Saturday, June 02, 2007

THE MULDOONS Interview! Detroit Rock Family!


The Muldoons! photo: Patricia Muldoon


By: Rich Tupica
richtupica@hotmail.com



The Muldoons are a family punk-rock band from Detroit, Michigan. Shane, 10 and his older brother Hunter, 13, both write and play guitar while their father Brian, 48, pounds away on the Gretsch drum kit. These kids haven’t even reached high school yet and they have already opened for virtually every great Detroit rock band, recorded a couple 7” singles and are days away from releasing their debut full length album. Dirtbomb Ben Blackwell and his uncle Jack White of The White Stripes will co-release the new LP on their labels, Third Man and Cass Records, making this even more of a family oriented album. Not to mention Hunter and Shane's mother Patricia and their uncle Dan Muldoon did the album art. Though, I should warn you, even in the presence of their father the Muldoon boys were not deterred from penning songs about topics that would get other kids grounded for a month!
Hunter and Shane’s lyrics on the new LP range from explosives, to comic book fantasies, to killing zombies “one by one.” While their guitar riffs echo The Stooges, Nirvana and on one track The Gories, they use their influences to make every song different from the next. Ben Blackwell recalls the day he discovered The Muldoons’ music, “My first experience with The Muldoons was actually reading Shane's handwritten lyric sheet for ‘Destruction Boy’. She may kill me for saying this, but Shane's mom was looking at me, almost scared, saying, ‘Social Services are going take him away,’ while I thought I'd finally found the reincarnation of Darby Crash,” said Blackwell. The Muldoons first public gig was not at a bar, it was opening for the Grammy Award Winning White Stripes, Blackwell was there to witness. “The first time I saw them live was complete and utter joy...I'd taken a 6 a.m. flight from Ottawa, where the Dirtbombs had just wrapped up a three day Canadian tour, back to Detroit to catch them in their surprise opening slot for The White Stripes at the Masonic Temple. But there was also a bit of uncertainty as to whether or not it would actually happen, so it was all kinds of anticipation and fear and excitement building up at the same time. When Shane started singing that first song I felt so proud I almost started to cry,” said Blackwell. Since The Muldoons first started playing music in late 2004, they have gained the respect of veteran Motor City bands and their loyal followers making them a staple in the rock community. “The Muldoons are pretty damn important,” said Blackwell. “Not only did they set a precedent for a lot of the ‘kid rock’ bands, but they also put on a blazing show every time they step onstage. And they never play the same set twice. Hunter and Shane are humble and yet remain a force to be reckoned with. Brian's not too bad either,” said Blackwell. If you want to buy their new album, be at the Lager House in Detroit, Michigan on June 9th for the record release party.



Brian, what were the first bands that really got you into music when you were a teen?
Brian: "In my preteen years, I listened to what my brothers were buying, from The Beatles to all the things that were happening at the Grande Ballroom and on WABX fm in the late sixties. My early teen years I was obsessed with the album 'Raw Power', The New York Dolls first album and The Spiders From Mars era of Bowie. When I was in my junior and senior years of high school it went from Brian Eno to Phillip Glass to The Ramones and all that early punk stuff."



How about you guys, what bands have influenced your tunes the most?
Hunter: "Well, the guitar work of artists such as Kurt Cobain, Ron Asheton, Johnny Ramone, Fred 'Sonic' Smith, Wayne Kramer, Pete Townsend, Tony Iommi and Jack White. The lyrical phrasing of Dee Dee Ramone, Kurt Cobain, Iggy Pop, and Ozzy Osbourne...the first five Sabbath albums only."
Shane: "Some bands that influenced my music are Beck, The Stooges, MC5, The Ramones, The Go, Nirvana, Black Sabbath, The Hives, Hot Hot Heat, Led Zeppelin, New York Dolls, and the list goes on."



Hunter and Shane, when did you first learn an instrument? How old were you and what did you play?
Hunter: "I started taking drum lessons when I was five-years old. I picked up the guitar when I was 10-years old. I took guitar lessons when I turned 11."
Shane: "I was six-years old when I first took drum lessons. I was eight when I started playing the guitar."



