Thursday, December 14, 2017
2017 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees
I don't care; there are many WAY more important musical topics to discuss. Anyway, Smithereens' singer, songwriter and guitarist Pat Dinizio's death is much more meaningful.
Monday, July 3, 2017
Susan Tanner: 51 Years Is Not Enough
Susan Tanner’s tragic death from cancer April 24 and the loving response
on social media and in several publications demonstrates what an effect her
death has precisely because Susan had a greater, loving, professional,
intelligent, funny and more positive effect on us with her life.
Susan was known professionally for working for several major record
labels in New York, Boston and elsewhere, before returning to Buffalo to work
for Righteous Babe Records and Ani DiFranco for many years. I can attest to
Susan’s professionalism, knowledge and respectful treatment of others from my
time writing for several publications, and her industry background and regard
has already been written about well by Donny Kutzbach in The Public and Dale Anderson and Jeff
Miers in the Buffalo News.
Susan was also well known, and in the long run maybe better or with more
reverence, as the hostess with her husband, Marty Boratin, of what is basically
Buffalo’s rock and roll bed and breakfast, their home in Eden. The couple
hosted many house concerts, parties and other events, and gave accommodations
to many touring bands who needed and often could not afford a place to crash.
Regardless their day job responsibilities, Marty and Susan also fed and
entertained the musicians, seeking nothing more than some good music and
friendship in return. There are too many shows to remember, but among the
memorable ones I recall are Peter Case, Jon Langford, Oh Susanna, Gurf Morlix
and a host of local performers. Susan, an accomplished singer in her own right,
even joined Jon Langford (The Mekons, Waco Brothers) reciting poetry during one
of house concerts. Susan and Marty’s Independence Day and Christmas parties are
also legendary, bringing people back to Buffalo who moved away years ago.
There may be no one absolute way to fight and live with cancer, but
Susan certainly found one that worked for her and those around her. With an
intelligent, scientifically trained and educated mind and awareness, she
researched and participated in interviews and discussions about and in actual
treatment trials for her cancer. She frequently traveled out of town for these
treatments and consultations, and was very open about her cancer diagnosis,
status, treatment, how she was feeling and what stage she was in at that
moment. Having cancer was not going to stop Susan from using her mind, body and
spirit to fight this bastard and to live a full life, She openly and repeatedly
acknowledged she received primary health care and her cancer diagnosis from the
medical staff of Planned Parenthood, a group of dedicated professionals who
helped keep Susan alive. Friends and loved ones of hers have made financial
donations in her name to Planned Parenthood, a fantastic idea. During a
memorial celebration for Susan at Babeville, college friend, record industry
and radio colleague Anita West movingly spoke of their friendship, fun together
and their shared fights with cancer, probably sharing more than anyone else
could from that period. West came into that event blazing, wanting people to
know that much more about Susan and her life as well as know about the ups,
downs, loves and fears of living as they did and fighting cancer.
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Susan Tanner recites poetry with Jon Langford, 2014. Photo by Barkloud Productions/Val Dunne Photography |
I can write of a bit of familiarity with Susan’s caring and sharing of
hopes and fears of chromic and terminal diseases. My lovely wife, photographer
Val Dunne, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 24 years ago, and fights it
every day; indeed, she is currently in an about 3-week episode/flare up of the
disease, and just returned to work. We have been fortunate to be friends with
Marty and Susan for longer than we can remember, more than 30 years (hell, my
sister Heather had Marty’s late father as a high school teacher). Val has been
through many trials, experimental drugs and treatments, even chemotherapy, and
like anyone suffering from chronic or terminal illnesses, a toll is often
taken. For the last several years, every time we see Susan and Marty,
particularly at their home, after a while Susan, Val and several other people
living with chronic and/or terminal health issues will start talking about what
they are going through, sharing information and empathy, offering advice,
solace, support and love. After a moment or so, I will leave these
conversations, because while I may be the spouse and partner of someone in this
situation, I cannot fully know what it is like to live with such diseases, and
I felt like a bit of an intruder; I was never made to feel this by any of the
other people, but I realize that there are experiences I cannot fully understand
without being the person in the crosshairs. Val and other people I’ve spoken
with who were part of these discussions always credit Susan with being
incredibly open, positive and supporting, sharing information about everything
from how to try to avoid nausea and bad tastes in the mouth connected to
chemotherapy and other drugs, which pains reacted to which medications and
other treatments, which medical staffs were more understanding and caring, and
what the best places to stay and best modes of transportation were for people
with health conditions. Oh, and of course, diet was key, along with gardening,
as were appreciation of good music in all its forms, good friends, books and
conversation. According to Val and others I have talked to with these medical
conditions, Susan was never short on warmth, understanding, shoulders to cry on
and a song to cheer them up. I noticed that talking with Susan raised Val’s
spirits, and indeed mine, during periods when her MS was really causing her
trouble. When Val was hospitalized with pneumonia a couple of years ago,
besides family and staff, Susan was her only visitor.
