Wednesday, June 18, 2014

One Year Later

Today marks the first anniversary of this website. Thanks to everyone who has supported it by reading my work over the last 12 months. Extra thanks to the many news sites that brought www.JoelGausten.com to the global masses. And of course, thanks to the many artists, publicists and industry folks - and my wife Shannon, who had the original idea for the site - for their invaluable assistance along the way. Here are the Top 10 posts on the site from the first year, based on the number of hits received:

  1. Hated In New Hampshire (July 14, 2013)
  2. The Best of 2013 (December 29, 2013)  
The best is yet to come!

- Joel Gausten
June 18, 2014 


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Sunday, June 1, 2014

How to Make ANOTHER Monster: The Son of Electric Frankenstein!





All great bands understand the value of making a visual statement to go along with their music. For New Jersey Punk Rock & Roll” veterans Electric Frankenstein (EF), this has meant nearly 25 years of awesome low-brow poster and album cover art. In 2004, guitarist Sal Canzonieri compiled Electric Frankenstein-related imagery from nearly 200 artists around the world for Electric Frankenstein! High-Energy Rock & Roll Poster Art, a stunning 160-page collection published by Dark Horse Books. Showcasing some of the greatest horror-themed art ever committed to print (including work by big leaguers like Coop, Frank Kozik and Mad Marc Rude), the book introduced the band to a greater audience and even found its way into the archives at the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame & Museum. Now, Canzonieri has assembled a second volume of band-related art for Son of Electric Frankenstein! More High-Energy Punk Rock & Roll Poster & Record Cover Art (BGT ENT), a collection of images from June 2003 to December 2013.

If you loved the first EF book, or are simply a fan of this art genre, Son of Electric Frankenstein is a can't-miss addition to your library. My personal favorites in the collection include Mike Hoffman's cover for the 2009 Electric Frankenstein comic book, the great Basil Gogos' cover for the 2005 EF album Burn Bright, Burn Fast! and Stainboy's extraordinary Frankensteinized take on Funkadelic's Maggot Brain:


Prints of this art are available for purchase at http://www.stainboyreinel.com/www/EF2.html


Of course, I'm also thrilled to see that Son Of Electric Frankenstein includes a variety of eye candy from the 2008 Canadian tour that EF did with me behind the drum kit – including the great Kustom Kulture carnage of Johnny Ace and Kali Verra:





Son of Electric Frankenstein also devotes space to artwork created for The Kung Fu Killers (KFK), a “secret” supergroup that may or may not have included past/present members of EF, Pigface, Christian Death and Shadow Project and may or may not have had yours truly on drums for a spell. To my eyes, Brett Parson's work below is the hands-down highlight of the featured KFK material:







On a personal note, I commend Sal for putting together yet another amazing project under the “Electric Frankenstein” banner. Even in his 50s, he still approaches every song, every show and every piece of art with inspiring energy and enthusiasm. I consider him – along with other hardworking people like Jerry Only and Martin Atkins – one of the true creative role models I've had to pleasure of watching up close and personal over the years. I want to be just like him when I grow up!


Order Son of Electric Frankenstein (and view more samples from the book)

Electric Frankenstein Facebook

Official Electric Frankenstein Website


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Monday, May 26, 2014

REVIEW - Arch Enemy: War Eternal (Century Media)




Major lineup changes are rarely accepted in the world of Hard Rock/Metal. It's been 10 years since Peter Criss last performed with KISS, but more than a few hardcore fans remain unwilling to accept Eric Singer – a guy who has actually held the drummer role longer than Criss and the late Eric Carr – in the Catman position. Although the “original” lineup of Black Sabbath continues to sell out venues around the world, there are several longtime supporters who simply can't stomach the idea of Tommy Clufetos keeping the beat. Of course, this reluctance to embrace a new member often stems from inner-band turmoil that spills into the press, leading many fans to feel the need to choose sides and loyally defend their chosen member(s). On the other end of the spectrum, Metal veterans Arch Enemy handled the departure of much beloved singer Angela Gossow and the arrival of former Agonist vocalist Alissa White-Gluz in an utterly refreshing way. For example, Gossow has offered public support of White-Gluz, while the cover of the June 2014 issue of Terrorizer  shows her literally passing the torch to her replacement. Naturally, such actions make it kind of tough for Arch Enemy fans to get into Internet battles over which singer is more deserving of the job or debate over band politics. Unlike countless bands that fall victim to mudslinging (their own as much as their fans'), Arch Enemy addressed this situation with class and grace and set an example of how other bands could treat similar matters in the future.

And with that, let's dive into Arch Enemy’s 10th and arguably best album.

Demonstrating Arch Enemy's typical ability to balance aggression and melody, the extremely well-produced War Eternal showcases an absolutely bulletproof band. Any doubts over White-Gluz's ability to deliver vocals worthy of the name Arch Enemy are instantly blown away by her intense growls on “Never Forgive, Never Forget,” a blastbeast-heavy stunner that offers some downright extraordinary musicianship at the 2:16 mark.

Beyond White-Gluz's impressive presence, War Eternal boasts plenty of stellar guitar playing (especially at the 2:19 mark in “On And On,” during the first half-minute of “No More Regrets” and basically in all 323 seconds of “Time Is Black”). Three cheers to founding member Michael Amott and new six-stringer Nick Cordle for delivering performances that offer plenty of dramatics without once hinting at pretentiousness. Best of all, the songs on War Eternal (especially the hook-heavy “As The Pages Burn” and the epic “You Will Know My Name”) instantly get in your head and stay there for days.

