V: Do you remember your first interview ever?

INTERVIEW WITH IAN GORMELY

VICTORIA ARAKELYAN

HUMBER COLLEGE

THE BIOGRAPHY&CONTEXT

Ian Gormely, 33, was born in raised in Vancouver. After doing an undergrad in Victoria, he moved to Halifax in 2006 and finished one-year journalism program in King’s College, then worked there for one more year in City Magazine. When his wife, who is also a journalist, got a job in Toronto, they both moved to the city. Today Gormely writes for Exclaim! and has a weekly entertainment column in Metro. He says he initially got into music journalism because he was “extremely uncool” as a teenager, and wanted to know more about music to increase his “coolness”. He also started playing a lot of instruments at that time and played in a “post-Nirvana” rock band in high school. That “snowballed into bit of an obsession”, as Gormely puts it, and led him into being an assistant editor of Toronto’s leading music magazine.

V: Do you remember your first interview ever? - student2.ru

The coffee shop picked by interviewee was a tiny one, with one long table at the center and a couple of tables for two on the sides. I managed to get one of these before he came - sitting in front of each other at a separate table appeared a better idea than being surrounded by a bunch of people at the long table. The place generally smelled like cinnamon and ginger. A lot of arty people were sitting around, infusing the atmosphere with ions of laidbackness.

Gormely was also clothed very laid-back: plaid shirt, faded jeans and a cap. He ordered the same ginger tea that I was already sipping - probably appreciating the role of mirroring in a good interview (or simply appreciating ginger tea). We greeted each other with a handshake and right away engaged in a little conversation about music - that served as a best icebreaker I could ever imagine. All the anxiety I felt before immediately disappeared. That was a luxurious advantage though - we had this topic that we knew we are both passionately interested in, and that 10-minute chat about music tendencies and value of music journalism has set the perfect pace for the further interview.

Gormely’s body language did not change at all throughout conversation - he was sitting with his shoulders on a table, leaning towards me and gesticulating lively.

V: Do you remember your first interview ever? - student2.ru

The Interview

V: Do you remember your first interview ever?

I: Yes, I was interviewing Canadian band The Weakerthans, their bas player, in 2003. I was feeling super anxious, I did all kinds of notes and questions, and then he was going to call into the station and I had to record it there, which was new to me. So I went there, and they didn’t call, and I had to just go home. Which becomes a pattern in music journalism. And then finally they did get on the phone, and I had all these questions, and I was asking them. Looking back now I guess that is just a wrong approach, you just go through your list that you’ve written down in the order you’ve written them down and that doesn’t make any conversational sense, I was not engaging with the music the way I supposed to, I was asking them surface questions as opposed to asking about music itself.

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