Susan and Marty were/are great people on their own, but made/make an
incredible couple together. Their home was warm, open and inviting, there was
always good food and good music there, beverages of all kinds and an
understanding that love truly conquered all.
Monday, May 29, 2017
'Death or Glory: Requiem for Friends' Playlist, Thoughts
The theme of my WBNY Alumni Weekend show this year, “Death or Glory,” went through a last-minute change due to some sad, unforeseen circumstances, and became “Death or Glory: Requiem for Friends.”
This is due to the recent deaths of three friends, all with strong
connections to Buffalo’s music community: Tom Connolly, one of the originators
of WBNY and continued supporter and air personality for years; Thelma Lee
Ballard/Bad Penny, uber-fan and nicer person than many realized, and most
recently Susan Tanner, who worked in the music industry for years, both
nationally and at Righteous Babe Records here in Buffalo, remained a strong and
knowledgeable supporter of music and was a host for bands at the home she
shared with her husband, Marty Boratin.
My original theme for this year’s edition of “Death Or Glory” was
originally planned to be “Think! It Ain’t Illegal Yet,” responding to the
political atmosphere of stupidity, deception/outright lying and savage
right-wing ideology being applied by the current president and his political
allies. It was to be a broadcast call to arms on how artists of all walks are
part of what could be called the best of the resistance. Even if you are not a
lefty, opposing political dishonesty, mean spiritedness, anti-intellectualism
and corruption through arts and other acts should appeal to all who believe
freedom of expression is a precious and powerful freedom.
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Your author/radio host, kvetching. Photo by Val Dunne Photography |
But with the deaths of the three friends mentioned above and so many
other musicians and artists, I believed that my overactive, weary mind needed
to take a look at how music and its addressing and illustrating of death, loss,
the end of relationships and circumstances affected me and no doubt others.
There is an amazing amount of great music that addresses these and other
related issues, some quite directly and some more implied or indirect, and I
was only able to scratch the surface in the three hours of music and talk that
I had. But I cut down a bit on the talking and got to a lot of music, and I hope
the playlist below shows some sort of understanding of the issue and provides a
bit of solace and understanding to people going directly through death of
relatives, friends, etc., and its effects.
I have written articles/appreciation of Tom Connolly and Penny/Thelma
Lee upon their deaths, and I am working on an article about Susan Tanner, but
her death seems to have floored me more than the others. I will publish such an
article soon, but one longer than normal mic I took during my WBNY Alumni weekend
show involved Susan. I played “Hello Birmingham” by Ani DiFranco in Susan’s
memory. While Susan worked for Ani and Righteous Babe for years, the real
reason I played the song for her was because Susan had been a longtime patient
of Planned Parenthood, and it was the talented medical staff there that
diagnosed Susan’s inflammatory breast cancer and helped her live for so many
years after the diagnosis. “Hello Birmingham” was a spare, aching tome to
Birmingham, Alabama, which in the late 1990s underwent the bombing of medical
clinics that performed OB/GYN services, including abortions. Buffalo had
sustained the vile, intimidating, freedom violating abortion protests of the
Spring of Life, and then Dr. Barnett Slepian’s murder/assassination in 1998.
