Damon & Naomi

Finding An Honest Place Through Collaboration

originally published October 17, 2007

Damon & Naomi & Kurihara

Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang's influence on the American indie scene may not be a subject that crosses the lips of anyone other than hyperbolic, intensely obsessed music writers, but remains undeniable all the same. As the rhythm section of the highly original and far-reaching Galaxie 500, the pair's thoughtful, deliberate structure lent stability to the shaky, desperate tone and guitar of band frontman Dean Wareham.

Since that band's demise in 1991, Krukowski and Yang have performed under a few different monikers (Magic Hour, Pierre Etoile and Damon & Naomi) and with a few other people while simultaneously pursuing the foundation of their book publishing company Exact Change. They've also found time to focus on Krukowski's creative writing and Yang's visual art. In short, they've spent way more time outside of Galaxie 500 than they did within it. And in this time, Damon & Naomi have forged a unique identity such that for folks to refer to them automatically as "ex-Galaxie 500," while not incorrect technically, seems needlessly nostalgic.

Touring behind their newest album, Within These Walls, which the pair released via their own 20/20/20 Records imprint, Damon & Naomi are joined onstage by Japanese guitar master Michio Kurihara. The pair first met Kurihara after befriending Japanese band Ghost in the late 1990s. Known not only for his manual dexterity, but also his almost preternatural musical instincts, Kurihara plays electric guitar on Within These Walls, his third recorded collaboration with Damon & Naomi. Kurihara will also perform at the 40 Watt with the band Boris, which shares the bill that night.

The paring of the truly massive-sounding Japanese band Boris with the delicate, introspective music of Damon & Naomi seems, at first, an incongruent bill that would split an audience. "There have only been two shows so far," says Krukowski. "At the Wire festival, it seemed to make sense to the crowd. Tonight [Tuesday, Oct. 2], at an all-ages show in Philly, in a sweaty basement club, maybe less so… But it makes sense to the bands." It makes sense because, artistically speaking, both Boris and Damon & Naomi seek the same things - both push beyond what they've done before and both are endlessly curious about what can be created within their musical realms.

Still, how does such a bill even happen? Krukowski says it was a pretty simple affair. He explains, "We met Boris when they came through Boston on tour. Kurihara was at our house recording basic tracks for the album, and asked if we wanted to go see them. Afterwards, they told us that they listened to [Damon & Naomi's 2005 album] The Earth Is Blue in the van every day because it was their daughter's favorite! Atsuo, the drummer, suggested that we tour together. We were charmed, but thought he was joking. Later, Kurihara said to us, that was no joke, they really want to do this."

Although through seven albums and 16 years, Damon & Naomi have dug deep, both lyrically and musically, to deliver an intensely heartfelt music, the tunes on Within These Walls are so emotionally bare, so close-to-the-bone, that it's easy to feel duty-bound to spend time alone with it. Tracks such as "The Well" ("I never learned to turn my boat / Into the waves to survive / I let the cruel, cruel water just rise and rise") and "Cruel Queen" ("Mother, dear mother / I only want your blessing") imply that the songs on the album were culled from deep personal experiences.

Krukowski simply says, "We wanted this record to be honest, above all." Which is, actually, a perfect answer. It's unnecessary for Krukowski to elaborate because the music speaks so well for itself. The intensity of Damon & Naomi, through tender, quiet songs of a deeply personal nature, easily matches the visceral intensity of being blown away by Boris. This bill is - if it can really be nailed down and defined - a bill for music fans. That is, not just those who enjoy a good tune played by a competent band, but, rather, those who can recognize the interconnectivity of seemingly disparate musical styles, and that the surface differences are, in many ways, merely cosmetic. However, you don't need to consider yourself a deep thinker on the subject to simply enjoy the music. If you just want to listen and take it all in, then that's a legitimate and honest pursuit. After all, as Krukowski put it, the point is honesty, above all.

WHO: Boris, Damon & Naomi, Michio Kurihara, Noot D'Noot
WHERE: 40 Watt Club
WHEN: Tuesday, October 23
HOW MUCH: $9

You will be the first person to comment on this article.


