Alright, kids, school is in: touring on the back of 1973's underappreciated gem "Hard Nose the Highway", Van put together the Caledonia Soul Orchestra. They are simply one of the most nimble and overlooked live ensembles in rock and soul: Jef Labes on keys, Dahaud Shaar on drums, "Brother" Jack Schroer on sax, David Hayes on bass and the blindingly-talented John Platania on guitar formed the backbone of the band. Six months later they would be torn apart and Van (as he is and was wont to do) had moved on to the heavily Irish-influenced folk-soul of "Veedon Fleece" before disappearing from the public eye for several years. For the briefest of moments, though, they burned brighter than anything else out there. Grab a loved one, play it loud, and enjoy...
Saturday, December 21, 2013
It's too late to stop now!
Alright, kids, school is in: touring on the back of 1973's underappreciated gem "Hard Nose the Highway", Van put together the Caledonia Soul Orchestra. They are simply one of the most nimble and overlooked live ensembles in rock and soul: Jef Labes on keys, Dahaud Shaar on drums, "Brother" Jack Schroer on sax, David Hayes on bass and the blindingly-talented John Platania on guitar formed the backbone of the band. Six months later they would be torn apart and Van (as he is and was wont to do) had moved on to the heavily Irish-influenced folk-soul of "Veedon Fleece" before disappearing from the public eye for several years. For the briefest of moments, though, they burned brighter than anything else out there. Grab a loved one, play it loud, and enjoy...
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Pardon our dust...
Hey all...I've been a bit lax updating this here blog-type thing, but that's all about to change! Here are some of the exciting things you have to look forward to in the coming weeks:
- Interviews with Murry Hammond of the Old 97s, Rick Miller of Southern Culture on the Skids and Zach Gabbard of Buffalo Killers
- The "Best of 2013" list
- Various and sundry album reviews
Thanks for hanging in there and here's hoping we can close out '13 strong!
Saturday, November 16, 2013
INTERVIEW: Richard X Heyman
(photo by Nacy Leigh)
Journeyman rock n' roller Richard X Heyman has played with some of the biggest and most noteworthy names in rock and soul, and continues to put out incredibly well-written and passionate solo albums. Upon the release of his latest solo platter, "X", Heyman reached out to chat about the record, his influences and some of his more his more notable experiences as a backing musician.
The new album, “X”,
is a delightful album that almost sounds like a greatest hits collection of all new songs – how do you feel you have grown as a songwriterwith this record?
Thank you. If
only they were hits! It's difficult for me to assess the songs in terms
of growth. The writing process is an emotional outlet and the songs that come
closest to achieving the feelings I envisioned are the most realized. One
can only hope that they improve with experience so if someone listening thinks
there's growth in the songwriting, I'll accept the compliment. One thing
I have been experimenting with on this project is to take songs I've written on
piano and then turn them into guitar-oriented arrangements. Several of
these tracks were written while I was working on my last album
"Tiers" which was primarily piano-based. If they had been included
on "Tiers," the piano parts would have been prominent. For the
"X" album we mixed down the piano and I played the piano voicings on
various guitars, mainly a Fender Stratocaster.
Despite almost always
playing all the instruments on your records, this is the first one you recorded
at home. How did that change the dynamic
or influence the sound of the album? (As
a side note, I think it’s hilarious that you titled your bedroom studio “The
Kit Factory” yet recorded the drums elsewhere!)
Actually I've done several albums at home. Nancy and I
live in a New York City apartment so it is impossible to record drums here
properly. Not to mention we'd probably get evicted. The name of
our home studio is a pun based on The Hit Factory (the famous NYC studio).
We are both cat lovers, hence the "kit" reference. It's
always fun to record in a large state-of-the-art studio and I did a few of my
prior albums in that environment. But with today's advanced technology,
independent artists can achieve a high level of fidelity with a computer and
some decent microphones. I do try to retain as much warmth in the sound
as possible via an analog pre-amp compressor and a tube guitar amp (a Fender
Vibro-Champ).
I imagine your songs
are like children – it’s tough to choose one above the others. But let’s say
you are asked to make a “Sophie’s Choice”; is there one that you are particular
proud to have written or one that is particularly special to you?
It's very simple - the first track on all of my albums is my
favorite. On "X", besides "Denny", I like
"Please Be Mindful," "Somebody Has Finally Found Me,"
"Mourning," and "House of Cards." I know it's a
songwriter's cliche to refer to their songs as children, but I never felt that
way. Though I guess if you're gonna go with the family relations analogy,
some songs are like a favorite child and others are like a troglodytic nephew.
What are some of your
musical touchstones, those things that you heard and loved and go back to? Who inspires you musically?
I grew up listening to a wide variety of music. Big band
jazz, classical, Broadway shows, Sinatra. Then I got into rock'n'roll.
I love the Everly Brothers, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, the great
songwriting teams such as Leiber & Stoller, Goffin & King, Weil and
Mann, Barry & Greenwich. I also am into blues artists like Freddy
King and Magic Sam, as well as soul singers Sam Cooke, Wilson Pickett, James
Brown and all the incredible Motown acts. Then I got into Bob Dylan and
Phil Ochs, the Incredible String Band, Joni Mitchell and of course the British
groups -- Beatles, Stones, Who, Kinks, Hollies, Procol Harum, Yardbirds,
Animals, Zombies and the American artists - Jimi Hendrix, The Byrds, Lovin'
Spoonful, the Beach Boys, the Band, the Mamas & the Papas. I'm sure
I'm forgetting many others.
Your music often gets
saddled with the term “power pop”, though I think it’s got as much in common
with girl groups and the 60’s mod scene.
Do you feel constrained at all by being defined that way?
I'm not a fan of the term power pop. To me, it's an
oxymoron. Most of the music that is filed under that category is neither
very powerful or popular. That's what the term "pop" originally
referred to - its popularity. When you release anything out into the
public domain, others are free to write or say whatever they want about it.
So I have no control over what label or genre someone thinks I fit into.
The Who - now that's real power pop! I would say I consider myself
a rock'n'roll singer/musician.
You have worked with
several very high-profile collaborators (hell, your resume is kind of a
trip-tych through the last 40 years of rock and R&B!) – are there any
collaborative experiences that were particularly memorable that you wish to
share?
It's always an honor to get to play with musicians whom I respect.
Playing drums for Link Wray was a great experience. He basically
invented the power chord way back in 1958 with his song "Rumble."
When I played with him in the 70's he was playing a Gibson SG through an
Ampeg amp and man he got the nicest tone I've ever heard. It was such a
pleasure to pound along with that sound. He was also a very sweet
guy and let me do my thing on the drums, which I appreciated. I recently
played guitar for Mary Weiss from the Shangri-Las, and had a blast performing
those classic hits like "Walking In The Sand" and "Leader of the
Pack." And just last week I played drums for Mark Lindsay, former
lead singer of Paul Revere & The Raiders, and again was thrilled to get to
play a set full of hits such as "Kicks," "Hungry,"
"Just Like Me" and many others.