And Daniel Erlandsson is an absolute monster behind the drums, as always.

Nearly 20 years after their formation, Arch Enemy have once again raised the bar for groups creating melodic, song-oriented Metal that still retains plenty of power. There's not a single note on War Eternal that doesn't shine. This is easily a contender for the Metal album of the year.




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Monday, May 19, 2014

On Demons and Birthdays: An Evening with Bill Ward


Click here for my exclusive report for BraveWords.com on Bill Ward's private VIP reception in Annapolis, MD on May 10!


Photo by Cory Danziger

Friday, May 9, 2014

The Jesus Lizard: BLOG



The frequently unclothed frontman. The use of four-letter words for the titles of their releases. The extraordinary rhythm section. The jaw-droppingly talented six-stringer. From 1989 to 1999, there was no band on the planet that acted, sounded or performed like The Jesus Lizard.

For one explosive decade, singer David Yow, guitarist Duane Denison, bassist David Wm. Sims and drummer Mac McNeilly (later replaced by Jim Kimball and Brendan Murphy, respectively) produced some of the most challenging and invigorating sounds ever committed to disc. Now, The Jesus Lizard’s storied career has been given the coffee table book treatment in the form of (you guessed it) BOOK.

Published by the Brooklyn-based Akashic Books, BOOK charts the Chicago band’s intense history: From their beginnings as a drum machine-fueled recording project to their rise in the American underground scene to the band’s highly controversial (yet financially beneficial) jump from indie label Touch and Go to Capitol to their eventual breakup in 1999 (and reunion 10 years later), it’s all there. With a slew of photos illustrating the tale, the band – as well as multitude of friends, supporters and fellow musicians – offer insight into the band’s caustic life and legacy. Even if you’re unfamiliar or disinterested with the band’s music, BOOK makes for an intriguing exploration of the alternative music scene of the 90s – a short burst in time when a band as gloriously odd as The Jesus Lizard could do whatever they wanted to do and get a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

According to Yow, BOOK was kickstarted by Akashic founder (and Girls Against Boys member) Johnny Temple, who pitched the idea to the band – and initially received a lukewarm response for his trouble.

“I don’t remember how excited everybody was at first,” admits the singer. “I remember thinking it wasn’t such a great idea because the band had broken up 10 years before that; I just figured nobody would care. We talked more and more about it, and talked about how complete it could be. I said, ‘Yeah, let’s do it,’ but I insisted that I design it. I pretty much laid out all the artwork that we ever did for the most part. Whenever it was handed off to somebody else for some reason or another, I didn’t like it. It was really important to me that I be happy with the way this book looked.”

Yow went on to spend close to two years working on BOOK, resizing and color-correcting photos and designing the main look of the project. Eventually overwhelmed, he handed the project off to Chunklet publisher Henry H. Owlings, who helped put things together in InDesign. All told, BOOK took about three years to complete. The finished product greatly impressed the band’s original drummer.

“Something like [this book] can be presented in so many different ways, and the thing that I’m most happy about is that I don’t think it comes off as some sort of self-important indulgence by the band; that’s not what it was intended as,” McNeilly says. “When we were approached [with] the idea, we sort of went, ‘Who’s going to buy this? Why would anyone care about this band now?’ We were so close to it that I think all of us failed to see what kind of impact the band might have had. To me, seeing all the things in the book together in one place sort of brought that home a bit. I was able to acknowledge that, yeah, we must have made some sort of impact if all these other musicians were speaking so highly of us. Of course, we knew that while we were doing [the book], but I think we had such a keep your head down and work your ass off mentality when we were doing it that we just didn’t have much of a perspective because we were just so in the middle of the whole thing.”

Prior to The Jesus Lizard, Yow and Sims were members of Scratch Acid, a Texas – based band that offered one full-length and two EPs before burning out in 1987. For Yow, the differences between The Jesus Lizard and Scratch Acid were considerable.

“Being in any kind of band or collaborative, creative thing like that is very much like a relationship,” he says. “There’s so much compromise involved…I think to a degree, the four of us in The Jesus Lizard sort of meshed better, and I think maybe our chemistry was better than in Scratch Acid, or more conducive to being more prolific. Scratch Acid took forever to write a song; in The Jesus Lizard, we were able to work a little quicker.”

Following a brief stint in the band Rapeman with Big Black’s Steve Albini and Scratch Acid’s Rey Washam, Sims joined up with Yow and, along with former Cargo Cult member Denison, recorded and released the debut Jesus Lizard EP, Pure, in 1989. With McNeilly soon joining on drums, The Jesus Lizard made their live debut on July 1 of that year at a Thai restaurant in Chicago called Bangkok Bangkok. The band followed up this world premiere two days later with a show on the roof of then-Ministry/Killing Joke drummer Martin Atkins’ apartment in Rogers Park. Yow has colorful – if somewhat hazy – memories of the night. 