Relentless

Athens Songwriter Nate Nelson Delivers The Sounds On His New Full-Length

originally published October 17, 2007

Nate Nelson is an anomaly in the often cringe-worthy world of the singer-songwriter. In an arena where the best artists are often clumsy, unsure dreamers and journeymen, Nelson is incredibly focused. Ironic, too, is the fact that singer-songwriters tend to be mythically rootless individuals, while their music is inextricably tied to those who came before them; Nelson's music, however, sounds rootless.

His deeply intimate, gutturally romantic tunes don't sound, really, like anyone but Nate Nelson. Through very loose comparisons, one might be able to discern some Jeff Buckley, Radiohead and even Now It's Overhead in Nelson's music, but in no case can these possible inspirations be heard outright.


Nelson's latest recording, credited to Nate Nelson & Cortright, sees its release this week. Called Knobs Have Turned, the album title alludes to the craft of record production. The album was recorded with his Nelson's backing band Cortright - drummer Ian Werden (Slackdaddy) and bassist Jay Rodgers (ex-Aqualove) - and features contributions from Modern Skirts guys John Swint and Phillip Brantley, Tin Cup Prophette's Amanda Kapousouz and Now It's Overhead's Andy LeMaster.

In just a few short years, the 19-year-old Nelson has moved from adolescence to accomplished artist, from amateur kid to engineering professional. It's all pretty impressive, especially in a musical genre that seems to reward immaturity. Even so, Nelson says, "I've never considered myself young, and still don't. When I was recording and playing out in support of my first record, Random Acts, I was 15. I felt like if I considered myself 'young,' I would be putting myself into another group away from every other songwriter. I have always said that I am a songwriter, and that I want people to like my songs because they think they're good songs, not because of how young I am. I want to be thrown into the fire with all the songwriters and bands I listen and look up to!"

It's one thing, however, to want it, and another thing entirely to do it. "I made my decision to completely pursue music my senior year of high school," says Nelson. "All of the people I talked to that play music for a living told me 'you need to do it now, school can wait, see what happens.' So I did. I took a year off and I lived completely as an artist. I engineered and produced a couple of records at Chase Park, wrote and recorded Knobs Have Turned, and built a band and did some touring in the Southeast. I quickly realized that I was much more focused than all my friends that I went to high school with. They would get pretty upset with me for being out of town every weekend and missing their parties. I have to tell them on a weekly basis that 'I'm not being too cool for you guys, I just really have to do this'."


As an engineer at Chase Park Transduction, working alongside such notables as David Barbe and Andy LeMaster, Nelson has a solid advantage over most musicians. "I'd be lying to you if I said I don't think about what I want to do in the studio while I write," he says. "But I wouldn't say that it drives it in anyway. I think about mics I want to use and what tones I want on all the instruments… not about how I can chop it to hell in ProTools and change anything with a click of the mouse. I use the studio to write [the way] just anybody else would use their band."

That Nelson got into the recording game so early and so deeply is both impressive and a little confounding. "I became interested in recording when I realized how much I loved the atmosphere of the studio when recording Random Acts," says the Athens native. "So during my last semester of high school, I did an internship at Chase Park Transduction. Six months after that, David Barbe stopped calling me an intern and started calling me an engineer. I just did a record for my great friend Nick Light titled The World Forgetting by the World Forgot, as well as Matias' Split Leaf EP." Nelson also recorded "Clean Getaway," the Maria Taylor track that turned some ears on an episode of "Grey's Anatomy" this spring.

It's no secret anymore that there's a burgeoning underground of very talented, young singer-songwriters here in Athens (Allison Weiss, Nicole Matias, etc.) who seem to have sprung from nowhere. Or, at least, this underground hasn't sprung from the club scene in the traditional, late-night, booze-fueled sense. Nelson sees this as a positive thing. "I really think that is it great that coffee shops and clubs are taking more chances on acoustic-based songs with early shows and whatnot," he says. "I mean, that's how it's possible to get started around here. It was for me, and still is, a really great way to be playing a lot both in town and out of town, and then hit club kids with my music from a more intimate angle than they're used to."

