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There's something at work on New Erections, the new record from
San Diego's resident four piece aural assassins, The Locust.
| There's something at work on New Erections, the new record from
San Diego's resident four piece aural assassins, The Locust. It's that
unidentifiable 'thing,' which was always hinted at on past Locust
records but not fully realized until now. Its immediate truth bristles
with intensity. Its insectile language works on the subconscious as a
musical representation of the Burroughs and Gysin cut-up method, a
footnote of comparison that bassist/vocalist Justin Pearson
acknowledges as an unintended effect of having four principle
songwriters in a band. |
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I've never been skeptical of the Locusts intention as a 'band,' though
I've never really thought of them in the traditional sense of the word
'band.' They're much more like a collective. Sure I can't listen to
them every day, sitting in my pre-fab cube, drinking my single serve
coffee, working on excel spreadsheets. The work itself is inspiration
enough for mass homicide without the sound track of the Locust lending
its ferocity to my high blood pressure. No.
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The Locust are more of an
entity, individually they are some of the nicest people I've had the
pleasure of meeting and having an occasional drink with at the Casbah
but once they move as a unit their DNA changes. As the Locust, they
devour all in their path, using razor sharp musical incisors to
decimate the crowds with bombastic sonic annihilation.
The Locust, whose
members include drummer Gabe Serbian, bassist/vocalist Justin Pearson,
guitarist/vocalist Bobby Bray and keyboardist/sound manipulator/vocalist Joseph
Karam, represent a decade's worth of underground music, record label(s)
and side projects surface to blinding brilliance. Their names and
accomplishments are not something the average fifty-year-old Guitar
Center employee is going to recognize or identify with but their
contributions both individually and collectively are worthy of respect.
Check out wikipedia for the full rundown
of each member's affiliations.
After several rescheduling issues, Pearson confirms our interview will
take place at one of San Diego's local punk rock friendly Mexican food
establishments, Pokez.
Talk About NEW ERECTIONS!
New Erections is the foursomes latest release on Anti, an imprint of punk mega label, Epitaph.
The labels mission statement is; "Real Artists Creating Great
Recordings on Their Own Terms." Being on Anti is a point of pride for
Pearson whose respect for label mates Nick Cave, Tom Waits, and Merle
Haggard has the all black clad, clean shaven bassist beaming and
admitting with a mischievous glint in his eye, "we sent the art in for New Erections with only the Anti logo on it and no one said anything."
Once again the band enlisted the expertise of producer/engineer Alex
Newport, whose credits include over fifty of the most amazing
underground and just-barely-slipping-a-toe-into-the-cold-mainstream
acts for the past decade. Only available via a secret, password
protected streaming web page buried on the Epitaph site, New Erections
elicits its namesake upon first listen – metaphorically speaking of
course. "We didn't want it to leak on the Internet and we got two weeks
away from the release date without any problems. In one way I think it
hurt us cause people didn't have their advance copies but I think it
actually helped us cause it built anticipation," Pearson states just
before ordering a vegan grilled tofu burrito.
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Like every Locust record, there is always the intent to change and improve on past efforts. New Erections
is no exception. Its dynamic and signatory, instantly identifiable as a
Locust record with the exception of a few key things: the songs are
longer, the vocals are intelligible amidst the cacophony, and it rocks
in all the right places. Certainly there will inevitably be detractors
out there in that vast and fickle scene that will lambaste the bands
newest piece with lazy whispers of sellout-ism or 'they don't sound
like they used to' droll.
Luckily, Pearson isn't affected by the
possibility. In fact he speaks of his bands newest endeavor with the
highest regard. "Most people are embracing it (the new record). The
different vocals and the fact that the songs are longer; there is more
space and development which make it less dense. Soundscapes was so
dense and you never had a chance to breath.
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It's interesting, to
perform the new stuff live cause a lot of it is actually harder to play
than Plague Soundscapes – physically and time signature wise. Plague was much more 'riff, riff, riff."
The transition the band went through is apparent. Pearson ruminates on the number of reasons New Erections sounds the way it does; "We took a weird path and I've only noticed in retrospect. We did Plague Soundscapes
and that was the first record we did as a four piece and we really
developed as a band, finally coming into our skin and found exactly who
we were. From then until now, we did Safety Second and that was the first time we developed material with space in it and parts that built up. It was weird because we did Safety Second
in conjunction with a very short west coast tour right and that was
when Dave Stone joined our band for that tour. Dave did sound
manipulation.
"He had this Darth Vader vocoder thing he modified to do obscure sounds
with. He also had this huge wire hooked up to a contact mic that he put
on Gabe's drums and Gabe would play these patterns and it'd pick it up
and he'd manipulate that. He had one of those Thunder Sheets (makes
thunder-like sounds). It was more theatrical than musical. We made a
45-minute set with no stops. I think subconsciously it put us in a
place where when we were writing for New Erections
we aimed for aesthetic, more musical dialogue I suppose, where we could
develop things. We'd try and find ways to sustain by detuning and
lengthen the song and of course lengthening anything for us is a long
fucking time." He says with a laugh.
New Erections is different than its predecessor for the simple fact that a listener can actually get to know the song. With Plague Soundscapes it
was almost too ADD to get a hold of an interesting hook: each song
exploded with dozens of great riffs and grooves that would last only a
few seconds each. Vocally ,the band has definitely matured, despite
Pearsons distaste for the word's connotations. It's one of the
strongest attributes on New Erections. Pearson eagerly explains, "The other thing I was really excited about while recording New Erections was we started developing more vocally. Out of the three of us I think I had maybe started to develop my vocals starting with Plague Soundscapes
but Bobby and Joey really delivered some amazing vocal techniques on
the new record. Alex really pushed for us to have our own songs. Each
of us did songs where we had written the bulk of the lyrics and the
other two members would do backing vocals."
"We didn't do preproduction on Plague Soundscapes. Alex did
produce the record but we didn't go over things. He didn't say 'you
guys really need to work on your vocal delivery.' Cause a lot of times
Bobby would specifically write lyrics where you'd normally have four
beats and four syllables but he'd write six syllables to four beats and
cram everything in. That's artistic in it's own way. Not that we're
supposed to be traditional but here's Alex saying, 'You can be weird
and abrasive but you can also be musical and do it.' I hate using the
word mature but evolution or something works better," Pearson says,
picking each word out carefully.
Its his meticulous way of explaining just how much thought and passion
went into his bands latest piece that brings William S. Burroughs and
Brian Gysin's 'Cut Up' method into our conversation. The Locust is as
connected to art as they are connected to music and the inevitable
occurrence of the two converging is perceptible. "Maybe subconsciously
those things [Cut Up method] tie in but it started with Safety Second
where we said there is a common theme we need to write about. And it
was all based metaphorically on human organs and the human anatomy and
that was the first step of us writing together while still writing
separately. Something we did again with New Erections. We'd
say, 'okay you write these pieces but keep in mind it has to be
thematically based on these things.' It's loosely based on an outline.
We're not Pink Floyd or Mars Volta and its definitely not a concept
record but we still pay attention to each others lyrics and contribute
to the whole," which resulted in three variant perspectives on one
theme combined into music and lyrics.
The Locust recently left for six months of touring in support of New Erections.
Our conversation didn't end there: check back in May for Pt. 2 of our
extended coverage on The Locust, Scrapping the Bottom, where we'll
discuss the concept of absurdity, breakfast in New York City with John
Waters and the trials and tribulations of touring.
Thanks to Justin Pearson, and The Locust.
Please visit The Locust for tour dates and info on the new record.
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