The Pencilstorm Interview - Lizard McGee of Earwig

Lizard McGee and his band Earwig are the very definition of DYI and have been making waves both in Columbus and the national music scene for parts of three decades. Earwig will be playing the Big Room Bar Saturday October 15th with The Kyle Sowashes and Bava Choco. This interview originally ran in May 2016. 

Details on the new Earwig record and more at www.lizardfamily.com 

Questions by Colin Gawel

- Before we dive in, tell everybody about the new record and the best way to get a copy or to hear the music?
 
This record is a Sci-Fi rock opera and all of the songs relate to a short book that I am writing (a rock and roll memoir) called “My Own Secret Service” which tells the story of Earwig and how the band began in the basement of a Columbus orphanage and ended up fighting demons in an alternate reality... and eventually used the power of a great song to save the multi-verse. It’s a true story, of course. It’s very experimental for us. James joined the band while we were making the record and she sings on many of the songs (she's from the alternate universe). We are a 4-piece now. That spiced things up a bit. It’s a departure from the usual Earwig record. It has a lot of Japanese on it because in the alternate universe (the mirror image of Columbus is called Capital City and it exits in an alternate universe called ‘The Unreal’) everyone speaks Japanese. Yes, it’s a concept record. Go ahead…call it a comeback. Also every song has a guitar solo or guitar break which takes me back to the early days of Earwig. I like playing guitar. 
 
As of this writing, the record is being mastered by Fc Bester who is from South Africa and masters records on his 1992 era PC in his basement. I’ve never heard anything he mastered but I’ve met him and I trust him because I can tell he’s part-crazy. We recorded it with Eric French in his basement and with Paul Abbot in the hallway outside of a dentist’s office in Clintonville. One song, we recorded the day we wrote it (All My Sins Are Blotted Out) on an iPhone at our practice space. I added a bunch of over-dubs in a garage somewhere in Ohio. Then Tom Boyer (GBSRecords.com) and I mixed it. Tom is a genius and a very talented guy, he fixed everything. We are co-releasing the new album with Anyway Records which is something we’ve been wanting to do for a long time but the timing has never been right until now. That means that the album will be available through Revolver distribution, which is good for getting the record to more people. The album will be available through all of the usual digital and streaming channels (iTunes, Spotify etc.) and we have 2 music videos. The release date will likely be mid-Summer. But the BEST place to find it early, order the vinyl, download the album or find out anything about what we’re up to is always www.lizardfamily.com
 

Before reading further, let's check out the video for "Wasted on You" featuring Lydia Loveless. 

Official video for Wasted On You by EARWIG (featuring Lydia Loveless) from the upcoming album PAUSE FOR THE JETS on Anyway/LFM Records. Directed by Mike Beaumont for Spacejunk Media. www.lizardfamily.com

- The first single off the new record, "Wasted on You" is an instant classic. Tell me about writing it. Was it in the morning? The night? On guitar or just in your head? Did it happen quickly or evolve over time?  

 *(First, thanks)*
 
I have a friend named Amy (Amy Turn Sharp). She is a wonderful poet and a great friend...and we had talked about writing a song together for a while. The genesis for this song comes from those conversations. It came very quickly, once I had the basic idea and sat down to write it. Like most Earwig songs, I thought about it for a long time before actually sitting down with an acoustic guitar. I wrote the song in the morning, but only wrote “place-holder” lyrics for the second verse. My thinking was that they were too straight-forward and easy and I would come back and write something different, something deeper.  Over time, I got used to the second verse and it stuck. It turns out that they are very deep. Like most Earwig songs, it’s a relationship song. But it’s based on real-life circumstances and it also relates to the story of the two main characters in my novel (My Own Secret Service).
 
- Did you immediately that this song was special? Have you felt that way about other songs you have written? Were you surprised it got some much love on CD1025?
 
Because I was writing from a more right-brain, spontaneous level…I was spit-balling and collaborating, just putting most of the lyrics in as place-holders, I didn’t over-think them. They were just the first things I thought about to get the point across. They weren’t poetic. The lyric "I'm only saying this because it's true. I still want to be with you. You mean the world to me and baby I'm sorry.” is far more direct and plainly spoken than I would usually write. But it’s one of my favorites now and not over-thinking it contributed to making this song more direct and relate-able lyrically. “Used Kids” was sort of similar, it came directly from a dream... so I woke up and wrote it down without too much thought. I absolutely love CD1025, you know how that is. We had a great response there with "Used Kids" and I tried to replicate that with our last album (Gibson Under Mountain) but nothing happened. We worked hard to make sure that people heard this song and it just clicked. We had tons of requests. The response from the station and the listeners was huge, the biggest yet for us, which was exciting and cool. A little aside…I gotta admit that I did examine the details behind how “Used Kids” did so well and connected with listeners on the radio. I designed the structure of Wasted On You (before writing the lyrics) with a similar skeleton. It has the same arrangement and chords in the verses and the bridge. That part was very purposeful. 
 