What’s on tap for you
next?
I'm just about to send out a bonus album to all the people who
donated to my Kickstarter campaign, which helped finance the "X"
album. I also recorded a Christmas single that will be out for the
holiday season. I'm writing and rehearsing new material for the band I
play drums in, The Doughboys, for our fourth release. As far as my solo
career, I'm trying to decide on what style or direction I should attempt for
the next project. I'm dabbling in some folk songs with just an acoustic
guitar and single voice, but I also am interested in doing something toward the
heavier side. Though I don't really have the haircut for that.
Friday, November 8, 2013
REVIEW: Old 97s and Drive-By Truckers @ Town Ballroom, 11/3/13
Wow, what a show! Two similarly-minded acts churning out parched, dusty rock n' roll, each fighting to be the best and loudest band on the Town Ballroom stage, and the audience was the winner!
The 97s, fresh off a year-long jaunt supporting the 15-year anniversary reissue of their masterpiece, "Too Far To Care", were in a loose and playful mood, pulling their setlist from albums across their career. Rhett Miller, all boyish hip-shaking and guitar-windmilling, sounded stellar and Ken Bethea has gotten incresingly intersting as a guitar player...his near-constant leads and fills skittered around and gave the songs added twang and crunch. Pingponging between classics from "Too Far" (like an absolutely scorching take on album-closer "Four Leaf Clover") and more recent gems from 2011's sadly overlooked "Grand Theatre" albums, Dallas' favorite sons were tight, fun and delivered a solid 65 minute opening set. Miller promised that they would be back in the late-spring or early-summer (in support of their upcoming 10th lp), and this fan cannot wait!
The Truckers live experience is one built on pure volume and heat. Opening with Mike Cooley's "Carl Perkins' Cadillac" was a nice surprise and Cooley and co-leader Patterson Hood absolutely CRUSHED with a set that was heavy on early classics while also debuting two new songs off their forthcoming record. Longtime fill-in bassist Matt Patton seems to have finally joined the ranks full-time, and while the third guitar is missed (keys player Jay Gonzalez filled in occasionally), Hood and Cooley more than made up for it in the heft of their playing. A solid set from a band that continues to bring the goods live!
Friday, November 1, 2013
Drive-By Truckers and Old 97s - LIVE @ Town Ballroom on 11/3
Buffalo, prepare to have you collective ass kicked on Sunday when two of the finest bands around alight upon the Town Ballroom for a show that is guaranteed to make your pits drip and your panties drop!
Old 97s open the show and just announced a new record (their 10th!) is arriving in early 2014....lead singer/songwriter Rhett Miller told Rolling Stone that the new record is going to be reckless and raunchy, which should quench the thirst of fans from the Good ol' Bloodshot Records days! I will also be speaking to bassist/co-leader Murry Hammond about this and everything else fit to be "hit by a train" very soon, so stay tuned for that!
More a force of nature than a band, the Drive-By Truckers are out in support of the recently re-released "Alabama Ass Whuppin'" and will no doubt leave the crowd a bedraggled mess by the time they leave the stage on Sunday. If you've never experienced the rock onslaught that is a DBT show, you are in for a real treat!
In anticipation (and perhaps to lube up and properly prepare yourself for the experience), here are a couple of clips that showcase the energy that can be expected by the combination of these two acts on one stage:
Old 97s w/ Exene Cervenka - Four Leaf Clover
Drive-By Truckers - People Who Died
Enjoy!
Thursday, October 31, 2013
INTERVIEW: A Conversation with Rick Barton (Continental, ex-Dropkick Murphys)
Hey, Rick, thanks for
talking to me – can you tell me how Continental got started and your decision
to get back into music?
I had kinda been taking some time off and had started up a
project called Everybody Out! – we had put out a couple of records for two or
three years and then the band imploded.
The lead singer and I hated each other, which just kind of happens. I was talking to Frank Black one day – I was
painting his house – and he said the same thing! (laughs) It’s probably equally
my fault as much as his, and it’s just like any other kind of relationship,
sometimes things just don’t work out.
When you are in such close quarters, it just seems inevitable that a
couple of the guys are going to end up not liking each other. It’s a brutal existence being in a touring
band. We’re out on tour and there are 6
of us in this tiny little van, and every little thing everyone does can get
annoying and that gets amplified as several days turn into several months and
no one really knows how to handle it.
So, that band disbanded and I decided I wasn’t going to tour
again on that level – it’s just brutal and you don’t make any money
anyway. You end up losing tons of money
to end up having friends become enemies.
My son had heard me playing some songs – I had been approached to become
a songwriter for other people and get into production – and he said, “You gotta
play those!” And I’m like, “Well, who’s
going to be the band?” He brought me in
to play with his friends, and they’re all 18 year old kids. It didn’t seem to make a lot of sense, but I
figured we’d give it a shot. I went down
there and they were all really incredible musicians, the thing hit right
away. I love playing with my son, and
the next thing I know we had a dozen songs together and I said we need to take
this thing on the road. That was a little over three years ago and the original
guys in the band, they kind of went into shock and couldn’t do it. So I had to go and find two new guys and they
were young kids too, friends of me and my son.
We did our first full US tour,
started in September 2010 and the rest is history as they say.
Has working with guys
your son’s age affected the way you write? Or is this simply the right guys for
your songs?
You always have to be adapting, not only year to year but
day to day, so that’s an interesting question.
At first, it was more that I would bring in the songs and tell them to
play them the way I wanted them to, but now the band is so incredible – I mean,
we just learned a brand new song yesterday – they take what I bring in and just
bring it to the next level. The drummer
is incredibly creative and I just let them go to town. The next thing I know,
they are coaching ME on when to come in singing and changing my phrasing. They are all naturally gifted musicians, and
sometimes I’m like “I’m not sure I want to sing it like that.” [laughs] But I defer to their knowledge of music. I
mean, if they wanted me to sing a disco song, I might have to draw the line
[laughs] but as long as it sticks to my intent, I am willing to let them take
the song where they think it needs to go and it’s been working out incredibly
well. They get excited coming up with
chord changes and accents, so I don’t want to take that experience away from
them. That is the essence of making
music and being in a band, creating a song and hearing it come to fruition from
the raw structure on the acoustic guitar.
Is that how you do
it, you just work it up on an acoustic?
Oh yeah, every song.
