EVERYTHING ZEN

New music from the ashes of ATDI

Johnny Loftus

At The Drive In reached its apex during the brief reign of Nu Metal in the hearts and minds of backyard wrestlers everywhere. But the car-crushing quintent from El Paso, Texas never fully unleashed its hydraulic screech upon the masses, dissolving just as their bus was crashing through front rooms everywhere. It might have been for the best. ATDI could crush the listener with its post-hardcore fusillade, like loud rockers should. But it might have been a bit too, er, intellectual for the average black-clad Nu Metaler, getting in fist fights behind the Circle K. In the popular sense, many of the bands’ contemporaries were coming out of Sabbath by way of Anthrax and NIN; At The Drive In was built on a punk rock foundation.

Two new bands have been thrown clear from the ATDI wreckage. While Cedric Bixler and Omar Rodriguez have formed The Mars Volta, Paul Hinojos, Tony Hajjar, and Jim Ward have regrouped as Sparta. Patches of At The Drive In appear and disappear within the four songs on Austere, Sparta’s debut EP. But what’s most interesting about the tunes is their channeling of the intelligent hard core sound mined by Fugazi or late, great New Yorkers Quicksand.

Quicksand was amazing. When Slip arrived in 1993, it was surrounded on all sides by grunge and the burgeoning Alternative Nation Babylon. But Quicksand’s music didn’t ride on the backs of The Pixies, Fastbacks, or Melvins. It rocked, for sure. But it rolled in different directions, down avenues that felt more urban than the protean grooves of the Pacific Northwest. Quicksand was assembled out of New York hardcore crews like Youth of Today; Slip‘s punishing dynamics were the antidote to Sixteen Stone.

Which all sets up an eerie parallel. Quicksand existed within a period of time that saw lesser loud rock acts riding the wave that Nirvana’s success had generated. However, after only two albums, Quicksand dissolved, never fully capitalizing on the climate they were in. It’s the same with At The Drive In. While it was certainly a group with more to say than many of its blowhard contemporaries, ATDI’s yeast never rose. But it left behind a legacy of rock – albums and EPs that still crackle with inventiveness and tingling power – which will stay fresh long after Limp Bizkit’s sell-by date.

And now comes Sparta, completing the circle with an EP that co-ops Quicksand’s rhythms into songs with a bit more melody and just a hint of programming to compliment the solid state punch. Like Quicksand main man Walter Schreifels, who has re-emerged with Rival Schools, skewing his earlier work in new, exciting directions, Sparta’s new music feels like a perfect addendum to ATDI. And while The Mars Volta recorded output is hard to come by, word on the street is that it’s mining a more melodic vibe. Even though it’s tough when great bands break down, there can still be a payoff in the music that climbs out.

JTL

White Stripes Divorce Certificate

We told you it was coming, so here it is: Jack and Meg’s 2000 divorce certificate:

White Stripes Divorce Certificate

This whole thing has been pretty silly, and while it’s been fun getting one or two high-profile links, we hope some of you newbies will stick around while we get back to doing what we’ve been doing all along… If not, thanks anyway for stopping by!

Got a couple of new items in the merch store: a Glorious Noise wall clock and a Glorious Noise flying disc (a/k/a Frisbee for all you non-stoners). The product is the hero! We’ve got lots of shit you want.

Well, I Used to Be Disgusted

Elvis Costello & the Imposters

With Billy Bob Thornton

DTE Energy Music Theatre, June 7, 2002

The price of fame. I paid it. Willingly. No, not for me. Let’s see, the face value of the ticket was $42.50. Added to that is something called a “Convenience Charge.” I’m not so sure what expediency was involved. After all, I waited in line for the ticket, so it wasn’t like they were doing me any favors on that front. So Ticketmaster conveniently added $6.40 to the cost of the ticket. In addition to which, there are two $3 fees tacked right on for parking at the venue.

That was one aspect of the price in question.