 
- How did you get the idea to have Lydia Loveless sing on the track? Were you guys friends from before or did you just call out of the blue?
 
Earwig had played with Lydia’s first band, Carson Drew (with her sisters and her dad on drums) at Bernie’s Bagels. I had always kept her in mind but had not heard any of her solo records until the same month that I was writing "Wasted On You." I don’t remember why, but I had just ordered all of her albums. She was on my stereo daily at the same time I was writing this song and when I envisioned it as a duet, she was my first person I thought of. It was a bit out of the blue. I did not know her well, but I reached out to her and asked her and she said yes. Earwig’s drummer at that time, George Hondroulis, was friends with Todd May (who plays with Lydia) and now George actually plays drums with Lydia Loveless. 
 
- Lydia is very busy these days, did you guys actually record together in the same place or did she add her vocals at a different time?
 
We recorded them together at the same time. I recorded all of the other vocals and over-dubs from this record at my house, in my garage (Moonville Recorders).  When I knew that Lydia was on-board, I wanted to make sure it was special, I wanted us to be together. I also wanted it to be very easy and professional. I called my friend Tom Boyer, a wonderful producer in Columbus. Tom does fantastic vocal sessions, has a great ear and has great gear. Plus he’s in Columbus, where Lydia lives (I live in southern Ohio). We set up the microphones for the vocal session face-to-face and sang the duet directly to each other in real time. We did a couple of takes, but it was very quick and it was important to me that we sing to each other at the same time, not separately. I had heard a story about George Jones and Tammy Wynette recording a duet this way (they were married at the time) and it just seemed like a great way to go. 

I really wanted us to be in character and deliver these lyrics to each other. It was the same for the video, which turned out great. I sang my lines directly to her and she sang her lines to me. I really concentrated on her and focused on delivering the lyrics with real emotion behind them. She did the same. Lydia was fantastic to work with on this song and the video too, she’s a real killer. I’m a big fan. 

Watch This! A bootleg video of "Wasted On You"

- Can you get us up to speed on the current Earwig line-up and how it compares to previous incarnations of the band?
 
Earwig started as a trio, which has a sort of magic of it’s own. By the time the first record happened, we were a 4-piece. It didn’t last long and Earwig has been a trio for a long time...until James joined the band officially about a year ago. James is a big Earwig fan (she's my daughter) and we had talked about her singing with Earwig for fun. We did a couple of shows with her singing lead/back-up vocals. We did a show at Skully’s last summer, it was super fun and we just decided that we should do it all the time. At that same time, George was leaving Earwig to join Lydia’s band full-time. They tour year-round and he gets paid, so it made sense. Nick Nocera (he runs Alison Rose t-shirt shop with his wife, Alison) was a friend and a drummer so we asked him to sit in with us for a few shows. Costa (Costa Hondroulis, Earwig’s bassist and George’s brother) and I liked Nick  so much, we asked him to join the band full-time and he accepted. He plays in a few other local groups (Winter Makes Sailors, Joel Walter Band). It sounds cliche, but I’m more excited about Earwig right now and more excited about this new album than I have been in a while. We all are having a blast and we really have a great time hanging out.

 - Can you remember the first Earwig gig? Where was it  and how did it go?

Earwig’s first gig was at Apollo’s. We had just recorded our first EP in my garage on a 1/2” reel-to-reel tape machine. I remember this gig because at the end of the song “When You’re Dying” I sang so loud and hard and long that I actually passed out while I was standing up and fell over into the wall. The band kept playing and everyone thought that I was screwing around and that it was part of the show. This has become a sort of tradition as over the years... there’s usually that moment in the show where I do something spontaneous and dumb… all in the name of Rock and Roll. I have done things like bite down on a cymbal just before the drummer makes a big crash (turns out it was a bad idea, chipped tooth), climbed on top of my amp and dove over the drum kit at the bass player (he wisely moved and I landed with my face in the monitors and broke my guitar) and decided to be a super punk rocker and fist-punch an air duct during the middle of a guitar solo (it was actually made of concrete and I broke my hand). 
 
- Who are a couple of bands you have shared the bill with that really stand out?

I don’t know. We’ve played with a lot of great bands that I really like. We opened for Archers Of Loaf a few times and that was cool. To me, being in a band and playing shows is a lot about hanging out with your friends. Some of the best shows I remember were from the early days of running my record label LFM Records and we had a tight-knit scene of bands. Earwig, Monster Zero, Preston Furman, Bigfoot, Ugly Stick, Parsnip…we would play shows as fundraisers and pool the money to press more records. We would do tours together. Making friends with other bands from out of town is always nice. We had great shows with The Boy Wonder Jinx/Goner from Raleigh, NC. and Ditch Croaker from NJ.
 
 
- Tell us about an Earwig show that sucked.

