Free Energy is inspired by what inspires you

Free Energy stands a good distance away from the sort of indie experimentalism that’s worked out so well for bands like Dirty Projectors and Animal Collective, preferring instead a brawny take on classic rock that's larded with dueling guitar solos, lyrics about driving around the city all night, and maybe a little bit of cowbell. It’s the continuation of a sound that singer Paul Sprangers and guitarist Scott Wells tweaked with their previous band, the criminally overlooked St. Paul, Minn., outfit Hockey Night, but this go-around appears calibrated for success: The band recently signed to big-time dance music label DFA, and a recent self-titled EP—not to mention a tireless show schedule—is building anticipation for a full-length due in early 2010. In advance of a performance at the DFA Holiday Party on Saturday, Dec. 19 at Le Poisson Rouge, The A.V. Club spoke to Sprangers about comparisons to “classic rock,” getting hooked up with DFA honcho James Murphy, and the pitfalls of making music in a big city.
The A.V. Club: Free Energy shares members and a certain freewheeling sensibility with your last band, Hockey Night. What accounted for the transition?
Paul Sprangers: We were all in Minnesota and it just wasn’t working. The more we pushed to try new arrangements and do things differently, the more things kind of dissolved. Scott and I just kept writing songs like we always have. Some of the demos we did with Hockey Night, some of the ones we did ourselves, and DFA signed us on the strength of those. We just kept writing and eventually James had time to start working with us.
AVC: How do you think Free Energy elaborates upon your previous efforts?