jeudi 13 juin 2013

Words with Rich Jacobs






Hi Rich, how did you find yourself in the hardcore scene back in the days ?


So, basically I got into hardcore through skateboarding basically - I had a few friends I skated with that were metalheads, I was too young to even care about music much - but then when I was about 11 I decided that I wanted to be different than my older brother who was into BMX and hair metal sort of. I wanted to make my own mark or stain as it was probably thought of in my family. I was raised with cool but definitely conservative parents - who considering everything were pretty mellow and trusted me for the most part but also helped fuel my teen age and youthful angst and feeling of being pissed off, misunderstood, and like a real outsider freak. I had bad skin - which as one can guess - pretty much sets you apart weather you want it to or not - plus it messes with your self confidence unfortunately as well as an 11 year old. But I found a comfortable place amongst the punks that I could fully express my artistic side, my creative, and rebellious side. I wanted to do my own thing though rather than trying to sort of just fit in with another group. I wanted to feel OK to be me - not judged, criticized, picked on, or beat up. Luckily I didn't care much what anyone else really thought - that never really mattered too much to me for some reason. I had a different idea in mind about what I wanted and I wasn't about to let anyone really get in the way of that concept - I try to keep an open perspective nowadays - but not really much has changed in that regard for me. I feel it is very important to be doing what you feel passionate about, love doing, or feel like you need to be doing - otherwise you are clogging up the channels of your own life. I don't wanna ever be there. The process in which I ended up into hardcore was really organic - I was exposed to the music and ideas through a lot of innocent methods - like fanzines, skate magazines like Thrasher, going to record stores, and reading, talking and living what I was into. It helps to find someone you can talk about these things with - bounce ideas off, etc...I wrote a ton of letters, did mail order, went to shows, made zines, traded tapes through the post, played in bands, put on shows, made shirts and graphics for other bands and my own, it became a part of my daily life as much as anything else did. My parents used to think and tell me it was just a phase I was going through - it has only been 30 years I guess since they told me that - so maybe it is a long phase. The era I got into it was fun for me - the later part of 1983 and as I mentioned before - I was 11 years old.  But you gotta also remember that a few things if that seems young to you : 1) I was six feet tall in 6th grade- I was always a head taller than anyone around me growing up basically. 2) From being a skateboarder I was used to being a solitary loner by choice-and it makes you kinda seek out your own path or trip. 3) Many of those I skated with were quite a bit older than me generally as well.


What was the meaning of hardcore for you ?


Hopefully some of what I just wrote will explain what hardcore means to me - I would just add that I have always looked at punk or HC as a house with many windows and doors in it, stairways, and extra rooms. I was generally almost always most happy when I didn't feel like those doors were shut, or locked. I liked the idea that you could open up the windows and see something new, you could go explore other parts of the house, and find things you didn't know existed, if you just stayed in your room, with the doors closed always. I wanted to open the back and side doors and learn about everything else too. It was just the impetus or starting block on which to build all your other ideas and adventures on. I want to think of the world in not just punk terms - I am grateful for the knowledge and opportunities it afforded me- the experiences obtained while actively pursuing being a part of it, but i want to be a citizen of the whole globe / world. Not just a guy into hardcore only. Maybe that means i am not a purist - I am totally OK with that. I caught a lot of grief for being different from some of my punk friends, when I branched out into listening to other things they didn't understand, appreciate, or even know much about. I don't care really about that now - but I do remember feeling kinda confused when many many years later they too would start to check some of that stuff out and be super zealous, and almost preachy about how "sophisticated" they now were for liking those things . I have always liked rawness - it translates into many forms. I enjoy raw, unfiltered, unprocessed, rough around the edges, not perfectly framed or constructed things. It makes more sense to me, and feels more warm or inviting to me. It seems like humans had a say in it instead of robots, machines, and rulers. Hardcore can fit that I suppose, or it can be as cookie cutter as people make it. It is and always has been available as a choice - you gotta decide - which side you want to pursue though basically - it is up to you though for sure.




Were you straight-edge at some point ?


