Hello Chris. Thanks for doing this interview.
We are a fan of duraluxe and want to know if duraluxe is working on some new
stuff? What can we expect from you guys in the future?
troy and i are working on a few new things,were in a regrouping phase right
now. troy wanted to go back to school in his hometown of evansville, indiana.
that is where we are right now. we have been playing a few show as "la honda",
just to play non duraluxe tunes.
we are starting a new record right now. we have about three songs in the
works. it's a departure from "the suitcase", sorta. after three years in los
angeles\orange county, we have had it with anything commercial sounding. i don't
know who will put a new record out, we never have had a solid label situation,
three records on three labels, it's frustrating to try and do good work and not
have any label support. i always pay for our records myself. i never see
royalties. a labor of love, i reckon.
Where did duraluxe receive inspiration for the concept behind "the suitcase?"
that record is about moving and travelling. we have lived in nashville,
athens, southern california, and toured a lot since we started the band. we
tried to capture the discombobulated state of mind we get in when you spend your
life travelling with three dollars in your pocket, and no idea when or where you
might score a meal. the record is also about missing your friends who are
scattered about the globe. i had to move to california in a hurry when gene
eugene died. i had to finish his projects and run the studio. i had to walk away
from my life in athens with no notice. i guess the suitcase is mostly about
longing for a sense of stability.
Your breaskfast with amy material is classic in our eyes. Where did you find
the inspiration, as a group, to make such thought-provoking, creative, and chaotic music?
breakfast with amy, gee that was so long ago. i don't think i'm the same
person i was then, so it is getting hard to comment on it. i was an art student
at the time, i think it was mostly motivated as a "dada-ist" comment on modern
christianity. i have a hard time with the way christianity is percieved and
understood in our little world. BWA was an attempt to get people to notice the
riduculous fashion in which the faith has mutated into this alienating beast,
that i have witnessed doing as much damage as good in its presentation and
understanding.
the band,BWA, was about as disfunctional a band as you can find. no
rehearsals, no rules and as many agendas as members. we were inspired a lot by
things happening in l.a. at the time. bands like redd kross, janes addiction,
and arty bands like sonic youth and bad brains were sorta an influence. as a
band we all agreed on sixties pop, so stylistically we started there and let the
modern influences direct us. sixties pop was the form, our enviroment and times
were the motivation. i kinda miss the performance art part of it. the shows were
riduculous, lots of fire.
How did you learn how to play guitar?
how did i learn to play guitar? the ramones and echo and the bunnymen. I did
take lessons for a little while from a guy named rusty anderson, he now plays
for paul mccartney. after a few months of lessons he said i should go develop my
own style, i thought at the time he was dissmissing me because i sucked, but i
think he believed i really had a thing. it's taken me 20 years, but i do have a
thing with the guitar i call my own.
Besides recording and producing, do you have any other great experiences you would like
to share, like doing sound for U2 or working for MTV?
outside the recording studio i've done some cool things. i worked for a company
in nyc called effanel music. they have recording trucks and did a lot of live
recording for mtv, vh-1 and jive like that. i got to record the sex pistols for
120 minutes, the butthole surfers, too. i worked on a patti smith live
recording, an elvis costello "storytellers" show for vh-1.i've done a lot of
tour sound, from small club tours to stadiums. oh man, a stadium with 40,000
people in it and i'm in charge of the sound. it's a power trip.
Name 3 cd's that you've worked on that you're most proud of and why.
that is hard to do. i've done maybe 400 records. it changes a lot. i'm really
proud of my mix on the new ester drang "infinite keys". a great record. the
first morella's forest ummmm, "superdeluxe" i think it's called has always been
close to my heart. all the joe christmas\summer hymns stuff. the choir, mineral,
anything lassie . "pacifico", oh man, what an amazing record. i mixed it in like
five hours, andy prickett tracked it. perfect. when the magic is there, all the
planets line up and it falls together. oh yeah, the billions, a moment of
musical magic. i didn't know them, the label was nervous about these kids, they
thought the songs were too long and were afraid to make the band edit them down
in pre-production. on the first day of pre-prod, i told the band the label
needed three pop songs, so we will leave you alone for a couple hours. take your
three poppiest songs and make them three minute hits. cupie(eric campuzano) and i
went outside, smoked a bunch of cigarettes, went back in, and the band had
arranged things perfectly.
i could go on all day before i settle on three cd's
What bands have you been a formal member of, and give us an
idea of how you feel about each band's output?
fluffy-flipper and melvins meet the adolescents. the funnest band i was in.
no rules, just punk rock. i'm the only former member without a masters degree.
my roots are punk rock. i don't know if people got it, is was a little heavy
with sarcasm.
breakfast with amy-just what 80's christian music needed. the first time i
met gene eugene he went off on me about how i was cheapening the market with
that crap. we became great friends. BWA was definately a product of the times.
duraluxe-somewhere along the way i realized that i could actually write good
songs. troy o'daugherty and i have a thing when we write. we both get to use our
non-music influences in this band. we let william burroughs influence our lyric
writing, a lot of cut ups, we get to show our bob dylan influences work,
country, folk, grunge, shoegazer, we agree, agree, agree.
i hope more people will get to hear the duraluxe records, there is something
there, if you dig in a little.
i've been an informal member of many bands, but i have not been in too many
bands of my own, the studio thing takes a lot of time.