For example, I was working on that new song in my camper this
morning. The band will get the song in
one night, and then I have to go back and practice for three days because I am
just not a natural musician. What I have
is some kind of bizarre gift that enables me to have a song come through my
body and it’s a phenomenal thing. I come
up with some great shit that I have no idea where it comes from. Working on that new song today, suddenly I
found myself turning these three chords around and I am on to another song – it
gives me chills up and down my spine to do that! I’m 52 years old, and this phenomenon happens
to me on a regular basis. All my peers,
guys who are far superior to me musically – guys who I worship like Frank Black
and Paul Westerberg – most of my peers wrote their best stuff in their twenties
and have steadily gone downhill. I’m not
sure if they are just experiencing life differently or what, but they aren’t
able to draw from the same inspiration as they once did. Most artists do their best work when they are
younger, but in my case I really think that I am writing better every day. It just blows me away. I really, honestly think my best material is
still to come.
You can see a
difference even between the Continental stuff and the stuff you did with the Shadowblasters
– it’s leagues better and more mature.
The songs have a swagger and confidence
- you seem to be very confident in your writing right now.
Oh yeah, I am. I am
very lucky. We’re about to turn the
corner and have people start to recognize us…it’s beginning to happen for us
now. This is where I really have to be
careful, because we are actually starting to get popular. It’s a very slow process, acquiring fans. Now these songs that I write are actually
going to be heard by people. It’s fun,
though, to know that your songs are going to be heard.
So what’s the endgame
with the next release from Continental – do you have something in place
label-wise or are you shopping it?
We have a label in Europe and one here – these are small
labels, they don’t give you any money or anything. We pay for the recording and everything
ourselves – labels aren’t what they used to be and everybody’s poor in the
music business. I think we’re going to
do a couple of singles sometime soon and those singles will be the lead-in for
an album we are going to record right after we get back from Europe in
December. We’re kind of old school,
where bands would release a single or two and then you’d have to wait for the
album to come out. And it’s not even the
plan because we are copying the past – it’s for financial reasons. We can only afford to do singles right
now. We had to put up a lot of money to
go to Europe but we’re pretty sure we’re going to get most of that back and we
are going to invest all of that money into recording an album. That’s the way you have to do it – you have
to put every dime you make back into the music, even the stuff you make from
your day job. A lot of people are
afraid to do that, and I understand that fear because I am often reticent to
throw all my money into music but at the end of the day I do it every
time. I get down to the last hundred
bucks to eat for the week, but everything else goes to the music.
The flipside of the
coin, though, is that you own it and don’t have any other master telling you
how it needs to sound or what single needs to be released. You’re in control.
Yeah. That’s
definitely the good part.
Tell me a little bit
about FM359, the project you and Mike McColgan (Street Dogs, ex-Dropkick
Murphys) are working on.
I tried calling Mike and I was talking to Jonny (Rioux,
Street Dogs bassist) and I think it’s coming out sometime in November or
December and then we might do a one-off tour and see how it goes. There is really no definitive plan. I mean, I think the stuff doesn’t sound the
best, sonically, but the other guys are really into it.
I know that you
aren’t probably one to cash in on nostalgia, but I am sure that there are a
bunch of people who are interested in that because of the connections you guys
have from the Murphys days and from the Street Dogs. Do you think the connection is going to help
raise the profile of Continental?
I don’t think it will, actually. Nowadays, I don’t think people research and
do a back history on the bands they like.
It did happen and it was still happening through the 90’s, but I don’t
think people really care about that anymore.
They just want to know what’s happening right now. I can tell you, me being an ex-member of the
Dropkick Murphys has done almost NOTHING for Continental. We might get one or two fans a night who were
my old fans from the Dropkick days, but that’s it. They don’t come out. People don’t come out in general to see new
bands. They’re going to go to Warped
Tour and Riot Fest – anything that’s a big event. Or if some legendary band from England comes
over like Cocksparrer or someone, people are going to go to that but people
aren’t seeking out new music live. They
just click on it on the internet - click, dismiss, click, dismiss. They don’t have to put any work into finding
out about bands. They might just go to some live clip that sounds like crap and
go “They suck” and move on. It’s a hard
sell if you’re an underground, original, unknown band.
We’re playing a show in our hometown on Saturday and we have
this campaign blitz of giving away free CDs and shirts, I have been doing
personal invites on Facebook to practically every person I know, flooding
social media like crazy – and after three weeks of this campaign we are up to
about 60 tickets pre-sold, and the Middle East (the club) have said that that
is a PHENOMENAL number. The venue holds
190 people and we are probably going to end up putting 150 people in that
room. That’s our hometown and it’s
because of constant vigilance and working our asses off. Back in my day, in the early 80s, 150 people
would come out on Monday night to see two bands at Cantone’s or the Rat and
they wouldn’t even know who they were. That’s
just what people did. That’s where
people socialized and now people socialize from their bedroom. There’s a huge divide. The tour we were just on, after we left
Buffalo – Buffalo we had a good crowd, I think that there were about 70 people
there – after that we played SEVERAL rooms where there were only one or two
people and that was it. I’m not even exaggerating. I made my mind up, at least we can get people
out in Boston, but you would think with our networking we could fill a much
bigger room. And I have promoters who
caught wind of my promotion and they want us to do this same thing in Canada…I’m
like, “I’ll go completely broke giving away our merchandise”, but you know what
I’ll do it. The guy in Montreal, the
promoter, I told him “Free t-shirts and CDs”.
We’re not going to make any money that night, even if people come. But that’s the name of the game…I’m willing
to lose money to get people into the room to hear the music. I have no retirement account or
anything. I am a painter and work in the
trades, so I do this because it’s what’s in my soul. I am not and will never be a rich man, and I
had to pay a lot to get out from underneath the Murphys, so this is it.
Is that mercenary, “take
no prisoners” approach to getting people in the room what you attribute your
growth to? The album is great, but
seeing you play live is really what sold me on the band…
That’s the point. It doesn’t
matter what it takes, getting warm bodies in the room is the goal. I posted on Facebook recently that I would
rather make people happy than make money, so that’s it.
You’ve got the tour
coming up, the album after that – what’s your plan long term? You seem to be hitting a late stride
songwriting-wise…are you focusing on the band or do you plan to do more
production gigs and farm your songs out to other performers?
I’m putting all my eggs in one basket and really work this
Continental thing until I can go no longer.
If somebody asks me for a song, of course I will try to do that, but I don’t
want to work with musicians [laughs]
Have you thought about
working with some of the people who are your heroes – Frank Black,
Westerberg? Is that something that would
be a viable option for you in your golden years?
Those two guys, they’re a lot like me and they write on their
own, so I don’t really see that working [laughs]. Collaboration isn’t for me, it’s just
not. I do it with the Street Dogs and
Mike, but he doesn’t play an instrument so it’s different and I like bringing
stuff to him to see where he takes it. We
were going to cover a song of mine that we did with on the Street Dogs’ last
album (“Poor Poor Jimmy”) about the old Rat in Kenmore Square and the owner
there. But Mike just hits it out of the
ballpark, and we were trying to practice it last night and I’m like, “Dude, I
suck at my own song…we can’t do this!”