Yeah there was a time from the ages of about 14 to about 18 that I thought of myself as straight edge or at least found some meaning in identifying with it as an important factor in my life personally. That being said - I never wanted to look at it as a reason to separate people, or be self righteous, as much as I thought it was sort of a personal way to be subversive to the ways in which normal society said you needed to be. I guess it that way i wanted to distinguish myself or mark myself as different than that - but when you do so - it can be exclusionary, elitist, and sort of alienating.  Based in the fact that we are all just humans - some don't have X's on their hands, & some do choose to put them on their hands. So to me it makes no difference. I have never taken drugs, smoked a cigarette, drank a sip of alcohol, ever-not even once just see what it is like. I have smelled most of those things but that is about as much as I ever needed to know it wasn't for me personally. I don't want to use my time to worry about what other people do or don't do so much. I figure no one really honestly cares or should care about what I don't do - so I rarely ever talk about it nowadays - unless it becomes an issue for someone else - which it rarely does. I wanna be given the chance to not do it, so I am totally fine giving others the same courtesy and respect of doing what they feel like they want to do for themselves. I don't care in other words about identifying myself as straight-edge - since about the age of like 18-19 maybe latest. Other things took my interest i guess. I do find it kinda amazing that it still exists as a movement within the punk circle. Extremism within any culture is kinda boring and i don't get much from thinking or worrying about it. I would much rather focus the time and energy I have towards creation, expression, and sharing the things i have come away with as a result of doing just that. Not to pretend like I am any better at anything than anyone else. It is all personal. I view any choice as very personal.


Can you talk a bit about the Salt Lake City hardcore scene ?


I honestly know very little about the Salt Lake hardcore scene personally, I lived in Utah once in 1990 for about 7-8 months. I liked the bands The Bad Yodelers, The Stench, Brainstorm, Iceburn, and maybe a couple others ? I think Raunch Records, and more specifically Brad Collins deserves full credit for any scene related discussion in that area - he really was the one in my opinion that built the infrastructure for any scene to thrive - he documented it, nurtured it, was the only real outlet for it to exist, and distributed all the music that local and other bands put forth through his doors, and on his radio show. He is back at it from what I hear. He is the man to speak with on that matter - I really do feel unqualified to speak on such things, but I do know it was he that made most of it happen. He is a killer guy too - super funny and tweaked in the best possible way. He was always super nice to me, as was Brad Barker who worked there with him. They are the reason there is / was ever a scene there as far as i can see. Honestly - it is that simple, and the kids who wanted it to happen.




Can you talk a bit about your relation with Iceburn ?


As far as my relationship with Iceburn goes - I kinda feel as though it would not be too out of line to consider myself a silent partner, or invisible member of the group almost - I never was an official member musically - although we did try to do a one off band once under the name Dizzy. We played only once - and no one even would clap when we finished - that should let you know how well received it was. I will take partial credit for being an influence on the band - I know that it must seem cocky - I don't mean it to be, I just remember turning Gentry and the guys onto some key things that helped shape the course of the group - be it bands, composers, ideas, concepts, and just being friends with them really. I went on several of their tours, did most of their cover art, t-shirt graphics, and was one if not their largest fan and champion. I hope they won't be bummed I say that. Gentry is one of my best friends - he sang and played guitar and did tuvan throat singing at our wedding. I still to this day value and respect everything he says, and plays on. He is a rare person. In fact i would pretty much describe him as a musical genius - something I would never say about nearly anyone else. He is truly capable of doing anything he would ever want to do with a guitar and if at first he can't - he finds a way to eventually make it happen. The guy makes his own amps, and has remade most of his guitars to better suit him, and his preferences while playing. He is serious believe me. Listen that is all you need to do. I feel lucky and honored to know him. He has given me, and everyone who listens so much to consider - it is a real blessing no matter what your take on blessings is. He is beyond gifted, but works twice as hard at developing his playing as anyone I have ever met. He can write full orchestra pieces, and has. He rules. Iceburn were a great band, they pushed it about as far as you can in a single band - they were always like 3 records ahead of themselves on tour. They have hours of legit material unrecorded, full pieces of music that never happened, I feel like they were not only miles ahead of anything else around them, but people have still not caught up to what they were doing 20 years later. But they are starting to luckily. Eagle Twin is very sick also. Not to be glossed over or overlooked. Gentry is a real deal music man. Try to dispute it - I dare anyone.


