| SYNESTHESIA
[sin-uhs-thee-zhuh] – noun
A
neurologically-based phenomenon in which a stimulus of one sensory or cognitive
pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or
cognitive pathway, as when the hearing of a certain sound induces the
visualization of a certain color.
You already know the story
of the Neptunes. World-famous producers and songwriters, Pharrell
Williams and Chad Hugo, over the
course of their decade-long career, have literally changed the course of music.
It started with the redefining of hip-hop, the two of them wielding a
minimalist, synthesized palette and a limitless imagination to create a sound
that was as sophisticated and elegant as it was raw and rhythmic. Soon the
Neptunes would alter the landscape of pop
music, as well, creating driving rhythm & blues influenced work that artists
in every genre would seek out to help establish their creative impulses. They
have worked with everyone from Madonna and Justin Timberlake to Jay-Z and Gwen
Stefani; from Britney Spears and Busta Rhymes to Kelis and the Clipse. Think of
your favorite songs in the last ten years: most of them are Neptunes productions.
But N*E*R*D* are not the
Neptunes, and the Neptunes are not N*E*R*D*.
“The Neptunes is what we do, but N*E*R*D* is who we
are. It’s our life,” Pharrell would say
in 2000, in describing the group that includes him, Chad and longtime
friend and creative wunderkind, Shae. The three of them together combine for
uninhibited explorations of sounds, emotions and truth, adhering to no agenda,
subscribing to no rules. N*E*R*D* is the way they live their life, the way they
see the world.
The words Pharrell used to
describe N*E*R*D* in 2000 ring just as true in 2008, with the release of the
group’s third album, Seeing Sounds. The album is a
blistering mash-up of booming hip-hop beats and rollercoastering rock riffs,
rumbling crunk rhythms and scintillating soul music. Whereas their first album,
In Search Of…, was an imaginative,
exploration of identities, and their second album, Fly Or Die, sought out the range of
genres and sounds that have influenced the group, Seeing Sounds grinds everything
together, evoking a sound that is un-tethered by preconceptions and convention.
It is also an album that amplifies the style and attitudes that have made
Pharrell,
Chad and Shae
transcendent cultural icons.
“We are only a slave to the
energy, the energy and the emotion,” Pharrell describes. “We don’t care about
genres. Why would we? For us, it was just about being what we are. We aren’t
limited by anything other than our imaginations and what we feel, so why would
we make music packaged into a little box?”
The album’s title gives a
clue to this thinking. It follows the concept of synesthesia, which is a neurological
sensation that occurs when the stimulation of one sense, involuntarily – and
some say preternaturally – stimulates another: seeing the color red and feeling
the taste of your mother’s blueberry pie, or hearing the whisper of wind through
trees and feeling goose-bumps on your skin. More to the point, with N*E*R*D*, it
could be hearing a musical note or a melody and seeing a flashback from the
youthful romance of your adolescence.
“It was something we were
watching on television, on the Discovery channel, on the phenomenon of
synesthesia, and we realized that was how we see, hear and make music,” explains
Shae, who serves as the group’s conceptual glue. “That’s how it’s always been,
we just never knew there was a name to it. And when we learned about it, we knew
it had to be the title of the album.”
“Every thought makes a
sensory impression,” Pharrell says, “but sometimes the wires are a little
crossed. When you hear a sound, instead of just your brain receiving electric
impulses and then interpreting them, something happens and it invokes other
things, a feeling, a memory, an emotion. That’s how we make music.”
Indeed, while Pharrell and
Chad are classically
trained musicians, sophisticated players who play all of their instruments on
all their hit-records, they author the music of N*E*R*D* from a more honest,
emotional, and ephemeral place. It is more than just musical notes on a 16-bar
grid, or the demonstration of technical skill, or a hot beat. “It’s been five
years since our last album and we’ve seen and heard and done a lot in our
lives,” says Shae. “We feel free, and we need to express that. It’s like we’re
doing it for the first time all over again.”
Seeing Sounds was recorded over the last fifteen months, and is a
reflection of the life lived by the three men as they have traveled the globe
and interacted with people from all walks of life. “In that way, the music is a
reflection of the world in a way that producing for someone else could never
be,” Pharrell explains.
The album’s first single,
“Everybody Nose,” is a testament to how the restraints of conventional
songwriting and rock music have been interminably clipped on this album. Its
proclaimed taunts (“All the ladies standing in the line for the bathroom!”) are
driven with a thundering bass that gives way to a deep, drum-heavy rhythm track.
The song careens between the head-nodding bravado of hip-hop and the body-moving
energy of dance or punk music. “And people know what we’re talking about,” Shae
says of the song’s clever title. “It’s an observation of what we’ve seen and it
captures that sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll mentality,” says Shae. Indeed, it is
salacious and sexy, diplomatically dangerous. And while contrary to popular
belief – it is an anti-drug song.
The overarching theme of Seeing Sounds is its energy. A song like
“Killjoy” moves at a quick clip, like a fast-rap throwdown by Big Daddy Kane
from back in the day, with a fierce percussive breakdown serving at its
emotional center. “Anti-Matter” moves through several different tempos
throughout the song, flirting with psychedelic guitar funk and a dirty south
bounce, teasing the senses with its stop-and-start momentum. “Spaz” has the
complex rhythms of Indian music that eventually gives way to noisy breaks. In
forgoing all genres, or rather in not remaining faithful to any one genre, the
boys in N*E*R*D* are creating their own.
“We made this music
anticipating the live show,” explains Pharrell. “That was the most important
thing. We know what we want to do on stage – we want to get fucking crazy,
fucking insane – and if we make pussy-soft songs, no one’s going to want to
jump.”
Indeed.
Pharrell takes it one step
further. “No one will ever know what kind of a rush it is on stage to play these
kinds of songs until you experience it for yourself. But that’s the thing, we
wanted to give that feeling to our audience.”
Not all the tracks on Seeing Sounds are sonic monsters – they
also display the group’s musical breadth. “Sooner or Later,” evokes the elegance
of ‘60s UK pop, while “Yeah You,” a
first-person account of having a female stalker, flirts with smooth, ‘70s
soul-jazz.
In the end, it’s about
transposing those feelings we all have – of rebellion and conflict, of
confidence and insecurity – into a form of music. Seeing Sounds, hearing memories.
“Our fans are an army of
individuals celebrating individuality,” says Pharrell. “They come from so many
different walks of life, there are so many archetypes in our crowds, and they
all meet up here in that moment with our music. That’s a beautiful thing and we
have to honor that in our music.
“We’re not doing this for
the money. We are just trying to keep the movement going. We owe it to the
people. More than rock out, we want them to bounce all over the room and get
lost in it.”
Be ready. N*E*R*D* is
coming.
"What is a N*E*R*D*? N*E*R*D* stands for No One Ever
Really Dies. The Neptunes is what we do, but N*E*R*D* is who we
are. It's our life. N*E*R*D* is just a
basic belief, man. People's energies are made of their souls. When you die, that
energy may disperse but it isn't destroyed. Energy cannot be destroyed. It can
manifest in a different way but even then it's like their souls are going
somewhere. If it's going to heaven or hell or even if it's going into a fog or
somewhere in the atmosphere to lurk unbeknownst to itself, it's going
somewhere." – Pharrell Williams, 2000 |