But then there was the opening act. Billy Bob Thornton. When I mentioned to a colleague that he was going to be first up, the reaction was, “The actor?” Un huh. “What’s he going to do—standup?” I think that would have been preferable. But maybe, adequate backup band notwithstanding, what I assumed was a musical act was really standup. He let loose with such between-song patter as saying, “I made a movie here. A Simple Plan. Just across the lake in Wisconsin.” Yes, DTE Energy Music Theatre is in Michigan. And Michigan is separated by Wisconsin by Lake Michigan. But the venue is northwest of Detroit. Which is to say that geography is not his strong suit. Or maybe that was a joke. Or maybe it is a commentary on the Arkansas school system. Here is generally not some place, oh, 350 or more miles away. He played up his redneckness in a manner that would make Jeff Foxworthy cringe (and having to make a Jeff Foxworthy reference makes me cringe—but I would have rather sat through a week of his bad jokes than the 40 or so minutes of Thornton). When pointing out that one of the band members was going to be playing a mandolin on a forgettable song, he said, “When hillbillies made guitars, they stopped short.” And, yes, he made cracks about a car in the front yard on concrete blocks. But not just any car. A DeLorean. And not just any front lawn. That of the late Jim Varney, of “Ernest” fame. He did try to convince the crowd that he was just a regular guy, as he listed many of the jobs that he’d once had in his life, from drill press operator to asphalt layer. Yeah. A regular guy. An Academy Award winner. Married to Angelina Jolie. Very normal. In his tribute to his spooky spouse, “Angelina,” we were treated to such poetry as “We just looked at them and growled” and “What’s come between us—could it be the music or the mystery of love.” I’m guessing that it must be the mystery of love, because his musicianship would be grounds for divorce.

Billy Bob Thornton has joined the ranks of many thespians who have parlayed their fame in one area for a half-assed performance in another. Bruce Willis. Eddie Murphy. Dan Ackroyd. John Travolta. Make no mistake: None of these people would be let near a recording studio or a stage unless they had established themselves in another venue. And I had to pay.

This Year’s Model

I’ve seen Elvis Costello with and w/o the Attractions plenty of times over plenty of years. After his last outing, I was pretty much certain that while he kept exploring new aural landscapes, the level of what I had expected from him at a live performance exceeded, perhaps, what any touring musician would reasonably be expected to do. But who among us is reasonable when we go to see favorite performers? It was smilingly surprising to hear “Watching the Detectives” with a Caribbean syncopation for the first time. The second had charm. The third left me wishing for the original. I figured that the last time I saw Costello would be the last time. But with summer coming on with the speed of a Trabant with a gummed-up carb, with the ability to hear live music outdoors, and with what I perceive as pretty much a blank slate so far as the possibilities vis-à-vis performers who qualify for the Ticketmaster tariff, off we were to see Costello and the Imposters (which is essentially the Attractions, with Bruce Thomas replaced on bass by Davey Faragher). After performing for more than 20 years, they were at the top of their game during this performance.

Although Costello isn’t the skinny kid with Buddy Holly hair and horn rims anymore, striking a pose on the cover of My Aim is True, he is now at least exhibiting an aggressiveness that has long been absent. This was not a “God Give Me Strength” performance; Burt Bacharach was not in the wings. The set blended cuts from When I Was Cruel with a select sampling from, primarily, the first three albums; it made me realize how “Blood and Chocolate,” which he did perform, was pretty much the end of the single-hit style of Costello (although arguments could be made that later tunes like “Sulky Girl” would fit in that mix). Costello, having progressed the capabilities of his pipes through work with the likes of Bacharach and Anne Sofie Von Otter, has evidently concentrated on his guitar playing. Once secondary to his vocals, it is now as much a part of his work. In fact, the number of instrument changes during the show kept a roadie exceedingly busy.