Hunter Muldoon! photo: Dan Meyering


What does your mom think about the band? Has she ever jammed with you guys?!
Hunter: "Our mom is very supportive of our music. She has yet to jam with us, but someday! She’s been to every one of our shows, listens to a lot of loud rehearsals and has been very loving and supportive of our music since the beginning."
Shane: "I remember her singing ‘Red and Black’ with me during a rehearsal once, or maybe it was ‘Wild Thing’. Our mom takes all the photos for our records and video tapes a lot of our shows."



Brian, you still run your home business, can you tell me a bit about that?
Brian: "I’ve been a furniture upholsterer for 28-years now. I run a one-man shop. The last 15-years I’ve focused on restoring furniture designed from the mid century modern era."



What do you guys do when you're not playing music, any other hobbies?
Hunter: "I like to skateboard a lot, but everything else I do is music. I’m in three bands, and it’s my only passion in life."
Shane: "I like to play baseball and basketball and I’m on a soccer team called the Sonics. I like to skateboard with Hunt and others from the neighborhood. Video games, Guitar Hero!"
Brian: "Cycling on Belle Isle and restoring vintage Italian racing bikes."




Hunter and Shane, do kids at school dig your band and do they get to come to see your shows?
Hunter: "We have never told one kid at our school about our band. We really don’t think they would be interested at all, even if we were to tell them. Our musical interests are just too far apart. They like rap, hip-hop, and newer rock music. They have probably never heard of most of the bands we mentioned, or bands we have played with."



What are your favorite newer bands right now?
Shane: My favorite band right now is SSM.
Hunter: My favorite band right now is The Go.
Brian: My favorite band right now is Lee Marvin Computer Arm.



The Muldoon brothers! photo: Patricia Muldoon


What is the best and worst part of playing in a rock band?
Hunter: "The best parts are when we get to play with some of our favorite bands. The worst part is when gear malfunctions and I have to figure out why it broke. It’s even worse when it happens live."
Shane: "Best part is being asked by a good band to be on a bill with them. The worst part is loading and unloading gear."
Brian: "Getting excited about playing a new song they’ve come up with. The worst part is trying to fit all the gear into our car for shows, a Ford SUV, plus leaving enough room for all of us.



Who writes the songs in The Muldoons? Is it a group effort?
Shane: "Sometimes I come up with a guitar riff, but most of the time it’s Hunter. If we all like it, we try to make it into a song. When we first start to run through it I usually don’t play guitar, I just make up words that will fit. Sometimes words from another song will fit and I’ll sing them. Once I figure out the words and can remember them, I'll try to learn the guitar part and practice singing and playing at the same time. Some songs come together fast, like ‘Zombies.’ Some take a long time, like ‘Tall’.
Hunter: "Yeah, what Shane said."



Shane, Brian & Hunter Muldoon


How often do The Muldoons practice and write songs?
Brian: "Unless there is something more important going on, it’s usually four or five times a week. Generally right after we get back from school for 45-minutes or so, hardly ever on the weekends. New songs get worked on when one of them comes up with something we all get
excited about spending the time to develop further. It’s always a guitar riff first, lyric ideas second. Sometimes they write them together, usually it’s Shane though."



The Muldoons have 7” records out on Detroit-based Cass Records, and now a full length is on the way. Jack White’s label Third Man is putting it out along with Cass. How did this come about and how involved was Jack with the record?
Brian: "When we finished mixing all the tracks I sent one to Jack to see what he thought. He thought it had some great moments and offered to help us. It took awhile to figure out how the distribution would be handled. Ben Blackwell's Cass Records is going to help us on that end.



Shane at The Lager House! photo: Patrick Currie


Where did you guys record the songs for the new album and how long have you been working on this album?
Brian: "We recorded and mixed the record at Brendan Benson’s Le Grand Studio here in Detroit before he moved to Nashville last spring. At the end of last summer it was sent to New York City and was mastered. Through the winter my brother Dan Muldoon worked on the sleeve art. My wife Patricia took the photos. We’ve been at it on and off for a year or so.



Do you plan to do a tour for the new album?

Hunter: "My dream in life is to be a musician and just go out on tour whether it’s with The Muldoons, or another band I may have. I would love to go out and support our new LP, but it’s hard because my parents have to work and 10 months out of the year we’re in school.
Brian: "We’re going to Chicago in July, we hope to get back to New York this summer. We will do what we can, gas is rather pricey now."