Besides duraluxe, what other music are you working on right now?
i have been taking a little break. three years at the green room wore me out.
i worked on about 40 records in three years. they each take a little bit of my
soul. i have been spending a lot of time listening to my vinyl collection and
making beats on my computer. i'm itching to get back into action. the last thing
i worked on was some summer hymns in athens in feb., before that i was in
chicago mixing the ester drang record.
Give us your thoughts on the recording process of the prayer chain's mercury
(one of our fave cd's at somewhere cold)
a good record takes a little conflict, mercury was a f$%#@&g war! you can hear the band break up on
the record, you can see them extend a warm and heartfelt middle finger to the
industry. it started off with a lot of hope and expectation, trying to escape the
grunge tag they got from shawl. the first couple weeks were great, it was wayne,
eric, andy, steve hindalong and myself. the drones were taken seriously, the
verve and drummers of burundi were blasting through the big speakers, there was
some strong drink. we were left alone. after this first couple of weeks tim showed up.
then the label people started to hang around the sessions.
this is when the war began, tim and the label vs. everyone else.
don't get me wrong, i love tim, but he loved the rock star aspects of the shawl era, while the rest of
them wanted to be taken seriously as artists. their quick rise and sucess kinda
alienated them from a lot of the musicians who had paid their dues, but recieved
no glory.
anyway, i was the first person at the studio on the first day, and i
finished the last mixes by myself, i was the last man standing. i think the
conflict is what makes that record pretty good, i wish the original version was
the one released. the label kinda ruined it for me with all the changes.
the best moment- andy singing sunstoned. the best vocal on the record. the
drone for humb, which was mostly my doing, was fun.
the tapes for mercury were in my possession for years. one day i came home
and found that my basement was flooded. floating across the water was the box
for reel two of mercury. the track sheet for grylliade was washed up on the
stairs. the masters for that record are now in a nashville landfill.
You have put out a call to travel around and record people. With all your
experience and established reputation in music, what drives you to do this?
mostly the experience that compells me is the adventure, the travel. i've been
everywhere in north america, i went to norway to record, in january of 2001,
january dude. it was like minus 10 the whole time.
how did you discover drones?
o.k., bear with me on drones, i get a little metaphysical about drones. i'm
a big fan of indian music, and i really like to study religion and the nature of
belief. i read the Upanishads as much as the Bible, i study all religions to
define my own beliefs. the drone is important, it's the sound of the mystery of
the universe. it is the "OM", or more accurately the AUM of meditation. the
buddhists, the hindus and the early church of Christ all use the AUM,
gregorians, russian orthodox, they take the directive to pray and meditate much
more seriously than american christianity.
when done properly all the vowel sounds are represented, consonants are
interruptions, the beat is an interruption of the essential sound. the drone
should put you in a place to recieve the resounding being that is the universe.
in Hesse 's siddartha the river was the drone that put the hero in touch with
God.
an example would be the prayer chain "humb" drone. it really can open you
up to recieve the message, it is calming and rapturous at the same time. the
sanskrit term for this is "ananda". that it the meaning of the last letter of
the AUM. so the drone is the meditation. it could be with properties, like
meditating on God, or without properties, and meditate on the Formless, wich is
a property of God. the drone is a prayer and a meditation, the song of the universe, and a
vehicle to bring one to the feet of God.
i think a lot of western christians are missing a big part of the
experience of God by denying this part in their lives. christianity is an
eastern religion, and has all the properties of the religions that predate it.
the meditation, the drone, is part of the experience, just sit down, shut up,
and listen. God will sing for you. oh yeah, don't be afraid of the great
metaphor that reveals God. as history christianity is complicated, as metaphor
is beautiful, graceful and compassionate. oh no, there is a duality for you.
Who are your favorite artists to listen to?
bob dylan, yo la tengo, stereolab, miles davis, lenz\swift, stan getz,
edith piaf, indian music, ali farka toure.
Do you have any advice for young musicians getting started out?
worry about songs-not gear, learn rhythm, learn to tune, listen to the beatles,
get a lawyer.
Any other comments? (URL, contact info, etc.)
my contact info,fabulouschris@hotmail. i haven't a
website yet. thanks a lot, i feel like i've been to a therapist, chrissy