Susan strongly defended Planned Parenthood not only for the life-lengthening
medical care she received from it, but for the thousands, if not millions, of
people who received primary and other medical care there, including the small
number of abortions performed. She defended and praised their work, and while
Susan did this willingly, forcefully and honestly, she and others should not
have had to defend Planned Parenthood from unwarranted attacks for so long. As
the son of a 20-year breast and lymph node cancer survivor, friend and admirer
of Susan and hopeful defender of reproductive and health care rights, I took
the liberty to defend them through this song and story about Susan and to
attack those vile, ignorant and/or awful people attacking these rights.
This is my playlist, by the hour, from ”Death or Glory: Requiem for
Friends:”
6-7 PM – “Death or Glory,” the Clash; “Black Cadillac,” Rosanne Cash;
“Long Black Veil,” Johnny Cash; “Come into the House of the Lord,” Marty Stuart
and His Fabulous Superlatives; “Killin’ Time in Texas,” Gurf Morlix; “Gloria,”
Patti Smith Group; “Marquee Moon,” Television; “Heaven,” Talking Heads;
“Innocent When You Dream,” Tom Waits; “Wall of Death,” Richard and Linda
Thompson.
7-8 PM – “The Suit,” Public Image Limited; “This Is It,” the Jumpers;
“While the City Sleeps,” the Ramrods; “Last Regrets,” Mark Norris and the
Backpeddlers; “Wintertime,” Scary Chicken; “Hello Birmingham,” Ani DiFranco;”
“Broken English,” Marianne Faithful; “From the Air,” Laurie Anderson; “It’s No
Game,” David Bowie; “Heroes,” David Bowie.
8-9 PM – “Showroom Dummies,” Kraftwerk; “Symphony No. 6, 2nd
Movement,” Glenn Branca; “The Black Angel’s Death Song (Live),” Velvet
Underground; “Little Angel, Little Brother,” Lucinda Williams; “Cold Cold
Ground,” Tom Waits; “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” Hank Williams; “Reload,”
Tension; “Ghost Bitch,” Sonic Youth; “Love Comes in Spurts,” Richard Hell and
the Voidoids; “Walking Out on Love,” the Beat; “Rockaway Beach,” the Ramones;
“Turn on the News,” Husker Du; “You Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory,”
Johnny Thunders.
Monday, August 29, 2016
For Bad Penny, or I'm Really Sick of Obituaries
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Bad Penny and Jax/Courtesy Chris Fertita-Miklasz |
In the end, there is no way you can accurately predict when someone who
allegedly lives life to the edge or pushes the envelope, etc., will die, and
when someone who is so well known and is actually irreplaceable to a certain
community dies, no, we didn’t really expect it and no, we are definite not
ready for it.
Thelma Lee Ballard, known to many more people as Bad Penny, was found
last weekend in the West Side home where she was house sitting. While she lived
hard and turned some people off with her boisterous honesty, she appreciated
what life had to offer, grabbed it with two hands and whatever else she could
use, and didn’t waste a moment on this realm.
She was best known for her living in and breathing life into Buffalo’s
original music community, love of conspicuous consumption (food, alcohol,
dancing, etc.) and for being herself, even when she herself was known by two
names. You never had to wonder where you stood with Penny (usually a bit back
when you first met her). Strong willed, strong opinions, strong action; people
often recall a slug to the chest, arm, shoulder or balls a part of their
initiation to Penny, but she was truly a caring person. Caring wasn’t a passive
emotion with Penny.
I
remember her basic whirling Dervish/Tasmanian Devil self, as many people first
did, through the community of musicians, DJs, promoters, writers, fans and
other ne’er-do-wells from clubs such as the Continental, Nietzsche’s, Club
Utica, Essex Street Pub, Mohawk Place and a few others. She was at the major
shows, tons of the shows we’ve all forgotten and just as many house, yard and
street concerts, loudly showing her approval and appreciation to the bands. It
is hard to recall a Jack Lords or Steam Donkeys show at which Penny was not
present. I was officially introduced to Penny in the early 1990s at a birthday
party on Connecticut Street with her apartment mate, the late artist Jack
Drummer. My lovely wife Val and I drove by that apartment/studio earlier today,
at Connecticut and Plymouth, and it still looks incredibly like we remember it
from almost 25 years ago.