The comparative few who paid to see the show got their money’s worth. Which leads me to wonder about all of the empty seats and the essentially bare lawn. While it could be that for many people Costello is past his sell-by date, it was evident that he attracted a demographic that was exceedingly wide, from people who look like they were from central casting for the Scooby Doo movie (who danced through the entire set) to those who look like they could be Costello’s great aunts and uncles. Although the weather in Detroit has been generally changeable—changing from bad and back again—I don’t think that meteorological issues are to blame. Perhaps that it is becoming a bit too much to pay out the kind of money to see shows unless you’re really committed to it. It may be that we have entered a period where Big Business has overreached into our pockets, and it won’t surprise me that we’ll be hearing reports at the end of this summer how the take from concerts is at an all-time low.

Autographed CD Contest Results

We had a lot of great responses to our contest to give out an autographed copy of Jay Bennett and Edward Burch’s new album, The Palace at 4am (Part 1). The artist who got mentioned more than any other was Tom Waits, which seems appropriate. Our panel of judges struggled with the decision, but they finally decided on a winner. The autographed cd goes to Alicia, who cracked us up with her response to the question, “What is your 4am music, and why?”

Alicia: 4am is the time of day reserved for the worst of all music. No, leave Miles on the shelf. Instead, put on “Cold Hearted Snake” and draw out the SSSSSSS sound forever. It’s the time to play pure shit and enjoy it. ‘Cause that’s the time the beer usually finds it’s way back up, and the ugly guy finds his way to my bed. Why fuck up the vibe with good music?

Another great entry that had us laughing out loud:

Dave: REO Speedwagon’s Hi-Fidelity, The Handsome Family Through the Trees, and Sly [and the Family] Stone’s There’s a Riot Going On.There’s only 3 reasons to be awake at 4am: 1)Music to clear the party – Kevin Cronin vocals clear the room, I don’t know why. 2) Music to drive to at 4am alone – Brett & Rennie, mmm, dark roads & antidepressants. 3) Music to keep my woman awake to – Sly, porn-style.

And the following were others that we especially liked:

Drew: My 4am music is by Matt Johnson of THE THE. Just when you are coming down from a wild night out, you stick on THE THE, and Matt’s twisted lyrics and scary music start messing with your head. You wonder if someone slipped something into your drinks that might make you psychotic!

Emlyn: Drifty tunes or something that goes well with blue lights or shady rooms – especially with the sounds of the river flowing outside my window. A song that takes me away like hypnosis and gets me out of myself and lets me sleep. “Blue Moon” by Elvis is drifty 4am. music for me.

Alex: I once read a quote from Neil Young about the album Tonight’s The Night in which he said, “It’s not something you put on when the sun’s out, it’s what you put on when the night is dying.” Considering the dreary, drifting sound of that record, I can’t think of anything better to fall asleep or pass out to at 4am.

Thanks to everyone who participated. It was fun. We hope to have more contests soon. We love giving stuff to our readers. Remember: Glorious Noise loves you!

BUT IT’S ALRIGHT NOW

The Hives and Mooney Suzuki Remind You That Life Is A Gas

Johnny Loftus

It’s an all-ages 7:15 on a Wednesday night inside Chicago’s Metro. The Mooney Suzuki’s gear sits coiled on stage. A quick glance away from front-of-house, and you miss them: The Suzuki, four guys dressed like Batman villains who’ve suddenly appeared behind their instruments. The drummer is standing on his kit. And lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, Ben Stiller lookalike, and principle rabble-rouser Sammy James, Jr is strutting around the stage, pointing out potential rockers in the audience. The double-time beat drops, and all of sudden there are four guys on stage singing a song about today, about right now, about this moment, and it’s rock and roll. And you wonder: why isn’t this happening all the time?

To paraphrase the Suzuki, it’s a tough old world. A little bit is music, but the rest is hoops. But when rock and roll happens with the ferocity of what occurred at last night’s gathering of like-minded peppermint twisters, you wonder about when rock and roll will finally, completely, take over the world. It would replace parking tickets with concert tickets. Every day would be Saturday night. And no one would ever place a cover sheet over a TPS report again. This is the sort of world that the Mooney Suzuki and The Hives live in. Unfortunately, we can only stay for a short time – then it’s back to a world without black suits and white neckties.