As for others, I would be in too much awe to work with those other guys
you mentioned, but I kinda like to be the lead guy. That’s just my ego or something.
Is that what brought
you back in front of the mike?
I got tired of having lead singers and having to deal with
that….I thought, I could probably do all this myself. It might not sound as good as I want it to,
but there is more sincerity when the guy who wrote the song is singing it. I’ve had other people sing my songs in the
past because I didn’t have confidence in my voice, but now I have learned to
sing and feel like I can do this.
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
INTERVIEW: Sam Phillips
Posessing a voice that is equal parts haunting and expressive and a songwriting acumen that encompasses the entirety of 20th-century song, Sam Phillips has carved out a comfortable niche for herself in the post-pop musical landscape. Upon the release of her stunning new collection, "Push Any Button", Sam spoke with me about the inspiration for the new record, her foray into visual artwork and her desire not to dwell on the past.
“Push Any Button”,
for lack of a better word, is a very “sweet” album – you sound like you are in
a very good place and it pulls melodically from classic pop and pre-rock
traditions. What inspired its creation? Were the sonic choices you made a reaction to
the Nonesuch records, which were a bit more spartan?
Push Any Button was inspired by my
online digital art and music project called Long Play that I did a few years
ago. I wrote and recorded a lot of material in a short amount of time so
the production was sparse and done on the fly. I wanted to take my time
writing and recording the songs for Push Any Button. My aim was to make each
song a record you would find on an old jukebox.. But with a modern twist.
It’s obvious from
both a songwriting and production standpoint that you put a lot of craft into
your work. What is your songwriting
process like? Has producing your own
work impacted the way you express yourself?
Song writing is still a mysterious
process for me. Anything can set it off-- a feeling, an old building,
wearing my husband's shirt, a melody in my head, a phrase. Someone asked
me where his daughter could take song writing lessons recently. While I
am sure there are people who try to teach it, I think it is something you have
to learn by doing... Really by listening.
You were an early
adopter of crowd sourcing, creating your own website for the funding and
release of "The Long Play" series. Can you talk a little bit about
how that experience was? What were some of the benefits and drawbacks to
that model for you?
I loved doing Long Play. The only
drawback was that it wasn't physical. At some point I hope to release a
physical copy of the art and music.
You have a history of working with Amy Sherman-Palladino on her TV series…how do you approach composing for someone else’s vision?
You have a history of working with Amy Sherman-Palladino on her TV series…how do you approach composing for someone else’s vision?
When I began making music for Gilmore
Girls, Amy asked if I would use my voice in the score. Because the show
had a lot of dialog, I couldn't use words, so I used melody to express the
emotion needed for each spot. It was different from songwriting in that
the pieces of music were tiny and the emotional mood/range was limited to the
specifics of the show.
Your collage work is
quite stunning and yet very playful– what creative itch does working in that
medium scratch? Whose work inspires your own?
I loved working with old album covers
and vintage images to make new record jackets for the vinyl edition of Push Any
Button. It connected the album to an appreciation for the old record business,
while commenting on the brokenness of it in a lighthearted, scrappy way. One of
my favorite artists is Chris Burden.
You’re coming up on
the 20th anniversary of “Martinis and Bikinis”, which was a critical
and commercial watershed for you (and, full disclosure, is one of my favorite
albums). How do you view that album now
with the comfort of distance? Is
nostalgia something that matters for you artistically?
Though there were some amazing
performances by the musicians on Martinis And Bikinis, I prefer the albums that
I did for Nonesuch and some of the more stripped down recordings I am making
now. I like to keep moving forward.
What are some of your
musical touchstones, those things that you heard and loved and go back to? Who continues to inspire you musically?
I love great melodies and I am
not a snob about it. It can be a chorus from a pop song, a classical
piece by Rodrigo, a standard from the 40's or a guitar line from a rockabilly
record.
What’s next on tap
for you?
In addition to writing songs and
scoring for film and TV, I am putting together more visual art and will be
doing more live shows next year.
Monday, October 21, 2013
INTERVIEW: Richard Barone (the Bongos)
(Photo by Mick Rock)
Venerable New Jersey songwriter and erstwhile leader of art-rockers the Bongos, Richard Barone writes fiercely independent and genuinely passionate songs about love and life. Barone reached out via email to discuss his recently reformed group, their just-released "lost album" and being the final act to take the stage at legendary NJ venue Maxwell's.
Your “lost” album
“Phantom Train” is just now coming out, and it’s a doozy! The album had a notoriously troubled
gestation. How did it come about that you finally were able to “finish” it?
There
was a perfect storm for its delay and a perfect storm for its release. At the
time of recording, coming off a 300-show tour and landing in the Bahamas to
record, the project was too big and unwieldy for us to deal with. There were
multiple takes of songs and endless mixes to sift through, and no pressing
label commitment to deliver it. We were back on the road before we knew it, and
soon after that we were all off on our own doing different things. So, the
album remained in storage boxes. After I mentioned it onstage at the “cool blue
halo” 25th anniversary concert last year and performed a song from
it, Marty Scott who was re-launching his JEM Records label this year contacted
me to ask about it, and everything fell into place. We spent the summer finally
listening to all the mixes and versions of the songs, and picked the ones that
comprise “Phantom Train”.
You recently got to
help Maxwell’s in NJ say farewell, closing out the storied venue with sets from
both “a” and the Bongos. It must have
been an honor to be the first and last band to play there. Can you tell me about that experience?
The closing night of
Maxwell’s unleashed a torrent of emotions for anyone who had ever been a part
of its closely knit community. The bands and bartenders, the DJs, the house
sound mixers, the waitstaff, the regulars and even the youngblood newcomers
stepping in for the very first—and last—time could each sense something
important was being lost. Something cool that we would all miss. It all began
quite innocently. We were just some guys in a band looking for a place in the
neighborhood where we could play. It was mutual love at first sight. We
performed there, we practiced there, we stored our gear there, we ate, drank
and had basically grew up there. Over time, musical styles and personal lives
evolved and changed, as did Maxwell’s, yet the venue remained a constant.
Through good and bad days as Hoboken lost its original innocence and “small
town” vibe, Maxwell’s persevered somehow, remaining a meeting place for music
lovers and perhaps the most well-known and least-known bands of our time.
