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Thunder & Frenzy

Chatham_Angels

Rhys Chatham’s ESSENTIALIST
HEATHEN SHAME

September 9, 2006
MassART | Boston, MA

When a piece of music begins with sheer, obliterating noise it sends me into a panic. I’m constantly looking for narratives in music —patterns and emotional cues— and noise initially puts up a wall of pure hunger, of force, that is not only daunting but difficult to reconcile with. You want to ask of any piece of music: Who are you? What are you doing here? What are you trying to say? but the pummeling wall of sound hurls you backwards, scrambling your logical brain and frying your synapses before you can even begin the inquiry.

There’s catharsis to be found in something so pure. Saturday night, Heathen Shame —consisting of Kate & Wayne of Major Stars/Magic Hour on guitars and Greg Kelley on amped trumpet— began their set with feedback so loud I started to wonder if I could jam multiple sets of ear plugs into my ears. But once the noise settled down to more manageable levels, I was free to engage their performance on its own terms. On the one hand, the group created a palpable sense of tension, echoing Kate and Wayne’s intricate pas de deux of aggression between the guitars with exaggerated, orchestrated movements. As the players stalked intently around the room with mechanized precision, their bodies silhouetted in near-darkness, the forbidding (and foreboding) noise gradually gave way to patterns. Patterns and ritual. The guitars were no less frenzied, but the chaotic bacchanalia of notes began to sound like Indian ragas. Something delicate was there, buried but audible, like the last shred of Hope in Pandora’s box. The piece built and built to a strangely cathartic finale. It was emotional and exhausting.

I’d heard that Rhys Chatham’s new band Essentialist was inspired by the glacial, drone-laden metal of groups like Sunn0))) and Earth. The performance certainly started out that way —with a beautifully orchestrated slow burn, tension ramping up with carefully calibrated precision. Then, BAM! The drummer let loose all that coiled energy and suddenly we had a very different beast on our hands. Not a slow, lumbering beast of burden but something lightning-fast and sleek. It also reminded me of nothing so much as speedy metal in the Pantera vein, albeit played with a sociological sense of detachment. (What the Brits would call “po-faced,” I believe.) Riff-o-rama heaviosity without all the attendant clichés like adolescent posturing, macho bluster, and ridiculous genuflecting at the Church of Satan transmutes into something else entirely —something pure and almost new. (I say almostbecause man, dusting off Monsters of Rock dinosaur metal is a tall fucking order.) If you think about how Rhys has previously performed his alchemical straw-into-gold with punk rawk (applying avant-garde techniques to rock n’roll structures) this new outfit makes sense. Appropriately enough, Saturday night’s show led, full circle, to a blistering performance of 1977’s “Guitar Trio,” a work that never fails to strip the paint off the walls and remind you how vital the sound of three guitars can be.

***

Essentialist will be recording later this month, with an eye towards releasing an album in mid-2007. Chatham’s “A Crimson Grail” will be released in December 2006 on Table of the Elements. Visit Rhys Chatham’s site or that of his record label Table of the Elements for more info. “Guitar Trio,” which is taken from the recently reissued compilation of early works entitled Die Donnergötter (The Thundergods) is available online. | Buy releases from Heathen Shame, Table of the Elements, et al.:Twisted Village. | More info about other NonEvents here.

MP3Rhys Chatham, “Guitar Trio (1982 Version)”

Now/Then/Now

Wunderground

Rhys Chatham is currently in the midst of a tour of the US. If you have even a passing interest in visceral, textural guitar-based music you should go out of your way to see one of these shows. There are a variety of co-headliners along the way, including electronic duo Pan Sonic in New Haven. (If only they were playing together in Boston —if only!) The tour culminates at the Wire-sponsored Adventures in Modern Music festival in Chicago [Sept. 20-24th at the Empty Bottle]. If you’ve ever had a yen to see Coughs AND Jandek at the same time and live to tell the tale, this may be your only chance…

09-05 Knoxville, TN – Bijou Theatre
09-06 Asheville, NC – Orange Peel
09-07 Chapel Hill, NC – Local 506
09-08 Philadelphia, PA – Community Education Center
09-09 Boston, MA – Mass Art
09-10 New Haven, CT – BAR
09-11 Brooklyn, NY – Issue Project Room
09-12 Purchase, NY – South (Purchase University)
09-14 New York, NY – Tonic
09-15 Buffalo, NY – Soundlab
09-16 Cleveland, OH – Beachland Ballroom
09-17 Detroit, MI – Bohemian National Home
09-20 Chicago, IL – Empty Bottle (Adventures in Modern Music Festival)

I won’t be attending the Wire-fest (alas) but I’ll most certainly be at the opening night ofWunderground, an ambitious show at the RISD Museum that attempts to chronicle the city’s radical underground art scene from 1995 to the present. There will be eight artists-in-residence (including Lightning Bolt’s own Brian Chippendale) working on a sculptural centerpiece rising up through the soaring 30-foot high main gallery. There will also be a show devoted to poster art.