But a couple of memories of what
some people might consider a softer Penny, which was really just another
part/side of the actual Bad Penny/Thelma Lee Ballad life force. One morning,
about 15 years ago, at one of her Allentown apartments, she hosted a crepe
breakfast during what might have been one of the days of the Allentown Arts
Festival. A large crowd spilled from her apartment to the balcony, the driveway
and lawn below, having a great, rather mellow time and eating what were some
amazing crepes. Penny was often
happiest when she as busy and able to channel her energy, and she got the
biggest kick that day when she was repeatedly told how good the food was. I
realize she had help that day, but the brain cells have taken a bit of a
beating over the years, even with the lack of intoxicants for years.
Penny also had a couple of interests that kept her calm, busy and happy,
animals/pets and flowers/gardens.
While she was a cat lover and shared space and feelings with them, she
also liked dogs, and she was always asking about Harold and our previous dog,
the late Walker. She also did gardening as a job and worked on some nearby
gardens, including one at the end of our block at Norwood and Bryant. She was
obviously enjoying herself, but took the garden quite seriously and
concentrated as if she realized that every act to beautify by working with
Nature was important and creative, which of course they were. She would ask for
my opinion on her work as I walked Harold or Walker by, but you could see she
was continually processing the work and results and figuring out her next move,
Not that everything was peaches and cream; you noted I referred to
drinking and other use and abuse, and they did crop up, as even her best
friends readily acknowledge. I won’t repeat in depth the story I’ve written
about before on how Val, Penny, Mikel Doktor, Marty Boratin and I drove from
Buffalo to Austin to attend the South by Southwest 2001 conference. She was a
true road warrior and drove her segment without mishap, but after basically
being told by one of us that if she didn’t shut up after hours of drunken
yelling in our shared room at the Austin Motel the first night, because some
people did not want her to accompany them in the state she was in, that they
would, well, enforce that sentiment. She took her stuff and stayed with friends
after the first night, but she joined us for the drive home and again did her
share, as if the first night’s incident had never occurred,
Interesting but not too surprising, for every story we in the Buffalo
music/Penny community could tell, there was at least one that members of the
Austin communities could tell, as we found out that conference, as well as
stories from when she lived in Los Angeles, which we also heard there.
Saturday, June 11, 2016
Remembering Tom Connolly
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The amazing Tom Connolly, recently at WBNY studios. Photo by Andrew Kat |
I’ve written remembrances before, here and elsewhere, and I’ve written
way more obituaries than I can remember from my journalism days, but it is
different when you are writing about a friend, a good friend, a longtime friend
and a great person and friend to so many people. It is neither fun nor easy to
say goodbye to someone like this, nor to say goodbye to parts of your life,
actually or symbolically.
But I am writing about Tom Connolly today, a friend for more than 30
years who without coincidence was part of some very big and very good parts of
my and so many other people’s lives. Tom died about a week ago, and there have
been several good remembrances and obituaries written about him, so I am going to
reflect on my memories and experiences of him, to make sure people realize just
what a great, kind, caring, intelligent, helpful and modest person Tom was and
will always be.
I don’t believe I can write a deserving, comprehensive obituary/life story
of Tom, but Tom is best known for his involvement at WBNY 91.3 FM and other
activities at Buffalo State College, his mentoring of so many broadcast and
print journalists over the years, his work at clubs like Regan’s and his
longtime producer/night host work at WBEN 930 AM.
I first encountered Tom (although pretty much everyone knew of Tom
within a few days of getting on campus) in 1981, as a Buffalo State College
freshman of sorts who already had an associate’s degree under his belt. I was
active in student politics and media first through my writing at the Record,
and eventually came to his attention through my activism. But my two best
memories of Tom occurred in 1984-1985, my senior year.