Thinking back about those LFM shows, some really incredible things happened. It was a lot about the idea of making your own fun. One particular show kinda sucked but it was amazing too… we rented a YMCA in West Columbus to host an evening with LFM bands and some of our friends, more punk bands from Cleveland. A big group of outcasts from the area high school came out and they were basically the group that had organized and promoted the show. Unbeknownst to us there was an apparent feud of West Side Story proportions in that area between the Jocks and the Punk Rockers. Halfway through Earwig’s set a group of Jocks showed up to deliver a mass beatdown to these punks. They launched their surprise-attack by throwing a cinder block through the large plate-glass window at the back of the hall. I remember looking out over a mass of kids and seeing that huge window just crash to bits and, like a nightmare, some dickhead football team pours in through the hole and starts tearing into the crowd. It was a bit of bad luck for them though because the Cleveland crew was hanging by the back of the hall and they had brought along a crew good old boy, heavy hitting, lumberjack punks with them who immediately took the situation in hand and basically laid waste to the Jocks. I threw my guitar down and ran back to the action but it was over pretty quickly with most everyone scattering. The police were called, we lost our deposit and were banned from the YMCA. Epic show.
 
How about a show that was really great?

There was a family in Delaware that had 4 sons, each one in a different year of high school. Every year they, as one son would graduate, would have a big graduation party, rent out the VFW and all of their family and kids from the high school would come. Every year they asked Ugly Stick to play the party. On the fourth year, Ugly Stick couldn’t play and the family asked if Earwig could play. I was excited because this show was a legendary thing to us at that point. It was an honor to be asked. The mom from the family contacted me early and sent me a check for $300, they were paying for all the food, had rented a PA and a sound guy…the works. Their grandpa who was in the war was even going to be there. It was a big deal.

I got nervous the week of the show and for some reason lost my voice the day before the gig. I couldn’t sing loudly at all, it was terrible. But there was no way we could just cancel the show or back out at that point. We arrived the next day and set up to play and I had knots in my stomach as I sang the first song. It was okay, but by the second song I basically couldn’t sing and had lost my voice. I stopped and apologized to everyone and said that I had lost my voice. I felt horrible but the kid that was graduating and his friends and brothers all came right up front, took another microphone and basically sang the whole show with me. His family was really cool and the grandpa even got up and danced. Everyone had a blast. It was a negative that turned into a positive through the gracious, good attitude of Earwig fans...just a really great energy and it turned out to be a fantastic, fun show. 
 
- What are a couple of your favorite rooms to perform?

* I always liked Apollo’s, I played a show with a young band called The Wire there once.*
I liked Stache’s. The Metro in Chicago is cool. We had a lot of fun playing at Bernie’s even though it was so shitty. I love the Newport and we have played there a few times, but always somewhere on the floor. We have never played on the big stage. I’d really like to. I love the Newport.

--Let's take a break and enjoy some music before we continue--

Reward on reward-link : http://reward-my-music.com/54038 Earwig. Live footage from 2007, edited by Matt Parker.


 - Switching gears, another really popular Earwig song is "Used Kids" written about the record store now getting ready to move off campus. Where did you get your records growing up? What were some of your first records you loved?

When I was a little kid I joined the record club and sent in a penny and got 10 Elvis records. The record club sent me bills and tried to make me pay more than that penny and I remember that my mom wrote them a letter and told them I was a kid, that it was their fault and to leave me alone. The first 7” records I bought were ‘The Gambler’ by Kenny Rodgers and ‘Another One Bites The Dust’ by Queen. Then I went through a phase when I bought a lot of Duran Duran cassettes. I’ve always been a huge Prince fan since I heard the album Controversy. When Purple Rain came out I would walk to the local record store and buy every Prince single on 7” the day they came out. I still have all of those. They have incredible B-sides and the Purple Rain record is on purple vinyl. I still play those. I probably have more John Denver records than anything else.
 
 
- Along those lines, do you still play records today? Where do you live? Describe your house.

I live at a secret location, deep in the woods of southern Ohio. It’s a magical, haunted place and I love it. It is a little blue house and I have done a lot of work on it. When I found my house it was abandoned and empty. Strange things happen in the woods, the previous two owners/tenants actually died there at the house. I have no neighbors and it is beautiful here. It’s a bit like a farm but with only dogs, cats and chickens. I drive 3 hours round-trip to Columbus for band rehearsal. I have a 9-hole golf course that is part on my property and partly in the woods. It’s true. 
 
 
- You moved to California and toured the West Coast for a time. What took you out there?

In 1999 Earwig’s bass player moved to NYC and I moved to California (the Bay Area). My wife had been offered a job as an office manager at the new internet division of a large newspaper. I found a job at a recording studio called Avalon and I also worked at a haunted house called The Winchester Mystery House. That was very cool.
 
- Why did you return to Ohio?

