Back in Flight: Scotland’s Aerial Returns with ‘Activities of Daily Living’

Scotland’s Aerial has finally unveiled their highly anticipated album after a decade-long hiatus. Following the success of their 2014 standout, ‘Why Don’t They Teach Heartbreak At School?’, which featured the stellar track ‘A Great Teenager’ ranking at number 38 on my ‘The Best 100 Power Pop Songs of this Century (2000-2020)‘ compilation, the band returns with ‘Activities of Daily Living’. Once again, they hit the mark, particularly resonating with fans of Teenage Fanclub and Fountains of Wayne, as Aerial continues to thrive in that musical sphere. This latest release offers a delightful array of cleverly crafted earworms, showcasing the band’s trademark wit and charm.


You can find ‘Bad Tattoo’ showcased on the Best Power Pop of 2024 Spotify Playlist.


Could you share the journey of bringing this record to life? How did all the pieces come together to create the final product?

We started writing the album (Activities of Daily Living) about 3 years ago. Covid afforded us time and boredom. If I remember rightly, Mackie (Mackintosh – the other songwriter in the band) set himself a challenge to write a song a week and deliver a finished demo to me every Monday. I think he told me in order to keep himself honest. I decided to do the same thing and then began a pretty frenetic period of writing and exchanging demos, a bit of one-upmanship and an eventual body of songs that was the basis for the album. In the end we took 14 of them into the studio once lockdown was lifted and over a number of sessions, worked with producers Duncan Cameron and Dave McClean at Riverside Studios in Glasgow to record it.

We have worked with Duncan before (on our debut Back Within Reach). He has produced some of my favourite bands – Teenage Fanclub, BMX Bandits, Trashcan Sinatras – and so we trusted him to bring out the best in the songs. We mixed the album with him too and are really happy with the end result. It’s probably our best sounding record.

Was there a particular moment or experience that struck you, signaling that you were onto something special with this project?

For me personally, I think when I stumbled on the concept of writing a song about wasting time playing video games (Pixelated Youth) – that was one of those moments. It was one of the quickest songs to write for this album. I think I wrote the lyrics in one long, late night session. The theme afforded lots of nostalgic references – power ups on Super Mario, collecting coins on Sonic, game cartridges, dot matrix printers etc. It became a homage to Shigero Miyamoto, the Nintendo programmer who wrote most of those games. I added lots of Game Boy chiptune effects in the final song and I think that fits really well.

The decision to seek opinions on your new songs is intriguing. When did you realize that external perspectives could contribute to your creative process?

Well, I only really seek the views of the rest of the band. We have been doing this long enough and I think have a quiet confidence in what each of us does. And we have strong enough relationships that if something isn’t good enough, it will be called out. For the last album (Why Don’t They Teach Heartbreak At School?) we had a ton of songs to choose from – like about 50 or so. Much of the work there was paring it down and choosing what would form the album. This one was different; we wrote for the album. Each of us has a good enough filter such that if a song makes it to the demo stage, it will probably be a contender. We didn’t throw much away.

In fact, we had so much time and recording tools to hand, that the demos are really well produced. That can be problematic as you can then spend too much time in the studio ‘chasing the demo’. In the end we did use some of those original demos as overdubs.

Success can take on different meanings as time goes on. When envisioning success for this new record, what does that picture look like now?

I am really proud of our previous albums. I think the collection of songs on there really stand up. This is our first one in a few years so I think at the start, success is probably making sure you are not eroding the good work you have done before.

Once you get past that, the concept of success changes. For us, I think success was probably down to two things – getting the songs themselves recorded well and to our satisfaction. And then getting the right label deal. We were quite focused on this one in getting it out on vinyl. And we did that. It is out on Flake Sounds in Japan and we have a limited release of 300 on coloured vinyl – exactly what we were after. The less outcome-focused bit of success for me is getting to spend time as a band in the studio and going on the ride of concept to release. Spending time with your bandmates as you do this is probably the best bit.

Among the gigs you’ve performed, which one holds an indelible place in your memory and why does it stand out?

Oh there are lots of gigs that stand out. For me, when we played T in the Park many years ago – that was really special. It’s the main music festival in Scotland – or it was at the time as it’s moved on and rebranded now – but it’s the one I grew up going to with my friends. To go there as a band and experience backstage, the other bands, the most generous rider we’d ever had – it was great. A real highlight.

Lyrics often carry profound meaning. Are there particular lines you hope listeners will always remember from your songs? If so, what’s the significance?

I still think Why Don’t They Teach Heartbreak At School? is a great song and album title. I can say that because Mackie came up with it, not me. It made promotion for that record very, very easy. Most reviewers had their own reflection on the phrase and were hooked. I think we got a lot of listens as a result.

Arguably, it meant that coming up with the title for this album was trickier, but we all gravitated to Activities of Daily Living pretty early on and I think it works well. It fits in with what we were doing when we wrote it. Like everyone, we were stuck in a cycle of eat, sleep, work, repeat over covid – our activities of daily living. That’s ultimately what the album is about.


Aerial’s new album ‘Activities of Daily Living’ is out now on Flake Sounds.

Released on Eco-Mix Coloured Vinyl. Limited to 300 signed & numbered copies.

Available at: https://aerial.bandcamp.com/album/activities-of-daily-living

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