Future Music

Sunroof

Gareth Jones, famed for his production work for Depeche Mode, Erasure and Einstürzende Neubauten, first became acquainted with fellow producer/label boss Daniel Miller when requested to work on Mode’s 1983 synth-pop album Construction Time Again. At the end of those sessions, Jones and Miller would stay behind and playfully experiment with sounds at The Garden – then studio of synth pioneer John Foxx.

Despite naming the project Sunroof and later remixing artists including Goldfrapp, Can and To Rococo Rot, the duo refrained from releasing their own studio jams for almost 40 years. However, that changed in March 2019 following various improvisations using modular suitcases. This time they made plans to record their sessions, resulting in Electronic Music Improvisations Volume 1 – eight extemporary modular pieces recorded live in various studio spaces across London.

Can you remember the circumstances behind the two of you first meeting?

Daniel Miller: “We were starting to plan working on the third Depeche Mode album Construction Time Again. Up to that point we’d been working at a great studio called Blackwing but felt we needed a change of scene so finally landed at John Foxx’s studio The Garden because it was so different from a conventional studio. It had daylight, which was unusual in those days, a relatively big control room and a small live room, but we didn’t have an engineer. John suggested Gareth because he’d help set up his studio and worked with him on Metamatic. Gareth had a very enthusiastic vibe, so we decided to work with the Mode together and it all became very natural and fluid with a lot of experimental processes.”

“In a way that was the start of the Sunroof project because, quite quickly, Daniel and I realised that we liked hanging out in the studio after Depeche Mode had gone home. They usually got the train back to Essex and as we were both living in London we’d spend the odd hour or two doing jam sessions and playing around with synths and effects. We were just mucking about and wouldn’t even

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Future Music

Future Music2 min read
Inphonik RX1200 £26
> Most of the reviews featured on these pages are based around soundware of various kinds, and mostly samplebased libraries hosted in Kontakt or other software. Occasionally, however, we’ve had forays into synthesiser presets and other content. This
Future Music1 min read
aya, Lip Flip
Some producers take such a radical approach to sound design that it makes the next thing you listen to – whatever it is – sound just a little dull in comparison. Dripping in detail, aya’s Lip Flip EP is a catalogue of fried and distorted electronics,
Future Music2 min read
On Our Playlist
After the ‘shoegaze rave’ of his last album Ultra-Truth, Daniel Avery returns with a pair of more straightforward and up-front club tracks, released by the label offshoot of his spiritual home, London’s Fabric. Both Wonderland and Running are pure pe

Related Books & Audiobooks