Nelson plays a show at the Caledonia Lounge on Wednesday, Oct. 17 with his band (though Ben Leathers has replaced Werden on drums) to celebrate the release of Knobs Have Turned. He'll also put in another brief performance this week, playing on the quad in front of the University of Georgia's Myers dorm on Friday, Oct. 19 at 4 p.m. for a rally supporting Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

WHO: Nate Nelson & Friends
WHERE: Caledonia Lounge
WHEN: Wednesday, October 17
HOW MUCH: $5

WHAT: "Rock For Barack" Rally
WHO: Nate Nelson, Allison Weiss and more
WHERE: UGA, Myers Quad
WHEN: Friday, October 19; 4 p.m.
HOW MUCH: FREE!

You will be the first person to comment on this article.


A Good Time Was Had By All

With North Star Deserter, Vic Chesnutt Works Well With Others

originally published October 17, 2007

Kristen Bach

Vic Chesnutt

It'd be easy for Vic Chesnutt to take it easy. He's an internationally acclaimed songwriter who's adored by the rough-and-tumble indie set and also celebrated by polite-society music mags like Paste. Chesnutt, who turns 42 next month, could settle into a career based on nostalgia, appearing every so often to play the hits. He could. But he doesn't.

The singer who's able to draw more meaning out of one or two vowels than most amateurs can out of entire bodies of work continues to challenge himself, collaborating with creative musicians like Canada's Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Athens' own Elf Power and more. He left the safe Americana label New West earlier this year to release his newest album North Star Deserter on the risk-taking rock label Constellation Records. It's a challenging album that veers from intimate, hushed acoustic numbers, where Chesnutt's left to his own devices, to full-on apocalyptic rockers with the full band creating a mighty squall.

The song "Warm," written in 1985, dates back to Chesnutt's days playing with the Skiffle Group and almost appeared on his debut album Little, while "Marathon" - "One of my favorite songs on the record," says Chesnutt - came about only a day before the North Star Deserter recording sessions started. "So it's the complete span of my adult life, basically. All the way from when I first moved to Athens to last winter."

The Album

To create the sound of North Star Deserter, Chesnutt relied on the instincts of filmmaker and longtime friend Jem Cohen, best known for his Fugazi documentary Instrument and the portrait of Atlanta musician Benjamin in Benjamin Smoke. Cohen acted as creative director for the album; he assembled all the musicians; decided who would play on the album and in what arrangements and at what studio. He chose which of Chesnutt's songs to record, he handled the album artwork and the liner notes as well.

Kristen Bach

"I love him! He's brilliant! His films are amazing!" says Chesnutt. "And beyond his films - because I know him personally even more now even though I've seen his films millions of times - he's a poet. He talks with an everyday street language that's like a poet. He's very emotional and very cerebral. It's great fun to talk to him and he's always insightful about the world. And he's a huge fan of my music! I knew he wanted to remedy what 'sucked' about my last few albums. He hated all my last records, he hated them so much, and so he was gonna fix 'em."

In early 2006, Chesnutt flew up to Montreal, Canada, to record the album. Among his collaborators were Fugazi guitarist Guy Piccioto and the members of post-rock heavyweight bands Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band. "I saw Godspeed play at the 40 Watt and that was one of my favorite shows ever. Jem turned me on to their music years ago, and I loved their records, and also the Silver Mt. Zion records. I was really excited to meet them and didn't really think they'd want to play with me. I showed up in Montreal and fell in love with all of them. They all made me feel at home right as I got off the plane, so I didn't feel so sheepish anymore. I also felt like we had a kinship about politics, art, how we saw things, music. It was a whirlwind love affair."

North Star Deserter is pure Vic Chesnutt, with moments of piquancy and pugnacious humor poking through, but most of the album reflects the aesthetic of Cohen's films: moody and a little ominous, contemplative, deeply personal, emotional and reflective of a unique sort of fractured beauty.