Bounding that stage on July 31, 2013, first for a set by the specially reformed
“a” (the original first band to ever play at Maxwell’s, including all three
original Bongos) and a final closing set by the Bongos as ourselves, felt
poetic somehow. The entire day and night was a celebration of old friends and
new faces. Every bit of the original magic was there in that overcrowded little
room. Looking out into the crowd, the energy and sense of celebration was at a
sustained peak throughout the night. Especially for the final encore of Big
Star’s “Thank You Friends,” when we were joined onstage by members of Yo La
Tengo and the Feelies. For me personally, in some sadly joyful way, it was
Maxwell’s finest hour.
With the Bongos seemingly
reunited and the Feelies back together, the NJ scene of the late 70’s and early
80s seems to be having a bit of a resurgence!
Why do you think that music resonates so much now?
Originality
never dies.
I imagine your songs
are like children – it’s tough to choose one above the others. But let’s say
you are asked to make a “Sophie’s Choice”; is there one that you are particular
proud to have written or one that is particularly special to you?
Whichever
of my songs I am performing at the moment is my favorite one. “The Bulrushes”
might be a current favorite, as it has been covered several times this year
alone, most recently by Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs.
Can you describe your
songwriting process for me? What
inspires you to create?
Anything
can inspire me. Usually, though, it’s a person or a relationship issue that
starts the ball rolling. From there it takes all kinds of turns and
free-association. Like, how does my situation relate to other experiences and
how does it relate to the listener? And how can I tell this story in a way that
has never been told.
What are some of your
musical touchstones, those things that you heard and loved and go back to? Who inspires you musically?
That’s
easy. The Beatles, in particular Lennon. Marc Bolan and T. Rex. Donovan. The
production work of Tony Visconti. The music of Kraftwerk. The ambient music of
Brian Eno. The guitars of Robert Fripp, David Gilmour, Marc Bolan, Eddie
Cochran. The poetry of Edgar Allan Poe. The prose of Willliam Burroughs. The
plays of Tennessee Willliams. And the art of Andy Warhol. For starters.
What’s on tap for you
next? Are there plans to tour or promote
“Phantom Train”?
I’m
always on tour, primarily as a solo troubadour (see http://RichardBarone.com/Upcoming_Shows
for schedule and sign up for the geo-targeted newsletter) and I perform many
songs from “Phantom Train” in my shows. The Bongos just played this week at New
York’s CMJ Festival and will do some more shows as well. Just keep an ear to
the ground, and you just might hear The Bongos “Phantom Train” roar into your
town! I’m planning my next solo album as well, on which I plan to open
the door to special guests. I am one of the luckiest musicians I know, who is
fortunate to work with some of the greatest artists around, and I’m honored to
collaborate with so many who have inspired me.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
INTERVIEW: A Conversation with Doyle Von Frankenstein (DOYLE/Misfits)
(Photo by Tim Tronckoe)
Thanks for speaking
with me.
Hey brother, no problem.
Your new band Doyle is
made up of the final line-up of your previous group Gorgeous Frankenstein – what
made you decide to make this a new band?
Why change the name?
Yeah.
That was my singer’s call.
Alex, he’s a crazy fucker – the imagery he puts to the songs is just
insane. We were texting about the new
record and he just texted me and said “Let’s call it Doyle”. Are you sure?
“Yeah.” But you know, with
Gorgeous Frankenstein no one knew who we were. We did two tours and would go
out and play to 50 people and 49 of them would tell me they didn’t even know I
had a new band! So it made sense to just
use my name.
How did the songs for
“Abominator” come together? What’s your
songwriting process like?
Well, I write all the music myself – guitar, bass, drums,
and then I send it to Alex for words and vocal melodies. It’s all my own music – I’ve done this for
too fucking long to play other people’s shit, y’know [laughter] So, I would record demos of the guitar and
bass, and program the drums and then send transcriptions of stuff to Alex so he
has a sense of what to put lyrically to the music. He is an intense dude, and some of the shit
he comes up with is just the sickest, and that’s just who he is! He is the genius, I’m just a guy who plays
guitar. But you know what, it’s all
about the songwriting. I am a hack at
guitar, I know two chords, but I can write songs, y’know. That’s what gets people moving and
involved.
We weren’t even sure what to call the record and I was
driving and the title “Abominator” just came to me and I texted Alex to see
what he thought. He was excited about
it, so it became the last track we did and the title.
It’s an appropriate
title – the new stuff is fucking heavy!
Was that intentional?
No, I just write what comes out. I don’t have a tree in the backyard that I
pluck stuff from and say I need this type of song or that type of song. I just sit down with the guitar and these are
the ideas that were the most interesting were the ones we worked up. We actually had 38 songs to work on. We worked on more than half of them and then
picked the eleven we wanted for the record.
We have the 2nd album almost finished.
Really?
Yeah. When we tracked
we had six songs left over and figured, what the hell, so we went back in and
recorded a few more. I have three songs
left to put guitar on, but it should be out in a few months. The first record doesn’t even come out on
physical CD and double vinyl until the 29th (of October) but we’ve
been selling it at shows and it’s been available digitally for months.
And how is the album
doing?
It’s been great. You
know, it’s the first thing I ever downloaded.
I got an iPhone and my album was the first thing I purchased
[laughter] But it’s cool because the
physical release has an extra track and it’s a tri-fold digipak with a 16 or 18
page booklet with art and the lyrics.
That sounds
cool. You’ve been a special guest on the
Danzig Legacy and 25th anniversary tours playing the Misfits songs
that are over 30 years old. How has that
experience been?
It’s just like going to work, you take your tools and do
your job. I’ve spent my life playing
those songs, and I wasn’t in the band from the start but have played those
songs over and over. It’s fun, the crowd
loves it.
You’ve said in the
past that Glenn is like a mentor to you – what have you learned from him over
the years?
Well, he taught me how to play guitar and I learned
songwriting from him. I think I learned
that it’s important to fucking just do your own thing and write your own
shit. That’s important, you know. He’s very supportive and he always does what
he wants to do, and I’ve definitely taken that with me.
Who or what inspires
you musically?
Well, when I started it was Alice Cooper and Bowie, and then
punk came along and the Ramones, the Sex Pistols and the Damned were really
important to me. When the Misfits broke
up, I stopped playing music for a few years and one day my friend brought over
Van Halen and put that on, and I was fucking blown away. It was “Van Halen 1”, and the guitar playing
was fucking insane! But you know, the
songwriting was also good. And that’s
what I hope to inspire. You have some 16
year old kid sitting in his room, playing Eddie Van Halen or Yngwie Malmsteen
licks spot on, but who fucking cares? Do
something original. That was what punk
was all about.
Aping some guitar
solo might be technically impressive, but it lacks soul.
Yeah.
So what’s on tap for
you next? Do you have plans to tour
“Abominator”?
