Saturday, September 18, 2010

ACCEPT WHAT WE DO!

ACCEPT – “Blood Of The Nations” CD ’10 (Nuclear Blast, Ger) – I can remember some things vividly. The births of my children, the day I graduated from college, the first time I had sex, my first kiss…and the day my old buddy Doug told me he’d gotten a test-pressing of ACCEPT’s “Breaker” a month before it was to be released. Events like this stand out in sharp relief against the tapestry of time that forms our lives. I can see it just like it was yesterday: We were driving in my ’78 Malibu up Moravia Park Drive and all of the sudden, Doug (he who never lacked a flair for the dramatic) turned to me, his face awash with the emotion of a man who’d just witnessed a mass-mutilation. “Ray,” he began in a hushed tone… “I just got a test-pressing of the new ACCEPT album from the guy at Passport (Records)…. His words hung in the air and he tension was palpable. Then came the resolution, “It’s heavy as shit!!!” Now, you have to understand, this was important to know. The simple reason was that ACCEPT’s first record, released in 1979 was a monster…an electrifying debut, laced with nasty metallic riffs, nuclear whammy bar dive bombs and razor-blade vocals. Somehow, when their sophomore effort arrived in 1980 under the name “I’m A Rebel,” there had been a bit of a castration done to our Teutonic terrors. The production was far more sterile, the riffs were half-assed and the whole thing was eked down several notches (possibly due to Passport trying to mold their own AC/DC…and quite unsuccessfully). So this 3rd one, “Breaker,” was going to tell the real story and my God, it was quite a tale! From the slashing metallic stormers of “Starlight,” “Run If You Can” and the title cut, to the massive (and maybe greatest ever) metal ballad “Can’t Stand The Night” to the caustic slap at the industry, “Son Of A Bitch” this sucker flat-out bristled! And that was the bottom line. The album was a motherfucker and good ol’ Doug put the cherry on top (pun intended) by making his own cover for the white-label promo LP he’d gotten by gluing a “wide-open” shot of a lady from Hustler magazine to the cover.

From this point on, ACCEPT had a damn good run of metallic mayhem ahead of them with scorchers like “Restless & Wild,” “Balls To The Wall” and “Russian Roulette” to add to their collective resumes. Sadly, the band would fall from grace as the ‘80’s unfolded into the grunge-laden ‘90’s, slapped with the double whammy of an industry that just didn’t give a shit and their own creativity going in the dumper. Records like “Eat The Heat” and “Predator” were better off forgotten and truly, the once great German metal tank receded into my memory, their last record hitting the racks in 1996. That was until I saw a little piece online about a new ACCEPT record in 2010. I have to say, my reaction and what I feared led me to think of an old Agent Steel album title, “Skeptic’s Apocalypse.” Udo was no longer on vocals (replaced by Mark Tornillo of TT Quick), and drum god Stefan Kaufmann had given up the stool in favor of Stefan Schwarzmann. Was this going to be another disappointment, a reformation fans would wish never happened? The answer is…

NO!!! Now having listened to “Blood Of The Nations” a handful of times (and that takes awhile, as the 13 tracks clock in at over 70 minutes), I’m here to say “ACCEPT your fate, metallers, the German tank is back!” You’ll have no problem understanding the fact that the boys… Wolf Hoffmann – guitar, Herman Frank – guitar (wasn’t he a Cubs manager years ago?!) and Peter Baltes – bass…really are out for blood when the opening riff of “Beat The Bastards” hits your speakers. From there on, it’s over an hour on a roller coaster of metal thrills with fat, nasty distorted Flying V chords powering the likes of “Locked and Loaded,” “Pandemic” and “Bucketful Of Hate.” Elsewhere, the band once again shows their versatility with the melody and drama of “The Abyss,” “Shades Of Death” and “Time Machine.” Tornillo does a great job of stepping behind the mike and, while he can cut a mean Udo when he wants, his tone is still different and his own, providing a bit of vintage Brian Johnson and even a hint of Dan McCafferty as well. Star of the game has to be shared between the two guitarists, however, with Hoffmann & Frank man-handling their V’s all over the record! Whether it’s locking together in a crushing rhythm or sailing off into screaming solo-fests (many songs contain multiple leads!) this is simultaneously a metal guitarist’s clinic and a work of art to hang over the mantle.

You might remember the day your child was born. You might recall your wedding day (some of us may have more than one of these on file). All the same, I think you’re going to ACCEPT this one into your permanent brain cells too! Two Very Large Erect Flying V’s

http://www.acceptworldwide.com/

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Looks Good On The Side Of A Van...Sounds Good Anywhere!

ASTROVAN – “You Said It Man” CD EP ’10 (Private, US) – Remember back in the ‘90’s, when “Seattle” meant more than just the name of a city in the Pacific Northwest? It meant more than the place Ichiro plays baseball or more than the town that’s home field for a bald quarterback. No, “Seattle” was virtually synonymous with the birth of an entire genre of heavy music, it’s most famous son being of course the tragic figure of Kurt Cobain. Well, I sure as hell hope none of these ASTROVAN guys follows in Mr. C’s personal footsteps but with this nifty little disc, these 5 are trying to put their place of business back on the map. “You Said It Man” is nothing complicated. It’s nothing that’s going to make you sit back, scratch your head and say to yourself, “Jeez, I wonder what it is these artists are trying to say to me here?” No, there’ll be no time for that, honcho, because you’ll be too busy just rawking your ass off to even care. See, ASTROVAN are a 5-piece that takes a generous helping of ‘70’s riff-rock, a heaping dollup of metal and then just grooves like no tomorrow. You don’t have to go any further than opener “Too Proud” to get walloped by a back-breaker of a rhythm. The clear, top-level production job brings the powerful riffing into sharp relief and atop it, Deezer’s incisive, throaty vox and the wah-wah soloing of Sam Damage ride like a biker on a Harley. The boys mix it up nicely too, with a faster neck-snapper like “Twelve Gauge Promise” easing in nicely next to the laid-back-yet-seething pulse of “Every Change.” “You Said It Man” is a slab of high-test windows-down rawk and my only wish is that it were longer than 6 songs. Still, making the listener hungry for more ain’t a bad idea and it beats the hell out of some 68 minute disc that’s bloated with filler. That’s What I’m Talking About

http://www.myspace.com/astrovanner/

Saturday, September 11, 2010

30 Years On And Still As Athletic As Hell!!! RAVEN Live At Sonar!

I’ll be the first to say I’m in the middle of some pretty rough times right now, especially business-wise. The ol’ economy has hit me hard. Still, with all that, I managed to make my way down to Baltimore’s Sonar the other night and catch a real unique show, coupled with grabbing some good ol’ times with friends from the past & present. Truly going to these kinda metal shows is a very special thing. It’s kinda like a misfits high school reunion! This was a particularly great evening, being that it was a co-birthday celebration between former Grinder Mag publisher Jim Powell and master graphic artist Dave Wright. Besides them I also got to chew the fat with local metal luminaries like Metal Matt (Iron Boss, Rancid Decay) and Raven drummer himself, Pentagram-man Joe Hasselvander.

I only caught a few minutes of the opening act ACID QUEEN, but they went down real nice spinning a fine web of NWOBHM covers like “Wasted” by Leppard, “Princess Of The Night” (Saxon) and others as well as a scorching guitar-solo-laden original. Up next were my new favourite band, SHOKKHER! From Washington, D.C., this 5-piece have been doing a spectacular job of hiding from me up till now…because they fucking kick ass! Fronted by a killer vocalist who could’ve been Rex Smith’s brother (wouldn’t that make him Michael Lee Smith? Well, no but…!) these guys combined massive NWOBHM riffs, Thin Lizzy-styled harmony leads and a slight overtone of glam to sweep me into instant fan-dom. Most of all, I was smitten by the lead guitar work of the young-looking axe man at stage right, who looked like he was 18 and played like Michael Schenker. His melodic soloing at the beginning of “Lady Insane” was enough to raise goosebumps. Completely taken by these dudes, I picked up their debut disc (10 songs for only $ 5!). Expect a full report soon!

