"CMJ
New Music Monthly
Jon Spencer
Blues Explosion -
Acme Blues Explosives, INC
Story David Daley
Photos: Dennis Kleiman
The latest blues-punk-funk-soul mishmash from the
Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
is its best yet, but talking to them about it
finds a band loath to reveal its true face.
When Rolling Stone reviewed the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion's last
album, Now I
Got Worry, the writer practically accused
Spencer of wearing blackface, sporting an
afro, and angling for a sitcom on the
WB Network. Asking what right young, white boys have to play the blues, the scribe
opined that "Spencer's faux backwoods drawl verges on minstrel-show insult."
Sitting in a diner in New York's East Village with bandmates
Russell Simins and
Judah Bauer, picking idly at the menu's awkwardly titled "salad burger," Spencer
will only call the review "upsetting," and bemoan that "some people don't get the
band, don't understand it." What actually sent Spencer off, however, was a tamer
Rolling Stone Q&A, in which he answered earnest queries about how a New Hampshire
boy fresh from sneering punk deconstructionists
Pussy Galore fell for the authentic blues music of Hound Dog Taylor and Mississippi
Fred McDowell. It's actually one of the few insightful articles on Spencer - whose
combination of genuine shyness and obnoxious East Village cool makes him a difficult
interview when he's not being downright rude - that reveals the depths of his musical
knowledge, and gives
Blues Explosion
fans at least half-dozen original sources to
explore themselves, some they might know (Howlin' Wolf, Elmore James), and some
they might not (Jessie Mae Hemphill, R.L. Burnside).
After the interview - perhaps feeling his authenticity in question, perhaps frustrated
that the soul, funk and hip-hop sides of his band get overlooked because of the
name Blues
Explosion - Spencer sat down and wrote "Talk About The Blues," the first
single off the
Blues Explosion new album
Acme (Matador-Capitol).
"I got something I want everybody to hear right now, ladies and gentlemen/I don't
play no blues," he testifies, riffing on McDowell's album called I Do Not Play No
Rock And Roll, and calling out MTV and Rolling Stone by name. "That's right/The
blues is number one/But there's something I gotta tell you right now/I do not play
no blues/I play rock 'n' roll."
It's the bluesiest song on
Acme, a blistering, chicken-scratch distorto-groove with
Spencer howling in protest, that feels like an out-of-place rant in the middle of
an album with a lower-key, soul-train vibe, one that opens with a James Brown-styled
exhortation "Let's have a party."
"[On] the last record we got criticism for, I don't know, trying to be something
we're not," says Spencer. "I wrote the song right after we did the interview, inspired
by that and also some of the criticism we’ve received over the past couple years.
If we tried to record some song that was a response to criticism as it happened,
that would be too heavy-handed. The lyrics stayed true to the original off-the-cuff
feel, what you call a rant. But it's not such a big deal, you know. A lot of that
stuff just doesn't merit a response."
Indeed, Spencer's response is
Acme, an album that just appropriates more black music
than ever. There's a funkier bottom to the
Blues Explosion's trash-can-rattling
pastiche, with "Lovin' Machine" sampling the essence of James Brown's funky heart,
and "Do You Wanna Get Heavy"
borrowing the soulful stirrings of Stax-Volt R&B.
And there's a mellow, chill-out feel as well: if the
Blues Explosion's raw power
once got the trio tagged rock's sexiest band,
Acme has more crooning for post-coital
cuddling.
"It's interesting. This record, in some ways, is blacker than the last
one," Spencer observes. "When we're making a record, even after it's done, I don't
really know what to say. It’s not until we start doing interviews that you can sort
of see it for what it is."
Spencer insists Acme isn't merely a response to
Now I Got Worry, which he once fretted
was too nasty and raucous a follow-up to the more accessible, bell-bottomed hip-hop
soul of
Orange.
"The thing is, we recorded really raw and raucous songs for this record. It wasn't
until June that we totally started thinking about what to put on the record that
we really started going for the more mellow, soulful groove-oriented songs," he
says.
The group recorded slowly, trying to involve lots of different people, to recapture
the diverse feel of the
Experimental Remixes EP that followed
Orange. The trio recorded
the basic tracks with Steve Albini (and a couple with Calvin Johnson at Dub Narcotic),
figuring Albini's minimalist style would capture strong songs no remixer could completely
ruin. Then they distributed the songs to different mixers whose work they admired,
including Jim Dickinson, Alec Empire and Dan The Automator (Dr. Octagon, Cornershop.
It's a much more collaborative, hands-off method of making a record for Spencer,
who has produced his own music ever since the Pussy
Galore days.
"The idea was just to kind of mix it up, take a remix approach
to the album," says
Spencer. "This is the best record we've done. I really think this is a great record.
I think there's something on here for everybody. We really outdid ourselves songwriting-wise
on this record. There are great songs on there. That was one of the things that
allowed us to turn this loose to the different mixers."
Adds Simins, "This record also, more so than the other one, represents all of our interests. there are all these bands who listen to the same music all the time,
they all dress the same, and they play the same music. That's just boring. We listen
to a lot of different things. We kind of hip each other to stuff, and that's a big
part as to why this band works."
Spencer, for his part, credits his status as a new dad (he's married to
Boss Hog
partner Cristina Martinez, who adds backing vocals to "Bernie") for the
Blues Explosion's
new vibe.
"Part of the reason this record is different from other Blues Explosion records
is because of what's happened to me the past couple years, because I'm older - that's
always an influence - and more specifically, because, yeah, I'm a father now. That
was a big influence on me. Far more so than any music I've ever listened to."
You had a boy, right, I ask innocuously. Spencer turns and fixes me with a look
of icy cold disdain. "I'd rather not talk about my family," he says, shutting down
a subject he himself raised, seemingly for his bandmates' amusement. Attitude Explosion!
Or maybe it's just an interview inspiring the arrogant single from the next record
- "(Rather Not) Talk About My Family."
end" |