Tuesday 3 May 2022

The Horror's musical influences

  1. The Snap Shots - Hip Hip Hurray 
  2. Toy
  3. S.C.U.M
  4. Cerebral Palsy
  5. Skip James
  6. The History Of Apple Pie
  7. Blind Willy Mctell
  8. Joe Meek
  9. Velvet Underground
  10. The Sonics
  11. Screaming Lord Sutch
  12. Sonic Youth
  13. My Bloody Valentine
  14. The Cramps
  15. The Gruesomes
  16. Joy Division
  17. Blind Joe Death
  18. Jesus & Mary Chain
  19. The Birthday Party
  20. The Fire Engines
  21. Teddy and his Patches
  22. The Driving Stupid
  23. Dead Can Dance
  24. Squarepusher
  25. Hawkwind
  26. Can
  27. Neu!
  28. Caleb Quaye - Baby your phasing is bad
  29. The Jesus Lizard
  30. Music Machine
  31. Cramps - Sheenas in a goth gang
  32. Silver Apples
  33. The Painted Ship - Frustration
  34. Sleep - Jerusalem
  35. The Girlfriends -My one and only Jimmy boy
  36. Iggy Pop - Mass production
  37. Phil Spector / Ronnettes/ Shangri-La's
  38. Mayhem
  39. Darkthrone
  40. Les Rallizes Denudes
  41. Royal Trux
  42. Om - Pilgrimage
  43. Kraftwerk
  44. Bob Lind - Summer
  45. Melvins
  46. The Orchids - Love Hit Me
  47. Adrienne Poster - Shang A Doo Lang
  48. The Bittersweets - Summertime
  49. The Models - Bend me, shape me
  50. Dawn - Im afraid they're talking about me
  51. Marilyn Mattson - He means so much to me
  52. Christina - Bintang Tjitaku
  53. Susan Barrett - Chico's girl
  54. The Whyte Boots - Nightmare
  55. INFINITI - Game One
  56. Teddy & His Patches - Suzy Creamcheese

Monday 2 May 2022

Guitarist: Joshua Third


Under what circumstances did you first pick up a guitar?

Joshua Third: I was 15, I started playing it to settle an argument with a friend who was a bassist. I thought the guitar part in this song was better than the bass part. I learned how to play it to show him the guitar part was better. After that, he got me in a band and I was kicked out for not knowing how to play Hendrix songs and generally being a bit too wild.

What were you listening to at the time? 

Sonic Youth, so you can imagine how those two different worlds might collide.  

Were you also interested in circuitry back then?

It came later on actually, when we started The Horrors. That’s when I started playing guitar again. We wanted all of these 60s buzz pedals and stuff, but we just couldn’t afford any of them. I had heard they were really easy to build; then I started reading about it. Suddenly I had this array of 60s effects pedals. I was really happy, and then I realized I could make pedals do even more stuff.  

And at this point you were also studying physics at a university, it sounds like you had a full plate?

Yes, I was in my last year. I was actually interested in electronics before that and I was going to go into electronic engineering. Then someone told me that I’d end up having to make mobile-phone satellites, so I studied physics instead.  

You must possess a large and high-functioning brain to have been admitted to a physics program at a place like University College London. Did you get straight As?  

I was all right. When I did A-levels they were broken up. In my AS-levels I got straight As, and then I realized I didn’t have to do any more work so everything after went down to Bs.  

Has your physics training directly helped you create pedals and other equipment?  

It doesn’t really help you but it sets your mind up for it, if that makes sense. It makes you good at math and good at looking at something and tearing it to bits. Electronics are really about knowing how something works and how you can change it. But I imagine if anyone knew I was completing a physics degree to go on and do this they would laugh at me.  If they did it’d be out of jealousy. 

But, since you say that, do you feel like there’s something else you should be doing?

I should probably be discovering new particles and having them named after me. Whoops, never mind. Who wouldn’t want that? [laughs] Why am I in a band?





The Horrors' Joshua Hayward has designed and built "hundreds" of pedals and effects units

Since they first hit the nation’s stages nearly 10 years ago – bedecked in funereal attire and pumping out a savage garage post-punk brew –The Horrors’ sound has been consistently evolving.

And, while the band’s last three albums – 2009’s Primary Colours, 2011’s Skying and 2014’s Luminous – have seen a myriad of synths come to the fore, Joshua Third’s inventive guitar-playing and experimental use of effects have been ever-central constants.

What really stands Joshua out from the majority of his peers is that his experimental dabblings are not just limited to the stage, studio or rehearsal room. Since The Horrors started in 2005, the guitarist – who has a first-class honours degree in physics – has designed and built “hundreds” of guitar effects units and pedals for the band.

When it comes to carving out The Horrors’ pulsating psychedelic soundscapes, Joshua and his electronics workshop have played a more-than-essential role.

How did you first get into designing and building your own guitar effects and pedals?

“I didn’t have enough money to buy my own!

"I got the Craig Anderton book [Do-It-Yourself Projects For Guitarists] when I was in secondary school and I made some PCBs [Printed Circuit Boards], but I never quite got around to actually building the pedals.

"When I was 20, I finally got round to doing it. The first thing I built was a Big Muff, but I didn’t like the sound of it and, in a rage, I broke it – but it’d taken me ages to do. I’d never used a soldering iron before and it was an absolute nightmare, but I didn’t stop, and I made another pedal pretty soon.”

What other pedals did you build during the early days of The Horrors?

“Another early one was a Fuzz Factory clone, but that pissed everyone off endlessly andI didn’t really use it much.

"I also had a [Boss] DS-1 that I modified to sound like a Nintendo! I think a lot of people have done that. You just take the back off, connect the two bits in the back with a little wire and then it sounds likea Nintendo… and it’s useless!

"The damn thing doesn’t work in bypass mode anymore, but it was just quite funny, and I was like, ‘Wow I did that – that sounds really bizarre!’”

Was there a turning point in terms of producing your first effect that worked really well?

“Very early on, I took a small bunch of parts on tour so I could build a pedal, and I built a [Univox] Super-Fuzz because I love Poison Ivy and I love The Cramps.

"That’s my ideal way of how a guitar should sound. Their guitar sound is just the most beautiful thing in the world. Not only did it work really well but I also learned a lot about design and circuitry.

"I’ve built about six of them now, but the first oneI built was the one with the crazy fabric on it. One big thing I realised was there’s two transistors in the circuit that would have been randomly selected, and they make each pedal sound completely different.

"I’ve had Super-Fuzzes since, and played on other people’s, and they never sound the same. It’s all because of these two little transistors, which – when they’re different – just completely change the sound. If they match, it becomes like a super-clean octave, but if they’re completely off it just becomes this outrageous fuzz, and you can go everywhere in-between once you put a pot in to control how matched they are.”