The band is
really your baby, how did the making of Italian Horn come
about?
Italian
Horn started when I was experimenting with a bunch of crap I
had in my
apartment. Here's a partial list of said crap:
-old Tascam
4-track
-broken
microphone
-various
wires
-80s DOD
digital delay pedal
- Alesis drum
machine
I was
listening to a lot of Loop, and thought about using that as the
blueprint for
a lo-fi project. Instead of using a ton of layering to
create depth
it was based on a bunch of simple, repetitious sounds.
Then I
scrapped the whole shit, and went back to listening to the
4,000 Gigs of
Guided by Voices I had on my laptop, same idea but more
vocally
based, and usually incorporating conventional song structures.
Red Affair
and Bells of Spring both a marriage of those two ideas,
just simple
loops with vocals over them.
You have been playing with a band for less than a year now, what made
you want
to add backing members for your live shows?
Jim Siegel,
had moved here from Boston and was a drummer I dug for a
while. He
offered to play drums if there were any live shows, a few
days later I
ran into Alan and he mentioned he'd be down to play bass
and that Dave
would play guitar. With the 12" coming out on Dais it
made sense to
try to play some shows. At first I was really concerned
about
replicating the sounds but it was great to play with everyone
and start
from fresh. We've been told that live it's more like
Dinosaur Jr /
Hüsker Dü which is a cool contrast to the EP which
sounds like
Flying Saucer Attack if they played power pop... at least
to my weird
ears.
You take the name from a very famous and iconic piece of Italian jewelry
and part of Italian folklore, does this reflect your roots?
Why the name?
I was joking
that if I had known how many great opportunities we have,
I would have
picked something that rolled off the tongue a bit easier.
We often get
called Italian Porn, I think that sounds cooler. That
object has
haunted me my entire life, one hung from my gold chain as a
kid, another
hung from my rear view mirror when I got my first car
(you go
straight to heaven if you get in an accident and die but have
the horn),
and now I live in an Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn,
where I have
to dodge them to get anything done.
You played in other bands prior to Italian Horn, how is this different than
from what you had done before?
Every other
band I've played in had a very specific scope and aim.
They weren't
going to grow they were going to shoot straight like an
arrow, hit
their target, and get plucked out and reused until they
were dull.
Italian Horn can go in any direction, I wouldn't be opposed
to doing
something totally different on the next release, exploring a
different
production style, or just fine-tuning what we sound like
now.
The band has been compared to many artists including Guided By Voices, were GBV
an inspiration to you? Who are your inspirations?
One thing
about Robert Pollard and his vocal approach is that it
sounds so
natural, that is inspirational to me. I'm not interested in
the "big
chorus", that forced hook that's so sugary that one of my
molars falls
out and lands in my iced coffee. I like hearing a record
and then
randomly having some part of it bouncing around my skull when
I'm picking
up my laundry, or riding the subway. Bob is the best at
that. I'm a
sucker for power pop and also repetitious music--that
could mean
reggae or Lungfish---I like the depth that's created by
focusing on
one thing. If you can marry that to a vocal that feels
right, then
shit is great. I'm still inspired by old punk and hardcore
as well as
new bands. I tend to like newer stuff that isn't poppy at
all, that
being said Merchandise is a fabulous band, and they aren't
afraid to
build a song around a big riff. That's nice.
You have released a handful of EPs including The Bells of Spring, last year.
What was that experience like finally getting your music out?
I've had
people telling me I'm good and I'm an asshole since I was
16-years-old
yet I'm still not prepared for feedback. I can write
something,
love it, and know where it's coming from and then someone
will tell me
I'm ripping off another band, or that I can't sing.