It was after SHOKKHER that “Athletic Rock” came barreling full-force into the club, as Mark & John Gallagher plus Joe H took the stage and set everything into a high-energy barrage that didn’t let up for their entire set. John proved he is still as crazy as ever, mauling his 4-string while unleashing high-pitched shrieks that would make Mr. Halford take note to this very day. Joe delivered a thundering cavalcade of drum-storm pillaging that not only cemented his own legendary reputation but also did proud the legacy of “Wacko.” Last but surely not least was Mark, who’s guitar sound was nothing short of nasty as fucking hell. I mean the cat had a snarling, honking sound that recalled Akira Takasaki at Jaxx a few years ago and his playing put him at the forefront of most NWOBHM guys, right up there with Pete Haworth and the Maiden bunch. This Gallagher brother was wrenching screaming harmonic squeals out of his axe when Zakk Wylde was still a gleam in someone’s eye and he was on it this night, through classics like “Break The Chains” and “Rock Until You Drop.”

All in all, you talk about a heavy-assed and fun night from stem to stern! This was it! Best show of 2010 to this point and one hell of a high school reunion!

Let Us Not Forget...

On a day like today, while we music people revel in things like the RAVEN show last night, the new IRON MAIDEN album or new guys like SHOKKHER coming out of the woodwork, it's important that we all take a step back, just for a few minutes. We will never forget what happened that day so long (and...paradoxically, so recently) on 09/11/01 and will always remember all of those who lost their lives as well as those who came forth in great numbers to help with the rescue and aftermath.... Turn the Marshalls off for a moment and let's bow our heads to remember....

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

This LLAMA Is Spittin' Fire

DALI'S LLAMA - "Howl Do You Do?" CD '10 (Private, US) - Well, the Realm may be strugglin' to life again here and there, but in doing so it's a lean, mean killing machine. So, besides just having nicked the title of one of Judas Priest's heaviest platters, I'm going to get right to the fuggin' point here! Over recent (hell, even way before recent!) times, the stoner genre has started to fold in on itself and become not only repetitive and derivative (a nod to Rick & Roll, who loves that "derivative" word!) but also just plain shitty. One band whom you can't lay that mantle on is DALI'S LLAMA and their latest, the cleverly monikered "Howl Do You Do?" really bears that out. Simply put, this crew takes that tried-&-true overdriven and distorted stoner vibe and draped over it some super-catchy old time rock & roll melodies that really grab me by the nads. Sheezus, it's almost as if Eddie Glass & Chuck Berry sat down and compared geetar playin' all across this shiny recordable medium and I'm a happier man for it. Only one question, friends...Howl Do I Get This Outta My CD Player?

Sunday, September 5, 2010

JEFF ADAMS - FACE DANCER's Lead Guitarist Speaks In An Exclusive 2010 Interview!




Getting into bands like Sabbath, Zeppelin, Grand Funk…that was a big part of my introduction to great music back in the day. First, it was going to the record store, buying albums by them, taking chances on lesser-knowns (who would become Gods to me) like Budgie, Cactus, etc. and going to big live shows at places like The Cap Center and Civic Center. A real turning point, however, was finding a local band that kicked ass right in my “back yard” and getting to see them a couple times a month, in the intimate setting of a club like Essex, Md’s Sea Gull Inn. The band in question was FACE DANCER. Between seeing them a million nights at the Sea Gull and then worshipping every second of their debut platter “This World,” I was a true fan, smitten with the works of this kick ass hard rock band. They constantly amazed me, at first with their ability to cover some of the best stuff of the day (The Who, Zeppelin, Jeff Beck, etc.) to their originals which ranged from pounding heavy rock to Beatle-esque melodies. Standing out above it all for a guy like me was the blazing lead guitar work of one Jeff Adams, the first local player who’s work I really studied and a player who stands among the best of the big shots. Not long ago, and after way too many years of not having done so, I tracked Jeff down and we rolled back the years to bring those great old days back to life. Here’s how it went, as Jeff Adams tells the story of his time in the area’s best hard rock band and how things have developed for him in recent years. (Jeff Adams photo - Teri Murphy)


Ray - One thing I’ve always found that’s a good place to start is the
beginning. Jeff, how early on in your life did you get involved in music?
Do you come from a musical family? What got you into playing guitar?

Jeff - WOW! NOW WE'RE GOIN BACK A WAYS! DID I TELL MY AGE?? WHEN I WAS 11, A BUDDY AND I ON OUR BIKES PULLED UP OUTSIDE OF A REC-CENTER DANCE ONE SATURDAY NIGHT. AS WE WATCHED THROUGH A WINDOW, I WAS INSTANTLY MESMERIZED BY THE BAND AND THE LIVE MUSIC THING. HOWEVER I ZEROED IN ON THE DRUMS. SO I WENT ON A MISSION TO BE A DRUMMER AND STUCK WITH IT INTO MY TEENS. AT AGE 15/16 MY DAD BOUGHT A NEW GUITAR(FOR HIMSELF) AND CLEVERLY HANDED ME HIS OLD ONE, ASKING IF I WANTED TO HANG IT ON THE WALL OR SOMETHING. I SAID SURE. WITHIN A WEEK I HAD FIGURED OUT ALL THE BASIC CHORDS, AS WELL AS 5 PATERNS(COVERING THE OCTAVE)OF BASIC SCALES IN 3 DIFFERENT MODES!
WITHIN A COUPLE OF WEEKS I HAD SOLD MY DRUMS REPLACING THEM WITH GUITARS AND AMPS!

Ray - Who were your early influences as a guitar player? How has that
evolved any? What, if any, current players do you like?

Jeff - AS A YOUNG GUITAR ENTHUSIAST(SAY AROUND 1970), I IMMEDIATELY LATCHED ON TO BECK, PAGE, AND CLAPTON. I SPENT YEARS LEARNING EVERY LICK THEY WERE RECORDING, AND OF COURSE THEN STARTED LISTENING TO ALL THE GREAT PLAYERS OF THE TIME. FROM THE BEGINNING I WAS VERY MUCH INTERESTED IN WRITING MY OWN MUSIC, AND PLAYING MY OWN STYLE OF LEAD GUITAR. FOR EVERY HOUR(OR 5) I WOULD PUT IN COPYING OTHERS, I WOULD PUT IN AN HOUR(OR 5) OF AD-LIBBING TO RHYTHYM TRACKS. THE LATTER QUICKLY BECAME MY FAVORITE THING IN LIFE!

Ray - What were the beginnings of the FACE DANCER story? How did you get
involved, how far along the line was that in the history of the band?

Jeff - FACEDANCER HAD BEEN AROUND FOR A FEW YEARS WITH VARIOUS LINE-UPS BEFORE I MET THEM IN NOVEMBER OF 76. I WAS BUYING A PAIR OF JEANS IN THE WHEATON SHOPPING PLAZA(WHEATON, MD)WHEN THE GIRL AT THE REGISTER WHO I DIDN'T KNOW ASKED ME IF I WAS A GUITAR PLAYER!? SHE SAID HER BOYFRIEND'S BAND WAS LOOKING FOR A LEAD GUITARIST. ANYWAY I SAID YES, GAVE HER MY NUMBER, AND GOT A CALL FROM SCOTT MCGINN THAT AFTERNOON. I WENT OVER TO THE FD BAND HOUSE(RIGHT IN WHEATON)THE NEXT DAY, ACCEPTED THEIR INVITATION TO JOIN, AND DID MY FIRST SHOW WITH THE BAND THE NEXT NIGHT! WOW, WHAT A TRIP THAT WAS FOR ME, I WAS PLAYING IN FRONT OF A SEA OF PEOPLE FOR THE FIRST TIME! I WAS PETRIFIED! I THINK IT TOOK ABOUT 2 MONTHS WITH THE BAND FOR ME TO EVEN LIFT MY HEAD AND LOOK OUT AT THE AUDIENCE!

