Ava, Eleanor and Chloe share lead vocal across the 11 songs on Something To Consume, while Ava and Chloe also bounce between drumming duties. This fluid mix is borne partly out of the band’s live shows, which are now delivering a kind of controlled chaos that’s leading to venue upgrades and five-star reviews, but their gigs sound like they began as a bit more, well, just chaotic.
“I started out as the drummer and we played two house-party shows before we got Chloe,” recalls Ava. “We found the right one, first try! It was pretty awkward at first, though, because she’d be beyond the stage and come up and drum a couple of songs.”
“There was talk of me playing ‘rock piano’,” Chloe laughs. “We wanted to be friends, I think, but there wasn’t a clear role for me right away. Honestly, that ambiguity of roles in the first place made it easy for us to be like, ‘Fuck it, let’s just do what we want!’”
“It was pretty hard, though,” adds Ava, “because I wasn’t trained for drumming. I taught myself and so I had the right side of the kit on the left side and the left side on the right side for the longest time. We would have to swap them whenever we switched places and that would just take so much time, it would be this awkward silence with the cymbals clapping around… but I eventually trained myself to drum right!”
A relentless touring schedule also ensured that Die Spitz tightened up their transitions, something that served them well for entering the studio with only 15 days to record Something To Consume. That said, the band still managed to make time to experiment as they continue to forge their unique style and sound.
“On the day that we did Go Get Dressed, we recorded it a different way,” says Ava. “The drums don’t come in till later and they’re very loose. There’s not a heavy beat in it. So, we started with a guitar and we left that whole day to be creative and experiment with whatever sounds we wanted. Kate plays the bass with her violin bow and it sounds really sick. That was that was a really fun day. It was very creatively freeing.”
“I think that freedom comes from our live shows,” says Chloe. “If we didn’t have the live experiences we have had, then I don’t think we would have gotten to that point with recording.”