Hunter getting down! photo: Patrick Currie


Hunter and Shane, being younger than most bands, how do you get along with your fellow Detroit bands? Are they pretty cool to you guys?
Hunter: "Everyone is extremely nice to us in the city. They’re all very positive and supportive. They come out to our shows and talk to us. All in all, they’re really cool and nice."
Shane: "Yeah, what Hunt said."



Shane and Hunter, How was it opening for The White Stripes at The Masonic Temple in Detroit? That's a huge show! Were you guys nervous at all?
Hunter:
"Personally, I was really nervous. All that was going through my mind was, 'What if they don’t like us? What if I break a string? What if I forget how to play a song?' So that was kind of nerve wrecking. It was also a bit intimidating having all those people staring at us when we first got on stage. The reaction we got was even more surprising. The show was amazing and I was really happy that we got to do it, I think it opened up a lot of opportunities for us."
Shane: "I remember sound checking in the afternoon being fun when nobody was there. It was kind of scary when it was full of people and we were waiting to go on. I remember Jack telling us to just keep going if we made a mistake and to not stop. I sang into the mic Jack uses over by Meg so I wouldn’t have to look out at the crowd. We played eight songs in about fifteen minutes. It felt good to have people cheer for us."



How would you describe your band to someone who has never heard your music?
Hunter: "I would have to say loud, energetic, in your face punk rock.
Shane: "We write songs for 10-year olds everywhere."
Brian: "Feedback."



If The Muldoons were approached, would you ever consider signing with a big label?
Brian: "If there was an opportunity for wider distribution for a record, promotion and tour support, sure, why not? I think any band that makes something they’re proud of would like to see it be made available to a wider group of people than they could reach through shows, the internet, or a Myspace page."




THE MULDOONS LP! Available June 9th!


art: Dan Muldoon



Muldoon LINKS!

The Muldoons Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/muldoonsofficialsite
Cass Records: (BUY Muldoons!)
http://www.cassrecords.com/






Friday, June 01, 2007

Jack Oblivian Interview


Jack O in Memphis photo: Theresa Kereakes


By: Rich Tupica
richtupica@hotmail.com


Jack “Oblivian” Yarber has influenced countless bands across the world, released piles of albums, and by popular demand, has toured many foreign countries. To only ramble on about Yarber’s work with The Oblivians and skim over his other bands would be a shame. Beside the stack of gritty garage-punk that Yarber has contributed to, are all of his other records that have consistently become more polished and focused throughout the years. Yarber was born 100 miles away from Memphis in the small town of Corinth, Mississippi. However, by 1987, the bright lights of Memphis called and Yarber became a permanent fixture in the city that arguably invented rock-n-roll. If not for a chance encounter in 1989 with a stranger who insisted that Yarber play music with a guy named Greg, a lot of bands today would not exist, including The Oblivians.
The Compulsive Gamblers was Yarber’s first band that was able to capture the sound that he and band mate Greg “Oblivian” Cartwright were looking for. From then on, it seems that Yarber found his niche in music. Early r&b, rock-n-roll and country were all parts of his equation, not to mention his gift of lyrical story telling. Songs about booze, love gone wrong, murder and sleaze was their motif. Where the Gamblers abruptly ended in 1993, The Oblivians would soon be created. After a short hiatus apart, Yarber and Cartwright recruited local Shangri-La record store clerk (and now owner of Goner Records) Eric “Oblivian” Friedl. The Oblivians were a complete democracy, all sharing duties of song writing, vocals and drums. Switching instruments during their gigs was testament to that. The Gamblers and the early Oblivians tunes are quite different from one another, Friedl recalls this transformation, “The Compulsive Gamblers got so big…they had a horn section and just a huge cast of side people,” said Friedl. “I think we were just looking to do some stripped down stuff. We knew a lot of that music already, and since it was just so simple and I really didn’t know how to play guitar, we just stripped it all the way back to the basics. Instead of a full fledge arrangement for a song, it’d just be one killer riff that maybe changed, maybe didn’t and it worked out really good,” said Friedl. Since his days in The Oblivians, Yarber’s songwriting has been progressing and transforming, never recreating a previous album. “Jack’s records have been really consistently amazing,” said Friedl. “Some people…you get kind of tired of seeing them play after a while, but Jack’s managed to reinvent his music and the latest record is as good as anything he’s done,” said Friedl. Since The Oblivians split, Yarber has kept busy with his current band Jack O and The Tennessee Tearjerkers as well as his solo records. Yarber also worked with many other bands like The Cool Jerks, The Limes, ’68 Comeback, Tav Falco, South Filthy, The Natural Kicks, The Brand New Love Affairs and The Knaughty Knights…just to name a few. Yarber’s new CD, ‘The Flip Side Kid’ was released in late 2006 by his long time record label, Sympathy For the Record Industry. However, Yarber has decided to release the vinyl format on his own, pressing and printing the sleeves by himself under the record company alias Dirt Cheap Date. This is the first time Yarber has done this since his days with The Gamblers…The self-released ‘Flip Side Kid’ LP is now available through Goner Records.