"I look at this record like this: Jem is like an editor at a publishing house, right?" says Chesnutt. "And I'm like a writer who writes little works, small poems or something. And so he went through my manuscripts - he's known all the things I've written in the past, having seen me play stuff live that's never been recorded - and picked out the kind of pieces that he wanted to present in what might be a 'collected works' edition. So he had great oversight in shaping the mood and tone of North Star Deserter… He's also very much like a director who decided to dramatize some of my short screenplays so he picked the scenes he wanted to do and he cast the musicians to play their little part on each song, or in each scene. It was kinda like that. So I really didn't have much to do with shaping the tone… except for the fact that I write these kind of songs. I also write other kinds of songs, which he omitted." Chesnutt calls Cohen - unavailable for interview for this piece - the John Cassavetes of the project, referencing the director's looser style of choosing actors based on their artistic idiosyncrasies and allowing them a great deal of leeway with character interpretation.

And so if Cohen's the North Star Deserter director and Chesnutt plays the lead role, is the actor happy with the end result? "Hell, yes. It's what turns Jem's crank about my music the most. This is Jem's idea of what makes my work good," says Chesnutt. "And I agree, I think it is my best album for that fact. I'd put it up there with Little or West of Rome, and if somebody wanted an introduction to Vic Chesnutt, I'd give 'em this one right after those."

The Show

Ben McCormick

Ham1

This week's 40 Watt performance is a collaborative affair that Chesnutt's referring to as "Three on the Tree." Rather than rely on Canadians this time around, Chesnutt's looking a little closer to home. Athens' own Liz Durrett opens the show (she is Chesnutt's niece), and the local darlings of Ham1 both perform a set of their own material and act as the backing band for both Durrett and Chesnutt.

The gang has been shooting out of Athens on brief regional jaunts over the past several weekends, and Ham1 main man Jim Willingham reports that the shows have been going swimmingly. "I think it's an ideal setting for Vic's stuff," he says. "Sometimes we get a little loud and do some sections of noisy rock that are really up our alley."

This group effort snowballed from a gig at the 40 Watt last year; Durrett asked Ham1 to back her up when she played at the club's Christmas party, and she added her talents to some of the band's songs.

"It was just so much fun, it was one of our best shows," says Willingham. Durrett and Ham1 played a few more shows together. "We had the summer off since most of us are teachers, so we decided to go out on the road since we were kind of inexperienced with touring, and we asked Liz to come out with us and kinda Wonder Twin our powers."

Chesnutt was at that 40 Watt Christmas party as well, and was impressed with the interplay between Durrett and Ham1. "They sounded great, real good," he says. "They really brought out the best in each other." Chesnutt ended up playing a show in Ham1 trombonist-bassist Chris Sugiuchi's back yard accompanied by Sugiuchi and Ham1 drummer Eric Harris (formerly of Olivia Tremor Control). "Eric and Chris and Vic had become buddies from living on the same street and talking about cars," says Willingham.

The disparate elements came together late this past summer when Chesnutt expressed an interest in playing more shows, and the Chesnutt/ Durrett/ Ham1 combo evolved.

"Everything came together beautifully," says Willingham. "I think it's a little more of a traditional Vic lineup. Brushed drum and regular drums with Eric's sort-of-sloppy jazz style. I'm playing acoustic guitar, but with distortion and vibrato. It's an antique-y sound that works well, a little '50s sound with Liz's textured guitar… It's kind of regal and cool sounding."

This week's show also serves as a release party for Ham1's sophomore album The Captain's Table.

And More!

Over the summer, Elf Power and Chesnutt collaborated on a full album; Chesnutt wrote all the songs and handles all the main vocals.

"The tracks were all recorded live, all of us playing at once," he says. The album was recorded entirely in the attic of Chesnutt's home in the Cobbham neighborhood. "I've still got some backing vocals to record I think, but other than that, yeah, it's almost done. … it sounds really good. I think the sound is incredible." Tentative plans are for the album to see a release next year on the Orange Twin label, and Chesnutt says he'd like for that to happen, though nothing's decided yet.

And there are still plans for Speed Racer: Welcome to the World of Vic Chesnutt, the long-out-of-print 1992 short documentary directed by Jem Cohen collaborator Peter Sillen, to see a release on DVD. "It's coming along," says Chesnutt. "Should be some cool stuff on there, hopefully."