Ray - What was the line-up of the band when you joined?

Jeff - WHEN I JOINED FACEDANCER IT WAS CAREY KRESS AS LEAD VOCAL FRONTING THE BAND, SCOTT MCGINN ON RYTHYM GUITAR, DJ LONG ON KEYS, BILLY TRAINER ON DRUMS, AND DALE MARKS ON BASS. SHORTLY AFTER, DJ HAD TO LEAVE THE BAND FOR AN OPERATION, AND DALE WAS MOVED OUT TO MAKE ROOM FOR DAVE UTTER(LAZY DAVE, MY BUDDY!). AT THIS POINT SCOTT PLAYED BASS AS WELL AS SOME KEYBOARDS.

Ray - When I first started to go see FACE DANCER, it was at the Sea Gull Inn
in Essex, Md., I’m thinking it was around ’76 or so, but age may have
dimmed my memory (lol). You guys played there a lot right, what was it
maybe every month or every other month? What other places were you
playing then? How many gigs a month were you doing at that point?

Jeff - WELL THAT WAS WHEN I WAS NEW WITH THE BAND, WE PLAYED JR'S INN, THE SEAGULL, THE ACT FOUR, THE BAYOU(IN DC), THE HOLLYWOOD PALACE, I'M SURE I'M FORGETTING A FEW, BUT IT WAS FULL TIME RIGHT FROM THE WEEK I JOINED THE BAND. LIKE MAYBE 3 TO 5 NIGHTS A WEEK.

Ray - What did you think of the Sea Gull, as far as clubs and crowds go? As
I recall (and, my memory may be better on this!), there were a lot of
really good looking women at those shows back then. That had to be pretty
cool, they tended to like lead guitarists, didn’t they, the guitar being a
phallic symbol & all that? (lol)

Jeff - THE SEAGULL INN WAS BY FAR MY FAVORITE! IT HAD A NICE SIZE STAGE(NOT TOO SMALL NOT TOO BIG) WHERE WE COULD LET OUT OUR SOUND AND LIGHTS, THE CROWD WAS NUTS, AND YES, THERE WERE A FEW YOUNG LADIES THAT WOULD COME AROUND ONCE IN A WHILE!(HAHA)

Ray - Those were some of the best nights I had, as a music fan, down there,
especially in the summer, going down there on a hot night, drinking some
beers and watching you guys. I still remember that one night we were
waiting to get in and you came walking up, noticed my homemade FD t-shirt
and were like, “Cool, man.” I went home & played guitar even more after
that. It was great, as a young guy into playing myself, to have a
semi-local guy who I could watch up close. I was into people like Leslie
West, Iommi, Duane Allman, etc. but you were right up there with ‘em in my
opinion and were not just some disembodied rock star a million miles away.
Did you realize you were influencing other guys like me who came &
watched you play?

Jeff - I ALWAYS APPRECIATED SEEING HOMEMADE FD GEAR, IT MEAN'T TO ME THAT MAYBE WE WERE DOING SOMETHING RIGHT! FROM TIME TO TIME I'VE BEEN TOLD THAT MY PLAYING HAD AN INFLUENCE, AND LET ME SAY THERE'S NOTHING IN WORLD MORE REWARDING!! I NEVER CONSIDERED MYSELF A GREAT PLAYER, JUST A GUY DOING WHAT HE LOVES TO DO.

Ray - You used to do a cover of the Stevie Wonder song (which had been
redone by Jeff Beck) called “Cause We’ve Ended As Lovers.” That has a
tremendously emotional melody, which then both you and Beck extrapolated
on so well in your versions. This is the kind of thing I loved so much
about guitar players from the ‘70’s. There seemed to be so much more of a
lyrical, conversational sort of playing ability among you guys compared to
a lot of the note-per-second shred-type stuff nowadays. Any commentary
from Mr. Adams on this?

Jeff - YES! GREAT POINT! NOTES-PER-SECOND AND COMPETITION BETWEEN GUITAR PLAYERS NEVER MADE SENSE TO ME. FIRST OF ALL, PLAYING A GUITAR SOLO IS LIKE PAINTING A MASTERPIECE. IT'S A PERSONAL THING. IT CAN'T BE COMPARED TO THAT OF ANOTHER ARTIST(UNLESS SOMEONE IS COPYING), IT'S A CREATION THAT SHOULD COME FROM THE HEART AND SOUL. AND WHEN IT DOES, IT'S ALWAYS GREAT. 'CAUSE WE'VE ENDED AS LOVERS' IS A PERFECT EXAMPLE. TOO MANY NOTES TOO FAST USUALLY JUST TAKES AWAY FROM THE FLAVOR.

Ray - I remember you guys during that period doing originals like “Cry Baby”
and “Change” as well as covers like “Dancing Days” & “Won’t Get Fooled
Again.” Again, not trying to rely on my faulty memory (except for the hot
women quotient!), what percentage originals & covers were you playing
then?

Jeff - WHEN I JOINED FD WE WERE DOING ROUGHLY 50/50 COVERS TO ORIGINALS. OVER MAYBE 6OR 8 MONTHS THE ORIGINALS GRADUALLY REACHED 80%(OR MORE) OF THE SHOW.

Ray - You guys used to set off a big flash pot right at the “scream” part
in “Won’t Get Fooled Again.” I used to make sure I was up at the front
for that and it would feel like I was going to get my fucking face blown
off for a second! Ah, the joys of youth! Great theatrical moment, how
come bands don’t do stuff like that anymore? Maybe afraid they’ll kill
somebody? Ever get hurt onstage? Stories, please!

Jeff - WOW! FLASH POTS! OUCH! I KNOW THEY LOOKED GOOD AND THE AUDIENCES LOVED THEM, BUT I HATED THEM, I COULDN'T BREATH AFTER THEY WENT OFF! AT THAT TIME THEY DIDN'T MAKE 'SAFE TO BREATH' FLASH POWDER, IT SUCKED! AS FAR AS INJURY, I NEVER GOT CAUGHT BY ONE, BUT CAREY KRESS DID! HE RAN TO THE WRONG SPOT ON STAGE AT THE WRONG TIME ONE NIGHT AND TOOK A DIRECT HIT! HE WASEN'T SERIOUSLY HURT, BUT BADLY SHAKEN UP!

Ray - In a related thought, Carey really had a theatrical way about
himself as a front man. Even on a relatively small stage like at The Sea
Gull, he had a way of making the whole thing feel like it was a much
bigger production. He’d come on and instantly have the crowd in the palm
of his hand. What was it like, working with that kind of singer?

Jeff - YES! CAREY HAD AN AMAZING PRESENCE! HAVING SUCH A GREAT TALENT
FRONTING THE BAND CERTAINLY MADE IT EASIER FOR THE REST OF US! I ALWAYS DESCRIBED THE MAGIC THAT WAS FACEDANCER AS FIVE MEDIOCRE SINGERS AND PLAYERS WITH AN INCREDIBLE ELECTRICITY THING THAT YOU JUST COULDN'T DEFINE.

Ray - When did you guys get the deal with Capitol Records. I know that “This
World” came out in 1979, but when did the process start with them. Tell
me about that, from when you signed up through the recording of the album
and it’s release. Be as wordy and long-winded as you’d like, you’ve got
my rapt attention.