Where are you at right now, and how you doing tonight?
"I’m at home in Memphis, Tennessee. I’m doing pretty good."



How old were you when you first started to write songs and play guitar?
"I think I first got a guitar in the fifth-grade, but I don’t think I actually really started learning, seriously learning how to play it until the seventh-grade. I wrote my first song in fifth grade called 'Alley Cat' but I can’t remember how it goes, it was for my cat. I don’t think I really started trying to write songs until my high school days, really, after high school. I don’t think any of those are really worth listening to at all."



What bands did you listen to back in high school?
"In high school, as a junior, I was kind of into heavy metal like Judas Priest and this is back when Iron Maiden had their first singer Paul Di'Anno, and stuff like that. I didn’t really hear Motor Head until a few years later, I knew of them, I just didn’t have any of their records. I’d never really buy that many records. I had a friend that would buy them and a neighbor across the street that would buy them, because I never really had any money. I was into a lot of Black Sabbath, just kind of what teenage kids listened to. Then I kind of had a new-wave streak with The Ramones which is I guess a little more rock, but I liked The Clash and stuff like that too."



Didn’t you play in a new wave band a long time ago?
"Yeah, it was me and my cousin, ever since we were kids we ran together and then I think by the time we were in seventh-grade we started playing guitars. After like a year or two we were trying to be heavy metal and then when we got turned onto the new wave punk thing, which he never really got into that much but he would do it anyway, because other people liked it and it was easier to play. So we did that for awhile."



What was that new wave band called?
“We went through all kinds of names, we did a 7-inch record under the name The End, but we’d change our name like every year. There was a couple of other bands called The End as well.”



Jack O, Ferris Wheelin' photo: Theresa Kereakes


Do you have any more of The End 7" singles laying around?
"I got one of them. I think Goner every once and awhile has one or two, yeah but it’s not that great, it’s a little too new wave actually.”



How did The End, finally call it quits?
"It was this weird thing. I was first living in this apartment building in like 1989, the end of ’89 is when my cousin who tried living in Memphis met a girl and split town, he just quit the band. Which was kind of a good thing because it was going nowhere. What I wanted to do was totally different from what he wanted to do."



So the band you had with your cousin was your first band then?
"Yeah, it was always me and him and we had the same drummer all the way through high school. It was after that band split up that I met Greg Cartwright.”



Jack in Memphis! photo: Theresa Kereakes


How did you meet Greg Cartwright?
“In like 1989 we met through this guy who came over to my apartment building. This guy popped in and he was real friendly, he just walked up in the yard and I thought my girlfriend knew him and she thought I knew him, we both thought the other knew this guy. So we let him come up to the apartment and were just hanging out with him."



This stanger told you about Greg?
"Yeah, he kept saying, 'I got this guy you got to meet though,' he said 'He’s the dude for you, man,' he kept saying that. Then after he left, his name is Terry, my girlfriend looked at me and said, 'Who is that guy?' I said 'I don’t know I thought you knew him.' Then he shows up like a day or two later with Greg and he was like, 'This is the dude, I’ve been telling you, you gotta’ get together!' Then Greg started calling me, which was different than what I was used to, because I was used to my cousin who never wanted to practice, never wanted to do anything, couldn’t get him to do shit. So I thought, 'Wow, this guy actually wants to play,' that’s how we started playing."



Jack pimpin' a cool hat! photo: Theresa Kereakes


So, this is when you and Greg officially teamed up?
"Just me and him tried getting people we knew to play drums, we went through a couple of drummers, a couple of dudes who didn’t know how to play drums, but we’d try to get them to play anyway. That’s kind of how I started to get pretty good on drums, from just never having a drummer and then Greg always came up with songs more than I could so that’s kind of how it worked out."



