Best of What’s Next: Best Coast
Before singer/guitarist Bethany Cosentino was crafting two-minute, beach-fuzzy sonic diary entries with Best Coast, she weathered an earnest singer-songwriter stint in her teens and a more recent drone-y period with a band called Pocahaunted. Within the past year, though, she and bandmate Bobb Bruno have recorded enough 7-inches for a family to eat dinner off of, all released in small batches on boutique labels Group Tightener, Art Fag, Black Iris and PPM. The 23-year-old Cosentino (a former Fader intern) and bandmate Bobb Bruno are shooting for a September release for their debut LP, and in the meantime they’ll be spending early February on tour with the Vivian Girls. Paste recently talked with Best Coast’s bandleader about Oasis’ influence on the new album, a certain lie about her babysitter and finally giving Neil Young his due.
Paste: Devoted Best Coast fans already have a stack of 7-inch records. Do you collect them too?
Bethany Cosentino: I don’t own a lot of 7-inches myself. However, I’m obsessed with buying girl group singles and ‘50s and ‘60s singles on 45s. It’s always really cheap and accessible. At the Amoeba Records in Los Angeles, there’s box after box of 7-inches and 45s. It’s just a little package. Most of the time I feel way too ADD to sit there and sort through every single record. Sometimes I go to thrift stores, although they’re the worst to look for records. You either look for so many to find a good one, or you just keep looking and find the West Side Story soundtrack like 500 times.
Paste: After all of 7-inch recordings you’ve done, are there any previously recorded songs on your debut album?
Cosentino: It’s all new. We were only tracking for a week. It was really quick because we had a limited amount of time in the studio and a limited time with Lewis [Pesacov] of Fool’s Gold and Foreign Born, who produced it. He recorded and produced the songs on the Black Iris 7-inch. While it was happening, I was so stressed and I wanted it to be over and sleep for five days. Now that it’s over I’m jumping to start recording again because it’s so much fun. Even though recording is one of the most stressful things in the world, it’s also one of the most amazing and creative processes that I’ve ever been a part of. Everything that we had recorded before, all the previous 7-inches, we recorded them ourselves. It’s cool to do something different from what you’re used to doing.
Paste: What changed about the process, recording this album?
Cosentino: The record itself is going to be not that different from what we did before. There are some darker, moodier, slower songs and I don’t think people are used to hearing that from me. A record should be a collage of different sounds. When you have a record of 12 songs, 30 minutes of the same song over and over or just a similar vibe—I think it can get a little bit boring. I had written these moodier, darker songs, and when we were recording them we were trying to keep these ideas in mind of these bands like Oasis and Nirvana who have these slow songs. Everything before has been so poppy and fast-paced. We’re used to just sitting down and doing guitar and vocals and then Bobb does his fast surf-y kind of thing. The slow songs were a different process where Bobb does this heavy, fuzzy bass-sounding thing. Nothing too crazy. I don’t think people will really be like “Who is this? This doesn’t sound the same at all.” I just think that it’s different recording 12 songs as opposed to just two.