| A  truly great debut single should make the listener ask: Who is this person? And  where did they come from? That’s what happens when you first watch the video to  Willy Moon’s I Wanna Be Your Man, in which a lean and long-faced young man  struts and jerks and testifies in a spotlight, over a monstrously metallic Bo  Diddley beat, for one minute and 50 seconds. And the answers in this case are  every bit as interesting as the record itself.   Willy  is 21, and whip-smart with a tinder-dry sense of humour. He doesn’t blend  different sounds; he smashes them together to hear what kind of noise they  make. It’s as if rock’n’roll had been deep-frozen in 1965, just before the  Beatles discovered acid, and abruptly reanimated 45 years later by a laptop hip  hop producer.    On  his demos a chain gang from one of Alan Lomax’s 1930s field recordings beats  out a rhythm track with hammers and axes; early 60s rock’n’roll is crunched  into shuddering quasi-dubstep; a riotous Amerie breakbeat bucks beneath blaring  horns and James Brown yowls. Willy loves the physical energy of Cab Calloway  and Michael Jackson, the brevity of the Ramones, and the style of film noir.   He  writes, records and produces everything on his own and keeps things short:  nothing grazes the three-minute mark. “Generally the most interesting stuff  happen in the first two minutes anyway, the rest of it just bores me to tears,”  he reasons. “I’m a great believer in simplicity and brevity. It’s also down to  having a short attention span. I don’t even read books anymore, just short  stories.”   Willy  grew up in New Zealand. When he was 12 his mother died of cancer. His father  lost his job due to the time taken off caring for his mother, and was forced to  find work abroad in Saudi Arabia, leaving 12-year-old Willy and his 16-year-old  sister to raise each other. “I was always getting in trouble at school and  they’d say we have to get your parents in. I’d say, well that’s difficult.”   Formerly  a gifted student, he effectively gave up on school, attending occasionally only  to see his friends and read science fiction novels. He was thrown out of one  school, then another, and dropped out of formal education all together when he  was 16. “I thought what’s the point? I am allergic to authority and besides, I  have always been more of an autodidact anyway.”   Eventually  he decided that something had to give so for his 18th birthday he saved  up and bought himself a one-way plane ticket to London, where he found  hedonism, strife, financial insecurity and a surprising musical breakthrough.  When Willy met his girlfriend she played him an album by 1940s forces’  sweethearts the Andrew Sisters, which triggered an obsession with pre-1960 pop  music. “I still listen to jazz more than anything, like Woody Allen!” he laughs.   After  losing his job and being kicked out for not making rent, Willy and his  girlfriend bought the cheapest available plane tickets — to Valencia, Spain.  From there they jumped a train down to Morocco. “It was ridiculous,” he says.  “Who knew what we were meant to do once we got there?” They eventually made  their way to Berlin, where they would live for the next year, and crucially  where Willy’s music would begin to take form. There he began writing primal  rock’n’roll songs but found it too constricting. “There was a whole revivalist  scene, but it felt a bit like locking oneself up and throwing away the key.”   Returning  to London, he worked on developing his own sound, the first fruit of which was  I Wanna Be Your Man. He posted it online and acquired a record deal. “I’d hate  to be in a band, too many opinions,” he says. “I’m a dictator at heart.”    Now, finally, he is relatively settled and  secure and working on his debut album for release in 2012. It promises to be  extraordinary. “I’ve always been ambitious,”  he says. “One day, no matter what, I’m going to be successful.” |