Gentry and Rich, keeping an eye on each other...Wait, isn't this Zack de la Rocha in the back ?!


How did you become a drawer ?


I became a drawer by default - it is all I could do otherwise. Words were not on my side growing up - I was shy as hell. Didn't want to even look at people when either of us spoke. Luckily I had access to pencils and paper and later other materials. It has always helped me survive most definitely. It also happened super organically - just did it all the time, and I do mean all the time. I had to.


What is the meaning of art for you ?


Art for me is really "the results of living with your eyes open". Simple but complex too. I love looking, and seeing things - and I can't just always stand by and not try to do something about it. It is in everything, or should be at least.




Who are the people who had the biggest influence on you ?


The list of people that have had the biggest influence on me is for sure artists - musicians, those that tinker, thinkers, makers of things, outsiders, the humble people everywhere in the world, the poor, and forgotten, those I have loved and do love, my family and friends, my wife and son, my self when I am honest with myself. I love making lists and was tempted to list 1000 of my closest friends, enemies, and favorite artists. But I want to keep it open ended. I want to always have an on going list for this.




Is there anything from France that inspire you ?


As far as France goes - there are many things really that I like and think are very intriguing , inspiring, and enjoyable. Let me try to list some of them - first thing that comes to mind as far as music goes - Lard Free, Catalogue, wasn't Mahogany Brain from France?, Aluk Todolo nowadays, my good friend Stephen O'malley lives there in Paris - he is in Sunn O, KTL, etc...but is from the States. I like a lot of artists & composers from there - Erik Satie, Gilles Deleuze, Metal Urbain, where is Yann Tiersen from ? I like Starcow gallery, I like the outside markets there, the food is very good. Best pastry I have maybe ever had was there, hmm? Mark and Eva Newton, a photographer named Raphael , Jonone, a lot of the old school french painters are historically important and of interest. Let me think of some good ones those were just on the top of my tongue. Hold on. Debussy, Pierre Henry, and Pierre Schaeffer, Luc Ferrari, the term avant garde is french - so that is pretty fitting. Matisse, Cézanne, Toulouze-Lautrec, there is much more for sure....I will keep adding to this list as they come to me. Yves Klein, Hans Bellmer, Unica Zurn, Max Ernst, Tanguay, Henri Cartier-Bresson, where was Man Ray from ? Magma, Gilbert Artman, Richard Pinhas-Heldon, does Gong Count, I think Faust lives there too nowadays ? I love the weird art fusion sort of space rock era stuff, I don't know the french punk stuff as well as I should, or the modern day scene - but I really think Aluk Todolo is interesting and the Gunslingers too. Maybe that is good for now. Unica Zurn was with Hans Bellmer and she died in France but she was german I guess. I think it counts though she was one of my favorite surrealists for sure. A. Giacometti of course  I love his drawings.


How do you see the world we live in today ?


I see the world through eye glasses nowadays - I like what I see sometimes, and other times it saddens me to no end. I want to try to focus on the things I can take some control over - my feelings, and my ideas are mine - but I want to freely share them - if anyone is interested. I have a lot to learn, but I want to look at life as an adventure not a punishment. I wish for all to find peace within ,and be strong enough to fight off any force trying to hold them back from that goal. I get stoked on people that are not selfish, but are kind and gentle. I am not down with wars. I like the idea of trying to leave things less messed up than you found them - or at least leaving a different kind of mess there, if you are messy. Some things do matter and should be considered carefully. But it is important to me to try to find reasons to laugh, and feel and attempt to find true happiness. It can be ugly out there, or it can be what you try to make it.  That is probably all, I think for now. Thanks for considering my ramblings. I am not a prized speller, and take a lot of artistic license with spelling on many occasions mostly on accident. Enjoy your life - use your eyes more often to see.  Rich Jacobs - 2013 Oakland




dimanche 3 mars 2013

Words with Loz Wong




Hi Loz, when did you join Snuff ?


I joined snuff in oct/nov 1995, just before the Demmamussabebonk session. I was roadie for them up to when Simon left for most of that year as well. I'd also stood in for Andy on bass at a couple of rehearsals so I was kind of ingrained into the Snuff family already.


What is your favourite Snuff release ?