Jeff - AT THE TIME I JOINED FD IN LATE 76, WE ALL SAT DOWN AND CLEARLY OUTLINED THE BAND'S GOALS. WE WOULD EITHER LAND A MAJOR RECORD DEAL WITHIN A YEAR AND A HALF, OR DISBAND. WE PRETTY MUCH MET THAT TIME LINE GOAL WITH THE CAPITOL DEAL. I BELIEVE IT WAS EARLY 78 WHEN WE ACCEPTED CAPITOL'S OFFER, AND BEGAN THE SEARCH FOR THE RIGHT PRODUCER. AFTER DECIDING ON RICHIE WISE, WE WENT INTO PRE-PRODUCTION THAT SUMMER. THE LOGISTICS WERE WORKED OUT FOR RECORDING TO BEGIN IN DECEMBER IN LOS ANGELES.

Ray - How much were you all involved with the production, mixing, etc. of
“This World?”

Jeff - ACTUALLY VERY LITTLE. WE PRETTY MUCH ALLOWED THOSE INVOLVED SUCH AS OUR PRODUCER, THE PROJECT MANAGER FROM CAPITOL, AND OUR MANAGEMENT, TO TAKE FULL ADVANTAGE OF US THE NAIVE YOUNG MUSICIANS. RICHIE WISE MIXED THE ALBUM ON HIS OWN, IT WAS DECIDED THAT THE BUDGET DIDN'T ALLOW FOR THE BAND TO BE THERE. WE HAD TO LEAVE L.A. AND GET BACK TO WORK!

Ray - Don’t get me wrong, “This World” is one of my favorite hard rock
albums of all time. All the same, though, after having seen you guys live
so many times, the recording quality was kinda thin. Did you think it
gave a real indication of what your live show was like?

Jeff - YOU GOT IT RIGHT THERE, THE ALBUM SOUNDED TERRIBLE IN MY OPINION. WAY TOO THIN. I SURE DO LIKE THE ROCK CANDY RE-RELEASE(2008), THEY RE-MASTERED THE ALBUM GIVING IT THE BALLS IT WAS LACKING, WHICH IS CERTAINLY MORE LIKE THE WAY THE BAND SOUNDED LIVE.

Ray - One of my favorite things about “This World,” and FACE DANCER’s
original music in general is the diversity of the material. On one hand,
you’ve got something with a real catchy, poppy vibe like “Can’t Stand
Still” and then things much heavier like “The Sphinx” and “Cry Baby.”
Seems like bands back in that decade were more likely to be able to flow
between different styles and make it work, more so than now. Any
comments?

Jeff - RIGHT AGAIN, RAY! IN MY VIEW THAT WAS A KEY ELEMENT TO THE GREATNESS OF FD LIVE AND ON RECORD. GOTTA HAND IT TO SCOTT, HIS WRITING WAS VERY DYNAMIC. WE WOULD TAKE THE AUDIENCE ALL OVER THE PLACE WHICH LAYED THE GROUND WORK FOR A VERY ENTERTAINING VISUAL SHOW.

Ray - “Change” is an interesting song. It starts out with a section that’s
almost like a Beatles thing from “Sgt. Pepper’s…” or the white album and
then erupts into this runaway train metal kinda ending. Has to be fun
playing stuff like that, eh?

Jeff - AN ABSOLUTE BLAST! 'CHANGE' WAS ALLWAYS A FAVE OF MINE TO PERFORM! ANYTIME YOU CAN JOLT PEOPLE LIKE THAT, IT'S A LOT OF FUN. NOT JUST MUSICALLY BUT WE LAID IT ON THICK VISUALLY AS WELL.

Ray - “Cry Baby” was your sort of traditional closer, it just seemed like it
went on, just escalating and escalating, with this huge lead guitar
climax. That’s gotta be a blast to play, right, knowing you’re going to
get to go off like that at the end, I would think?

Jeff - 'GO OFF'? HAHA, YEA, THATS A GOOD WAY TO PUT IT! A BUNCH OF OUR MATERIAL GAVE ME THE PLATFORM TO 'GO OFF', BUT CRY BABY WAS ALWAYS A HIGHLIGHT. SOME HOW OVER TIME WE WORKED OUT THAT LENGTHY BUILDING THING THAT CERTAINLY DID WORK WELL LIVE!

Ray - Following “This World,” did Capitol set you up with any kind of
touring, supporting a bigger act, etc. to promote the album?

Jeff - NO, THEY OFFERED NO TOUR SUPPORT OR PROMOTIONAL BUDGET. AT THAT TIME CAPITOL WAS POURING ALL OF IT'S RECOURSES INTO THE KNACK. REMEMBER 'MY SHARONA'? THAT PIECE OF GARBAGE (IN MY OPINION) WAS THE DOWNFALL OF FACEDANCER AND OTHERS ON THE LABEL. THERE WAS LITTLE DOUBT THAT FD'S SUCCESS IN THE MARYLAND, DC AREA COULD HAVE BEEN DUPLICATED AROUND THE COUNTRY, LET'S JUST SAY IT WAS BAD TIMING FOR FD ON CAPITOL RECORDS. EVEN MCCARTNEY WAS AFFECTED BY THE KNACK PROJECT AND LEFT THE LABEL AT THAT TIME. FINALLY EMI, CAPITOL'S PARENT COMPANY, CAME IN AND CLEANED HOUSE AS THE KNACK PROJECT HAD PROVED TO BE A HUGE BLUNDER FOR THE LABEL. WE DID HOWEVER MANAGE TO HOLD ON TO OUR 2ND ALBUM DEAL, SO WE FELT WE STILL HAD A SHOT.

Ray - The next recorded work was “About Face.” What can you tell me about
the thoughts behind the writing and the making of that album. It was a
drastic change, a lot more keyboards and a lot more radio-accessible type
stuff. To be honest, as a fan, I didn’t like it nearly as much as it’s
predecessor. What are your thoughts on it now?

Jeff - YOU'RE RIGHT THAT WE WENT INTO A LIGHTER VEIN WITH MORE KEYBOARDS, BUT THAT ONLY HAPPENED BECAUSE OF THE TERRIBLE PERSONNEL CHANGE WE WENT THROUGH. AFTER 'THIS WORLD' CAME OUT, WE WERE, OF COURSE, WORKING TOWARDS THE NEXT ALBUM, AND STARTED HAVING ISSUES WITH CAREY'S VOCALS ON NEW SONG DEMOS. I DON'T KNOW IF HE WAS JUST PARTYING A BIT TOO MUCH OR WHAT, BUT HE WASN'T
SOUNDING GREAT, AND OUR PROJECT MANAGER FROM CAPITOL (MITCHELL SCHOENBOUM) WAS FREAKING OUT. WE WERE ALL CONCERNED. OUR SECOND ALBUM DEAL WAS AN OPTION FOR CAPITOL THAT WAS BEGINNING TO APPEAR FRAGILE AT BEST. ANYWAY, WITH TOTALLY DIFFERENT ISSUES GOING ON CONCERNING DAVE UTTER, WE MADE THE PAINFUL DECISION TO LET BOTH OF THEM GO! IT REALLY SUCKED! CAREY WAS SUCH A GREAT GUY AND GOOD FRIEND, AND THE SAME GOES FOR DAVE, MAN IT JUST SUCKED! AT THIS POINT WE STARTED THINKING ABOUT A MORE CONTEMPORARY EDGE TO OUR SOUND, MAYBE SOMETHING MORE ACCESSIBLE, AND DECIDED TO BRING IN ONLY ONE NEW MEMBER, A KEYBOARD PLAYER WITH STRONG VOCALS. ENTER MICHAEL
MILSAP.