You guys were called The Pain Killers, right?
"We were changing our name a lot, that was with this one drummer we had for almost a year, this guy that Greg went to high school with. He was a good drummer but he was real heavy. He liked Nine Inch Nails, it was his favorite band at the time, it was good stuff or whatever but it just wasn’t what we played. Then when we would play with him on the weekend and we'd be jamming with a drummer who’s playing like crazy, really going at it on the drum kit... while we were trying to do our little songs or whatever. We did have some good stuff with the dude though."



I hear you still have some old Pain Killers cassette tapes, is that true?
"Yeah, of The Pain Killers, I still have some, but they’re real demo-y sounding. I just went through a bunch of those tapes the other day and the better sounding stuff is of me and Greg on the 4-Track, some of it's just Greg. The stuff that still sounds good today is not the full band. When it’s a full band with The Pain Killers it just has a really thin sound, just because we were trying to record a full band with a cassette 4-track."



Gamblin' days
! Jack O & Greg Cartwright



Where did the Compulsive Gamblers rehearse and record?
"I lived in this apartment building, which is where we eventually recorded those early Gamblers recordings like the first Gamblers cd, all that stuff except for the last three songs was recorded there. It was recorded on an 8-Track, we rehearsed and recorded in the apartment building."



The Compulsive Gamblers
had a lot of depressing drinking songs, was that true in real life too?
"There was lots of drinking but not compared to what I’ve seen over the years. It wasn’t like where some people stay up all night and into the next day, it wasn’t quite like that. I mean, we’d have beers and we’d like to have a party, but it wasn’t so bad. At the time we thought, 'Wow, were partying!' But over the years I’ve realized that these people are taking partying to another level to where it’s not even any fun.
If we did try to rehearse or do a gig, we’d say, 'Alright, we're not going to drink.' We’d start playing and after thirty-minutes, it’d be like 'Lets go get some beers, it doesn’t sound right!'”


Compulsive Gamblers in 1993


The Compulsive Gamblers
released three vinyl 7-inches, all pretty rare, especially the 'Church Goin' record. Who put those out?
"I don’t even have a copy of 'Church Goin’, I got a sleeve...I always try to keep at least one, there is a guy in town who did that one and I don’t think he did that many and it was never re-pressed and then he just kind of disappeared. I did the one with 'Sour & Vicious Man' and the second one with 'Mind in the Gutter.'"



Did The Compulsive Gamblers ever go on a tour?

"We never really did a long tour, we did some weekend things, where we’d go on the road for a couple days. I think we went to New Orleans a couple times, played Jackson, Mississippi, Tupelo or something like that. We went all the way to Florida, can’t even remember the name of the place, it was a long drive just to play in a bar to a handful of people."



Front Porch Pimpin, The Oblivians!


Why did the Compulsive Gamblers call it quits?
"I think it was that summer of 1992. After playing 1990-91 The Compulsive Gamblers never had any really good gigs, we never really had a set band or anything. By 1992 we had a set band, had our sound, somewhat of a sound. It was a pretty good year, pretty good gigs, party gigs with the Gamblers. By the end of 1992 it seemed like everyone started moving away and even Greg went to New York for a long time. I think it was early '93 he went to New York, he met this girl Casey Scott. She was in town with her drummer and bass player and I guess she played a little guitar but she wasn’t a real guitar player and she needed a real guitar player. She had a record thing with some subsidiary of Capitol Records or whatever, I forget the name of it, but you know how major labels try to look indie. They were putting them up in a house in Memphis so they could come down here and write songs... so they could come down here and soak up the Memphis soul, or whatever that means! But she met Greg and said ‘Do you want to come to New York, you'll have a place to stay and record’ and he said 'Sure'. Next thing you know, everyone split and it was just me and the violin player, what can you do with that?"



Casey Scott "Creep City"cd (1993), that's Greg all the way to the right.


So how were The Oblivians started?

"After the Gamblers split-up I went to New Orleans where the drummer was during the summer of ’93. I think I came back to Memphis for a weekend, Greg had moved back by that time and within like two or three days Greg was like, 'Let’s jam, who should we get?' and I said 'Let’s get Eric, he’s like one of the only people who digs us,' and he worked at Shangri-La, a cool record store. So we got him, and it seemed like over that weekend we came up with what’s on that first recordings of The Oblivians that Goner put out about two-years ago, ‘On the Go’, that’s what we did that weekend.





