SF Bay Area duo Grex's new album, Everything You Said Was Wrong, has made its way into Disaster Amnesiac's listening rotation, and I'm very glad for it. As I've heard the 16 tracks of this great release, I've often had thoughts about Fusion. Mind you, it's not a Fusion of the 1970's variety. In terms of said style for Grex, I have to say that it feels to Disaster Amnesiac that they are working on more of a 21st Century Fusion. The tracks within Everything You Said Was Wrong show thoughtful, crafty blending of elements that shape music currently, at least as far as I can perceive it. Hip Hop, Jazz, Free Improvisation, the various strains of Dub, Heavy Rock: all of these and more rise to the surface. That said, it's a delight, the way that keyboard player/vocalist Rei Scampavia and guitarist/vocalist Karl Evangelista, aided on the LP by percussionists Nava Dunkelman and Robert Lopez, mix these various elements into a sound that is very much their own. It's easy to hear and feel their unique band voice. Surely, that's not an insignificant achievement within the music industry, and Grex should be acknowledged and rewarded for this. In Disaster Amnesiac's view, there are tunes on Everything that could and should be hit singles. The musical craft and intelligence shown on tunes such as Beepocalypse, Husk, Gone, and Goodnight would seem so refreshing on my Youtube feed of current industry offerings, if for no other reason save the knowledge that there's music like this out there. Then you have the gorgeous Satie-like craft of Walking Ayler in Tarzana and the spooky Trip Hop of Boo Ghost or Margot Tenenbaum providing lateral moves into more abstract zones, by turns cerebral and concrete. The way that it all hangs together, all the while within a clearly defined band voice, man, I like it. A lot. As such, Disaster Amnesiac wanted to reach out to Grex, ask some questions, and get the skinny on this fine release from the minds of its creators. Hopefully its title does not refer to things said inside of their musical world, because they are doing just about everything right therein.
For people who aren't familiar with Grex, please give a bit of background. What are Grex's origins?
Karl: Grex is an Oakland, CA-based art rock/experimental
duo comprised of me, Karl A.D. Evangelista, on guitar, vocals, etc. and
Margaret Rei Scampavia on keys, vocals, etc. Drummer/percussionist Robert Lopez
sometimes joins.
Grex was formed in 2009 at Mills College. I had been studying
under (the great) Fred Frith and Art Ensemble of Chicago co-founder Roscoe
Mitchell, both whom of emphasized the importance of rigorous practice and
personal discipline. Rei and I formed Grex as a kind of amateurish escape - a way
of rediscovering the joy of the creative process away from external pressures.
In biological terms,
a "grex" is an entity - a slime mold - composed of several smaller
organisms. Rei selected the name. We thought it appropriate for this project,
which was always intended to be a converge of disciplines, genres, and
interest.
Grex songs are very unique. I am curious as to what your song writing
processes are. Do you have multiple methods of song development? What
goes into the act of crafting a Grex song?
Karl: Thanks so much for saying so!
Our creative process has has gone through a series of very
significant changes over the course of our time together. At first, Rei and I
co-composed in a very literal sense, writing lyrics in alternating couplets and
assembling harmonic structures one chord at a time. These days, one of us will
write either most or all of a song independently, applying finishing touches in
rehearsal.
The one significant (practical) change you may detect on Everything
You Said Was Wrong is the dominance of samples and electronic sounds. Every
sample on the record was first “performed” in real time (i.e., nothing was
programmed in the pedantic sense, and we refrained from using quantization),
and a lot of the record was written using drum and percussion elements, rather
than guitar or keyboard parts, as a base.
As I've listened to Everything You Said Was Wrong, I've marveled at the
lyrics. Karl's seem to be from a declaratory place, while Rei's seem
more like Symbolist poetry at times. Please describe some of the
influences or aspirations in your lyrics.
Karl: Grex has traditionally traded in surrealism and
lyrical abstraction, and Rei’s lyrics in particular (on “Beepocalypse” and “Feather Chaser”)
continue this practice. Even the songs that I (Karl) wrote for Rei’s voice -
like “The Other Mouses” and “Ikki” - are meant to sound evasive and, well,
lyrical. We borrow liberally from a tradition of poetic irony that encompasses
both classic psychedelic rock (including Pete Brown, who was Jack Bruce’s
lyricist) and more contemporary songwriters like Fiona Apple, St. Vincent, and
Mitski.