I know everyone says it but it is true for me this time, our current release 54321 Perhaps is my favourite, it was more to do with the spirit it was recorded in, previous recordings have been arduous at times, last minute arrangement changes, long mixing sessions, budgets etc.. This time we jammed the songs on my sofa, we all chipped in with riffs, rehearsed new tunes at soundchecks and recorded the album fresh and hungry to make a racket.


What are your greatest memories with them ?


Well there are many, I'll never forget Reading festival 1999, that was one of those gigs that felt surreal, getting to Australia, getting to New Zealand, bribing customs in Slovenia, touring the US with NOFX in 1996, meeting all the crazy beautiful punks around the globe, not the corporate ones, the real punks. I learnt so much about life in other countries, music, culture, politics, for the experiences and friendships I still enjoy today.





How do you feel about this new record ?


First off I feel this new album is a really British sounding record, not for any flag waving bullshit, more that the record sounds like where I live. Obviously we're all older and I think that's reflected in the songs. I really like Duncan's lyrics on this record and of course I'm well happy on the phat guitar mix! And as I mentioned earlier it was recorded in a great spirit and I think you can hear it on the record. But I would say that !


What about being on Fat Wreck Chords ?


Yes, it's the sort of surprise you want all the time. I've had nothing but love for Fat so when they came in for the record it was an easy decision for me anyway. I'm fairly sure the others feel the same. Saying all that being signed is not what it used to mean, downloads mean you are making music for arts sake which maybe is a hood thing but just having the chance to have a record out on a top label is bloody marvellous, at least it means people are interested, still listening.




How did you become a guitarist ?


I started on trumpet, I was shit. I couldn't read music and gave up. My little brother had a guitar he never played so I started to have a go, I played by ear and was not in tune for at least a year. I was 15. When I turned 18 I switched to bass and started a band with some mates. I was still playing guitar and as I was more eager to explore heavier sounds I started writing riffs on guitar more often and eventually became the guitarist. We soon evolved from a Floyd-esque racket to a more punk thing and once I heard Hüsker Dü and Bob Mould's guitar sound I knew what I wanted to sound like.


Do you feel like you're part of a particular scene?


Yes and no. In the countries where being a punk actually means an alternative life choice then yes, to be the soundtrack to their party is a good thing. There's a different scene city to city, the internet has watered that down somewhat but it's still there. On recent tours with the onset of the austerity measures across Europe, the crowd are more political, angrier but Snuff shows are where you can let that steam off in a positive way and have a sing song as well !
That's the new scene right there, everyone loves a sing song ! On the last Tokyo show we did, the crowd were singing along to "What kind of love" so loud we couldn't hear ourselves, it was great !

I guess a scene is only as good as the music and attitude that fuels it but that's the point, the point of anti establishment DIY non corporate street music will always be about substance over style and they're the bands that are remembered. There are positive aspects of a global scene though, I'd love to see a convergence of the global scene, pressing issues like the corporate sponsored punk tours we get these days or the iTunes monopoly on top of the economic bullshit it's hard for a real scene to maintain.
Fuck I'm in my 40's, I don't go out, what do I know, in reality, there may be a scene out there but I'm not part of it like when I was a younger. I hope it is healthy, not too demoralised ! Getting organised and ting.



"Table Tennis Hard Core"


Have you played in other bands?


Yes, various shit bands from 18 to 24 then in 1992 (I think)? I was living with some Irish lads from Lurgan, in Rayners Lane, we started a band called "Your Mum" with me on guitar and Simon Wells on drums, Paul McMahon on guitar & vox, Rory Blaney on keys and vox and Tony Poole on bass. We did a few shows and a short tour with the mighty J Church in the UK then a one sided album on the "Rugger Rugger" label followed by a 4 track single on the same label recorded via an EMI demo session meant for Snuff. We called it a day when Simon left Snuff and I joined Snuff. Your mum released a best of CD, remixed by Simon.
In 2004/5 I was in a punk band called "Park Royal" with Lee Erinmez (Snuff bassist) on drums, Stacey Dee (ex-Amputees, currently in Bad Cop/ Bad Cop out of SF) on guitar and vox and myself on bass, we did a handful of shows and recorded an EP but never released it, Stacey had to move back to the US so she obviously couldn't carry on. Lee and myself are thinking of remixing the EP and putting it out somewhere as it has some good tunes as well keys from Lee Murphy (also Snuff keys). I did do a collaboration with Duncan Redmonds, Wesley j Walsey and Frankie Stubbs called the Pissmops a few years back, that was a laugh. There's a few other things I've been involved in but that's not a punk thing at all and kind of more a covers thing.