The first was WBNY’s coverage of Election Night 1984, which included
races from

I covered elections and politics professionally for more than 18 years as
a print reporter, and basically organized and edited the news coverage of the
newspaper chain I worked at and I can say without a doubt that our coverage of
Election Night 1984, due to Tom, Dave, Randy Bushover, David Debo, Carla Julio,
Gabe DiMaio, Rita Tarnofsky, Barri Falk and so many other people was the most
professional, and really the best, political team coverage I ever was proud to
participate in and be part of. I apologize to anyone who worked so hard on this
that I didn’t name them, but 32 years has affected a few brain cells.
As many people know, Tom was an avid, nay, master trivia player; as a
member of the 1977 Lancaster Central High School It’s Academic team, which won
the entire championship, and captain of the 1978 team, which finished second
overall, I found a virtual match to my trivia skills and someone who also
approached these matters with humor. The 1985 WBNY team that entered the
College Bowl competition was made up of Randy Bushover, David Debo, Tom and me,
and I guess you could say we did rather well. We won the Buffalo State College
tournament basically going away, with every game a romp, and Tom and I were
among the four students as top individual tournament scorers named to the team
that would represent Buffalo State at the regional College Bowl tournament at
Ithaca College.
While Tom would find a way every time we spoke afterwards to remind me
of my correcting the proctor asking the questions when she mistook
“paramilitary” for “parliamentary,” then answering the question correct, the
quote all four of us, as well as those watching and on other teams during the
Buffalo State tournament, would remember came from Tom. Every time the proctor
asked us if we were ready to start, Tom, in a now hilariously reverent voice, would
dedicate our match to the memory of Vic Tayback. Somehow, the four of us kept
from bursting out laughing, and we received some classic looks of confusion and
compassion from the other teams and officials. Sure, we all respected the
acting of Mr. Tayback, particularly from “Alice,” but Vic was still alive and
acting until 1990.
I starting writing about music, mainly local original music, in 1985
after graduating, and a few years later, Tom became the editor of Buffalo
Night-Life Magazine, where I had my main gig, The Hosey Report, for about 15
years. Many of you may recall that I am rather opinionated and strongly
expressive of that opinion when it comes to music, and it often got me “in
trouble.” Club owners, booking agents, band managers and musicians often got
annoyed at what I wrote and/or how I wrote it, and more than a few, including
some air personalities at various stations, took shots at me and asked that
either my writing be heavily edited to exclude such criticism or that I be
either suspended or fired from Buffalo Night-Life. Tom always stood up for me
and stood up to these assholes and never placed restrictions on what I wrote or
what topics I covered. On the other hand, we did have several strong
conversations on what seemed to be my lack of concern over the effects of my
columns, with Tom once calling me a “loose cannon” without a smile.
Every example I cited above, and hundreds of not thousands of other
interactions with Tom, were conducted with humor, intelligence and respect. He
was bigger than life and never hesitated to accept a challenge or to do
something, instead of just talking about it. Tom never forgot WBNY, the friends
and colleagues he met and made there, and the mentoring he conducted with many
people, as well as the programs he recorded, hosted and produced. There are so many of us, including
those who live here in Buffalo/Western New York, who didn’t get to see Tom
often enough and are sad that we never go to say goodbye.
So, I won’t say goodbye, because I don’t want to forget what Tom did or
what he meant for so many of us, I don’t want others to forget, and I want
people to come to see what kind of good person can walk and interact among us.
But I will ask Tom to explain the dedication joke to Vic Tayback; I’m sure
he’ll enjoy it like we did.
Sunday, May 1, 2016
"Death Or Glory: Election Year Edition" & Some Thoughts from a Grizzled but Grateful WBNY 91.3 FM Alumnus
Your humble host, "Death or Glory" 2015 Photo by Val Dunne/Barkloud Productions |
I was again fortunate to take part in the WBNY 91.3 FM Alumni Weekend April 15-17 with my annual “Death or Glory” show; this time “Death or Glory: Election Year Edition,” from the always friendly studios on the Buffalo State College on Elmwood Avenue here on Buffalo’s West Side.