We had been living dirt poor in Ohio and decided to move to California and save money to come back to Ohio and buy a house with. That’s what we did. We had just released Perfect Past Tense. I kept the band active the whole time I was in California. I did solo tours from AZ., Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oregon and Seattle. The whole West Coast really. I also met a great guy (Raj Kapololu) and he played drums with Earwig. We performed as a duo and played clubs and colleges mostly around the Bay area. He was a great drummer and I split the output of my guitar and played through a guitar amp and a bass amp (Local H style). I talked to a lot of A&R guys during that time as it was right when there were a few labels interested in signing the band. Most of my trips to LA were about that. But nothing ever panned out. We did end up with songs in a few movies and some ads. I also would go busking in SF and Santa Cruz, which was a lot of fun…playing on the sidewalk and meeting crazy people. The plan was always to move back to Ohio. I wrote a lot of songs in California and we made some recordings on the sly at the studio I worked at (I had the keys and we would go there and record through the night). But I was itching to get Earwig back together in Ohio. It took a few years once we moved back but things finally coalesced with a new line-up.
 
- You have always been hands on both with the music and the business side running your LFM Records. What is your least favorite part of running your own label? 

I’m very Do-It-Yourself oriented. So I’ve always loved having my own record label put out our records, booking our own tours and things like that. But it has turned me into a bit of a weirdo, I’m sure. It becomes hard to let go of anything and have other people help. I’m learning, though. The worst part of the label is the self-promotion. When you have to create a compelling argument for people to pay attention to you and then say “Hey! Pay attention to me!” or “I think my record is really good!” it can seem very disingenuous and it’s not a natural thing to do. Plus people want to hear those kinds of things from a third party, not from the artist themselves. It’s a really hard line to play and not feel like you are begging people for attention.
 
 
- With all the changes in technology over the years, has that made running LFM easier or more confusing?

Both. I like to keep up on trends and see what is working in the music business now and adopt that method. It’s hard because my initial reaction is usually the very codgerly response to new technology and new methods. I typically feel like the old way was a better way and this is all stupid and not “how things are supposed to be.” But in reality there are a lot of new ways that people want to listen to and consume (buy) new music. For instance it used to be a very gauche move and you were a sell-out if you had your music in a commercial. But that really interests me now and I think that as lame as advertising can be, there are some very cool artistic ads and that is often how fans are exposed to new bands.
 
 
- If you pick a single Earwig song off each record for people to listen to, what would they be. You can pick three of the new record.
 
Dead Slow Hoot (1st EP) - Dinosaur Song (also our first 7”)
Mayfeeder - Sleep Standing Up
Perfect Past Tense - Drag
Center Of The Earth - Japanese Girlfriend
Gibson Under Mountain - Shiny Morning
Pause For The Jets - Wisdom Teeth, Silverheels, Holy Ghost Letter

Check out the song that inspired the DVD, "Year of the Drag". This video is a collection of clips of Earwig playing the now "infamous" song, "Drag". Pick up a copy of the DVD to hear the band commentary to this song and many others. www.lizardfamily.com

Reward on reward-link : http://reward-my-music.com/54039 Earwig video of She is a Witness from the album Center Of The Earth on LFM Records www.lizardfamily.com www.myspace.com/earwig

Just To Be Clear: Watershed Didn't Cancel, We Got Cancelled - by Colin Gawel

I've been getting lots of messages about Watershed not performing on the long-awaited bill with The Fags in Detroit Saturday night. To be clear, we did not cancel the show, we got cancelled. The powers that be decided that a hobbled Watershed was better replaced than to perform. Even just third on the bill was a no-go. Sure, Joe O. couldn't leave his wife and young kids alone with a major hurricane bearing down on his home but Herb, Biggie,Rick K., Ricki C. and myself were one hundred percent committed to putting on a first class rock show for any fan who was making the trip to Motown. After all, this is our only scheduled show this year. We were amped. You saw Biggie's cool flyers and Watershed ARMY sticker he customized for the gig? We had to make every effort to pull this off at any cost. 

In fact, as early as Monday when the hurricane was just starting to threaten our rock n roll party, Herb and I swung into gear with nightly rehearsals to put together something different (and SPECIAL) on the small chance that Hurricane Matthew would hit Joe's house in Myrtle Beach Friday night. (I guess he could have flown back Thursday, but what kind of guy leaves his family alone with that kind of uncertainty hanging over their heads? Not Joe O.)

Anyway, after some fits and starts we locked into a 18 song, 40 minute buzz-saw set with no breaks. Biggie had some cool stage ideas & lights and even a video greeting from Joe to intro the show. Alas, it wasn't meant to be. Would it have been as good as Watershed with the full line-up? No. But would it have been a unique little moment that Watershed fans would have enjoyed? I would like to think so, but now we'll never know. Though I'm obviously disappointed, it isn't our show so I respect the decision. Natural disasters aren't really something anybody plans for so things get tossed around. This storm is going to take lives, pets and property. I just lost a a few hours of raucous fun. No big deal in the big scheme of things.

