Your first album is instrumental except for one song. But then on your debut, you're singing on over half of the songs. Why start singing?
The music I was listening to, but also just because I would make instrumentals with a lead that went really crazy. I realized a lot of the time that sounds better with just a voice. And I liked how my voice sounded on top of those beats. The biggest part is being inspired by 90s electronic with indie elements.
What 90s electronic?
This Puerto Rican band called Superaquello. I found out about them from my friend Alejandro when I was 16. And also Jai Paul. A record label that was big for me was this label 555 recordings. I just went through a bunch of their catalog when I was 18.
The Rate Your Music tag for your album is “indietronica.” Do you agree with that?
Yeah. It’s an umbrella term. They also put slacker rock, neo-psychedelia. Slacker rock only applies to some of the songs. I know the psychedelia tag just means, like, Oh, it's weird, but I like that it's thrown in there to be like, You're not getting your average indietronica. I feel like when I started making and listening to indietronica, it wasn't like every white guy on earth was making that shit. And now it kind of feels like it's like, instead of you knowing a guy that's a SoundCloud rapper, you know a guy that makes indietronica. So I like that it's different, differentiated from it.
When it comes to the current wave of indietronica, it seems to be about filtering twee through a laptop. But you seem to be on a different side of that coin. Some of the songs on your album almost sound like pop punk to me. “Forever” could be a Green Day song.
Shouts out to Green Day. I don't know how much I was thinking about it when I made the album, but I had a long period where I was listening to MySpace era indietronica the most. But also, I listened to I Set My Friends on Fire like everybody else. I started watching YouTube videos about it, too. They have some really crazy melodies and cadences.
8.1heath’s music really reminds me of the MySpace era, like the MIDI grind
Stuff.
[Pointing to the guy next to him] Bro, that's him. Yo, he’s the real laptop twee.
8.1heath: Yeah. I mean, I go for that shit. I can't lie. You said laptop twee and I was like, that's a pretty fucking good way to describe it.
bbpue: We're on that twee shit. They're not twee like us.
What are some twee artists that you guys like?
bbpue: I like The Bad Spellers.
8.1heath: Hormones in Abundance is really good.
bbpue: Does the Love Letter Band count?
8.1heath: Oh, the Love Letter Band. A lot of like Scandinavian shit mostly.
You guys are starting a record label together, right?
Heath: Hell yeah. And our friend Lucius too.
Nick: It's not like a super serious thing, but we're doing it. And you know my brother's EP is going to be on there. He's using an actual four track.
I feel like you and your brother’s music is pretty similar—the fidelity and tone is very similar. What's some music that our parents were playing in the house when you guys were kids that might have been influential?
Our dad was obsessed with this band called Ultravox. Some real dad shit. A lot of dads like that band. They’re an 80s new wave/new romantic band. Scottish vocalist. They had pretty cool synths going on. Their old shit is fire. Especially this song called “Dislocation.” Another big thing for me, my aunt just randomly played “Heartbeats” by the Knife when I was a kid. That song is perfect. That song had me thinking differently, because at that point I was listening to dubstep mostly. But it was that along with getting into Jai Paul that made me get more into the pop side of it.
My roommate texted our apartment group chat last week. He was getting on a plane and he was like, “The dude next to me is talking about bbpue.”
Fire. What the fuck?
You're international. Is that the goal, to get really big?
Yeah. But also, I don't always know. I would really like to blow up. But there's so much stuff that comes with it. My main goal with music was always to make an album that people just love so much, you know? That's always been my goal. And I kind of achieved that. So now I want to make an album that even more people just love.
You talk about wanting to make an album that's universally loved. Is there a classic album that you consider a blueprint for the music that you make?
I don't know if they're classics, but there's definitely albums that are blueprint-y for me. I love DJ Klock. His third album. It's crazy to get a certain level of emotion from instrumentals, you know? And the whole vibe all together, it feels like I'm in the ocean or like I'm flying around. But there's other albums too. Emak Bakia’s Jane. The Famous Boyfriend's Making Love All Night Wrong [split album]. That was huge for me. It's also made on four tracks. But it's just these moments of insane warmth and pop genius. Also Todo Sigue Intacto by Apeiron. It’s blueprint-y for me, in the sequencing. Every track feels like it has its place. It made me feel like I can never make a song where I made it for no reason. I'm also very perfectionist with music.
Do you usually wait for inspiration to strike? Or do you ever just open your laptop with the goal of making something?
I usually wait for inspiration. But yesterday I was like, I’m just gonna make a bunch of shit. I didn’t like them at first but I played them in the car with my brother and Heath and they sounded good. I also made those beats for another person. Do you know goodguydar?
No, who’s that?
When Xavier was blowing up, he was posted with 1c and all of them. His music was always just vibey as fuck. I don't know how to explain it, but the beats he would hop on were way different than the kind of music I make. So I asked him, are you trying to try some new shit? And he was like, I'm down.
You also made that song with fakemink. I feel like that's like part of your lore now.
I keep forgetting to send him these melodies. I don't know if he still wants them.