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No choice but to take the stage

Belfast band Oppenheimer are hoping to make people smile and dance with their second album. Sharon ní Chonchuir talks to them about their inspirations and how they were forced to perform live.

I snatched a few moments with Shaun, the band’s vocalist and multi-instrumentalist, while he and Rocky were in the middle of their recent Irish tour.

He is very excited about touring.

“I love it,” he says.

“It’s great to have people come along and smile and dance to our music.”

Such enthusiasm for performing is unexpected from somebody who thought his band would never play in front of an audience.

Although both Shaun and Rocky had years of experience in playing and making music, they always thought their musical collaboration would be confined to the studio.

The pair met six years ago when Rocky — a sound engineer and record producer — was the sound man for a band Shaun was playing with at the time.

“We got talking and found out we were both really into keyboards and synthesisers and so we eventually started to make music together.

“That was in Halloween 2004,” remembers Shaun.

Together, they proved to be a good combination.

Shaun is the singer and he also plays the drums.

Rocky plays guitar and keyboards.

“And basically, whenever one of us can’t do something, the other person will try to do it.

“That’s how it’s worked until now, anyway,” explains Shaun.

After months spent making music in the studio, it took a forceful friend to convince them to perform before a live audience.

“We were bullied into it, really,” says Shaun.

“Our friend Tanya arranged a gig for us and then told us that we had no choice but to be ready to perform in four months’ time.”

The bullying tactics worked and Oppenheimer’s first gig — played on April 7, 2005 — was a success.

And from then on, the band’s playful melodic sound has won them more and more fans.

I’m even beginning to consider myself one.

One of my favourite tracks from their debut album — also called Oppenheimer — is Breakfast In NYC.

A multi-layered track that mixes Shaun’s high-pitched, almost reedy voice with tinkling keyboards and synthesisers; it’s an upbeat pop song that’s reminiscent of quirky pop bands like The Flaming Lips.

Shaun describes the sound of their debut album as “very much indie pop” but he indicates that their second album — which is due out in June — will move away from that ever so slightly.

“It’s more indie rock.

“There are less drum machines and more live guitars.

“But it’s still the basic Oppenheimer sound,” he adds, reassuringly.

So, where exactly does this sound come from?

Perhaps some of it comes from the unusual nature of this musical partnership.

Shaun is the stereotypical musician.

He has played music since he was a child and been in bands since he was in his teens.

But Rocky — while also a talented musician — brings his sound man’s technical approach to the band.

Then, there are their diverse influences.

Rocky is a fan of American indie rock like Slater Kinney and The Bronx while Shaun likes Brian Eno and Tom Waits and also cites the films of David Lynch and the books of Hunter S Thompson as his main influences.

Because of their intriguing name, I’m also wondering if they have an interest in American politics or the history of the nuclear bomb.

“That’s what everybody thinks,” sighs Shaun.

“Everybody assumes it must be to do with J. Robert Oppenheimer.

“But it isn’t.

“We literally sat down one night and made a list.

“We were trying to come up with the best band name ever.

“At the time, all band names started with ‘the’ so we decided not to go with that and we ended up choosing a surname we both liked — Oppenheimer.”

The name has served them well so far and it’s becoming more and more well-known both within and outside of Belfast.

I asked Shaun why he and Rocky chose to stay in the city when many bands on the brink of a breakthrough decide to move to London.

“We’re both from Co. Down but we’ve lived in Belfast for years,” says Shaun.

“We never considered moving to London.

“Nowadays, you don’t need to move anywhere to make it or break it.”

They also find Belfast an inspiring place to make music.

“The scene is so vibrant here at the moment,” says Shaun.

“There’s such a variety of genres and acts. I don’t remember a time as good.”

Among the acts he names are Fighting With Wire, Tom McShane and We Are Knives.

“I’m sorry if I’ve forgotten anyone,” he apologises in advance.

Belfast may have inspired them until now but it looks as though they are not going to be spending too much time at home in the near future. When I speak to them, they are halfway through a tour of Ireland. After that, they had plans to support They Might Be Giants on a US tour; to perform at SXSW and to take part in a Time Out Showcase in New York.

They will scarcely have time to draw breath after that before they start a week-long tour of Britain.

You’ll be able to see them in Leeds, York, Newcastle, Sheffield, Stoke-on-Trent and Coventry during March and April.

“We may get a little bit of a rest after that,” says Shaun.

“And then the new album will come out and it’ll be time for the summer festivals.”

Oppenheimer certainly seem to have a lot to look forward to.

Unlike many bands on the brink of releasing their second album, Shaun claims that they are not at all nervous.

“We’ll be the proud parents, no matter what,” he says.

“Hopefully it will make people smile and dance just like the first album did.”

Here’s hoping.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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