Anyway, It's going to be an amazing night of rock n roll with or without Watershed.  Small's is an excellent venue and The Fags are truly, truly one of the best rock n roll bands you will ever see. Click here to check out their pledge music campaign and pick up their new record. Do it!

On the upside, the new Watershed single produced by Tim Patalan is available TODAY! So check it out here or on Spotify or whatever.

In case you were wondering, this is the non-stop medley we planned for Saturday night.

The Gear: One Telecaster, One 100 watt Marshall Cabinet and a drum kit right next to me at the front of the stage, bottled beer (brand TBA)

The Players: Herb Schupp and myself.

The Set: 

Words We Say/Broken/Obvious/Small Doses/Mecurochrome/He's a Whore/Suckerpunch/Romantic Noise/Breaking the Habit/Superstressed/Nightshade/New Depression/How Do You Feel?/Hey Lydia/Manifesto/Best is Yet to Come/ Black Concert T Shirt/ Over Too Soon.

Encore: Drink more beer and watch The Fags.

 

Main Course: The Fags (with a side of Watershed) - by JCE

Watershed will be opening for The Fags at Small's Bar in Hamtramck, MI, this coming Saturday night, October 8th.    

TEN YEARS AGO, AN AMAZING RECORD WAS RELEASED.  IT WAS ALMOST PERFECTION, EXCEPT FOR THAT ONE MAJOR FLAW…..

It’s been almost exactly 10 years since the release of one of my favorite records on the planet.  I learned of this anniversary by total coincidence as I sat down with an idea to write about some (any) great, great record that had one flaw that bothered me. I thought I might write about London Calling by The Clash having both records crammed into one jacket and not listing the song “Train in Vain (Stand By Me)” on the back but that really doesn’t bother me that much.  I’m a little OCD, but come on, it’s The Clash so who cares?  It didn’t take me long to figure out what record was the perfect fit; that one record that is so perfect and yet has that one fatal flaw.  The amazing record I decided to write about, which as it turns out is going to be 10 years old on October 31st, is called Light ‘Em Up by The Fags.  This is one of those records on which every song is spectacular.  The artwork is edgy and I like it a lot.  The record title is perfectly rock ‘n’ roll.  The name of the band is…..unfortunately horrible.

The Fags were (are) a band from the Motor City, Detroit, Michigan.  The band is fronted by the excellent John Speck.  The Fags came along after John’s mildly successful band Hoarse, which was not remotely as good as The Fags in my opinion.  Watershed fans will remember a split single with Hoarse from around 1997.  Watershed fans also will know that Fags bass player Tim Patalan has been a valued collaborator/producer for Watershed.  So anyway, I had this theme and this band in mind – great record, one fatal flaw – and by pure coincidence, the record is being celebrated with a live show to commemorate its tenth anniversary, and Watershed is opening.  Damn I wish I was a few hours closer to Michigan so I could see that show.

But let me talk more about Light ‘Em Up.  This record did not go totally unnoticed.  Spin Magazine listed it as one of forty great records in 2006.  I haven’t seen the list, but I guarantee Light ‘Em Up was better than probably every one of the records they listed, whatever they were.  The record had eleven songs on it.  I’ll get to my favorite in a minute, but let’s start with “Truly, Truly.”  That song could have been a big radio hit, but I’m willing to bet that there were a lot of radio stations passing on playing a song by a band called The Fags.  I should say that I don’t know why they chose that name for the band, maybe there was a great reason for it, but I wish they hadn’t.  I read an article that seemed to suggest that they were just messing around when they did a gig as the Smokin’ Fags and after that it just stuck.  That’s a shame.  My personal favorite song on the record is “Mistake.”  The song just oozes regret: “I just can’t help thinking we’re making a big mistake.”  That line and the way it is sung gives me a chill even now.  My favorite lyric on the record (also from “Mistake”) is “I try to do what’s right, but what’s left keeps egging me on / It may end up on my face, that’s the risk that I take.”  I also can relate to the line “The radiator hisses in a soft assuring way.”  

The song “List” is right up there, as is “Rockstar.”  “List” has that great line “I sat down to write a list of every girl I ever kissed / I couldn’t remember them all, I guess it’s a case of selective recall.”  And “Rockstar” just makes you feel good—“Grab the keys off the counter, check the mirror on the way out….You’re a rockstar on a Saturday night.”  The title track is an instant classic as well.  I could make a good case for the brilliance of every track.  Light ‘Em Up is just a great rock and roll-power pop-whatever you want to call it record from start to finish.  It should have been HUGE.  Light ‘Em Up was actually completed in 2005 but sat on a shelf for an extended period.  Just like Watershed and countless other great bands, the recording industry completely failed The Fags, but their name almost certainly had something to do with their fate. 

