HUMANS really came to our attention after doing a feature on RUFUS DU SOL at the Malkin Bowl 2017 where they opened the show. They have a really chill presence on stage and motivates a crowd to keep moving.

Canadian indie-electronic duo Robbie Slade and Peter Ricq are HUMANS and they have recently released their amazing third album Going Late. A brilliant and follow up to their Juno Award-nominated second LP Noontide back in 2015. A couple of years ago they had great success as well, with the three-track Water Water EP which quickly took them on a world tour.

Going Late, in its darkness and skilful production is a very solid album ane we were very excited to sit down and chat with them both on the day before the release party in Vancouver, BC.

SLM:   Can you share a little bit about yours and Robbie's evolution together over the last 10 years, because it's been quite a ride. You guys have been together for almost a decade, right?

PETER: Yeah, t's funny, when we first started the band, we said, "Let's give each other 10 years, and then maybe then call it quits." But it doesn't feel like it's that long ago though. When you think of our journey ...

SLM:  Well tell me how you guys came together then.

ROBBIE: We're going to give a one time only offer exclusive and we'll tell you how we met. We met at an art show in 2008 and I was painting the walls of the art gallery and Peter was one of the artists. When we met, we talked a lot about what we like about music and our relationship started. Peter convinced me to not go back to firefighting and to quit my job and basically pursue music with him. So, I did. And, that's how the band got started.

SLM:  I saw you guys with Rufus Du Sol at the Malkin Bowl which was a great show at Stanley Park, and then, again at the Capital Ballroom in Victoria and I was curious because I know you've played bigger venues like Coachella. Does your music resonate in more of a club setting or do you like playing to a bigger festival?

SLM: We didn't get to chat earlier in the year but I'd love to dive into a little bit about “The Feels” too, where that was recorded?

ROBBIE:  That was recorded in Bryan Adam's studio. (See our recent BA Show Review)

PETER: “The Feels”,“ Sip It” and, “Boys and Girls” were all recorded there, right before going to Coachella and then we just got the master that day we were playing and so we DJed it at Coachella. So, that was cool.

SLM:  Talk to us about  working with Nick Cosub. What was that like?

ROBBIE:  Nick's the man. We love working with Nick. We worked with him on “The Feels” record and we've worked with him on “Noontide” (2015) since then we just always revert to him cause he's a friend now and he gets us and he makes us sound good. Any idea that we have, we're not shy about the outcome of those because he knows what to do to make it sound like what we want. We do experiment more and I think that's like where Nick has more of the organic skills because where we're willing to step into dangerous territory, the more often than not.

SLM:  It's nice to have somebody support you that way, too. I want to talk about first track, “Breakfast with Liz” (Which has a great new video/right). Tell us about this track and making the film to go with it?

ROBBIE: Well, the song was just thrown around different after parties and the video kind of fit into that a little bit, but I'll let Pete talk about the video.

SLM:  The Going Late, the video, you shot that film, in the 70s style, and you shot it in 35 millimeter. That looked like a really fun video to make. Tell us a little about that one, as well?

PETER:  We wanted to do the last video with our jacket, so I thought about it for a while and wanted to have all the jackets in there, and just have a gang, and we just had fun with it. We got a lot of our friends, in the film and music as we have come to know a lot of people to work with. We just hired all our friends to be there with us as well. It was really fun, but shoots are just long and hard, and to get people to keep shooting when it's three or five in the morning, no matter how tight of a schedule you are, people want to go home.

SLM: Yeah. Fair enough. Well, the designs on the clothing lines and the artwork, who does all of that for you?

PETER:  I did that after talking to Robbie who was designing the stuff for Noon Tide. I did a bunch of stuff and Robbie wasn't really feeling it, and then we went to an art show and Allie Bruce had some artwork, and she had some funky lines, she started drawing. When she broke her hand, she started drawing with her left hand, so we explored it with something more along that style, and from then on, we just always stuck to that logo and that style of illustration. Robbie has really strong ideas as well and then sometimes I just do something on my own.