I think the place [Martin] lived in was a 14 or 15-story building, he says. “I think they just had a couple of clip-on lights, and there was a fucking full-on swarm of bugs and moths and stuff. If you opened your mouth, you’d have three bugs in there instantly. I had to sing that way, and was spitting bugs out like crazy. After we were done playing, I had a few drinks…I used to entertain myself by putting myself in sort of dangerous positions. I hung off the side of the building by one finger while I was talking to my buddy Britt, who played drums in Slint…Right after I climbed back on, [our friend] Shannon [Smith] said, ‘What’s going on?!’ Britt, in his slow Louisvillian speak, just goes, ‘Maaan…I’m not gonna saaay.’ And I think [Atkins’ then-wife] Leila made some some really good Indian food; I don’t remember.”


Photo by Pat Graham  

Reading the extensive performance chronology that closes BOOK is a fascinating -  and at times bittersweet - experience. Most of the bands and clubs listed are no longer with us. One such venue, the sorely missed Maxwell’s in Hoboken, NJ, hosted its fair share of Jesus Lizard performances over the years.

“I always really liked Maxwell’s; I loved the smell of the coffee outside,” Yow says. “I think the first time I ever went there was with Scratch Acid. I remember we got into New Jersey really, really early in the morning and had nowhere to go. We went to some restaurant and had these really great egg, potato, bacon and cheese sandwiches. I always had a great time there; they always treated us right. I always liked the food, and the people who worked there were great. We had some really fun shows there. The first time we played with Nirvana was at Maxwell’s. Great place.”

Yow is also particularly fond of the Kennel Club in San Francisco, where the band once played for more than two hours – and took on Led Zeppelin in the process.

“[The audience] wouldn’t let us go,” he recalls. “We finished our set, and they wouldn’t shut the fuck up. So we did encore after encore; I think we played everything we knew how to play. I was just being silly, and I said, ‘We don’t know anything else, so we’re going to play ‘Dazed And Confused.’ I was just kidding, and all of a sudden David Sims goes boomboom – boom – boom – boom. I don’t think we did the whole song, but we did a good chunk [of it]. I got a huge kick out of that.”

When asked to name some bands that really impressed them on the road, Yow and McNeilly were both quick to praise the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and Six Finger Satellite. Yow added Kepone and Pegboy, while McNeilly threw in Sonic Youth and The Melvins. They both also expressed a love of Helmet. 

“It was a blast to watch the audiences listening to Helmet,” Yow says. “There would just be a big horde of people moving as one. It was a sea of heads all moving up and down at the same time. It was kind of remarkable.”

“Those guys were wound very tight,” adds McNeilly. “[They had] these cascading riffs that would come at you, and it was fun to see them do that night after night.”

Of course, no Jesus Lizard live show was complete without Yow’s insane, anything-goes stage antics. A testicular tempest of exposed flesh and ungodly moans and growls, Yow stripped and snarled his way across the planet, impressing adventurous music fans while scaring the hell out of everybody else. According to McNeilly, there was a trick to successfully playing behind such a madman.

“We used to get to a soundcheck and look over at the monitor guy or the guy at the front of house and say, ‘We don’t want any vocals.’ They’d say, ‘None?’ And we’d be like, ‘Yeah, none!’ (laughs) David was so unpredictable; you couldn’t cue off of him. Duane, David Sims and myself would prefer to be going along; we knew exactly where we were going to be musically speaking…We were very content to play the songs with the precision we felt they needed to be played. So none on us were listening to David on the stage. He could do pretty much whatever he wanted to and it wasn’t going to jar you out of where you were at in your musical headspace. It was almost like we were playing instrumental music every night. [We] could hear David, but it was very much in the background.”

With Yow’s scrotum often in the spotlight, it was sometimes tempting to overlook the band’s fierce musicianship. But from the incomparable interplay of the guitarists to the athleticism of McNeilly’s drumming, The Jesus Lizard were an incredibly well-oiled machine.

“What went on musically between [David Sims, Duane and I]  just came about very organically and naturally,” McNeilly recalls. “I don’t think there was any time where we ever said anything like, ‘Well, let’s try for a sound like this’ or ‘Let’s deliberately make it this way or that way.’ In fact, I think one of the greatest things about playing with those guys was that it was so easy to just let go and trust that the other person was going to come up with his part that was just what was needed for the song. I do think there was a conscious effort to try to keep the songs pretty stripped down so there wasn’t a lot of fat. We wanted it to be as hard-hitting as it would naturally be without forcing it. A lot of times, that’s why the arrangements and even the lengths of some of the songs were fairly short…This wasn’t something we talked about a lot; it was kinda of something we felt. It was a real luxury to be able to play with guys like that, where we all really just knew that the other guy was going to do what he needed to do.”

With the exception of 1994’s controversial Down (more on that in a bit), all of the band’s albums get a song-by-song overview (complete with some often-brutal critiques) in BOOK courtesy of Sims. In the bassist’s mind, the 1996 major label debut Shot was “the best album [he has] ever played on,” while a few songs (like “Perk” from 1992’s Liar and “Needles For Teeth” off 1997’s Blue) were pretty much stinkers. How close to the mark are Sims’ comments when compared to McNeilly’s views of the band’s past?