If you go to the anniversary celebration show at Small’s Bar in Hamtramck, Michigan on October 8th please tell me how it was.  A chance to see Watershed and The Fags at a small club together on one night is a chance not to be missed.  And it’s on a (Rockstar) Saturday night!  I really should be flying up there from Virginia.  I wish that John and Tim and drummer Jimmy Paluzzi would extend their reunion after this show, change their name and give it another shot.  At the very least, I wish they would go on a tenth anniversary tour down the east coast (and bring Watershed with them of course).  

BREAKING NEWS:  The Fags are planning to release a new record containing some old demos and outtakes, and you can get in on funding that now! – JCE

Watch This Interview with Colin on the Not So Late Show.

If you haven't had a chance to check out The Not So Late Show hosted by Johnny DiLoretto, you are missing out. Along with co-host Sommer Sterud and house band MOJOFLO, Johnny interviews all sorts of interesting folks from the 614. Taping is the last Thursday of the month at the Shadowbox Bistro, advance tickets are available or you can just show up at the door. The next show is Thursday, September 29th. Click here for more details. Below is an example of the good times rolling with Pencilstorm's own Colin Gawel.

Colin Gawel is the front man for WATERSHED. Johnny interviews Colin about his latest book and the significance Columbus has on the music industry. For more information about the show, please visit our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/JohnnyDiLorettoNSLS/ Show held at Backstage Bistro, Brewery District, Columbus, Ohio.

Three Songs in My Life with Nada Surf: Part One "Always Love" - by Colin Gawel

Nada Surf is playing the A & R Bar in Columbus, Ohio tonight.  I'm going to see them for the first time.  They are one of my favorite bands. - Colin G. 9/22/16

Three Songs in My Life with Nada Surf: Part One - "Always Love" 

"Have you heard the new Nada Surf song? It might be the best song I've ever heard." That's a pretty strong statement. And coming from my Watershed bandmate - future Hitless Wonder author Joe Oestreich - it carried twice the weight. Unlike myself, Joe is not prone to hyperbole. "Alright then. I'll be the judge of this, fire up the tune, Biggie." I responded.

So as the van rolled East on a beautiful stretch of I-64 towards a gig in Charlottesville, I heard "Always Love" by Nada Surf for the first time. It started perfect and only got better. Damn, Joe might be right. This is one of my favorite songs ever. Right now. After one listen. "Biggie, spin them shits again." It was even better on the second listen. I remember thinking, "Did he just sing, 'It helps to write things down, even when you then cross it out'"?  That's a great line.

Of course, the context of when a listener receives a song always plays huge into its reception. That's why seeing the Red Hot Chili Peppers while drunk in some club is kinda fun, but hearing the same band on the radio while stuck in traffic makes you want to wretch.  At that point, I was in great spirits. Everything was sounding good to my ears. Watershed was finally a truly great band touring behind a truly great record in The Fifth of July. We had had our moments in the past: but the then-current line-up of myself, Joe, Dave Masica and Mark "Pooch" Borror - along with the road crew of Biggie and newly hired roadie/older brother Ricki C. - was really gelling. You didn't have to like us or maybe we weren't your taste, but at that moment we were truly a great rock n roll band at the height of its powers. We never used a setlist and could do a smoking 40-minute opening set in an arena or a three-set marathon in a bar in Marquette, Michigan. It was all the same to us. Something about playing a thousand shows, I guess.

We had a new manager in Thomas O'Keefe, working radio & booking shows; and even a little tour support thanks to Columbus restaurant entrepreneur Cameron Mitchell. The last part was HUGE. I had recently married the girl of my dreams and we had a young son at home. In fact, being a part-time stay-at-home Dad really helped my writing with the latest record. Not much to do sitting home with a baby, so I wrote "The Best Is Yet To Come" and "Small Doses" instead of going out to the bars. One day I served Cameron coffee in the morning and then was his server later that night at a different restaurant. He said, "Let me get this straight, you work two jobs, help take care of a baby at home and tour & record with Watershed?" "Yes, sir." "Maybe you could use some financial help?" he asked. I answered, "I would never ask you for that." He responded, "I know you wouldn't, that's why I'm offering." It was the kindest thing anybody outside of Joe's dad had ever done for the band.

When the record was finished and all this momentum started lining up, my wife and I had a serious talk about the band doing some touring. She was all for it. Follow your dreams and all that. I did not sugarcoat what we were about to get into. I had done this before: three times, in fact. They were all resounding failures in the traditional sense (money & security). She had never been through a touring cycle before. So I tried my best to be brutally honest.  I laid it out almost word for word like this:

1) If I agree to this, these people own me for the next 18 months. They can schedule me anywhere, anytime, with rare exceptions. I could miss funerals and weddings. In the past I had missed my grandmother's funeral and my Mom's passing from lung cancer. 

2) I cannot quit halfway through, even if it gets tough. If anything is going to happen it will be towards the end of the 18 months. Many people are now working on my behalf and I owe it to them to give it my best: better not to even try than to quit 15 months in.