Karl’s leads are a new element, and they’re the end result of a
long process of navigating the balance between aggressive abstraction and political
grousing. At this time in history, it feels necessary to speak directly and
explicitly to social concerns, even if your language is itself kind of
elliptical and stream-of-consciousness. The male verses are hip-hop (n the
plainest sense), and we take our cues from the likes of MF Doom, Death Grips,
Quelle Chris, Moor Mother, and Odd Future.
Also regarding lyrics, I get a sense that you're both pretty literate.
Some of the lyrics give me an almost Cyberpunk feeling. Are either of
you Sci-Fi fans?
Karl:
Yes,
absolutely.
Rei has a pretty long history with creative writing. As a tandem, we’re sort of
science fantasy-type people (e.g., Star Wars or Dune), but Rei is very
well-versed in more traditionalist or “hard” sci-fi - Harlan Ellison, Ray
Bradbury, Robert Heinlein, etc. We’re also big into magical realist literature,
which is, I guess, a kind of second cousin to sci-fi - Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, Haruki Murakami, Junot Diaz, and so on.
Musically, Grex are both pretty obviously VERY adept with your instruments. Karl,
I hear lots of Jazz and Improvisational influences in your guitar
(Sharrock, Abercrombie, Frisell). Assuming this is the case, what are
some other strands of music that you pull from? What is your general set
up for realizing Grex music?
Karl: Wildly kind of you to say, and we thank you.
Your list of guitar influences is pretty dead-on - Sharrock is
the dominant thread, but I also took a lot of direct influence from Mr. Frith,
paradigmatic free improvisers like Derek Bailey, Henry Kaiser, and (sort of)
Ray Russell, straight-ahead jazz players like Grant Green and Joe Pass, and, of
course, Hendrix. Among newer players, I love Mary Halvorson, LIberty Ellman,
Ava Mendoza, and my good friend Will Northlich-Redmond. I also, admittedly,
tend to listen to sax players more intently than guitarists - the canonical
free jazz guys (Ayler, Ornette, Coltrane and Pharoah, Dudu Pukwana, Roscoe,
etc.) first and foremost.
I have used the same basic set up for years - a Gibson Les Paul
Classic, a ZT Club (which is appropriate for small settings but can project in
large rooms), and some combination of 60s fuzz tone, a Digitech Whammy, a DL4
Delay Modeler, and whatever volume pedal isn’t broken.
Rei, you move from Baroque sounds to Sun Ra interplanetary blasts on the
album. Where are you getting all of this? What's your set up for Grex
music?
Rei: That’s a very astute observation. My earliest exposure to music was very
structured and mainly classical, from Bach to Beethoven. Growing up, I listened to a lot of late
nineties/early aughts pop and rock, plus “classic” rock (Radiohead, Smashing
Pumpkins, Nine Inch Nails, Nirvana, Fiona Apple, Portishead, Led Zeppelin, Pink
Floyd, etc.). In college, my exposure to
and taste in music started to broaden especially after meeting Karl. For Grex, I try to model myself after the
likes of Horace Tapscott, Alice Coltrane, and Sun Ra, but I also end up
borrowing just as much from groups like Deerhoof, the Unicorns, and Sonic Youth.
A couple years ago I made the liberating switch from an 88-key,
weighted keyboard to a synth (a Rolland V-Combo) and a small Casio, and I
couldn’t be happier. I use a distortion
and a delay pedal for the synth.
This question is kind of addendum to the previous. I just wanted
to ask you both about your personal musical growth. Please describe your
development if you'd like to do so.
Karl: I started on guitar at 12 - which I now recognize is
somewhat late - and developed an early focus on blues and rock guitar. I got
into jazz around the same time, and this helped to focus my energies on
improvisation as a kind of non-specific practice (i.e., I’ve long been
interested in the idea of making non-prepared, or non-precomposed music,
whether that entails absolute abstraction or focused study of chord
progressions, culturally-coded musical traditions like kulintang or gamelan,
and so on).
If there’s any lasting merit to my musicianship, I’d like to
think that it comes from my unflagging commitment to regular practice. This is
something that I really learned from Fred and Roscoe - that music is not
just a creative discipline or even a job, but also a kind of psycho-physical
craft that needs to be maintained and honed. To my benefit and detriment, I
like to think of music as both an ongoing challenge and an opportunity to
exercise purpose.