Meanwhile, if
I write something for VICE saying that a band sounds
like
Nickelback I get death threats. People need to grow up and stop
being
pussies. Half the bands they worship wouldn't exist if they quit
when people
shit on them. Is the EP the best thing I've ever done? I
fucking hope
not, that would be depressing, to actuality hunk you've
"done
it." Lame. Ideally I'd be recording something everyday but I
also shoot
off in so many directions that it's not feasible. What I
like about
the Bells of Spring is that it's a story that I wrote
without
knowing, I look at the songs now and go "holy shit, you were
documenting
what was happening to you, being so literal" but I had no
clue, I was
just writing songs and lyrics. I'm happy to have that 12"
out, I'm so
flattered that Dais believed in me, and I need to make
something
better... soon.
You recorded The Bells of Spring in the East Village, did the neighborhood and New York City play a big part of inspiration to making your music?
I get
inspired by impulse. The best thing for me is walking home with
a bunch bag
of stuff that I think will turn into a meal, and then
leaving it on
the table because I have some idea for a song. Then I
record it,
and it sucks, and then I make something else... that sucks
too and I
cook the meal I intended to make and go to bed. The next day
I wake up and
realize part of one of the shitty songs is rad and
record it.
Home recording is cool because you can do that, and there's
not some dude
w/a ponytail judging you talking to you in studio
jargon. The
neighborhood didn't really inspire me as much as the
mundane parts
of my life do.
You live in the East Village and are considered a neighborhood historian, how has the neighborhood shifted over the time you lived there?
I live in
Brooklyn now and I'm not much of an EV historian, I'm just a
dude that
remembers a lot of shit. I'm only 37, there are so many
people who
have seen that area change 10 times over, I saw a sliver of
the change.
This island is weird, everyone complains about the "old
New
York." That's really sad to me, the old anything is gone, if you
aren't
embracing where you are now, you should go to bed and dream
about
something that you can't have anymore.
How
would you describe Italian Horn to
someone that has never heard of you
before?
A guy who
likes Guided By Voices as much as Slowdive was in a record
store buying
some noise cassette and the clerk is skeptical of him but
thinks he's
ok even though he's wearing clothes with logos on them and
still rides a
skateboard... and not a fucking cruiser board.
Not
much is known about the band and what is given is very straightforward – music, shows, releases. What would you like people to know about
the band?
That being
mysterious or cool is really fucking tedious, who cares. It
was rad when
there was so little information about a band that you
said to suck
the marrow out of every bone you found of something you
liked. Trying
to be "mysterious" when people know what you're eating
and where is
kind of boring. I don't care either really but it's no
for me. I
also like rap music and sports so whatever.
You opened for Quicksand at their NYC reunion gigs, how was that
experience?
It was
amazing to see a band reunite and sound better and fresher than
they did when
you were rosy about everything and so optimistic.
Quicksand was
a band that brought in something important when a wave
of hardcore
was getting phased out. What Quicksand were doing made a
lot of sense
then, by slowing down tempos, blending atmospheric sounds
with heavy
riffs and rhythms, it was aggressive but not aggro, tuneful
but not
"pop", and then a lot of shitty bands tried to sound like them
and failed.
Years later I hear a lot of bands that sounds like they
were informed
by Quicksand, bands that have no direct link to
hardcore.
People will debate me on this but if you play a Jesu song
and a more
subdued Deftones song back-to-back, there's very little
difference,
and the Deftones not only have Sergio from Quicksand
playing bass
for them now, but they admittedly love Quicksand.
How
did it come about that you would open for Quicksand?
Walter
mentioned it the week of the shows, asking if we could do it.
Of course our
heads exploded and we said yes and started practicing
every night
in case it happened. THe rest of the guys supported the
idea and it
happened. It's pretty fucking trippy because that's one of
the most
insane opening slots to ever have, and so many bands that
would be
perfect for it, to be asked and have the honor of playing is
something
that still doesn't' seem real when I type it. We're so
fucking lucky
it's insane. So thank you again to Quicksand for making
that happen,
and Walter for even thinking of asking.
Aside
from making music, you are also an author, are you currently working
on your next book?
Just working
hard at VICE, coming up with new ideas for weekend
content. I
won't be trying to get a new book going for a little bit, I
have some
other projects in the works, that aren't writing base. I'm
taking a
little break before I commit to another one!