How do you see yourself in the world today ?


In a lot of ways, really fortunate to have had the opportunities and experiences of being in a working band for such a long time, seeing a good chunk of our planet was never on the cards for me before Snuff so I'm really happy about that. Now I work in a completely different field from music full time so Snuff is a hobby for me now, the most enjoyable of hobbies if one had a hobby I should add, so I see myself as the same as any working person facing the daily grind, i just get to play punker a few times a year, which is nice.


What is the meaning of playing music for you?


Playing live is the reason I play, one of my favourite writers is a chap called Alan Moore, he thinks that music, art, the written word creativity expressed through particular mediums have the ability to change a persons perceptions, alter their state, he calls it the true magic, so that's what a gig is like, not all gigs but a good portion, you make a racket that transforms a crowd into a crazed mosh pit and a connection is made, from nothing, magic. When you're the opening act on a 4 band bill and the kids are stage diving off the PA by the third song you know some sort of magic just happened !




Who are the people who had the biggest impact on your life?


Well my Mum has always backed me. A few close friends who always had my back.
The original Snuff guitarist Simon Wells had a big impact, especially guitar style, he is a gifted fret fondler and I learnt a lot from him.
Bob Mould & Hüsker Dü, Jimmy Hendrix, Bill Hicks, Alan Moore, Noam Chomsky, Steven Bantu, Biko, Viv Richards, Warren Ellis, Bert Janch, London, The Clash, Mary Jane, Gordon Smith GS-1, not drinking for nearly 20 years has had an impact although that's not a person...Kazuo Koike,
Jim Marshall, Fat Mike, Trevor Tibbles, Hugo Chavez, Bradley Manning, Jacques Fresco, Boat Azizi, Chas & Dave.



Do you like France ?


Oui, j'aime France beaucoup, mon premier nom est Laurent et mon père et ma mère et par l'ile Maurice, toulement parle francais a l'ile Maurice. Mon francais et pas bon, je croix c'est comme une enfant! Je suis desolee!


What about hardcore and the straight-edge philosophy ?


I'm not straight edge. I understand the movement and respect the ideal but it's not for me. I don't drink alcohol but that's because I just don't like it, as a drug it doesn't agree with me so I don't bother. But I do enjoy other recreational pastimes if you get my drift....
I do enjoy hardcore but it can be too serious and stylised, bands like Refused raised the standard, I loved Gorilla Biscuits and SOIA, Farside, Born Against bands like that stood out for me, I like some of the politics of straight edge but I'm not disciplined enough for the lifestyle.





Do you believe in god or something ?


No. I was brought up in a catholic house and quickly spotted the bullshit of that religion.
The idea of an interventionist god or deity or a creator is pretty whacky to me and the burden of proof is not mine, I'm more interested in space exploration and what's out there.
People can believe what they want so I'm not a hater I just don't buy into the organised religion thing and I would prefer to live in a secular society.



Do you know who you are ?


Yes and no, I change with the seasons but I all I know is that I don't know nothing! Haha.
I know that I crave for a new way, fuck this consumer existence, this immoral and unjust capitalist shit storm. Endless wars, in action on climate, profits made from human misery. I am someone who is fully against that and boycotts as much of that shit as possible while trying to remember to enjoy and appreciate the world and culture around me. Being in my forties now I've seen the cycles of repeated economic downturns, for now, along with that the music revivals from ska to metal bashing to prog to techno to the money machine that is hip hop, I struggle to find content that has relevance to now, and that's the difference between the youth and the middle aged, we've seen the future and found it to be a lie, the youth haven't got that jaded yet, but soon come.
So I've ended up being the sort of person who is mostly annoyed all the fucking time!! Nice one.
I'd like to think that Snuff has made its mark and I look forward to more records and as many gigs as we can feasibly fit in. Up the punks.

Sorry about the rant, I can't stop myself these days, I do waffle on a lot if given the chance so again sorry.
This is probably why I don't get interviews too much...