Rei: My earliest exposure to music was singing in church
(I went on to play flute in the choir when I was older), and classical piano
training. I played flute in elementary
school as well, it probably sounded atrocious, and part of middle school before
switching to tenor saxophone. In high
school, I played both piano and tenor sax in various jazz combos through
school. Around middle school, I had a
rebellious streak and started listening to more subversive, but still
relatively mainstream, music. At Mills I
was primarily a biology major, but I still participated in the music
department. Some of my biggest
influences were Daniel Schmidt, who taught gamelan (an Indonesian gong
orchestra), and Maggie Payne’s electronic music class. Post-college, I would say that Karl has
really shaped a lot of the progression in my taste in music, as well as my
playing, since the majority of the music I play is either in Grex or other projects
Karl is working on.
Who programs the beats for Grex?
Karl: I do - though none of the beats are programmed per
se. I tend to pull samples from all manner of places - wildly obscure free
jazz and soul records, old personal recording sessions, household objects - and
use a SPD-SX sample pad as a kind of surrogate kit. All of the beats on Everything
You Said Was Wrong were performed first - as in I played them live, through
a PA, with sticks - and later looped.
The beat for “Blood,” for example, is actually a takeoff on a
pattern that Milford Graves showed us (a 6/8 rhythm that is meant to be
slightly asymmetrical, mirroring a heartbeat). It’s kind of impossible to
quantize or pre-program this stuff, as the human element is so essential to the
sound of it - so we’re more or less looping performances rather than regimented
beats, if that makes sense.
You have two great drummers, Nava Dunkelman and Robert Lopez on
Everything You Said Was Wrong. Please give some descriptions of what
it's like to collaborate with them.
Karl: To start, Nava and Robert are two of our favorite
people. Robert has played some five or six tours with us at this point, and he
was a regular part of the band from roughly 2012-2015. Karl has been playing
with Nava in improvised settings for years, though her addition to Grex as a
live and studio entity is relatively recent. It goes without saying, but both
Robert and Nava are exceptionally easy to be around, which is an underrated
plus when it comes to the sometimes tense and fatiguing world of tour or
pressurized performance.
The main thing about including a live percussionist in Grex is
that this music is meant to come out of free jazz, whether or not the resulting
sound reflects those intentions. There are some energies you just can’t access
without having a third musician reacting to the music in real time.
Where
was the album recorded, and who engineered it?
Karl: The album was recorded and engineered by Myles
Boisen at his studio. Virtually everything was performed live and edited
appropriately. We’re pretty hardcore about using live basic tracks as a base
for studio recordings, and so every single beat on the album was
performed/looped at home and played back in real time at Myles’s studio. This
is, I think, an inversion of normal electronic music procedures, and it made
for a really fun, but profoundly bizarre, mixing process - some beats were
manually re-performed and/or re-programmed after the fact.
Is the Ayler you mention a dog?
Karl: Yes! Ayler was (and is) our family’s dog for many
years - a Belgian Malinois mix. The song “Walking Ayler in Tarzana”
commemorates our time spent with him in the San Fernando Valley, taking
midnight strolls through the suburban sprawl. Our memories of Ayler remain some
of the fondest we can claim from our decade+ time as Grex.
Any
closing thoughts you'd like to impart?
Karl: Everything You Said Was Wrong was written to
reflect the reality of living and making art in the Oakland of 2020. It’s both
an ode to the embattled Bay Area arts community and a very overt criticism of
the dominance of oligarchical, often fascistic politics both in America and
elsewhere.
My (Karl’s) Aunt, Miriam Defensor Santiago, was a lifelong
crusader for progressive politics in the Philippines. She passed away not long
after running against current President Rodrigo Duterte, whose bloodthirsty
anti-crime campaign has undermined both the Filipino constitution and the
ethical responsibility of our country’s highest office. I feel that it is my
duty (as both a Filipino and an American) to speak to these issues, continuing
my Aunt’s battle for justice in new and specifically effective ways (re: the song
“Criminal”).
Finally, I’d like to stress that at a time of exceptional
instability for working artists and peril for marginalized peoples everywhere,
it feels irresponsible to “just” make music for the sake of turning profit. All
proceeds from this record are being directed to our friend and hero, innovative
drummer and educator Milford Graves, and the likes of the ACLU and Black
Organizing Project in Oakland.
Photo Credit: Lenny Gonzalez