Ray - What can you tell me about the time period following the release of
“About Face” and your eventual decision to leave the band. What
transpired with all that?

Jeff - AT THE TIME WE STARTED DIVING INTO 'ABOUT FACE', I WAS LOSING MORE AND MORE INTEREST IN THE BAND ALL THE TIME. THE BAND'S MANAGEMENT, BOB AISS, WAS,,,,, LET'S JUST SAY HE WAS DISTRACTED WITH HIS PERSONAL AGENDAS TO THE POINT WHERE I JUST COULDN'T STAND IT. I WAS A YOUNG GUY, NOT WELL EQUIPPED TO HANDLE STRESS, AND I WAS NOT HANDLING IT. IN FACT IT GOT SO BAD FOR ME THAT I BROKE OUT IN HIVES(CAUSED BY STRESS) WHILE IN LONDON RECORDING THE ALBUM. MAN I WAS MISERABLE! AT THE SAME TIME I WAS NOT GOING TO DEPRIVE MYSELF OF WHAT I THOUGHT WAS AT LEAST A CHANCE TO HAVE A SUCCESSFUL ALBUM UNDER MY BELT TO MOVE ON WITH, SO I HUNG IN THERE UNTIL IT WAS CLEAR THAT CAPITOL WAS NOT GOING TO PROMOTE THE ALBUM, AND THE ALBUM WAS GOING NOWHERE. AT THAT POINT I SAID THANKS, IT'S BEEN ONE HELL OF A RIDE, BUT I'M OUT.

Ray - I know that you moved to Florida at some point and I believe, got
involved in working with real estate. How has that worked out for you,
pretty well? I guess the economy has played havoc with that of recent
years, like most things, eh?

Jeff - NEVER DABBLED IN REAL ESTATE(WHERE THE HELL DID YOU GET THAT?), BUT IN '97 I DID FIND MYSELF DOING THE SINGLE PARENT THING WITH TWO OF MY DAUGHTERS. TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO KEEP THE ROOF OVERHEAD, I GOT INTO INSURANCE SUBROGATION(DON'T ASK WHAT THAT IS, IT WOULD TAKE AN HOUR TO TELL YOU!). I BECAME QUITE GOOD AT IT($$$), AND STUCK WITH IT THROUGH '05. JEFF IN THE FULL TIME CORPORATE WORLD WAS DEFINITELY THE OLD SQUARE PEG IN THE ROUND HOLE, I'VE BEEN SELF EMPLOYED EVER SINCE(YES, I'M STILL A POOL PLAYER)!

Ray - During the time since you’ve been in Florida, I understand that you’ve
released several solo CD’s. How many have there been, what styles have
they involved and are there any copies available? (I really need to hear
this stuff!!!)

Jeff - ACTUALLY I'VE ONLY DONE TWO STUDIO ALBUMS SINCE FD, THE JEFF ADAMS BAND(1998) AND STARKEY DRIVE(2006). THE OTHER 3 OR 4 ALBUMS ARE REALLY JUST COLLECTIONS OF JEFF 'SONG DEMOS' RECORDED ON HOME STUDIO GEAR OVER SEVERAL YEARS, PLAYING ALL THE PARTS MYSELF. I SAY 'SONG DEMOS' BECAUSE THE PRODUCTIONS ARE DEFINITELY NOT WORTHY OF REPLICATION. ALTHOUGH I HAVE PACKAGED A FEW MYSELF AND SOLD THEM AT GIGS FROM TIME TO TIME, AND IF YOU TWIST MY ARM HARD ENOUGH I MIGHT SEND YOU SOMETHING. THE JEFF ADAMS BAND CD IS ONLY AVAILABLE THROUGH ME, IF ANYONE IS INTERESTED IN IT OR THE STARKEY DRIVE ALBUM JUST FIRE AN E-MAIL AT ME> jeffsongs@tbi.net.

Ray – I’d read about the STARKEY DRIVE disc on the internet. I’ve since
obtained the disc thru CD Baby and really dug the melodic, Americana-type
style. What led you in this direction? What’s the status of that band?
Is it still going on? I think you played with that band at Ram’s Head
Tavern in Annapolis a few years ago. Any plans on a return there of any
kind?

Jeff - IT'S HARD TO SAY WHAT LED ME IN THIS DIRECTION, EXCEPT TO SAY I WAS NEVER REALLY A HEAVY ROCK GUY AT HEART. I'VE ALWAYS HAD A WIDE RANGE OF MUSICAL INTEREST, THE STARKEY DRIVE ALBUM IS MORE LIKE THE REAL JEFF, WHERE WITH FACEDANCER IT WAS JEFF PLAYING LEAD GUITAR TO SOMEONE ELSE'S MUSIC. STARKEY DRIVE WAS A DREAM COME TRUE FOR ME. SOMEHOW I HAD MANAGED TO GET TOGETHER 4 OF THE BEST MUSICIANS I HAVE EVER WORKED WITH, AND THEY WANTED TO PLAY MY STUFF! WOW, WHAT A DEAL! CONCEIVED IN '04, MY LONG TIME BUDDY STEVE BEHRENDT(DRUMS) AND I PUT THE ALBUM TOGETHER BEFORE WE EVEN HAD THE BAND'S LINE UP COMPLETE. WE ENDED UP WITH MAURICE BRULE'ON KEYS, JERRY MARTINEZ DOING LEAD VOCALS AND GUITAR, AND LOREN KRAFT ON BASS. WITH JERRY AND MAURICE COMMUTING IN TO MARYLAND FROM BOSTON, AND ME FROM FLORIDA, IT EVENTUALLY PROVED TO BE MORE THAN WE COULD HANDLE. WE RECORDED DRUMS, SOME OVERDUBS, AND MIXED THE ALBUM IN OUR PRODUCER'S(RUDY GUESS) STUDIO IN L.A., BUT DID MOST OF THE OVERDUBS IN STEVE'S HOME STUDIO IN MARYLAND. DURING THE 3 YEAR LIFE SPAN OF THE BAND WE ONLY DID 3 SHOWS. YES, THE RAMSHEAD TAVERN ANNAPOLIS, AND TWICE AT JAMMIN JAVA IN N.VIRGINIA. ANYWAY, WE HAD A
TOTAL BLAST, AND I WOULDN'T TRADE A MINUTE OF IT!

Ray - You became involved at a point with doing FACE DANCER reunion shows,
the latest of which I witnessed at Ram’s Head Live in Baltimore (which was
smokin’, by the way!). How does it feel to get up there now and unleash
the old beasts? Brings back a lot of memories, I guess. I know it must
have been a very difficult thing for you guys with Carey’s passing, but
I’m sure he’d have been smiling from somewhere seeing what I did at Ram’s
Head several weeks ago!

Jeff - IT FEELS GREAT! YES, IT BRINGS BACK MEMORIES FROM A BIG PART OF MY LIFE. FOR ME IT'S NOT JUST THE REUNION OF FD BAND MATES, BUT THE REUNION OF FD FANS WHO ARE STILL MOTIVATED TO COME SEE US. IT'S JUST AN INCREDIBLE DEAL TO REUNITE WITH FACES FROM THE FD HAY DAY. AND YES, IT IS A TON OF FUN TO CRANK THE MARSHALL AND BEND SOME STRINGS! I DON'T GET THE CHANCE TO DO THAT VERY OFTEN THESE DAYS. LOSING CAREY WAS A TERRIBLE BLOW TO ALL OF US, AND YOU BET HE IS BEING HONORED EVERY TIME FD GETS TOGETHER!

Ray - What’s in store for Jeff Adams in the future? What musical cards do
you have up your sleeve that fans of your guitar playing can look forward
to?