“I don’t know that I would agree with David on every point that he made,” he replies. “If you were at ask all four of us for our opinions along the same lines of basically dissecting an album down and sort of analyzing each song under the microscope, I think you get a lot of similarities with our general opinions, but then you’ll find some differences as well. I think that’s fine for David to have gone through [each album] like that, and I think of it as a really kind of unique window into how he sees things. I’m sure he doesn’t even think he’s speaking for the whole band; he was just giving his perspective. I do agree, though, that some songs – especially in hindsight once you get some space from it – didn’t work as well as others did. But we didn’t really have a whole lot of time to sit around and think about it. We were so busy as a band when we recorded those records. We were on the road most of the time; whenever we did record a record, it was usually purposefully scheduled right as soon as we’d come back off the road so that there wasn’t much downtime and we were very used to playing every night, and our chops were up and we were really functioning tightly as a band. When we went in to record the songs, it was just kind of knock em out, much like you’d do it live. There were a few overdubs here and here, but it was mostly just the band playing each song live from beginning to end.”

“I don’t think I’m quite as giddy about Shot as David is, but I do kind of share with him that Down is our crappiest record,” offers Yow. “I think some of the songs are okay, some of them aren’t so good and the sound of it is kind of poopy.”

In addition to reminding the singer of audio excrement, Down also represented a major turning point in the band’s existence. Not only was it the last time the band worked in the studio with Steve Albini behind the controls, but it was also the band’s final release on Touch and Go. Albini doesn’t mince words in BOOK when describing his feelings at the time of the band’s jump to Capitol Records:

It isn’t overstating it to say that the Jesus Lizard’s descent into “professionalism” felt like a betrayal, and that I was in a kind of mourning afterward. They had been doing everything so well, so efficiently, so on-the-ball, that they were continually proving the point that a band didn’t have to sell millions of copies, or even aspire to sell million of copies, to be the most important bands of its generation. They were so far ahead of the pack that dismissing it all to be a fourth-tier specialty act on a mainstream label seemed oblivious and destined for failure.

Philosophical dilemmas aside, the truth of the matter is The Jesus Lizard sounded just as good (and perhaps even better) on a major label than they did on Touch and Go. While that previous sentence might elicit a shrug from anyone born in the post-Dookie music industry, rest assured that switching to a major label was a very big deal in 1995. How does Yow feel about the move with the benefit of nearly 20 years of hindsight?

“I can’t postulate on what would have happened had we not [signed to Capitol], but I don’t regret having done it,” he says. “I got to buy a house. 

Despite the monetary rewards of the deal, McNeilly still struggles to express a definitive point of view on this period in the band’s history.

“To us, we felt like we had done everything we could at the level we were at,” he offers. “Signing to a major label, for us, wasn’t going to change anything really, except make it a little easier for us to pay bills and tour. Basically, for us, it was going to be a different logo on the back of the record and we were still going to do our thing – still driving around in a van on tour, not being extravagant or changing anything that we did. I don’t think any of us anticipated quite the backlash that we experienced with that as far as the perception that we ‘sold out’ or somehow turned our backs on the independent scene. It’s not like that now; you don’t get, ‘Well, a band is no good if they’re on a major label.’ That mentality doesn’t exist right now, and I think that’s all been blown into its proper perspective. A band is a band; do you like them or not? Back then, I think there was much more of the corporate-versus-independent thing. Everyone decided to get on that bandwagon, and that was unfortunate. I think it lost us some fans and prevented us from getting some new fans…I can understand from a fan’s point of view, ‘If it aint broke, don’t fix it. Why would you guys jump and do a major label thing?’ It really was more of a behind-the-scenes thing than anything that overtly influenced us or changed any of the music we were making or anything like that.

“[Albini] may have had some points, and if I had to do it all over again, I might have made different choices. I don’t know,” he continues. “We were functioning as a band, so we all kind of had to stick together. It was kind of tough. But also, you never know how long a band’s life cycle is going to be. I think at that point, I was having problems as well being away from my family – my wife and two very young kids. I was starting to have issues with touring as much as we were, and the band wanted to do more, so I was having my own split right around that time. Right when we jumped to the major label was not a good time for me personally in any way. Things just got more and more difficult for me to where I felt I had to make a decision – either it’s the band or the family.”

Naturally, McNeilly’s departure after Shot had a considerable effect on what turned out to be The Jesus Lizard’s final album, 1997’s Blue. Produced by Gang of Four’s Andy Gill, Blue found the band (completed by new drummer Jim Kimball) taking their music in unexpected – and, in some cases, infinitely more accessible – terrain. Looking back on the only Jesus Lizard album to not feature his creative input, McNeilly respects where the band took their sound in the final stages of their career.

“I was glad to see the band going in a different direction,” he says. “I think I probably felt that if I’m not part of it, then I don’t want to hear the band doing the same thing. I reacted to that in a more positive way and was glad to see them experimenting and stretching out a bit. After a while, you become very aware of repeating the same kind of general idea with the songs, and it doesn’t sit too well if you know you’re doing that. You really have to find whatever your source of creativity is and hopefully get inspired to keep doing something. I’d say for those several records we did for Touch and Go, it was just a very easy, natural progression of, ‘Here are the songs that are coming out of us. We’re on tour playing all the time and living together.’ Those just kind of fell out pretty easily. In some ways, it takes a little more effort the longer you’ve been together because you don’t want to keep repeating yourself. I think there was a conscious effort on their part to try some new things.”


Photo by Pat Graham  

Following a European tour in 1998 that saw Brendan Murphy replace Kimball, the band called it a day. In 2009, the original members reconvened for what Yow calls “a reenactment tour.”