Yeah, we’re going to try to cover the world. Lots of touring. We have the second record coming out, now
quite sure when yet, and these last couple of dates with Danzig. It’s all good.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
INTERVIEW: Tim Midyett and Andy Cohen (Bottomless Pit)
(Photo by Mr. King)
The songs on “Shade
Perennial” feel more visceral than the last two records. It was notably engineered by noisenik and
last-honest-man-standing Steve Albini, whom you had worked with previously in
Silkworm. Was that an intentional
pairing? What did he bring to the
process and how did it impact the songs you had?
[Tim Midyett] Steve
has been the recording process for us for a long time. We work with Greg Norman sometimes. He works at Steve’s studio, Electrical
Audio. But otherwise it’s always Steve
working on stuff. He understands us and
we understand him. We want to capture
the overall sound, the overall feeling of the music, much more than we want to
be surgical about working on each of the parts of it individually. He’s the best in the world at getting on tape
what is going on in the room as we do what we do.
[Andy Cohen] Can’t
underestimate the benefits of recording at Steve’s Electrical Audio, which he
envisioned, designed and built. The
rooms sound great, the equipment works, and it’s a great environment.
On the earlier albums
and eps, there seemed to be a bigger distinction between your songs – Tim’s
were a bit more meditative, Andy’s a bit rowdier and blunt (for lack of better
terms) – but the lines have become increasingly blurred on this album. What is
your writing process like? Do you each
bring fully-formed songs in or is it more collaborative?
[TM] Andy and I do
write separately. Sometimes we’re
particular about how things turn out, and in those cases there’s a fair amount
of guidance as to what to play and all that.
But almost all the time, once the band has the song, we all work
together to get the essence of it across.
Not too much explaining or direction most of the time.
[AC] We did rehearse this set of songs for longer than those
on the last two records. Maybe the
longer band exposure did result in a more cohesive group.
Andy, your guitar
playing is both incendiary and cathartic – who are some of your influences?
[AC] Influence #1: bafflement that most people aren’t
more thoughtful and aggressive in their guitar playing. Influences #2: Sonny Sharrock, Jimi
Hendrix, Joel Phelps, Robert Fripp.
Tim, your move to
baritone guitar with Bottomless Pit creates a wider palate than the “power
trio” attack of Silkworm – how did that come about?
[TM] Well, I started playing baritone guitar while I was
still playing bass, in about 1997, when Silkworm still existed. So I’ve been doing it a long time. I didn’t do it exclusively in Silkworm
because some songs demanded deeper low end impact or a certain sparse quality
or both.
In Bottomless Pit, I wanted to have a bass player so I could
play baritone all the time. I love playing
bass, but I wanted to have an entire spectrum of sound open to us, and the
instrumentation of bass, baritone, and regular guitar affords a kind of
chamber-music range that is flexible and useful to us.
You’ve been
intentional in making sure that the Bottomless Pit albums are released on vinyl
in addition to digital formats and it seems that the music benefits from the
increased sonic space that vinyl allows.
Is that a fair assessment? How
has the response been?
[TM] I’ve always been
a vinyl person, since I started buying records.
I never got rid of my LPs, and I never got into buying CDs, because I
never felt like CDs were a permanent format.
I think time has borne out that approach. They’re barely even in existence for independent
bands nowadays, and I think that’s great.
The packaging of CDs isn’t exciting, the actual item isn’t exciting, and
I think records sound better if you’ve got a decent turntable.
I put out the first three BP records on my own. I just did the exact way I wanted to do it,
and that meant vinyl, of course. People
have bought enough of them, but really we make the records for ourselves, so
the reception isn’t all that important.
Sounds dickish, but it’s true!
[AC] Vinyl sounds better and is more fun to play. In addition, it is turning out to be the only
format from the last 50 years with any staying-power. CDs have compromised sound quality,
questionable physical longevity, and appear to be on the way out of the market. Who knows what will become of the various
other digital formats that have become prominent over the last 10 years.
Seth Pomeroy’s Silkworm
documentary “Couldn’t You Wait” was finally released this year and it was quite
an emotional yet celebratory ride– it certainly served as a fitting tribute to
Michael and his musical life. Did it
allow you any measure of closure on the Silkworm experience?
[TM]
Closure, no. I don’t believe in it. I don’t want that. Silkworm was a huge part of my life and is
still a gigantic part of who I am. I
think about Michael several times a day every day. I don’t want to wrap any of it up as history
for myself personally.
I
love that Seth did that for everyone else.
He made that story available to people, and I cherish having those
memories consecrated and preserved. But none
of those stories will never be closed for me.
Not the band, not the way it ended, not Michael’s death. The good parts stay alive, and the horrible
parts stay open.
[AC] I don’t have any idea what people mean when they talk
about “closure” on an experience, unless it’s some business deal or something
with an explicit closing date. The
Silkworm movie is great, and, like Tim, I’m glad there is a warts-and-all
tribute that explains a lot of what I think was important about Silkworm.
You’ve given yourself
a second life as a band with Bottomless Pit…what keeps you making art after
almost 30 years?
[TM] Compulsion. Very simple. It’s a process of
chasing a rush, one that morphs a little bit every time you go to revisit it.
[AC]
Playing this music is one of the only transcendent experiences I know of. It is like magic, here in the regular
World. I mean that at the right time,
with the right sound, I/we can transcend our usual perceptions, and it seems
like a magical experience.
What’s on tap next
for the band?
[TM] We have a few
shows in the Midwestern U.S. this fall.
We’ll be on the west coast of the U.S. in late February and early March,
maybe Texas in April, then ideally the east coast in May. Beyond that, it’s anyone’s guess!
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
INTERVIEW: A Conversation with Dave Pirner (Soul Asylum)
(Photo By Michael L Smith)
Hey, Dave!
Thanks for taking the time to talk with me.
No problem.
I was just listening
to No Fun Intended and it sounds like you guys were having a blast recording
that. What was the impetus behind putting out a covers ep?
Well, I think that me and Michael Bland, the drummer, sort
of had a challenge and felt like, let me have a go at some of that music you
grew up listening to, kind of thing. And I really, really, really encourage him
to do that. I really welcome it. So, he has a tendency to sort of want to
explore things like that in a way that he’ll go back into the Soul Asylum
catalog and find some old obscure punk rock song I wrote and go “Let’s do that
one”. And I’m like “Great!”, because when he plays it, it sounds better than
it’s ever sounded.