Jeff - THE COOL THING ABOUT MUSICAL CARDS UP THE SLEEVE IS THAT NO ONE KNOWS WHAT THEY ARE, INCLUDING ME. ALL I CAN TELL YOU IS THAT CURRENTLY I'M PLAYING ACOUSTIC GUITAR MOST ALL THE TIME. IN FACT, MY WONDERFULLY TALENTED WIFE, KERRY AND I ARE WORKING ON AN ALBUM RIGHT NOW. WE'RE THINKING OF CALLING IT "NO BASS, NO DRUMS, NO WORRIES". IT'S A FUN COLLECTION OF CUTE STUFF, SOME SILLY STUFF, AND MAYBE A COUPLE OF LOVE SONGS. FD FANS THAT MIGHT HEAR THIS WILL DEFINITELY BE SCRATCHING THEIR HEADS SAYING "THIS IS THE JEFF ADAMS THAT I KNOW??" HAHA! AND WHO KNOWS MAYBE NEXT YEAR I'LL BE RECORDING WITH A ROCK BAND, WE'LL SEE!!

Ray - What do you think of the Guitar Hero video games? Do you have a
differing opinion on these from the standpoint of a guitarist or "layman"
or am I completely delusional about anyone even having an opinion on this? lol

Jeff - WELL YES, YOU ARE COMPLETELY DELUSIONAL, BUT THATS BESIDE THE POINT. I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT THESE GAMES, HOWEVER MY GUESS IS THEY ARE IN NO WAY 'MUSICAL'. I WOULD THOUGH RECOMMEND THEM OVER SOAP OPERAS!

Jeff - In the old Sea Gull days I remember you using a Les Paul almost exclusively. From what I saw at Ram's Head and in pictures from recent years, you seem to favor a STRAT now. What made you go this route?

Jeff - I GREW UP PLAYING GIBSONS AND ALLWAYS LOVED THE LES PAUL'S TONE THE BEST, BUT IN RECENT YEARS I'VE LEARNED TO LOVE THE LIGHT WEIGHT, EASY BALANCE, AND POSITION OF THE KNOBS ON THE STRAT. IT ALSO HAS A SMOOTHER CLEAN SOUND WHICH I SEEM TO USE MORE AND MORE THESE DAYS(HAHA). I DO USE HUMBUCKING PIC-UPS THAT DO SLIGHTLY SIMULATE THE LES PAUL SOUND.

Ray - In relation to the previous question, I found that (at the Ram's Head
show), regardless of what, you sound like Jeff Adams, which translates to
killer in my opinion. Even though it's 2010 you still somehow channel that
mid-late '70's hard rock guitar sound that's so lacking these days. With
that in mind, do you think your sound is something that comes more from
equipment or from your hands. Reason I say this is that I remember
hanging out years ago with this huge dude who (maybe not so coincidentally, considering
his size!) played with a sound very much like Leslie West, and he typically
used a Les Paul Jr. thru Marshalls. I don't have to tell you, he was a
lot better than me, but we were jamming one time and he picked up my Fender
Tele that I was playing thru a completely shitty Sears amp. Instantly, the
whole thing sounded like him again, complete LW tone and everything. I
mean, it wasn't exact, but it was close enough. Does that back up the
"player's hands" mean more theory? Comments?

Jeff - WELL THANKS FOR THE KIND WORDS! I DON'T KNOW ABOUT OTHER PLAYERS, BUT I'M A 'WING IT' TYPE OF PLAYER. IF THAT FAT SUSTAINING SOUND ISN'T THERE, THEN I KINDA SHIFT INTO ANOTHER STYLE. IN FACT, I LOVE AND PLAY LOTS OF DIFFERENT STYLES, ABOUT EVERYTHING BUT RAP AND HEAVY METAL. AS FAR AS THE PLAYERS HANDS, YES, I BELIEVE THE INDIVIDUAL STYLE WILL ALLWAYS CARRY THROUGH.

Ray - Here’s one that’s always fun… In the time that you were in FACE
DANCER, those glory years back in the ‘70’s…regale us with a story of the
weirdest, craziest, most unusual or just plain dumb thing that happened in
the daily life of the band…could be in the studio, onstage, on the road,
etc. Use your imagination and be comfortable with the fact that very
little can offend, repulse or otherwise miff any of it’s readers!

Jeff - WELL, THERE WAS THIS GIRL THAT WOULD COME AROUND THAT THE ROAD CREW HAD NICK-NAMED "BOTTLE ROCKETS",,,, NEVER MIND, WE'LL FORGET THAT ONE..... HERE'S ONE I LIKE(I'M GOING TO KEEP THIS LIGHT!),, WE FLY OVER TO LONDON TO RECORD THE 2ND ALBUM, WHEN WE ENTER CUSTOMS AT HEATHROW AIRPORT, THE CUSTOMS GUY SINGLES ME OUT FOR A FULL STRIP SEARCH. MICHAEL MILSAP LAUGHS AT ME, THE CUSTOMS GUY THEN PASSES ME RIGHT THROUGH AND TAKES MICHAEL FOR THE STRIP SEARCH! HAHA! NOW ON THE WAY BACK WE FLY INTO DULLES. THE BAND IS GIGGLING AND MAKING FUN ONCE AGAIN ABOUT THE HEATHROW SEARCH EPISODE, THE CUSTOMS GUY ORDERS EVERYONE BUT ME IN FOR A STRIP SEARCH! MAN I LAUGHED MY ASS OFF AFTER THAT ONE!

Ray - Any final comments?

Jeff - YES! FACEDANCER MIGHT DO A GIZILLION MORE REUNIONS, OR IT MAY NEVER DO ANOTHER. IN ANY EVENT I WOULD LIKE TO SAY TO ANY OF YOU FD FANS WHO MIGHT BE READING THIS, THANKS! THANKS FROM THE BOTTOM OF MY HEART! THE 5 YEARS I SPENT WITH FACEDANCER WERE 5 OF THE BEST YEARS OF MY LIFE, AND YOU GUYS MADE IT ALL COME TOGETHER!



Wow, what a great time I had getting in touch with Jeff and going over all the old FACE DANCER days as well as seeing what this killer guitarist has been up to since then. If you’ve never heard FD’s “This World,” then the only thing I can tell you is that, as a fan of hard rock, your collection is woefully incomplete. Order it now from
http://www.rockcandyrecords.co.uk/Also, anyone into absolutely stellar Amerciana-type rock needs to go to Jeff directly and get the STARKEY DRIVE CD. It is great!!! jeffsongs@tbi.net

Saturday, May 8, 2010

The Skykrakken Ascends...CORSAIR interview!!!

Nobody likes anything more than a great surprise, right? Well, one of the biggest surprises of 2010 so far for this writer was the arrival of the “Alpha Centauri” CD EP from Virginia’s CORSAIR. Besides being packaged in one of the most killer DIY sleeves I’ve seen in a month of Sundays, this short-but-lethal slab of plastic kills! We’re talking references like Sabbath, Thin Lizzy, Bowie & Valkyrie, so you know you need to read on to find out what makes this high-powered offense tick. Find out the skinny from Paul Sebring (guitar, vocals), Marie Landragin (guitar, vocals) and Jordan Brunk (bass, vocals). CORSAIR is completed by Aaron Lipscombe (drums). Leigh Ann Leary played drums on the EP.



Ray - My father was (and still is, at 83) a wise man, which is probably why a dope-ass like me has argued with him all the time. One thing this gnarled old dude has always told me is to start at the beginning. So, let’s do that. How did you get into music to begin with, who were your influences and how, in the great scheme of the cosmos did all this eventuate into the birth of the sonic beast we now know as CORSAIR?