“I think the biggest surprise for me was how much fun it was,” he says. “I just figured we were old guys doing young-guy music, and I didn’t know if we’d be able to pull it off well, and I think we did. Just hanging out with those guys was a blast; it was so much fun.”

While the “reenactment tour” turned out to be a lucrative excursion for The Jesus Lizard (Yow says he made the most money ever in his life that year), the series of performances had a particularly personal resonance for McNeilly.

“It was so much fun to play those songs again; it felt really good,” he says. “For me in particular, the way I had to exit the band before wasn’t a very good end for me. I was very torn up about it and had a lot of difficulty with it. For me, [the tour] was a new way to close the book and write the end chapter for myself. It was great; it was like getting to open a brand new present every night we got to go on stage.”

In addition to teaching at the School of Rock in Evanston, IL, McNeilly currently performs in Nature of the Drum, a percussion-heavy instrumental project also featuring bassist Gordon Patriarca and Machines Of Loving Grace’s David Suycott. He and Patriarca also work together in an improv project called Step Into Space. Additionally, he is working with Jeff Pinkus of The Butthole Surfers in a currently unnamed project that he describes as “’70s Hard Rock.”

Although Yow released a solo album (the brilliant Tonight You Look Like A Spider) last year, he is concentrating most of his creative energies these days on acting. Recently, he starred in two hilarious videos (“Hypnotized,”  Red White And Black) by the band OFF!, fronted by former Black Flag/Circle Jerks frontman Keith Morris. (“It’s interesting that a band can be current and viable in 2014 and sound exactly like they came out of Southern California in 1978,” Yow says.) On the art side of things, Yow runs a custom portrait site called Get Faced and is set to release Copycat, a collection of cat-related pieces, this August on Akashic. 

As far as The Jesus Lizard is concerned, fans shouldn’t hold their breath for new shows or music.

“The ‘re-enactments’ that we did with The Jesus Lizard and that David [Sims] and I did with Scratch Acid [in 2006 and 2011] have taught me to quit saying ‘never,’” Yow says. “I used to always be adamant that there was no way we would ever play again. Well, that kind of bit me in the ass because we did. I can’t say definitively that we will never play a show again or do some sort of something together. I just think it’s highly unlikely.”

If The Jesus Lizard has indeed ceased to be, BOOK serves as a fantastic final celebration of one hell of an unforgettable band.


Order BOOK


BONUS AUDIO: David Yow on The Dicks 

Authors note: In November 2005, I saw one of the greatest shows of my life when the legendary Texas/California band The Dicks played at The Scene in Glendale, CA. At one point, Dicks frontman Gary Floyd asked David Yow to join the band on stage to sing Wheelchair Epidemic, a classic 80s Dicks tune later covered by The Jesus Lizard. Do I even have to get into how incredible that was? I used my recent chat with David for this feature as an opportunity to ask him for some thoughts on the mighty Dicks. Heres what he had to say: 



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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

A Glorious Noise: Bill Laswell on Bladerunner in the US



Photo by Hiroshi Ohnuma

Doing a feature on Bill Laswell is both a blessing and a curse for a music writer. It’s a blessing because focusing on any one of his numerous projects is fascinating enough to produce rich content; its a curse because it is impossible to put together anything even remotely approximating a definitive overview of his vast impact on the world of music. Since the late 1970s, Laswell has built a discography boasting literally hundreds of titles. His production work includes big league releases like PiL’s Album, White Zombies Make Them Die Slowly, Swans’ The Burning World, Iggy Pop’s Instinct, The Ramones’ Brain Drain and Motorhead’s Orgasmatron. As a musicians, he has contributed bass and other instruments to the likes of Praxis, PainKiller, Massacre, The Golden Palominos, New York Gong, Last Exit and Material. While that list of credentials is clearly impressive, it is also woefully incomplete. With that in mind, let’s just focus on what the man is doing this weekend, shall we?

On May 3 at Reggies Rock Club in Chicago, Laswell will join forces with legendary experimental saxophonist John Zorn and former Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo for a stateside performance of their improvised music project Bladerunner. The following night, Bladerunner hits the stage at Le Poisson Rouge in New York City. These two American shows follow a successful March 13 performance at the Adelaide Festival in Australia.

Bladerunner initially surfaced circa 2000 as a quartet with guitarist Fred Frith, playing improvised shows in Canada, New York, Paris and London. Fast-forward 14 years, and Bladerunner has returned to the stage in a considerably altered form. For one thing, the group is currently operating as a trio without Frith.

I still have Massacre with Fred, and we play whenever we can,” Laswell explains. “Australia was originally [planned as] a trio with Zorn, myself and [drummer] Milford Graves. We had been working as a trio in Europe. Milford didn’t feel that he could make that flight [to Australia]; it’s really a long one from here. Zorn suggested Dave Lombardo.

It wasn’t a conscious decision to reform the band, and not a conscious decision to reform the band without one of the members,” he continues. “It just happened because of Milford not playing. Dave came in, and it worked incredibly well and we liked the idea of a trio. When we did the quartet, it was a long time ago. Since then, Zorn and I have been doing a lot of duets, so we developed a kind of repertoire and language that works. It’s always a little different, and it always goes somewhere else. It seems that from the experience in Australia that we can do the same with Dave Lombardo, who’s evolved tremendously as a musician since the [original performances]…I think he’s developed a great ear for communicating with musicians. It’s very different; it’s not even the same drummer. He’s conscious of it; he said he worked on it and tried a lot of different things. He spent a lot of time listening and developing things, and it paid off.”