3) The odds of success were worse than looking for a needle in a haystack. No matter how good the record, how good the band and management, we were signing on to basically drive around the entire country to find one needle in one certain haystack. Everybody is talking a good game now but this probably isn't going to work. Is that clear?

Still, being the beautiful, supportive person she was, she enthusiastically signed off on the plan. "You should go for it one more time."

So riding in the van at that moment, I somehow had yet another stay of execution of being forced to give up my life's passion and forced to retreat to the real world and a real job. But none of that mattered now. I was back from the dead. Life- support systems suddenly plugged back in by the mighty hands of rock n roll (along with producer Tim Patalan), traveling with my friends to play music and listening to one of the best songs I had ever heard.

Actually, I knew Nada Surf. Almost sorta literally. Their drummer Ira Elliot had been the drum tech for The Smithereens when we were lucky enough to open up a tour for them during our Epic records days. The tour was a blast and Ira was a heck of a nice guy to us bunch of Ohio hayseeds, who had somehow landed a major record deal. Ira was NYC all the way. I remember hanging with him at the Windjammer on Isle of Palms, SC  and while we are all rocking shorts and beachwear, Ira was donning skinny jeans and big black leather boots. Frankie LaRocka would have been proud. When Ira wasn't out working for 'Reen's drummer, Denis Diken, he had his own band. They were called Nada Surf. 

During that tour, The Smithereens got dropped from their label after a show in San Antonio. About two months after that, we got dropped too. Sometime after that, I don't know how long, I turned on MTV and there was a popular video getting lots of spins. The song was actually called "Popular" and the band was....Nada Surf. "Damn, that's Ira's band. Good for him."

Coming Soon: Three Songs in My Life with Nada Surf Part Two - "Blizzard of 77" 

 

Colin Gawel plays in the band Watershed (and in the bands The Lonely Bones and The League Bowlers) and also as a solo act. You can read all about him in the book Hitless Wonder by Joe Oestreich.

He is a dad, husband, coffee shop owner, and - oh yeah - is the founder of Pencilstorm, too. 

Tuesdays With Ricki - week three / Mitch & Becky and 920 am

WMNI, 920 am is an oldies radio station in Columbus, Ohio.  And we’re talkin’ OLDIES here, boys & girls, NOT classic-rock.  We’re talkin’ all the way back to the Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Jerry Vale era; but then strangely forward all the way through the 1960’s (Beatles, Kinks, Byrds, Gerry & the Pacemakers), the 70’s (James Taylor, Gordon Lightfoot, anything no louder than Bread and nothing as loud as Bachman-Turner Overdrive); and up through the likes of Josh Groban and Norah Jones.    


Mitch & Becky and 920 am


Mitch & Becky were each other’s first date, first kiss, first boyfriend & girlfriend.  Their first date was to go see Canned Heat and Blood, Sweat & Tears at Vet’s Memorial on the West Side of Columbus, Ohio, in January or February of 1969.  They broke up later that year, right around the end of August, just before Mitch’s senior year of high school and Becky’s junior year.  Mitch was the lead singer of a garage-rock band; Becky was a sweet girl from Grove City, Ohio.

One warm afternoon in spring, 1969, Mitch & Becky were lazily kissing on Becky’s parents’ patio in Grove City when “Love Can Make You Happy” by one-hit wonders Mercy came on WCOL-AM – Columbus’ Top 40 station of the time – and Becky said dreamily, “Oh, I love this song.  Don’t you think this is OUR song?”  The dreamscape kinda got shattered as Mitch replied,  “No, I decidedly DO NOT think this is ‘our song.’  I hate this song.”  Realizing he might have gone a little overboard as tears started to glisten in Becky’s eyes, Mitch said, “Maybe ‘You’ve Made Me So Very Happy’ by Blood, Sweat & Tears could be our song, since we saw them on our first date.”  But the damage was done.  Mitch doesn’t think Becky ever forgot that slight.  It might have been Mitch’s first definitive moment in a life as a Rock & Roll Snob of the First Order.

Today in 2016 they both have wound up listening to 920 am: Mitch because he got tired of trying to stay allegiant to an alternative rock scene that would embrace the likes of Mumford & Sons and Grouplove as its standard-bearers; Becky because she just wants to hear some sweet, sad songs that remind her of when she was a young girl.

One late summer Friday afternoon Mitch hears The Beatles’ “Eight Days A Week” on 920 and thinks, “This constitutes a savage, pounding rocker on this station,” while humming the riff to The Clash’s “Clampdown” to himself.  Two songs later – on the same afternoon – Becky hears “You Were On My Mind” by We 5 while braiding her granddaughter’s hair and she wistfully tells the uncomprehending little girl, “One time a cute, brown-haired boy won me a stuffed animal at Cedar Point, and this song was playing.”  

