Jay Reatard.STILL ONLY in his mid-'20s, Memphian Jay Reatard has already amassed a prodigious pro·di·gious adj. 1. Impressively great in size, force, or extent; enormous: a prodigious storm. 2. Extraordinary; marvelous: a prodigious talent. 3. body of work--with enough albums and side projects under his belt to make even Billy Childish child·ish adj. 1. Of, relating to, or suitable for a child or childhood: a high, childish voice; childish nightmares. 2. a. proud. Jay gained notoriety NOTORIETY, evidence. That which is generally known. 2. This notoriety is of fact or of law. In general, the notoriety of a fact is not sufficient to found a judgment or to rely on its truth; 1 Ohio Rep. (on a very small level--this is punk rock, kids) in the late 1990s for his work with the Reatards, recording albums for less than 20 dollars and playing shows drunker than Peter Laughner. Jay's best-known band was the synth-punk, Screamers-influenced Lost Sounds, which broke up in 2005. His latest effort, Blood Visions, is credited to just himself, and is undoubtedly the best work he's done so far (influences include early Roxy Music Roxy Music is an English art rock group founded in the early 1970s by art school graduate Bryan Ferry (vocals and keyboards). The other members are Phil Manzanera (guitars), Andy Mackay (saxophone and oboe) and Paul Thompson (drums and percussion). and the Adverts), receiving my vote for best album of 2006. Blood Visions is refreshing in that it's unique, sounding directly like no album cut before it, either by Jay or another band. I was looking at the recording date for Blood Visions. You recorded it just after the Lost Sounds ended. Actually, I recorded the entire thing while Lost Sounds was still a band. I recorded it at the band's studio that we had together, collectively. Later, when they found out that I was working on a solo record, someone took it. 1 couldn't get it off of the machine and I wasn't granted access to it. So I had to re-record the whole thing. So there's actually another entirely different version of the record out there. Sounds like it got pretty ugly. Yeah, it is weird. But I did it better the second time. So sometimes someone trying to screw you over can push you to do something better. I caught you on the last Lost Sounds tour. You played the Scene In Glendale. How was that last tour? As far as attendance, it was our best tour. As far as having fun, it was the worst tour I have ever been on. It was good. It kind of reassured re·as·sure tr.v. re·as·sured, re·as·sur·ing, re·as·sures 1. To restore confidence to. 2. To assure again. 3. To reinsure. the fact that I felt like it was coming to an end. I liked playing in the band, I liked playing every night, but 23 hours of arguing for one hour of getting along isn't a very good ratio for a group. My friend Mike Plante interviewed you, and one thing you said was that you take pride in doing things in a vacuum. Yeah. It seems like you've been doing your own thing in your room, going back to recording stuff on four-track recorders with the Reatards. Talk a little about that. Do you still pride yourself on figuring things out yourself? Yeah, I try not to listen to too much music. I try to not listen to what's cool: indie in·die n. Informal 1. One, such as a studio or producer, that is unaffiliated with a larger or more commercial organization. 2. fucking music. I just do what I want to do when I want to do it. I do my best to have access to a recording device, so when I get an idea at four in the morning I can record it rather than booking a studio two months later. I just try to create that way. It works against me and for me, I guess. It works for you. Bands that tend to create that way--people that create that way--they never seem to make anything with mass appeal. But then even if you do try to make something for mass appeal--the proverbial pro·ver·bi·al adj. 1. Of the nature of a proverb. 2. Expressed in a proverb. 3. Widely referred to, as if the subject of a proverb; famous. example from your town is Big Star. And they ended up just dying, crashing cars, becoming alcoholics really bad. Yeah. They were kind of cursed. With the new record, I thought, "Holy shit! This sounds like Eno." And I hadn't listened to the Adverts in four or five years, but it reminded me a lot of them too. It was refreshing because, like you were saying, you don't listen to too much, and it was like two people hitting on the same idea, yet it sounds different. I had never listened to the Adverts. I would always see them in people's punk collection, and think, "Okay, this looks like bad UK punk." It's funny; I don't even tend to like much punk from the UK at all. And people go, "Oh! It sounds like '70s UK punk, but the good stuff." And I'm like, "I don't even know much good stuff." I've never liked it. I've tended to always like domestic rock more than a foreign interpretation on it, so it's kind of weird. Wire is pretty much the only UK band I've listened to consistently. On that note, when I interviewed David Thomas from Pere père n. 1. Used after a man's surname to distinguish a father from a son: Dumas père primarily wrote novels, while dramas occupied Dumas fils. 2. Ubu, he said, "The most mediocre me·di·o·cre adj. Moderate to inferior in quality; ordinary. See Synonyms at average. [French médiocre, from Latin mediocris : medius, middle; see medhyo- band from Wisconsin is going to sound better than the best garage rock band from Europe." That's true to a certain extent. I always thought Wire and LiLiput were the best bands from Europe and Scandinavia. They were so unique. Wire just sounded like a bunch of guys A Bunch of Guys (BOGs), or Group of Guys (GOGs) are terms used by counter-terrorism officials to refer to small, self-organizing terrorist cells.[1] BOGs typically have little to no contact with global terrorist groups like al Qaeda, so they independently plan and who didn't like anyone. Their songs, especially off of Chairs Missing, are like, "We hate you. We're going to make songs that you really hate." And they're really good songs! They weren't trying to please anyone. Wire's definitely conceptually closer to what I want to do in music now. It's more like focused anger rather than belligerent, wild, "I hate everything." I'm trying to focus it a bit more, be more subtle. Not just a bunch of screaming and stuff. On Blood Visions you play all the instruments. Were you looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. other people or did you really want to bang that one out yourself? I didn't want to play with a drummer. I didn't want to take the time to teach anybody the songs. I figured that if I already know them, there's absolutely no reason for me to waste a bunch of time trying to teach them to somebody. Now that I've had them recorded, there's been this bunch of kids in town who've gotten really good, and I asked them if they would learn my songs and when I need them to be my backup band A backing band or backup band is a band which accompanies an artist at a live performance or on a recording. This can either be an established group or an ad hoc group assembled for the purpose. Such groups are often made up of session musicians. . To me that is so much easier than the band dynamic, at least for me right now. I don't want to get in a band that's a gigantic gi·gan·tic adj. 1. Relating to or suggestive of a giant. 2. a. Exceedingly large of its kind: a gigantic toadstool. b. love triangle--with four different dudes Dudes may refer to:
Hey, it seems like it worked for Chuck Berry Noun 1. Chuck Berry - United States rock singer (born in 1931) Charles Edward Berry, Berry for 50 years. I definitely think so. From a creative standpoint and from a financial standpoint, it makes a lot more sense to me right now. |
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