Of course, the lineup isnt the only thing that has changed in the time since Bladerunner’s original run. Although the group’s July 2000 performance in London (which can be found on YouTube) offered shades of PainKiller and the heavier side of Praxis in its 74 minutes of unstructured improv, listeners shouldn’t expect the same experience when they enter Reggies or Le Poisson Rouge.

To me, that was the quartet and those gigs – and that’s gone,” Laswell says. “That’s the past; I wouldn’t need to hear that for any point of reference. [That’s] the same with Last Exit or other groups. They’re part of a past history – not a future. The few things that remain are the relationship with Zorn [and] the consistent group with Fred called Massacre, which has featured [drummer] Charles Hayward now for over 10 years. These things continue. Are they aggressive? Are they loud? Yeah, they’re continuing in that direction. But lately, and consistently, everything to my hearing [with Bladerunner] has been a great deal more musical and a much wider perspective on sound and musicianship…Its not the same music; it’s not the same band. I think everybody plays differently and approaches playing differently. Everybody is listening to something else and everyone’s had 14, 15 years of experience doing other things. In the concept of improvisation or free music, you bring all that experience with you.”

The Adelaide performance featured a guest appearance by Faith No More singer Mike Patton, whose past exploits with Laswell have included guest spots with Praxis and PainKiller. Not surprisingly, his powerful presence at the Bladerunner show was a welcome addition to the proceedings

When he sits in with the various smaller groups, it just adds a level of intensity and a dynamic to the energy level,” Laswell says. “I’m not sure how it interacts or if it even works or makes any sense to anyone, but he raises the energy level…Its not really like a vocal; it’s like an electric charge of some kind.”


Left to right: John Zorn, Mike Patton, Dave Lombardo and Bill Laswell (photo by Tony Lewis/ John Zorn Facebook)

Laswells participation in Bladerunner is the latest in a long series of collaborations with Zorn. Metal fans would know the duo best for their work in PainKiller, whose early albums on Earache Records featured Mick Harris of Napalm Death/Scorn on drums. Last week, Laswell curated multiple events at Zorns New York music venue The Stone.

The soft-spoken bassists relationship with the musically extreme sax player dates back to the late 70s New York underground music scene.

[John] was coming from a really avant-garde place,” Laswell recalls. “He had been interested in Jazz and Bebop; if I had to guess, I would say Ornette Coleman or Lee Konitz or Wayne Marsh and this kind of Jazz playing, and probably Classical music at the same time. I think certain things happened that turned him to look at different directions, [like] Anthony Braxton’s solo alto saxophone record [For Alto] and maybe hearing Derek Bailey for the first time. Then, [this was] combined with his interests in performance art and different art projects, installations and events relating to people like Jack Smith. He started to combine all of this avant-garde information with his technique learned through studying and facilitating through Jazz, and that’s kind of the hybrid that started to form this character who over time became John Zorn.”

Considering that Laswell’s body of work has featured everything from the unlistenable (PainKiller’s Buried Secrets) to the serene (The Golden Palominos’ Pure), how does his focus or approach to tackling the atonal, brutal side of music differ from when he plays something a bit more conventional or conservative?

That’s been a popular broad and unanswerable question for a long time,” he says. “The reality is, I don’t think or re-think things…I might work in India one day, and the next day it’s Pop music in Ethiopia and the next day its complete horrible noise and the next day it’s New Age. I just try to apply my interpretation and intuition of the moment, bringing in whatever I can from my experience spontaneously – not so much thought out, well-prepared or planned too well...You have to get around those ideas that you approach things differently because someone thinks they’re different. They’re all just combinations of different configurations of sound elements, and you have to see it that way if you deal with sound and not so much with music genres or styles... I’m dealing mostly with sound collage and adding three or four things to create a new sound. You’re not going to make one note, one nuance or one statement that can possibly be new, but it’s the combination of elements that work and sometimes collide that make something a little unusual happen that you might see as music [you’ve] never heard before. That’s the only way that can really happen.”

In recent times, Laswell’s desire to explore sound has led him to places like Morocco and Ethiopia, while his ever-eclectic list of current collaborators includes longtime cohort/P-Funk keyboard wizard Bernie Worrell, bassist extraordinaire Jah Wobble, Yemen Blues, Hideo Yamaki, Josh Werner, Tunde Adebimpe of TV On The Radio and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith. There’s also more Massacre on the way. As impressive as these names are, they represent only a fraction of what Laswell has in store for the next several months. More insight into the moving target that is Laswell’s career can be found here. As far as Bladerunner’s future plans are concerned, Laswell is content to simply wait and see what happens.

When something is new, you don’t like to plan so much,” he says. “You kind of just want to appreciate the spontaneity of the moment and you don’t want to say, This is great or ‘It can be better. It’s not a band. ‘Band’ is an old idea; I don’t think I’d want to be in one no matter who was in it and no matter how great it was. It just gets redundant no matter how great it is. But to say we would continue at the moment, I think the attitude of everyone would be, ‘Great idea! We should continue and just keep it going.’ Even if it doesn’t get better, it was that good, so it doesn’t matter. It’ll always be a little different.”