So was it The Oblivians that made you move back to Memphis?
"Well, After coming here for a weekend and recording that stuff on tape, then going back to New Orleans, I was listening to the tape over and over and the Gamblers’ drummer I stayed with, he’d never play, so I was like ‘Fuck man, I’ll just move back to Memphis, one weekend and we’ve almost got a set.' So I moved back and as soon as I came back we got a gig opening for Southern Culture on the Skids, and it just kind of turned into The Oblivians.



Did The Oblivians try to capture that minimal sound, or did it just happen?
"I think we just kind of were pounding it out. Greg wrote all types of songs, but at that point I think. Eric had a big garage rock influence on us, at that time we were getting into Thee Headcoates, Gories and bands like that, it’s just what we were listening to."



How did you end up playing drums? And why no bass drum at times?
"I think nobody really wanted to be the drummer. Eventually I added the bass drum but I wasn’t really good at it. Playing the simple stuff, it was easier to walk into and I guess at the same time it was gimmicky. You know, people were like 'Wow, you don’t even have a bass drum, or a bass player!' But, it’s not like we said we're not going to have a bass player, we just started doing it that way. It’s not like we really needed one, it sounded fine without it."


The Leathers! Eric, Greg and Jack Oblivian


So did you have people giving you shit about not having a bass player?
"When I worked at Sun Studios, this is even after The Oblivians were doing good and recording records, there was this guy that ran the place. He was a cool dude but he was from the ‘70s or whatever. He had recorded all these bands there but he wouldn’t record us unless we got a bass player, so we were like 'I guess you won’t record us then.' This is during the ‘Popular Favorites’ era, and this guy was like, 'Get a bass player and I’ll record you for free at Sun Studios' and we said 'That’s o.k. man,' and he was like 'I got a 24-track machine in here!' and it’s like, really, how many tracks did Sam Phillips have? Well, he just had one!"


What Oblivians album would you suggest to someone?
"I think 'Popular Favorites', for somebody who’s never heard The Oblivians before, that might be a good one to start with. I guess you could always say start with the first one, but that one is kind of in the middle of where it’s not too rough and not too slick, not too tight. The Quintron album is when we got really tight, it was a pro-sounding band, can’t even barely tell there’s not a bass player because it’s just so tight."



The Oblivians!


How did The Oblivians get involved with Crypt Records?

"I think Eric may have sent him some stuff when he worked at the record store. This was before email, he’d send faxes for orders to Crypt, he would order those types of records and put them in Shangri-La. Then he sent our demo."



What was the first big Oblivians gig?
"I think our first breakthrough gig was when Eric sent the ‘On the Go’ record when it was just a tape to Todd, the guy who books at Maxwell’s in New Jersey. He does the Telstar label, he sent a tape to that dude for some reason or another and the guy said ‘we’ll book you a gig’ and this was before we had a record. The gig was opening for the Blues Explosion, this is when they just had their 'Crypt Style' record. We thought that’d be a good show and we’ll drive real far, actually I think we ended up flying there, and we’ll at least have a gig where people will be at it. Then we had two other gigs somewhere up in that area. We were kind of nervous, like ‘Wow, we're in a big city’ so we rented a practice room in New York and practiced. It was like hooking up your stuff and playing a few songs and realizing, ‘we know this shit man!' It was just to ensure ourselves, it was like 'Hey we're in New York City! Maybe we should fucking practice!' I think John put in a word to Crypt and then Crypt sent a fax to Eric saying he wanted an album, and we were thinking ‘well, should we do an album?’ Then Crypt sent another fax back to us, saying ‘What about a tour also?’"



How many over seas tours did The Oblivians go on?
"Three times I think but at the time nobody really knew who we were overseas, today it’d be different. Crypt knew how to put together a tour or show over there, over here we were just booking our selves."



Did you guys get any tour support from Crypt?
“Somewhat, there was a garage rock scene he knew how to book us into. I mean, we did play a bunch of places to hardly anybody, but we also played some shows where there were kids up front that knew the words to the songs of a record that had only been out for a couple months, it was pretty weird. We played a pretty bog show at 'Garage Shock' in Washington in 1994, that was a big gig with other garage rock bands."