Paul - I saw Mass Sabbath a year before I joined and there was this totally cool chick playing awesome solo's and she had a huge scary black mask with light up eyes (obviously homemade) and I turned to my girlfriend and said "Who's that?!?" and she said " That’s Marie Landragin the coolest girl in C-ville" and I said "Damn". Then a year later I got to be in Mass Sabbath and afterwards Marie asked in her hilariously cool Aussie accent " Hey pool ye wanna gitup an play gitaah someday?" and that was the day Corsair was born. After a few weeks Marie said she knew a girl who played drums, a shy girl named Leigh Ann Leary (the drummer on the record) whom Marie had known for years. She came by and we started playing some AC/DC jammers. Then a few weeks later we met a tall drink o’ water, with a smile big as the day is long, named Jordan Brunk who practiced with The Nice Jenkins in the house beside Marie's. He came over just to jam and he’s been with us ever since. Our first song was called "Electric Giant" which was played out only once before being scrapped. Though my voice is the only one on the record (except the chorus of “Black Ships”) we all sing in live situations and there are now several new songs where the main vocal is either Marie's or Jordan's. In the beginning I started singing simply because we didn’t have a vocalist (though there was talk of having a singer for a while as it felt like I was only singing to fill a space) but after a while I began to enjoy it and having Marie and Jordan sing as well has given it a much fuller sound, I believe.

Marie - Paul pretty much nailed it. I had played in different bands over the years but I wanted to do something more technical, more challenging, something more guitar driven involving imagery of the cosmic sort. When I met Paul though Mass Sabbath everything clicked between him and I musically, and from there the band sort of happened effortlessly. I was exposed to a lot of classical music (Rachmaninoff, Chopin, Mendlesohn) in my childhood and later, as a teenager, I connected with the hard rock greats (Black Sabbath, King Crimson, Yes, AC/DC, Thin Lizzy, Metallica). Thanks to my parents I was given a classical guitar, which spurned my desire to learn every sweet guitar riff I had heard!

Jordan - I studied music at UVA and had learned to play bass within my last year of college. I met some folks at school and started a band, The Nice Jenkins, in Charlottesville. One day I was unloading my equipment after playing a gig with my band and I overheard what sounded like two folks playing guitar hero and was drawn to their virtuosity. One afternoon, from across the fence Marie asked if I wanted to play bass with her and Paul. I couldn’t say no and found myself deep in the world of prog rock before I knew it. My musical influences stem from jazz fusion and 70’s funk but then Corsair led me to Thin Lizzy and Black Sabbath giving a harder edge to my style. My schooling was put to the test when I was invited to join Mass Sabbath in 2008.

Ray - I can tell from some of the things on your Facebook that you’re into cars. I also believe that CORSAIR is some kind of car, isn’t it. Tie all this shit together for us, if you don’t mind and set our minds at ease as to how this band became known as CORSAIR.

Paul - Corsair is several things; a WW2 fighter gull wing airplane or 17th century French barbary pirate or an air filter company perhaps? We became so-called because of the first two. We felt it conveyed a sort of swagger and trick, as in the way we like to write in our music. Even just the taste of the word itself: a hard C, a soft O, tricky R into a slick S, the skyborne and dignified AIR bringing the word to gentle close, that’s why I guess.

Marie - I think there was a Corsair sedan made by Ford in England in the early 60’s and in Australia in the early 90’s. I was born and raised in Australia so anything Australian is a “go” especially the delicious breakfast spread, Vegemite. I also have a ’57 Ford, so any connection to automobile history is pertinent to me. In addition, the name seemed to fit well in our minds for several reasons; the freedom of flight and power in the sky, the French buccaneer (my dad is French), pirates are daring and bold and the name always stumps people when I say it… I think it is the fading accent.

Ray - I was given pause when I received your package in the mail. That is not to say that I suddenly had hands like as dog, as I said pause, not paws. In any event, it was an eye-catching packet to begin with and the contents, besides handing down an aural ass-whooping also were a nice little piece of eye-candy. In other words, looks great! Who came up with the concept, what were the thoughts behind it?

Marie - Firstly, we are artists, secondly we were on a non-existent budget and thirdly, we are friends of the environment. I sought out a manufacturer of CD cases that we could feel good about in terms of our consuming footprint. We went with Stumptown Printers out west who make 100% recycled CD packaging. I dabble a bit in multi media so I immediately thought we could silk screen each CD pack individually which would give us the freedom to experiment with different colours and textures. This angle has given our EP presentation a D.I.Y. look but I think it also shows that we care as much about the whole package as we do the music inside! In the spirit of recycling, the EP was wrapped up in paper that I have been hording for years with hopes in using on some art project or another. In the end, I managed to get out some creativity, reduce some of my mountains of art materials and garner some attention. I also really enjoy hand writing out addresses and sticking stamps on mail. We don’t do that much anymore.

Ray - When you write a song in CORSAIR, how does that process work? Does somebody bring in a riff and everybody else adds stuff? Who writes the lyrics, etc. Give us some insight into how this riff-monster from Virginia ticks!

Paul - Exactly how you said it; mostly a structure is brought in and we all add to it. Sometimes they are born out of jamming. In the beginning I used to write most of the lyrics however in the past two years it has been more of a collaborative effort. I actually wrote "Last Night on Earth" as a joke because Marie made a comment whilst holding her hand in the air one night by the full moon and singing a falsetto like Dio "We should write a song called LAST NIGHT ON UUUUUUUURRRRRRTTTTHHH!!!!!” So I went home and wrote it and they said it was good! Its funny how things work out like that.

Jordan - Marie and Paul bring the licks to table and I try to arrange it and make it flow from one part to the other. When we want things to get heavier Paul usually takes over and when we want things to get spacey, Marie takes over. In the new songs we have written things changed a little bit, I wrote two songs and some lyrics and Marie wrote a song and lyrics as well.

Marie - Paul is a writing machine, he comes up with awesome riffs all the time. Sometimes it is annoying because he is so good! Our song writing might start with one person’s idea or a jam and then we all put our cents in. Sometimes it is two cents, sometimes 80 cents, meaning one of us can add a lot or a just little to an idea. Generally, the songs grow over time and we try to work in parts to improve on it or take it over the edge. I take a lot longer to write than Paul but usually the result is worth it! Paul wrote most of the lyrics but in our newer songs both Jordan and I are writing lyrics and singing.

Ray - The song “Last Night On Earth” is an especially emotional one. Why, when I first played it, I cranked it to 11 and the old man next door ran outside with a rifle in his hand, yelling all sorts of curses and epithets into the air. Of course, it was 4:00 AM. See how the emotion is drawn out by that number?! Seriously, I get a real “Space Oddity” vibe from this one. Any comments?

Paul - It’s weird because just like my explanation of Ray Bradbury (see below), the song is more about the dying relationship than about the rocket and going to outer space; the protagonist is leaving forever. His woman will be nothing more than a sour memory and he knows the relationship is dead. It has been dead for a long time. She doesn’t care he’s going on a rocket on a mission or else she'd be awake sitting with him until he has to go. It’s a feeling we've all felt of a partnership being a husk and hollow except this guy is leaving the planet! I can’t decide if he sounds sad or happy in the song.

Marie - HA! I seriously dig on some Bowie. “Last Night on Earth” is a song full of lament and sorrow. When Paul mentioned above how the song was born, by me gazing at the moon and crying out like Dio, I really was taking it seriously, what would it be if tonight was your LAST night on earth? How would you feel about your time here, what you have accomplished etc.? The self-reflection that is forced on you due to circumstances out of your control is a heavy, heavy time.