Click here for information on Bladerunners May 3 show at Reggies. Information on the group's May 4 performance at Le Poisson Rouge is available here

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Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Never Givin' Up: Mark Slaughter on Supporting the Troops, Life on the Road and Vinnie Vincent




Photo courtesy of Carol Anne Szel 

Its rare for an artist to produce one of his or her greatest songs after 30 years in the business, but that is exactly what Mark Slaughter did with the March release of his first-ever solo track, “Never Givin’ Up.”

A huge-sounding, instantly classic Hard Rock song, “Never Givin Up” features Mark on vocals, bass and guitars, with drum duties handled by Mark Goodin. Mixed and mastered by legendary producer Michael Wagener, the track salutes the military and all who have served. A portion of the songs proceeds are going to the Red Circle Foundation, a group that assists families of the US Special Operations Forces. In addition to the Red Circle Foundation, Mark actively participates in other charities including St. Judes Hospital.

The release of “Never Givin Up” is the latest chapter in a decades-long career already boasting considerable highs. Before hitting the big leagues in 1990 with his namesake band, Mark fronted the Las Vegas band Xcursion before joining former KISS guitarist Vinnie Vincent, bassist Dana Strum and drummer Bobby Rock in Vinnie Vincent Invasion in 1987, later providing vocals on the bands second album, All Systems Go (1988). Despite scoring a hit with the track Love Kills thanks to its appearance on the Nightmare On Elm Street 4 movie soundtrack, the group imploded in late 1988. Wasting little time, Mark and Dana recruited drummer Blas Elias and guitarist Tim Kelly for the first lineup of Slaughter. The band went on to sell more than five million records worldwide in the 90s, with songs like Fly To the Angels  and  “Up All Night” becoming MTV staples during the early part of the decade. The bands extensive work on the road during this period included tours with the likes of KISS, Poison and Ozzy Osbourne. Although it has been 15 years since the release of the bands most recent studio album (1999s Back To Reality), Slaughter -- currently comprised of Mark, Dana, guitarist Jeff “Blando” Bland and drummer Zoltan Chaney -- maintains a steady international touring schedule to this day. The current lineup (sans Mark) also serves as the current backing band for Motley Crue singer Vince Neils solo act.

In addition to fronting Slaughter, Mark has worked as a voice-over actor and composer for television, movies and sports outlets. His credits include music compositions for Fox Sports, along with voice-over ventures in productions like Batman Beyond, Bloodsport and Animaniacs. He is also a member of Scrap Metal, a Hard Rock tribute group that also features (among others) Matthew and Gunnar Nelson (Nelson), Janet Gardner (Vixen), Kelly Keagy (Night Ranger) and Eric Martin (Mr. Big).

Currently based in Tennessee, Mark recently took a few minutes out of his always-productive schedule to not only chat with me about “Never Givin’ Up” and life in Slaughter circa 2014, but also offer some thoughts on KISS most reclusive former member.

Congratulations on “Never Givin Up.” Great production, great sound – definitely a powerful Hard Rock song.

Thank you! I appreciate that. It’s crazy that the world of recording has changed so much. Basically, that was all done at my studio in my house. The drums tracks were cut by a friend of mine [Mark Goodin] out in Las Vegas; we were never in the same room. We just bounced tracks through the Internet; we actually recorded that track through the Web. It crazy when you think about how you can do things yourself. It’s empowering

You and Mark Goodin have a history that goes back several years, correct?

[Mark] and I went to high school [together]. He was a couple of years ahead of me, but we were in rival bands. At just about graduation time, he broke both his legs and kind of got out of drumming for a while. Then a mutual friend of ours said, ‘Hey, Mark’s playing drums again.’ I was like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding!” I always thought he was an incredible drummer. Lo and behold, I got in touch with him and we started talking about it. I started sending some tracks to him, and he said, ‘I can throw some great stuff on this,’ so we started working together. He did all the drums; I did all the other instruments on [the song]. Like I said, it’s empowering when you can play every instrument and just do the whole thing yourself, because then whatever’s in your mind’s eye can actually come through.

Which came first, the song or the desire to help to Foundation?

It started with an idea; I started with the ‘wounded warrior’ in mind. I’ve seen so much adversity that these guys have been going through. I talked to a gentleman named Brendan Webb, and he’s got the Red Circle Foundation. One-hundred percent of all the proceeds go to military gap funding. There’s no administrative costs; a lot of charities take huge amount of administrative costs. Usually, by law, it's only 30 percent [of the proceeds] that a lot of charities will give to the actual cause. St. Jude is one that’s true, and the Red Circle Foundation is true also. I just wanted to write a song that was about anybody – not just military – who’s faced adversity and has a hard time with things, and that they can overcome that and know that there’s still people who are behind them in whatever they do.

For those who might be unaware of what the Foundation does, what might be some examples of the work they do to support the families?

There are multiple sides of it. It’s basically whatever it is that the government doesn’t help. Let’s say a mother’s out in Afghanistan and her daughter wanted to do ballet…this gap funding might pay for ballet lessons for her little girl. One of Brendan’s friends was killed over in Benghazi; the government basically didn’t even send the body home for over a month because it’s their funding and the way they do it. If the funding is there, it allows the families not to grieve and to go through all that hardship and be able to move on. It’s just pretty much everything that’s needed by the Special Ops soldier. That’s what it’s really about.