WHO: Vic Chesnutt, Liz Durrett, Ham1
WHERE: 40 Watt Club
WHEN: Thursday, October 18
HOW MUCH: $6

You will be the first person to comment on this article.


Gyrate Revisited

Pylon's Michael Lachowski Talks Simplicity, Bringing A Classic Album Back To Life And Sealing The Deal With DFA

originally published October 17, 2007

Mike White

Pylon

If Michael Lachowski asks if you would like cream or sugar in your coffee, say yes. The bass player for Athens' longest running and universally lauded post-punk icon Pylon brews the deepest and blackest cup of ink this side of espresso. But it's good. This kind of liquid dynamite helps to recall the minute details of Pylon's long history; stretching from the late '70s up to this week's re-release of the group's impeccable first album, Gyrate. The unassuming line-up of Lachowski (bass), Vanessa Briscoe-Hay (vocals), Randy Bewley (guitar) and Curtis Crowe (drums) was most active between 1979 and 1983, but the songs on Gyrate have continued to find new audiences, long beyond's the group's demise and many brief reunions.

The album has persevered through decades of pop culture ebb and flow and is still heralded by record collectors as an obscure - though essential - artifact from Athens' early musical heyday. Gyrate has never been released on CD until now, and under the auspices of New York dance punk stronghold DFA Records, the album, under the name Gyrate Plus, is on the receiving end of an expanded makeover that will reintroduce the band to a new generation of listeners. Not only does the record sound better, it includes Pylon's debut "Cool"/ "Dub" 7-inch, as well as a very early and never-released demo cut titled "Functionality." The release also contains liner notes written by R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe, B-52's frontman Fred Schneider and Gang Of Four drummer Hugo Burnham.

Lachowski's tone is dry, but the excitement in his voice is unmistakable when he talks about his first encounter with DFA, and acknowledging that it is the perfect label to carry Pylon's past into the future with Gyrate Plus.

Flagpole

Do you still play music?

Michael Lachowski

No, I am probably the only one in Pylon who never took to musicianship. It used to be part of the shtick with Pylon in the early days, to say that we weren't musicians and that we didn't know how to play our instruments. I have only really played my bass at Pylon practice or recording session, or at Pylon shows. I have never played it on my own or with other people. Literally. But both Vanessa and Randy have found new projects to work on recently. They're both in a new band, called FFFM.

Flagpole

You're drawn more toward visual arts?

Michael Lachowski

Yeah. My interest in Pylon has more of an art bias to it in the sense that the concept or the context of it was always more interesting to me than actually playing.

Flagpole

I've never thought of Pylon's songs as open-ended. They feel very strict, which may be the result of your coming from an art background. Most musicians who come from an art background have a keen grasp on how the end product will be received.

Michael Lachowski

"Cool" was the first song we released. Our T-shirt design is going to be a red shirt with the word "Cool" written in white and that's it. No other references, other than the font. There is a certain pleasure that I get out of knowing that something so minimal is legitimately recognizable as a Pylon statement. When I wrote the words for "Cool," I wrote them on graph paper. All of the words are four-letter words. I showed it to Fred Schneider, who has a completely different sensibility, and he said it's too structured, too rigid.

Flagpole

Simple is powerful.

Michael Lachowski

The problem with simple is that it is hard to pull off. The reality, from doing commercial graphic design work, is that it is hard to get people to leave out 85 percent of the information. The feel-good stuff. The way I described it recently to someone is like we're moving in a covered wagon. We're pioneers and moving west, so we better bring everything that can possibly fit! The problem is the wagon will never make it. If you view a piece of communication as a vehicle and you overload it, it dies. Your statement is stronger if it says less.

Flagpole

Meaning, if you spell everything out, people won't read it.

Michael Lachowski

Right! If you say less, people will extrapolate more from their own biases or estimations. It allows them to engage more than they would otherwise.

Flagpole

How did the b-side "Dub" come about?

Michael Lachowski

"Dub" came about from a time when we played in New York. We opened for Gang of Four and it was a notable enough gig that it attracted some critics. Glen O'Brien wrote about it for Interview. His review said "it sounds like these kids eat dub for breakfast." So we had to ask a friend of ours, "What is dub?" So we ended up writing this song, and Vanessa just started yelling out, "We eat dub for breakfast!"