New York City’s Mooney Suzuki didn’t invent the toe-tap, but if Sammy James said they did, you’d believe him. Because you can’t help but tap the toe or stomp the foot when James and his band downshifts into “Half My Heart,” or “Electric Sweat.” It’s the kind of rock music that the phrase “let your backbone slip” was invented to describe. Sure, 90% of it is two chords, and James’ lyric book consists mostly of “Alright!” and “Okay!” So what? No one ever said that rock needed to be complicated. That’s the great thing about the Suzuki or their nattily-attired counterparts in The Hives. They realize, like so many other rockers out there, that music might have been better when it was recorded in a two-track studio behind the five and dime. In many ways, the emergence of “The New Garage” is the popular awareness of this. The Hives’ “Hate To Say I Told You So” will sound better than the boring alternative crap that surrounds it on your local radio station because it doesn’t get in the way of itself with goofy production techniques or a goddamn flugel horn overdub. And it doesn’t hurt that they’re from Sweden.

“Ladies and gentlemen, you are now living in The United States of The Hives!”

Pelle Almqvist has just harangued the capacity crowd for the first time. By now it’s 9:15 at the Metro. The Hives are slated to finish their set by 10:00, so you imagine that Almqvist – tall, reminding some of a young (Swedish) Gram Parsons – better get on with it. But The Hives can play 50 songs in 45 minutes, and each one would snap your neck. So you can give Almqvist and his constant monologue a break. The lightbulb’d “HIVES” sign hanging before an enormous, black and white Stars and Stripes blinks on, and suddenly Nicholaus Arson is doing the robot with his Telecaster, heltering and skeltering until the angles that compose his body mesh with the sharp lines of The Hives’ take on 1960s mojo. Almqvist is climbing the light rig, his white leather topsiders gleaming in the blinking “HIVES” light. That “Whadjapay?” guy is pounding away at his white SG. And you find yourself and the crowd surrounding you to be in a united state of mind.

It’s a tough old world. Especially when it’s 10:30 and you’re standing outside the club, scratching your head. It’s disorienting enough to see rock and roll so early. But when the rock itself is of the world-shaking variety, what then? The Mooney Suzuki and The Hives present the soundtrack to that rock and roll Erehwon that dissolves upon contact with the outside pavement. Until rock and roll does take over the rest of our lives – when girls will always play lead guitar, nobody’s hair will be clean, and ascots’ll be back in fashion – we need rockers like these groups. We need them to remind us that our lives aren’t just about the lovers, buggers and thieves; that sometimes, even when the sets are short, we can jump off our observation deck into a world where rock and roll is king.

JTL

The Real Garage

Glorious Noise was representin’ in full effect on WXRT’s Sound Opinions last night. I hope I sounded better than the first time I was on that show. The show focused on garage rock, and they had us on to discuss the recent White Stripes thing we did here a couple weeks ago.

I get frustrated listening to other people talk about sixties garage rock though. It’s a subject I care deeply about, and it’s annoying to hear people throwing terms around willy nilly. As anyone who has heard Crypt Records’ Back from the Grave series knows, there’s a huge difference between garage rock (roughly 63-66) and psychedelic rock (roughly 66-70). I don’t care what Lenny Kaye thinks or what the original Nuggets album contained. Just listen to the stuff, and you can tell which is which.

Update: you can now listen to my segment online via SoundOpinions.net.

Breech: Just Add Water

A Glorious Noise interview with Breech.

Getting attention for an up and coming band can be daunting. There are thousands of up-starts throughout the country and picking through those that are worthwhile is like separating sugar from salt. Zealous bands could just literally grab audience members by the throat until they listen, but why not just have a bake sale? Contributing writer Jude Lemrow interviews Missy Gibson of the Los Angeles rock outfit Breech, who have made their mark with their intense live shows and irresistible pistachio bread. Read more.

Continue reading Breech: Just Add Water

Rock and roll can change your life.