The song’s been out a little over a month at this point. How has the feedback been? Have you heard from people from the Foundation as far as how it’s been affecting people there?

It’s doing really well. This is a process in motion here. We’re working on a video right now; I’m sure that when that video goes out, there’ll be a lot more [attention] here. The single’s doing great. Nowadays, it’s different…I am the label; I am the guy who put it out. The monies can go exactly where I want them to go instead of into some fatcat’s hands who basically doesn’t do anything for the Foundation or for the artist.

This is a digital single, and we’re in a very different age now than when the last Slaughter album came out in 99. What are your thoughts on how music is distributed these days? Do you even see a need to put out CDs or vinyl at this point?

It depends on what artist you’re dealing with. I have a fanbase there, so there are people who would pick it up. For a new artist, it’s harder to find that fanbase. But lets say that an artist signs with a record company; the most they would get would be a dollar a record. If they get any advances to make the record, they have to sell a lot of CDs to just make up for what they’ve spent on recording it. [Releasing music digitally] is a process that you invest in yourself; when you put the music out, you can do whatever you want with it. For a new artist, I think it’s better, because at least it has a better chance. And it’s the same thing for a heritage artist; I think it’s empowering because you don’t have all the headaches that go along with it. Record label do promote, record labels do spend money – but their spending your money to do exactly what you would do if you would just allocate those funds for yourself.

Slaughter still maintains a very prolific performance schedule. I can still remember watching Headbangers Ball in 1990 when they focused on the KISS Hot In The Shade tour, which was your first time on the road with Slaughter. It’s been about 25 years since then. How has touring evolved for an artist like Slaughter, who clearly still has a market you can serve on the road?

We’ve never been an ego-based band; we never had three buses. We always did things very conservatively, and that’s how we’re doing it now...We fly in, do the show and fly back home, so it’s not like this giant expense of doing things, and it makes it so there’s less wear and tear on the band and it’s a lot easier for a better performance because you’re not spent...Flying in and flying out is not that difficult unless there are shows in a row. To me, I’ve always looked at [the performance] as we play for free and we get paid to travel. The travel is what’s the pain in the rear. We always love performing; we love to make music. If I wasn’t doing this for a career, I’d still be making music on the weekends. You have to have a love for it, first and foremost.

We’re here talking about your new single, Slaughter’s very busy and KISS just went into the Rock Hall. This extended family of musicians is obviously still very active, but we’re still waiting for Vinnie to do whatever he’s going to do next musically, if ever. Because you worked with him and gained some insight into his character, what do you think it might be about him – either in his personality or creative process – that has led to the fact that for basically 20 years now, we’re still waiting for him to come out with his next thing?

Vinnie is a very talented individual. I have not seen him since 1988. We walked off the stage in Anaheim, CA, and I never saw the guy ever again. What’s funny is that you’re saying ‘neither has anybody else.’ He’s done a couple of Kiss Conventions and things like that…I think that Vinnie’s absolutely brilliant to the point where hes a perfectionist who will not let art be abandoned. Art is never finished; it’s just abandoned. You get to a point to where you just have to walk away from your art and go, ‘That’s good enough.’ I think that he's just re-painting and re-painting and re-painting, and that’s what he gets in. I hope he does do some music; it’s long overdue. He’s an incredibly talented musician, writer, guitar player. I think a lot of the stuff I’ve seen him do hasn’t even been recorded properly. In fact, [guitar maker] Grover Jackson and I were talking about this the other day. People don’t know how talented he really is, but it is what it is. For some reason, he just hasn’t put something out. I don’t know anybody who knows him; I’m not at all in his circles. He’s just in his own world, so who knows?

One creative relationship that seems to have worked very well for just shy of 30 years now is the one you have with Dana Strum. The music industry isn’t really known for stability in personnel, but you guys have worked together for decades. What it is about your relationship that has enabled both of two to weather this industry for as long as you have and still continue to work together?

Obviously, you start with friendship, first and foremost. The other thing is respect. I respect who Dana is as a musician and as a person, and likewise. I know where I stand with him, and he knows where he stands with me. The fact and he has been working with Vince Neil, and that the rest of my band’s been doing all that stuff, is great. What’s a better example of how talented these guys are then to be able to go and do that? That’s when I got into my [solo] recording process; I thought, ‘Well, they’re doing that. I’ll just stay home and write some songs and record,’ and that’s what I’ve been doing. Slaughter still plays about 50 shows a year, which is quite a few. As far as us having this relationship for such a long time, I think it’s because you get to point where basically we remember the things that people want us to forget. Both Dana and I have very good recall with people, places and things. We were able to do the [first] Slaughter record [Stick It To Ya] without having anybody else tell us what to do. We had complete creative control. Everything that we did was from us. When you have music that wasn’t written by an outside writer and it’s something that comes from your heart, I think it’s a little bit different than something [where] you’re going through the motions and doing somebody elses songs.

It’s great to see you still doing it.

It is. I’m glad that we do; I’m glad that we have that relationship to where we’re able to continue to make music. Again, I think that starts with the friendship. It’s the same thing with me putting out the single. To [Dana], it was like, ‘That’s great!’ There’s no weirdness; there’s no freaked-out thing. Paul Stanley does records away from KISS all the time. It’s just being an artist; we’re artists and we make art.


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Official Slaughter Website

Red Circle Foundation

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