Mitch & Becky were really very happy at the start.  They went to movies.  They got burgers & fries at Sandy’s by Sullivant & Demorest.  Becky went to see Mitch’s band play at parties & dances.  But Mitch knew from the time he was 16 years old – possibly even before the first time his lips ever met Becky’s – that he never wanted to have any kids.  And Becky had wanted a big family since she was 10.

Mitch went on to work in warehouses and play in rock & roll bands for the next 15 years, then as a solo act for the 25 years after that.  Becky got married right out of high school and had four kids by five years after graduation. 

Mitch has read a ton of books over the years: at home; in motel rooms, dressing rooms & vans on the road; at airports & bus terminals and once in a police holding cell.  He sometimes thinks the most profound literary quote he’s ever encountered is, “Your name and mine inside a heart upon a wall / Still find a way to haunt me, though they’re so small,” from The Left Banke’s “Walk Away Renee.”  He hears that song about once a month on 920 am, and thinks of Becky every time.  First loves are like that.

Becky saw one of Mitch’s later bands at the Westgate Park Bean Dinner in 1978.  She was there with her husband & kids when they heard a racket from the music stage over by the duck pond.  “This is that punk rock crap everybody’s talking about now,” Becky’s husband growled as they got closer, “let’s get out of here.”  “No, I wanna watch a minute,” Becky said.  Mitch looked great, Becky thought.  He was still skinny, his hair was long but cut kinda cool and he was wearing a tie around his neck over a sleeveless black t-shirt.  Becky had put on 30 or 40 pounds when she had the kids, hadn’t been able to shed the weight and couldn’t remember the last time she had bought a new dress.  Or the last time she felt cool.

Mitch didn’t sing lead anymore, now he played guitar and sang back-up’s, and – in fact – the girl who was singing in the band didn’t look much older than Becky had been when she & Mitch were a couple.  The songs they played were all really noisy & fast and Becky didn’t think she had ever heard any of them before on the radio.  Just then Becky overheard the guy in front of her in the crowd say “Mitch writes all these songs.”  The guy had hair down to his shoulders & a scraggly beard and as he passed a joint to his buddy next to him, he concluded with, “Mitch has always been an elitist asshole, now he thinks he’s Joe Strummer or somebody.”

Becky didn’t know who Joe Strummer was and didn’t think she’d ever known anybody who made up their own songs before.  She wondered idly for a moment if any of the songs were about her, but the tunes were so angry & aggressive she wasn’t sure she wanted them to be.  Her littlest girl had her hands over her ears, yelling, “Mommy, TOO LOUD, TOO LOUD.”  Becky’s husband said, “Let’s go, Rebecca, they’re scaring the kids.”  Becky turned, took little Lee Ann’s hand in hers and “Love Can Make You Happy” was playing in her head as they walked back to the picnic tables in the evening dusk.  She turned to wave goodbye to Mitch, but he couldn’t have seen her, in the crowd, through the stage lights. – Ricki C. / September, 2016

I consider myself something of a devotee of bad late-1960's rock & roll exploitation films and even I can't claim to have ever caught the movie - Fireball Jungle - this clip is lifted from.   Judging by the fact that the producers allowed the film to grind to a halt for the entire 3:20 run-time of one-hit wonders Mercy, however, I have to ask the question: "Which member of the band had an uncle who was an under-assistant West Coast promo man?"  (It looks like a pretty great movie, though, doesn't it?)  (ps. For a HILARIOUS, almost Lester Bangs-esque review of Fireball Jungle, check out "LSD For Lunch" in the User Reviews section at this IMDB link)  (pps. After repeated viewings, I believe this may be the GREATEST rock video EVER PRODUCED.)

The Top Ten All-Time Best Songs on the Ricki C. Planet: 1) "Won't Get Fooled Again" (The Who)   2) "Brown Sugar" (The Rolling Stones)   3) "Walk Away Renee" (The Left Banke)   4) "Candy's Room" / "Incident on 57th Street" (tie, Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band))   5) "Then He Kissed Me" (The Crystals)   6) "Isadora's Dancers" (Elliott Murphy)   7) "Roadrunner" (The Modern Lovers)   8) "All The Way From Memphis" / "Once Bitten Twice Shy" (tie, Mott The Hoople / Ian Hunter)   9) "New York, New York" / "Looking For A Kiss" (tie, The Dictators / The New York Dolls)   10) "Dimming of the Day" (Richard & Linda Thompson)

Okay, so it's fairly painfully obvious that the cats & kitten from We 5 have got "1960's Folk Club Refugees" written all over 'em, and Pencilstorm readers have probably figured out by this juncture that Ricki C. was likely NOT enamored of the Folk Club Kidz back in the day.  Entirely correct, but goddamn I have always loved this kind of folk-rock tune, and I had a HUGE crush on We 5 lead singer Beverly Bivens when this song was fresh & new in 1965, and so was most of the world around me.