For the past several years, station alumni wishing to take part offer
shift bids, with the amounts they bid going to the WBNY Alumni Association to
assist the station. I was once again able to get a prime slot, 6-9 PM Saturday,
April 16; I have been able to acquire this timeslot for 3 of the past 4 years.
I am fortunate because one of the WBNY shows I still listen to religiously,
“What You Need” by Robin Connell, runs from 4-7 PM Saturdays, and since we
share many musical tastes and dryness of verbal approach, we might share some
audience.
Here is my “Death or Glory: Election Year Edition” play list:
6 PM – “Death or Glory,” The Clash; “Heart of the City,” Nick Lowe;
“Buena,” Joe King Carrasco and the Crowns; ”God Save the Queen,” the Sex
Pistols; “Gloria,” Patti Smith; “Love Comes in Spurts,” Richard Hell and the
Voidoids; “See No Evil,” Television; “Little Bit More,” Rosie Flores; “Done
Gone Blue,” Los Lobos; “Jack of Diamonds,” the Tarbox Ramblers; “2 AM Tragedy,”
Scott Carpenter and the Real McCoys; “Reincarnation,” Nullstadt; “JJ,” Oui73.
7 PM – “Ether,” Gang of Four; “You Burn Me Up (I’m a Cigarette),” Robert
Fripp (with Darryl Hall on vocals); “Poptones,” Public Image Limited; “Soul
Love,” David Bowie; “Do the Strand,” Roxy Music; “Intruder,” Peter Gabriel; “I
Wanna Be Your Dog,” the Stooges; “Roadrunner,” the Modern Lovers; “Heart Attack
and Vine,” Tom Waits; “Baby Doe Rules,” Decay of Western Civilization; “You
Make Me Want to Love You,” Pegasonics; “When You Find Out,” the Nerves.
8 PM – “Showroom Dummies,” Kraftwerk; “From the Air,” Laurie Anderson;
“Sex Bomb,” Flipper; “Vol au Vent,” Chris Knox; “12XU,” Wire; “Gigantic,” the
Pixies; “Down in the Park,” Gary Numan; “Why,” Steve Wynn; “Order,” the Fems;
“Boxcars,” Joe Ely; “Up the Neck,” the Pretenders; “Turn on the News.” Husker
Du.
Some people may wonder why, 32 years after my first DJ shift at WBNY, I
(and others) am still so excited and moved by being able to play music mainly
from my time at the station and the decade or so after it. It shouldn’t be
surprising that music has meant and still means so much to me.
Yes, I was one of those virtual clichéd kids born in 1960 who got to
listen to the Beatles, Supremes, Kinks, Who, Rolling Stones, Janis Joplin and
much more music on first AM radio, including sneaking my old boxlike transistor
radio under the covers with me until I fell asleep. Then, the 1970s turned into
FM, longer, more complicated and darker songs and then, at least for me, the
liberation of punk, new wave and affiliated music, groups, radio stations and
publications. Along with this liberation, I felt a responsibility to spread the
word on this and other styles of music, something I have now done in print,
online, etc., for more than 35 years.
But while I immensely enjoy and cherish the opportunity to comment on
music, spark discussions and hopefully open people up to new, “good/great” and
often challenging music, there is a certain creativity to being a DJ, whether
live or prerecorded on the radio, programming icloud or web casts, parties,
dance clubs, etc. Yes, creativity; a good DJ knows and works on creating
anything from moods and patterns to emotions, sounds and human experience. It
is so many things, from what music you play, how you present and describe the
music, not only what artists but what specific songs you play by the artists,
how you group songs together, what artists you play and play together, and many
other situations. I am an amateur college DJ who fortunately had some very good
training and mentors, an educated audience and a love and thirst for knowledge
of music.
A DJ can spend hours preparing for their shows or performances, and make
their show sound either prepared in a good way or bad way, or effortless, or
even make a lack of planning sound part of the entire experience. My
once-a-year WBNY Alumni Weekend shows normally sounds pretty frantic, fresh,
and at first ragged, until, as my lovely wife Val Dunne not only points out but
convinces me to do, I calm down and get into a rhythm. Of course, this all
takes place over three hours, so it feels breathtaking in good and bad ways and
a bit frightening.