So, to that effect, you know, there tries to be something
somewhat significant about the songs that we picked. You know, and on this
particular, I don’t even know what we’re calling that, installment? [laughter],
The Suicide Commandos are just a band that were the local Ramones and the
guitar player showed me my first guitar chords. And I just loved them. I just-,
I think that was probably the first time I realized that, you know, music
didn’t come out of some mysterious place that was a radio. That there were
actually local people in town making rock music and, the other one is by the
MC5. I had to really come to the MC5 by way of the Ramones or whatever and once
I figured out who they were, they just became a very, very important group to
me. And the funniest thing about Love Will Tear Us Apart, is people go, “Oh I’m
surprised you would cover that song” because they seem to think that-, I don’t
know, it’s weird. Like, because I wasn’t a goth kid, I wouldn’t be liking music
like that or something. And you know, it was always playing in the club next
door when we were playing in the little Bunker place. I always just thought it
was a great song and it’s also kind of a thing where they put out a remix, I
don’t know, ten years ago, and I was like “Oh cool maybe this remix is going to
be the version that I like better than the original version” cause I always
thought it could be a little bit better. I don’t know why. And the remix was
way worse. So, it was little bit of a, you know, I want to get this one right
to it sometimes. And you know, I think it’s just a great song.
What was really cool
to see you pick something off the second MC5 record, because I think that one
tends to get glossed over because people are talking about Kick Out The Jams. I
mean, Back In The USA was just such a phenomenal record.
And it’s a Fred Smith song, I’m pretty sure, which also
makes it unusual-, my god yeah, what a fucking weird record! And I met John
Landau and I asked him about it. And it’s weird because parts of it just don’t
sound as good as they could. And then you kind of have to have Kick Out The
Jams to sort of hear them at their full power or something. It almost seems
like maybe they were frustrated with the recording process because their power
couldn’t be captured, or something. But yeah, there’s really interesting things
on High Time. I really liked The Human Being Lawnmower, I’d love to cover that
one someday.
Well, is this the
first in a series of EPs that you guys are doing, are they all going to be
covers?
Yeah, I think our kind of half-assed strategy is to like do
three installments of three songs, put them on the Internet. We have like, I
don’t know, we recorded like ten songs.
Cool. Now I know
Michael is someone who you’ve been playing with a while. But you got a couple
new guys in the band. What can you tell me about them? They seem to have
brought some new energy to the project.
Oh my god, I mean, absolutely. It’s hard to-, I mean, I
don’t really feel like I have to rationalize it or anything like that, but when
we were making Grave Dancers Union and we replaced the drummer, Sterling
Campbell sort of opened my eyes. It was like I was living in a cave. And I just
didn’t really-, I mean I never really thought about, you know, the caliber of a
player as far as rock music goes, cause you know, I didn’t necessarily think I
was that good, and I was coming from that punk rock aesthetic it was kind of,
you know, sounding like shit was part of the deal or something. So then I guess
before that we had made a record with Steve Jordan, who is Keith Richards’
drummer and, just again, this amazing musician that just makes magic. And he
tried to get our drummer to play better and he did it. And he really nurtured
it, but by the next record, it just wasn’t happening.
So, you know, then Karl died. Karl was just my anchor, he
was an emotional anchor for me. Not necessarily somebody that had a lot to do
with creating the music, but somebody who was a moral barometer of the band,
that was always in a good mood, unflappable. He just was very, very positive
and very much somebody that didn’t get fazed by adversity, such an asset to the
organization in that sort of way. Now I’ve got a gentleman by the name of
Winston Roy. And Winston is like Sterling, or Steve Jordan, in the way that he’s
a world class great bass player, which is pretty far away from the Sid Vicious
rule of playing bass. He loves all kinds of music, but he’s just a phenomenal
musician and he’s a great singer. And Justin Sharbono is just ridiculous, I
mean, he’s so fresh in a way that he’s… I don’t know how much younger he is
than me, but [laughter] young enough that he didn’t crawl out from the same
rock. So he’s got this whole angle, where he was a huge fan of the band and he
just couldn’t wait to get his hands on the material and do his thing. And you
know, it’s just so unbelievable how much sort of fun it is to be in a band
again because it’s kind of reborn, you know.
Yeah, definitely. I
watched a couple of videos of you guys from this tour this past summer, and
everyone just seems to be on fire. It didn’t seem like a couple of guys in the
band had been there only a year.
Yeah, they’re
getting more jaded. [laughter]
Grave Dancers Union celebrated
its 20th anniversary is this summer, and you played that front to
back on tour. How was that experience revisiting something that far down the
line?
Well, I was initially against it. I was like I already
toured that record, I don’t want to get nostalgic. That’s the worst thing ever.
You can’t get sentimental and nostalgic in rock music. It’s a bad way to be.
And so, I kind of got voted down. [laughter] And they really wanted to do it
and I felt, well that’s kind of cool that they’re excited about it, so I’ll
give it a try. And it ended up being really an interesting experience for me,
you know. You just don’t play a record from beginning to end, and I didn’t know
how that was going to feel. And we spent, oh my god, I don’t know how many
months recording that record and trying to get it right. And once we did, here
I have a situation where some of it sounds better than it’s ever sounded. And
you know, it was-, there was moments where, you know, my memories of what was
happening when I was writing that record were kind of just weird - I was
feeling my “Grave Dancers Union self” [laughter] in a way that was not happy
and not sad and not disturbing, but very emotional, I guess. And you know, it
turned out to be a really interesting experience and I really didn’t see that
coming, so it was fun. And it was fun to tour with the Wailers – I mean, it’s
kinda weird the Wailers without Bob Marley, but they were just great.
That was a strange
little bill, the way that was built with four bands playing albums
back-to-back. I could see that being kind of an odd concert dynamic.
The
Wailers cheated too, cause they played Legend, a greatest hits record.
[laughter] Oh, okay.
So what inspires your writing these days? Obviously, you know, this is almost
30 years after starting out.
I guess the same thing it’s always inspired it. I think I
have a tendency to, I don’t know what the hell I’m doing, you know, and that’s
where I try to keep it. I think if I approached it like there was some sort of
a formula to it, it would really be terrible. If I even had an iota that I
think I know what I’m doing, I think it would completely detract from the
process of just trying to be open to whatever pops up in my head. I live in New
Orleans. I’ve been there for 14 years and to me it’s the music mecca of the
world. So, living in that environment has definitely been different than
growing up in Minneapolis. I mean, it’s just a whole shift in paradigm as far
as what the music is like that you’re around. And it’s a damn good one.
I did find myself going I’m sick and tired of
singer-songwriters bitching and moaning about everything. I want to move to New
Orleans, listen to instrumental music…I love the Meters, and I love hearing
people express themselves through horns. If you ain’t Bob Dylan, I’m tired of
what your words are about. And I guess that is sort of probably been the
biggest musical influence on me in a way - not that I try to emulate the music
of New Orleans or co-opt it or something cause it’s just not the way it is.
[laughter] So, I guess I try to learn from it and one of the things that I
learned was that I was a punk rock kid who expressed a lot of anger, and a lot
of angst, and nihilism, and all that kind of stuff. And you know, there I was
in New Orleans watching these amazing musicians and they were all smiling while
they were playing. And it was joyful noise. I got into the gospel music down
there, and you know, it just sort of made me think about my life, and how
different it can be for different people, and how music is there for all of us,
I guess.