The Airline! Jack O leading the pack


Why did you guys do the gospel heavy 'Play 9 Songs' LP?
"You get so caught up in it you can’t even tell what’s going on. It was like all of a sudden your band is doing pretty good and we were going to do another record, and we convinced Greg to do those gospel songs. He always pulled those out at the gigs and they were always pretty easy, just a couple chords and we could do them unrehearsed. So we're like, 'Lets do these songs!' and he was pretty hesitant because he didn’t want to do gospel songs and end up coming off like Reverend Horton Heat or something, which is kind of hokey or cheesy. We were like, 'No, we won’t do it that way, we would do it the way we do it and if it doesn’t sound right, then we won’t do anything with it.' I think Greg got interested when I said 'Well, what if Quintron played?'"


Why did The Oblivians call it quits?
"I remember a couple practices where we’d get together and we’d run through the set and we’d know the songs because we played them so much but at that time we couldn’t really come up with any new songs. Every time we’d try it just wouldn’t happen like it would a couple years before that. Whatever little personal things went wrong with each other seemed to be more amplified than the guitars... that’s just what I remember during the end. I guess at that time I had all kinds of little gripes I could say, but I can’t remember those now. I just remember those couple practices where it just wasn’t working out anymore."


Oblivians promo shot


So what about now, how is it touring various parts of the world?
“You kind of still got to do weekends, over here it’s hard with all the guys I play with, with their day-jobs and everything. I can get them to do a European tour, because they look at it like a vacation. The dudes I play with now, they have been around. We do a couple weekend gigs here and there and if it goes over really good they're all about doing another one, but if you drive somewhere up to like, Michigan or something and you come back and the gig was just o.k., then its hard to get them back in the van the next couple weeks."



Harlan T. Bobo, King Louie and Jack O photo: Theresa Kereakes


You had a main role in the indie film Sore Losers, do you plan to act more in the future?
“I really don’t consider myself an actor at all. I was telling Mike he should get this guy from the band The Fireworks to do the roll, but when it came down to it he couldn’t sign the dude because he went underground, I think he had been for years. He got me just because he couldn’t find anybody else. I didn’t realize that it was that big of a part, I just thought it’d be fun, but then all the sudden I was like, 'Holy shit!' I didn’t look at the script, I never read it or anything, I was like, 'Shit, I have to be here again tomorrow?' And he was like 'Yeah, you have to be here for like a month.' But yeah, I never really tried to pursue an acting career or anything like that, I like working on movie sets, but I wouldn’t consider myself an actor."



Jack O and Mike Hurtt in Goner Records photo:Theresa Kereakes


What's some crazy shit that's happened to you on tour ?
A different band I went on tour with was Tav Falco, I think it was 1999. It was one of the worst transportation problems ever. He was driving his mom’s station wagon pulling a U-Haul trailer and the car caught on fire in the Mohave Desert in the middle of the night and burned completely up! Man, we were really fucked and we hadn’t even played a gig yet. Some truckers radioed-in and a police car and a fire engine eventually showed up and took us to the hotel. I dealt with the cars breaking down before, but never burning completely up out in the middle of nowhere. It’s a funny story to tell, but at the time it was pretty fucked up."


Did you lose anything in the car?
"Well, whatever was in the car because I was to scared to get in there. I kept thinking, “Is this thing going to blow up or what?” I had never really dealt with a car catching on fire before. Luckily all the equipment was in the U-Haul so none of it got burned up. I had stuff like my keys in the car so when I got back in town I didn’t have my keys to get into my apartment, and my roommate who was always in town wasn’t in town at that time. It was like two weeks of hell, just to get back in town and then you can’t even get into your apartment."



T-Money
! Terrance and Jack on the town
photo:Theresa Kereakes


Your Jack Oblivian solo albums... did those come after The Oblivians broke up?
"I think with that first one 'American Slang' The Oblivians were still together when I did it, 'So Low' was right after the band broke up."


I heard on your first solo record you had an interesting drum technique, what was it?
"On the first one, I wrapped some mics around my chest and beat on my chest to make it sound like a bass drum. I also had change in my pocket to make a sound like a tambourine. I need to try that again, I haven’t done it in awhile. That’s a little bit more primitive than The Oblivians!"