SLM:  I love watching everybody running down the streets in the jackets. It kind of reminded me of a gang running down the street together reminiscent of The Outsiders in that scene where they're all sort of amped for their rumble, and they're all running down the street together.

PETER:  Yes. It’s really supposed to be like The Warriors, like the 80s movie.

Canadian indie electronic duo Robbie Slade and Peter Ricq are HUMANS (Capital Ballroom show above Spring show in 2018)

  Humans  release ‘Going Late’ on 16th November via Haven Sounds.

Sunleadsme

Really enjoy the unity of this video for Humans by director and artist Peter Ricq. Shot on 35mm film, “Going Late” pays homage to 70s classic The Warriors. 

ROBBIE: Either works for us as long as the sound system is good and playing us loud. You can tell that people are just looking around because most of the time, the sound is just not there. We could play a really shitty venue but if they're not shy about putting us loud, you can tell that the crowd is having a way better time and so are we and then we feed off the crowd. Coachella was a really fun experience because everybody was into it and it sounded great.

SLM: That would have been an amazing experience. I saw something about that you guys have snuck in once, or snuck in I guess once to see it, and then you were on the other side of it. What stage were you on for Coachella?

PETER: The DoLab.

PETER:  It was the last day to submit. We had a good track record with MuchFACT and they gave us some money and I knew that they were going to disappear. I thought, okay, this is my chance to apply for the biggest chunk of money. We'd done pretty well for the last couple videos, so we said let's just go for it. I just tried to think of the gnarliest video, the craziest thing, and then told my manager, the application is ready to go, can you submit? He wanted to know “How much time do I have?" “I said … Today!”

I wrote the treatment and everything, so, we did it last minute and we got the answer a couple months sooner that we got accepted and it just came up through grace. It's fun when you can make something and pay everybody what they're worth and work with the people you want, and money goes away quick when you don't have a lot of it. But, everybody has been really responsive to the video, and I'm really happy with it.

P.Tinham 11.18.2018

The Warriors

SLM:  You guys worked with Carlos Delegarza on the album track, “Still About You.” What's the story behind this track?

PETER: It's about being on tour, travelling on planes, and being unfamiliar with your surroundings, and being disoriented from the constantly changing experience of being on tour.

SLM:  I have that song “Bout You” stuck in my head all day, and I love that. I think that one's my favorites; honestly, it's on a loop in the studio. You know when you get something stuff in your head and you just start humming it back to yourself over and over again. That's what that song is for me.

PETER:  It ends on the same note as it starts.

SLM:  Do you have a favorite from this album that stands out for you?

PETER:  I like ‘Years’. ‘Years’ is a song that we wrote a long time ago, during the first two years of the band.

SLM:  Is it written around the same time as “Water Water”?

ROBBIE: “Water Water” is really old too. ‘Years’ must have been maybe two years after.

PETER: The new version of Water Water, was Nick's. The first version of this song, we were not into it, so we just re-recorded with him and he made it happen. ‘Years’ is actually recorded at the same time as Water Water, the one that's on the album. So, that was recorded two years ago. A lot of this stuff from this new album is recorded throughout the years.

SLM:  There's another track "Run", and that has So Loki for vocals. How did you guys end up working together?

PETER: I met the guy because he had a lot of questions about the music industry, and we talked and we became friends, and then I asked him if he wanted to drop some lines on the track, and sent it to him, and he gave me a bunch of stuff and I just cut it up really short. I wanted it to be more like how I used it and that was basically it. They're from Vancouver. They're really sweet guys and I really like their music.

Robbie and I chatted further about his baby due in the New Year and fatherhood. This will consume the ARTist, no doubt leading into the 2019,  and a new adventure for him for sure. We cannot wait to see the HUMANS perform on a continued tour for 2019. For more about the ARTists music and merch for those amazing jackets (Still hoping for a limited edition red one for Christmas ) check out their site : http://dashumans.com/music/