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Night Slaves to Perform at Mohawk Place February 5 - David Kane Speaks on Creativity, Collaboration
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David Kane and John Toohill: Happy to be the two parts of Night Slaves |
This shouldn’t be surprising for this Buffalo Music Hall of Fame member
who has played and written music with and for Mark Freeland. Electroman, Trek
W/Quintronic, Nullstatdt, David Kane’s Them Jazzbeards, Decay of Western
Civilization, Celibates, Erectronics and Terry and the Headhunters, among
others
The two-person industrial group in which he provides keyboards and
sounds for John Toohill’s vocals, Night Slaves, will perform a cassette-release
show (you read that correct) as part of a four-band slate with Cages, VWLS, and
Flatsitter Friday, February 5, at Mohawk Place, 47 East Mohawk Street, Buffalo.
Admission is $5.
KJH: One very basic/elementary question: Why a cassette
release party? Why a cassette?
DK: Why cassette? Because we could not put it out on
8-track. WTF!?! It does include a download.
KJH: Can Night Slaves’ sound/approach be described in a few
words? Is Night Slaves a true working duet between you and (vocalist) John
Toohill, and is the creativity/labor split between music and lyrics?
DK: Night Slaves Approach/Sound: The NS approach might best
be described as a lack of. We never set out to be like or take a certain genre
and try to emulate it in any way. We certainly talk about things we like but do
not set out to be like that. It seems to be a true collaboration of efforts. I
handle the music duties and John the lyrics and vocals. He gets what I am doing
and I get what he is. So yes, we seem to have hit on a pure collaboration of
two artists where the sum total is way greater than the two parts. Lots of
these could exist as instrumentals but when I am working on music for NS I am
always thinking, Can't wait to hear what he will do with this one. He manages
to meld his lyrics and vocal lines right into the music as if it were another
instrument, Some of the best moments are when we listen back and look at each
other and say who is doing that part? Our third ghost member I guess. I can't
begin to tell you how pleasing that is. I like the duo aspect because it seems
to make you work a little harder and it stays so personal. Unlike my other
projects I do not have to take other instrumentation into consideration. I love
that approach as well, but I already have a couple bands like that. No point in
repeating myself or doing more of the same.
I think the NS sound might be the aural equivalent of
walking through fog at night where images sort of slowly evolve as you approach
them. Sometimes blurry around the edges, sometimes clearer, sometimes almost
disappearing but always sort of there in varying degrees of clarity. Sometimes
being completely enveloped in the denseness of the fog itself.
KJH: Do you create the soundscape for Night Slaves with an
idea in mind for where the lyrics will go, do you receive lyrics to work out a
sound or is it more collaborative? Do you ever present a sound live and have
the vocals or music go off where they may?
DK: I will call what we are putting together songs, though
in most cases they do not follow what might be regarded as traditional song
structure. Our material seems to be many layers deep and these layers do not
really necessarily move or change with each other. I can appreciate when I play
these things for John that he can notice a new element and say I'll call that
the chorus where that noise comes in. Our music seems to evolve rather than
change. I can be a fairly prolific writer and it pleases me to work with some
one equally so. It is a pleasure to get together, put on a new idea see him get
happy, take his coat off, get out the pen and notebook and start writing away.
In the course of a few hours we have a new one. I appreciate the spontaneity. I
work that way as well. Sometimes things that were meant to be actually do
happen. We create and have a lot of fun during the process. You might like NS
if you like David Lynch and Evan Williams.
The NS sound has been described as:
A collaboration of Depeche Mode and John Carpenter on acid
Provocative, layered, complex, and requires reflective
listening as it pulls you into its spell
Cerebral electronic garage
Dark
Dark Squared
Bowie, Eno, Low with Iggy
A more layered Suicide
Says the band-"Weird, it makes us really happy"
Where are we headed? Right back to the basement for more. We
are well into our third release, which includes an 18-minute soundscape tone
poem sort of thing. Sorry, you can't stop us.....
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