Flagpole

How did you hook up with DFA?

Michael Lachowski

In January, I got an email from DFA that said you probably don't know who we are, but we hear you're thinking about reissuing some of your older material and we would love to be the label to do that, we are thinking of reissuing of some important bands and everyone in the DFA universe wrote your name down on that list of important bands.

I was already a big fan. I went to the rest of Pylon to tell them about it and none of them knew who DFA was. I was nervous that it was going to be hard to convey the importance of this kind of potential collaboration between our past and them being precisely the right people to bring it to the future. I met with DFA in March and it was an amazing love fest between DFA and Pylon. It came to the point of absurdity. [DFA recording artist] Juan Maclean was in town doing some stuff. I got to meet him and everyone else and we came back into the office and this guy [from DFA] came in for a three o'clock meeting.

He was acting weird and they finally brought him over. He was there to consult with them about a music project and he was a humongous Pylon fan. He pulled up his sleeve and he had this Mr. Horsepower tattoo on his forearm, the woodpecker that's on our "Beep" and "Altitude" single. I said, "Wow, you have the same Mr. Horsepower that we have on one of our records" and he said, "Dude, this came off of your record, that's the best fucking single of all time!"

Flagpole

Pylon was considering releasing a comprehensive collection of everything. Will that still happen?

Michael Lachowski

We came to realize that if we try to go down that road, it'll never happen. The amount of leg work and detail management will just bog us down. So then we came up with the idea to just look at the first album. Gyrate has never been available as a CD. A lot of the tracks were on Hits, but that was roundly criticized by everybody for the poor mastering job. Earnest and well-wishing people would say, "I love your band, but Hits is so flawed." So we got the message that Hits was far from perfect. Then people started asking about us again more recently because they couldn't find the records. We just said be patient, we're working on Gyrate.

Flagpole

And the remastering job is thorough but subtle.

Michael Lachowski

Yeah, the remastering was already done before we got together with DFA. It is 100-percent attributable to cooperation with Danny Beard [from DB Records], and the amazing man hours and dedication from Jeff Caulder. He went back to the master tapes, which had been spliced-up to make Hits. Somebody had taken the tape from "Cool" and "Dub," Gyrate and Chomp, cut them together and made a big reel to make Hits and left it in that condition.

There are some people who critique this record in the same way Gang of Four critiqued their first album. How it had just never been recorded to their liking. There was a time when we thought we don't hate our album, but it doesn't capture us the way we think of ourselves.

Flagpole

Gang of Four re-recorded its first album, and it's a disaster. Were you worried about overdoing it with Gyrate?

Michael Lachowski

We really didn't want to go down that road. When we first started talking with DFA, their concern was, "What are you thinking about doing with this record?" I told them that we have already remastered it and want to put it out track-for-track as it was, but better… And maybe add some new stuff at the end.

Flagpole

Where does the song "Functionality" come from?

Michael Lachowski

We didn't want to make this the definitive collection, but as long as we're reintroducing Pylon, is there anything we can throw on the disc that is pertinent and just kind of an extra? We had one demo tape that was just such an oddity. When we recorded, Vanessa was in the hallway of our studio. Randy, Curtis and I were in the other room, and we recorded four or five songs. That's the only demo we ever made. That's where this song comes from. We were going to include two tacks from the tape that have never been released elsewhere. But the tone of one of them came on too strong. The song was called "Information." Someone had the insight that it was ruining the end of the record, so pulling it off and just using "Functionality" is really strong.

We tried to play it recently, but can't capture it. There is a make-it-up-as-you-go feel to the recording. Vanessa couldn't hear what we were doing and she lost all track of her cues at some point, and I think she just quit singing. Curtis and I are just doing some incredibly repetitive things, but the guitar explorations that are going on are hypnotic. It doesn't sound that good, but it is really cool to just hear the song.

You will be the first person to comment on this article.


If you are having problems with the site, or have questions or suggestions, please contact us here. Thanks!

Working...

LOADING