Sure. I would think
the spirit of New Orleans itself, and that “joyful noise” kind of gives you the
permission to free up and explore a little bit more sonically or even to write
about different things than you would coming out of Minneapolis.
Yeah, I mean, there’s very little “I spent six months in a
basement during a freezing winter” kind of music in New Orleans. [laughter]
Yeah, I can imagine!
[laughter] But did you think 30 years on you’d still be able to do it as a
full-time musician? I mean, it’s kind of got to be kind of humbling to be able
to pursue your dream that way.
Yeah, I tell you, it is. It’s extremely humbling. I don’t
know how else to say it, but it makes me go, you know what I’m glad I didn’t
kill myself, and I’m glad I didn’t break up the band, and I’m glad that these
people still come out, and I’m glad I can still do it. And you know, and it’s
very humbling and that makes it that much more special, you know?
So, do you have plans
ever to do another solo album? Or is Soul Asylum where you’re hanging your hat
these days?
Not really, I mean it was of course a great experience, and
of course I learned a ton, and of course it’s affected the way that I approach
making records. But in a strange way, I wanted to know what it would be like to
make a record if I could hand pick the musicians. And now that is sort of what
Soul Asylum is, if that makes any sense. I couldn’t find a better group than
these guys, you know.
Delayed Reaction is
probably one of your strongest records. I was floored when I listened to it, because
I’d kind of fallen off the wagon a little bit with the band for a few years. To
be able to have the people you want playing the music that you want at the
level that they can, has got to be inspiring.
Well, it makes the whole process so much more effortless.
And it makes the studio fun instead of arduous. And I mean the funniest thing
about these guys, I don’t know why I tell this story, but we’ll all be in a van
for an extended period of time and everything that comes on the radio, they’ll
just deconstruct it. Even if it’s a Journey song, they’ll be sitting there
going “oh yeah this is Aynsley Dunbar on the drums and they’re getting really
interesting F sharp minor there, and blah, blah, blah” [laughter] They know so
much about music it’s hilarious and they grew up on the same stuff, you know.
Michael Bland grew up listening to the same classic rock station in Minneapolis
that I did, so, that part of it is comical cause you know, it’s not rocket
surgery [laughter]
Part of what being
someone who loves music is, is you pick apart all that crap and the minutia and
this drum set, this producer, so I get that. [laughter] So what’s next for you
and the band? I know you’re out on tour right now with Fountains of Wayne and
Evan Dando. What’s up after that?
Well, we end the tour in Minneapolis and I’m trying to get
Winston to stick around in Minneapolis, as much as I want to get back to New
Orleans, because we record in Minneapolis. So, we’re working on a new record
and it’s being made in a very modern way. And I just produced a record that was
made in a very modern way and the record that I produced was pretty much a
full-time job. Whenever I wasn’t on the road, I was doing that. I’ve got ProTools
skills so, I really had an interesting musical experiment with getting all
these just awesome second line rhythms and poly-rhythms and syncopations going
with the computer and being able to manipulate them just a little bit so that
it’s just really tight, you know.
We got at least a dozen songs tracked, and we’re sort of
working on them when we’re not on the road. And we’re trying to do silly things
like send each other’s files through the Inter-web and all that ridiculousness.
But you know, it’s most fun when we’re all together in a room. Me, Michael, and John Fields have a great
methodology - John can play bass and produce and engineer and we’re all
producers so between the three of us we can track my songs just incredibly
efficiently. We’re kind of trying to stop doing that so we can get Justin and
Winston in from the get go. But, Michael’s talking to John on the phone last
night and I said tell that motherfucker to book his ticket down to New Orleans
cause I’m the hottest producer down there and he’s got to come down there and
prove himself. [laughter] And he gave me a hard time, he said you know, hottest
producer in the seventh ward, and I was like yeah, well, but you know. So he’s
got to come down to New Orleans for the time. And I built a little studio in my
backyard where I made the record I’m producing. Hopefully we can get a record
out that has a place to put it. [laughter] I mean we made vinyl on Delayed
Reaction and they’re so goddamn cool but man I had to beg for it, you know.
[laughter]
Are you guys still with 429 Records or are
you going to shop this?
We’re gonna
shop it.
Okay. How was the
experience of releasing the EP digitally? Was that an economic decision, or was
it more a matter of you shoot stuff out over the Inter-webs and it’s just there
for people to find?
Well, you know, it’s weird because when I think about it, it
wasn’t even like a conscious effort. It was walking into the studio, and
Michael and John sort of jokingly going, “so what do you feel like doing?” At
one point I was in Minneapolis and it was Christmas time and my family was
driving me crazy and I jumped out of that situation and jumped into the studio
and they were like what do you want to do? And I was like, “TV Eye”, I just
felt like doing an Iggy Pop song. And I just screamed this scream that
[laughter] I think scared the hell out of John and Michael. But, it was just
little things like that, like “Oh, I feel like playing a Dead Kennedys’ song
today”. And then Mike would go, “I would love that.” Like really? And he’s
like, “Yeah, I got a Mohawk”. [laughter]
So, it was just really supposed to fun and funny and
spontaneous. We’ve always approached covers but we sort of used to sort of make
fun of the covers that we were playing, you know. We’d joke our way through
Chevy Van or Rhinestone Cowboy or whatever it was. So, this was a little
different than that as far as we hit on more music that is relevant to me. It
just kind of fell together and I certainly never had any intention that we were
going to put it out, but I guess that’s what the Internet is, you know, trying
to understand why. I try to understand, is it a bad thing that kids don’t
really get the idea of what an LP is anymore? I don’t know.
Yeah, I have pretty
strong feelings about that. That’s one of those things that I think is lost.
But you’re right, does it really matter if they’re going by the design of an
album and they’re following that journey or they’re making their own because
they shuffle the ten songs they want so they can add them to their playlist?
Yeah. It’s just a silly way to see what the Internet does
and see what people react to when they react to Joy Division. And we put out a song
on the internet a few years back, it was Let’s All Kill Each Other, and you
know the thing that was interesting about that is we went played in Peru and everyone
was “let’s all go kill each other!!!”, and it was like holy shit, that was
weird. You know?
[laughter] They knew
it! The Internet allowed them to experience that in a way that trying to find a
piece of vinyl or the CD in a Peruvian…I’m not even sure what kind of store
would carry that!
We could talk about analog vs. digital for ten hours too, I’m sure.
[laughter] I’m sure.
Well, Dave, thanks so much man. I appreciate you taking time out to speak with
me. And I’m really looking forward to seeing you guys in Buffalo on the 14th.
Right on, my
man. Alright. Well, I’ll see you there.
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