Do you prefer to record solo or with a band?
“Well, doing it on my own a lot of times something can come out where I like it, but I can never get a band to sound like that at all. But then sometimes doing it on your own, you probably need a band when it’s not a simple song, like a song with too many changes or whatever. It’s just so much easier with a band."


How did you guys record the Knaughty Knights singles?
"Lately with the Knaughty Knights, all those recordings for those 7-inches, Rich and me would both play drums. We’d lay down the rhythm, one would play guitar one would play the drums and then overdub tracks. It’s easier than trying to play everything, at least lay the drums down with somebody actually playing the guitar so you can get a tight rhythm. It’s just so hard to get everybody together a lot of times to try to get something recorded right."


How do you have time to play in so many different bands?
"Well, bands like South Filthy haven’t played together in awhile, we just do like two gigs a year. Walter would come here to Memphis and Jeff and me would go to Texas and we’d try to do a gig and squeeze in recording. I guess Walter did come here once and record. South Filthy is like a weekend thing."



So is it hard to get a steady band to record and tour?
"When you're younger, you might not be playing to many people, but you don’t have any jobs or families or anything like that, except Bubba and T-Money. They get to go on the road a lot, but they’re booked up every weekend until springtime with the River City Tanlines."



So, basically there's a lot of down time with these bands you play with?
"There is plenty of down time with all the other bands. Things get so slow with these other dudes I play with. The worst part of it is when the end of the year comes around with the holidays and all these bands want to do a big holiday, end of the year gig. They got a thing in their mind like they really got to do something before the year is over, like they’re running out of time, they got to record, that kind of thing. I’ve got everybody I’ve been playing with for the past one or two years all calling through November and early December wanting to record, usually not even wanting to go to a studio, they want me to record them up here in my apartment. I’ll have five different people wanting to record and do gigs all at the same time and it’s just way too much, but when New Years is over they stop calling (laughs). I always say, 'Just wait until January,' but then January comes and they just don’t call."


Brand New Love Affairs
!
photo: Theresa Kereakes


How often do you write songs?
“I don’t write them as much as a lot of people do, I wish I could, I wish they’d just come out. Sometimes I‘ll have something I’m working on, and just bounce it around for a long time and finally I’ll put some words to it, then I’ll find out later listening to some other tape like, 'Wow, this is the same song here, its just different lyrics,' it's the same groove that always comes out."


Do you ever feel pressure to write songs for the next album?
"Sometimes the pressure is good, it gets you going, gets you working. Every once in a while I’ll be working on something for a recording and then right when you’re about to send it to the pressing plant you come up with a new tune and you're like, 'Should I wait or should I save it for the next one?'"



You're self-releasing your new album "Flip Side Kid" on vinyl?
Why by yourself?
"Yeah, I’m doing it. I got it at a pressing plant. I’m just waiting on the label art, and then I have to finish the cover, which is basically the same cover, with some different images. It’ll be done hopefully by early spring. It’s already been mastered, I’m just waiting on the last little things. I’ll be doing it myself, just probably sell it out of the trunk of the car or whatever. I wanted to do both the cd and the vinyl and then I thought ‘Well, I’ll just do one of ‘em,' and then after Long Gone (owner of Sympathy Records) did the cd I realized that the vinyl costs more money, I probably should have done the cd, but I guess the vinyl is a little more hip. I’m just curious of how many they sell, because you never really know, like Sympathy or Crypt Records. I know I don’t really sell a shit load, but I want to see how many are going out there."



Your fans are pretty loyal, they'd buy it with or without a record label, don't you think?
"They’ll buy if they can find it. It’s not like they’re going into Tower Records and seeing some big cardboard stand-up. It’s kind of like...'What do you need a label for?'"




BUY! THE NEW 'FLIP SIDE KID' VINYL!
(click link below to BUY it at Goner Records!)
http://www.goner-records.com/cart/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&search_in_description=1&keyword=flipside



Jack Oblivian LINKS!

Jack's Official Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/officialjackoblivian

Jack's Grunnen Rocks page:

http://www.grunnenrocks.nl/people/y/yarberjack.htm
Cool Jerks Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/cooljerks
Brand New Love Affairs Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/brandnewloveaffairs
South Filthy Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/southfilthy
Knaughty Knights Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/knaughtyknight
Compulsive Gamblers fan-space:
http://www.myspace.com/compulsivegamblers



Thanks! to Theresa Kereakes
Check out her PUNK photos!












View My Stats