Ray - RED LIGHT CHALLENGE: You can meet one of the following people for an hour…who and why:

a) Barack Obama

b) Tony Iommi

c) Charles Manson

d) Don Prudhomme

Paul - I know its expected but “b”. although most of the time would be spent just looking at the two fingers he cut off 40 years ago and avoiding making it look like that’s what I was looking at. Then after about 57 minutes of staring I would probably ask him if he wanted to meet Barack Obama. He would probably say "Who?" and then I would tell him that no one will play Iron Man in our Black Sabbath cover band. Then time would be up and he'd probably split leaving me with the tab. I’d probably pay it but I'd carry the grudge longer than I’ve been carrying this battle axe around. Whew...

Marie - Tony Iommi for sure! I would not stare at his fingers. My brother has half a finger so I am used to that. I would probably hope he would bring along an old SG of his so I could give it a little play. I would definitely ask him for some guitar riff secrets and talk about gear.

Ray - Gear nerd question! Gear nerd question! What guitars, amps and effex do you use? Do you believe that playing in tune is important? (What?!?!) Don’t pay attention to the interviewer behind the curtain.

Paul - I play an Ibanez Flying V through a Peavey Ultra Plus. My only pedals are a volume pedal and a tuner. Playing in tune is very important especially for dual harmony stuff. I guess my tone is more heavy metal than Marie's but she has all the cool effects!

Marie - 1976 Les Paul Custom through a 1972 Marshall 100w plexi head and an 80’s Marshall cab. On the floor I have an Akai Headrush, a digital delay/reverb, MXR Phase 100, Fulltone OCD and a LPB boost pedal. I really want to add to my pedal family and score a Memory Man and a MXR Carbon Copy. Oh! and I have recently started using these metal picks called Ice Picks, they are amazing.

Jordan - I play through an Ampeg SVT3 Pro and aternalte between a 1978 Gibson Ripper and a 90’s Rickenbacker. I also use a MXR Blowtorch occasionally a moded Rat pedal.

Ray - Tell us your deepest and darkest feelings about dual guitar harmonies. Really, when I first heard CORSAIR and you guys ripped into the first dual harmony, I thought of fellow Virginian’s Valkyrie. It wasn’t so much that I thought you ripped them off (that thought came later… no, JUST KIDDING!) but that you both had tapped into something really special and then spun it off into your own galaxy. What is so special about those dual leads and what’s the hardest thing about pulling ‘em off?

Paul - First off Valkyrie rules! Secondly, I fell in love when I heard the harmonies in the middle of Metallica's "Orion". I still can’t understand the fact that a harmony is two notes together with the frequencies intertwining and that can make you feel happy or sad or make you wanna put your fist in the air and shout! It gives the music a little more depth. In addition our bassist Jordan does some really cool counter melodies to what Marie and myself are harmonizing. It’s just super fun to write those and figure out a harmony that works.

Marie - Ahhh, harmonies. When the notes are in harmony, it sounds so pleasant, so soothing, there is something magical about it. I agree with Paul, when I first heard “Orion” I rewound that middle section ten times, yes it was on cassette! This is before I had heard Iron Maiden or anything like that. Of course, I immediately wanted to play like that but my classical guitar couldn’t bend strings as well as an electric! I participated in group classical guitar sessions at school where we all played different harmonies at the same time in various classical pieces but it was nothing like “Orion”. Paul has a phenomenal ear and can put together melodies and harmonies that are heart wrenching. I just pretend like I know what I am doing and follow suit (but maybe with a lot of delay or phase)!!

Ray - Obviously (or maybe not) you’re into sci-fi of some kind. Who’s your favourite writer? Why? What’s a better book, “2001: A Space Odyssey” or “The Mote In God’s Eye?” Or, hell, better yet, pick your own two and do a comparison. Shit, making you feel like you’re in English class in high school now, eh?

Paul - Ray Bradury is my favorite by far. Though he is not entirely a science fiction writer it pops up often and he sort of influenced the style in which we write our songs... each is a different story about different characters but they all feel like their connected somehow. His style is amazing. Even in the spacey novels, sci-fi takes a backseat to the more human emotion oriented side. Also, there are plenty of rockets and such. Martian chronicles, The Illustrated man, October Country...

Marie - I really liked English class but I am a bit of a nerd! Umm, on this side of the literature spectrum I am more of the fantasy reader. Authors like George R.R. Martin, Tad Williams, J.R.R. Tolkien and numerous Russian authors like Mikhail Bulgakov and Viktor Pelevin, though I also like Bradbury and Roald Dahl too! I really enjoy stories with fantastical twists and turns, mythical creatures, wizards, dragons and awesome landscapes.

Jordan - I liked reading Dune by Frank Herbert.



Ray - Any labels show any interest in the mighty CORSAIR since the release of the “Alpha Centauri” EP? In today’s world, how important actually do you believe it is for a band of your ilk to sign with a label as opposed to putting out your own stuff?

Jordan - Hellion Records in Germany is doing some online distribution of our EP, thanks to your review Ray! It is not really important to have a record label until you get to a larger level. If you can do it yourself to start off with then you will reap the benefits directly and be able to support studio time and traveling.

Marie - Being on a label is not at all as important as it used to be, say twenty years ago. I think if you are willing to put in the hard work and promote your band as much as possible, book tours and gigs, spend your own dough on recording and merch then you can avoid going in business with a middle man. With the web at your finger tips it is a lot easier to promote your music all over the world and sell CD’s. I think the best attribute of being on a label would be touring with bands of a similar genre and having someone else book your tours both here and abroad and maybe having some help printing CD packs! Though, I definitely would not turn my nose up if a record label has interest…

Ray - Do you guys gig much? How many local venues will have a skuzzy bunch like you come slithering in to deliver the goods on their premises?

Jordan - We gig about once a month or so, at least for the past year, it seems. I think we have found our spot in Charlottesville and our core of fans.

Marie - It would be sweet to get out and extend our mileage a little more but we need to get a band van! Unfortunately for Charlottesville there are not too many good, mid-sized rock venues. There used to be a couple of awesome venues but they have slowly evaporated over the past two years. There is definitely a vibrant, diverse music scene here which is great but not the right venues!

Ray - RED LIGHT CHALLENGE: A turkey or a bear? Which one could climb to the top of Leslie West faster? Use your damn imaginations!

Paul - I feel they’d be neck ‘n’ neck on this "mountain" of a man, however, when they reached the tangle of hair atop his head I feel the turkey may be able to navigate better.

Marie - [laughs out loud] Nice one Paul.

Ray - What’s next for the mighty CORSAIR? A full-length record? A gig in Baltimore? (Please?)

Marie - The gig in Baltimore would be first, then another EP. We are planning on getting our next six songs recorded and pressed by June… fingers crossed! Then I think we will venture into the full length galaxy. Maybe a concept album? Still feeling it out, I guess.

Ray - Always fun…in the long and storied history of CORSAIR, tell us a story that’s either funny, odd, disturbing or possibly just plain weird from the studio, the road, onstage, etc. Use your imagination and remember that Raysrealm is rated at least “R,” with a leaning toward “NC-17” when necessary.

Paul - Ok, perhaps this is just silly… so we played with this band from Richmond, Va called The Ten Commandments (Marie really likes them) at an underground DIY venue in our town. At the end of the night the TTC vocalist, who was pretty lit, asking me if he knew where the drugs were at and (I often quote this line) Marie said, in her funny accent “You know, you don’t need drugs to have a good time, man!” She was trying to be helpful but just sounded like a total dweeb. The guy sort of stared at her in astonishment, he seemed kinda whacked out already so I don’t think he minded the statement.

Ray - Any final comments?

Jordan - At its’ best music should take you outside of yourself and help you tap into something greater.

Marie - Thanks for all your hard work Ray in bringing the lesser known music scene to the forefront! We’ll let you know when we get that record deal!


Don’t wait for these guys to get a record deal, people, because you now have no excuse. Refer to the websites below and do what you know best: Support another band who deserves it!!!


http://www.skykrakkan.com/
http://www.myspace.com/skykrakken/