The show promises to be (nearly) as colorful and raucous as the scene it documented. Before the city was overrun by yuppie development, there was plenty of space to be found in sprawling, often run-down, quasi-legal warehouses and mill buildings. It was the perfect atmosphere to fuel an intense, diverse, and collaborative local scene. Fort Thunder was the chaotic eye of the storm —a collective founded by artists Chippendale and Mat Brinkman that grew into a mini cottage industry (Lightning Bolt, Load Records, and comics tabloid Paper Rodeo all got their start there).

Sadly, Fort Thunder was demolished in 2002 to make way for a strip-mall (not without a long and vocal fight). If you go to the group’s website, you’ll see the rubble. And yet, the spirit lives on. In the most obvious sense, because these artists are all still working and collaborating. But spiritually, too, because Fort Thunder stands as an inspiration (alongside other like-minded but less vaunted underground collectives that sprang up around the same time —the show’s poster lists what seems like hundreds of them, most sadly departed). Not just for its staunchly iconoclastic, DIY-ethic. The group’s stylistic diversity, confidence, and radical experimentation set the bar for other young artists in the city, and also serve as a touchstone and jumping-off point for anyone interested in pushing the boundaries of not just comics or music but any art-form.

All my hoarded copies of the Fort Thunder in-house publication, Paper Rodeo, have gone missing. I still have a stack of Boredoms posters I snuck down off Thayer St. telephone poles the day after the show —they were printed on cheap butcher paper in short runs of different colors. I think I snagged six of them, my favorites done in rich plum tones. It’ll be jarring to see them framed (?) on a museum wall.

I leave you with a crazed mini-Fort Thunder mix-tape. For more check out the mysterious ft.thunderRealSlowRadio. More mixtapes here.

Rhys Chatham | Table of the Elements | “Fort Thunder Forever” —fantastic article about the group. |Fort Thunder home page | Lonelyville is an Eyesore | new Coughs record soon, yo. | Wunderground

MP3Olneyville Sound System, “Waste Away”

MP3Ninja Vs. Wrestler

MP3Wolf Eyes, “Wild Thing”

MP3Many Tentacled Splendor

ARTWORK BY BRIAN CHIPPENDALE, Eagle Square [detail]

Folie-mort-rêverie/Les faits m’errent

cornell-portrait+dream

I’ve had a rollercoaster of a week. So when I am actually listening to music (as opposed to hurriedly running around), I don’t want roars —I want songs that tiptoe and whisper. Or tiny whirlwinds, both glacial and immense. Mischievous songs that sound like rain on windowsills, the crackle of thunder in the distance, gathering speed and power. Wind-up toy operas. Spiralling violin, crackling static. Songs that could only have come off of an old wax cylinder, or from the future.

A few, s’il vous plait.

The Konki Duet aren’t a duo at all but rather a trio that sings in French, English, and Japanese. Their wry cover of the Visage chestnut “Fade to Gray” completely transformed the song (so much so that I barely recognized it). Their debut album exudes effortless charm, from the spidery Gorey-esque drawings that adorn the cover to the lovely harmonies and clever arrangements.

La Laque are a New York-based band with a marked interest in the Nouvelle Vague (check their website’s gorgeous Posters section for further proof). They first came to my attention with their gorgeously-designed split 12″ with Pas/CAL [available here —what a joy that website is! Happy design delerium]. They’re currently working on their first CD, but until then they’re offering free music on their MySpace page.

Le Volume Courbe is a very recent discovery. Charlotte Marionneau is a French expatriate living in London. Her music has a strange, otherworldly quality to it —she sings like an old soul and the music is a spidery yet tensile collage of fractured beats and guitar loops. Her cover of Nina Simone’s “Ain’t Got No/I Got Life” is celebratory. Find the album if you can —it’s well worth it. And hopefully she’ll tour here eventually.

The Konki Duet | The Konki Shop | The Konki YouTube

La Laque promise a CD EP on the way soon —check their MySpace page for info.

le Volume Courbe on Myspace | Buy “I Killed A Friend” [Astralwerks] | Le Volume Courbe YouTube

MP3The Konki Duet, “Cindy”

MP3The Konki Duet, “Ima wa mori no naka ni”

MP3La Laque, “La Sirene Dort”

MP3Le Volume Courbe, “Papillon de Nuit”

IMAGE BY JOSEPH CORNELL, BASTARDIZED BY ME. SORRY, JOSEPH!

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