August 20, 2009
An Interview with the Sea Navy about Memory Matches

The Sea Navy ::: Photo by Sarah Jurado
The Sea Navy are playing a record release show, tomorrow, Friday August 21st at the Sunset Tavern in Ballard with Battle Hymns and The High Strung. With the long-awaited (at least by me) release of their latest record Memory Matches next Tuesday August 25th, the Sea Navy have revealed yet another collection of short sophisticated pop songs out of the mind of front-man Jay Cox. The output of a year and a half of work, this time around Cox had his drummer Jordan Cumming to shoulder the weight of recording and mixing and the result neatly bottles the sometimes overflowing bursts of energy the band exudes on stage and then some. Through clever production and a determinedness to be what they are, I think with this new record they’ve set themselves among our city’s finest examples of heart-on-sleeve pop.
Jay and Jordan responded to a few of my questions about the new album and where they’re at right now via email, with sometimes slightly snarky answers.
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SOTS: The previous Sea Navy record came out before the current lineup had been able to form. This record found you playing many of the songs as a band long before committing them to tape. How did that change the song creation process for you this time around?
JAY: It changed the process to where the people recording/playing the songs are the ones that wrote the parts (for the exception of certain parts of “Rodeo”). We were able to make this record as a band and not “people playing with Jay.” Up until meeting both Jordan and Stuart I had missed the feeling of operating as a band and I am very happy at where we are at in our development. It has a long time since I felt so excited towards what a “band” was able to create and play. I’m so glad that the three of us function so well and I can’t imagine having written these songs with any other players. I don’t mean the previous comment as a negative comment on former members of The Sea Navy but more that having a stable lineup and having people equally invested made the whole process more comfortable and less rushed or on borrowed time.
SOTS: You guys’ bread and butter is the short form pop song. Not a song on this record tops 3 minutes. Is that result of an increased pace in general over the last record, it is even a conscious thing or does ’shorter’ just seem to be the natural length for the songs you guys are creating right now?
JAY: I think maybe 1% of the songs I have ever written have been over 3 minutes. I never worry/think about the length of the song. I think there is enough going on in each song to where the listener will not feel ripped off.
JORDAN: We play for as long as the song needs to be played. We could make the songs longer but then practices would run longer and that’s the last thing we want.
SOTS: One of the pitfalls of such a short time can be that the songs start to be indistinguishable from each other because there is just less time for melodic theme development. It’s something that I think you guys have avoided pretty well with this record. Was there a concerted effort to step away from any formula? It seems rarely is a turnaround simply a turnaround, there are lots of vocal tricks to add some character, and the guitar “solo” moments are just as energetic as Jay’s freak-out moments on stage amount to.
JAY: We have no formula. However it should be said that two out of three members of the band operate on the metric system. There are a lot of aspects of the songs that we will not try live but I think it does capture the character of the band well.
JORDAN: We did quite a lot of experimenting production-wise for this record, but that didn’t spawn out of an effort to step away from any formula. Making a record should first and foremost be fun…. and we had a lot of fun making this record. Going into the studio we had no idea that we would be adding so many layers to these tracks but after listening back to the basic tracks, we realized there was a serious lack of micro korg…. and the possibilities soon became endless.
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