Europe Jazz Network
MUSICIANS
JOHN
LURIE & LOUNGE LIZARDS
It's hard to believe, but the Lounge Lizards will soon turn twenty. Perhaps
they've lasted so long because they're one of the few bands who do what
jazz does best - pluck ideas, sensations and feelings that are in the air
right now and convert them into soulful, compelling music. And while Lounge
Lizards leader John Lurie has long been the very personification of downtown
cool, his music has a clear spirituality, making for an exhilarating blend
of transcendence and street savvy. As someone once said, "We are all
in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars".
Lurie's simple, charming melodies stand in sophisticated settings that
borrow from some remarkable sources. The band - always a top-flight selection
of musicians - breaks down in any number of combinations and permutations
for a dazzling array of sonic effects, sometimes building to a stunning
cacophony, sometimes lapsing into jaw-dropping pools of quietude. It's
all on ample display on the Lounge Lizards' stunning new album, Queen
of All Ears.
The album title comes from an old favorite of Lurie's, Jimi Hendrix,
whose liner notes to Electric Ladyland included the line "And on
he walked until after crowning Ethel the dog the Only Queen of Ears...".
As a teenager, Lurie and his brother Evan thought the line was extremely
funny. The phrase stuck in Lurie's mind for years until he gradually twisted
the meaning, taking it to another level. "It's like she's the queen
of all music", says Lurie. "But is it for the recipient or for the
given? It's not clear... I don't know what it means".
The original intent behind Queen of All Ears was to try to capture
the energy of the band in performance. "But there was no way to capture
the ferocity of the live show to tape - it just never translates",
says Lurie. "In the studio you go for something more elegant, more refined.
Approaching it that way made it possible for things to happen in the studio
that would never have happened live". An example is the two numbers
which bookend the album - "The First and Royal Queen" and "Queen Reprise"
- which came together in the studio almost instantly.
"It's kind of
like opening and closing the record with a prayer", Lurie says.
As usual, the music is as cosmopolitan as Lurie's home base of New
York City. There's a hint of African juju music in "The First and Royal
Queen", an easy Gershwin-like swing to "She Drove Me Mad"; the rolling
Gnawan pulse of "The Birds Near Her House" explodes into a Coltranesque
rave-up via the drummers of Burundi; klezmer, minimalism and cartoon music
all infiltrate "John Zorn's S&M Circus" (besides being an outstanding
composer, John Lurie also has the best song titles in the business).
Also as usual, the ensemble playing is exceptional. "Of course,
these guys have to be exceptional players, but they also have to be able
to play like they just found their instrument on the street", says
Lurie. "And more than that, they have to have the capability of loving
each other. In that way, we're much more like the Chieftains than Wynton
Marsalis". That kind of teamwork shows up even in the solos - despite
their excellent musicianship, the soloists never showboat and instead play
a character, supporting the vision of the song. A splendid case in point
is Steven Bernstein's masterful work on "Monsters Over Bangkok", where
his slide trumpet becomes a sauntering, lubricious character straight out
of a Damon Runyon novel.
Just about everybody in the band gets a chance to shine on Queen
of All Ears - saxophonist Michael Blake charms all the snakes within
a fifty-mile radius on "Birds Near Her House", then Lurie's brother Evan
takes an eloquent solo on the same tune; ace cellist Jane Scarpantoni summons
up almost palpable storm clouds on "Monsters Over Bangkok" while Lurie
outdoes himself with his soaring, joyous turn on "Three Crowns of Wood".
And yet for all the axemanship, the human voice plays a bigger part
in this album than ever. The electrifying chant that closes "Birds Near
Her House" is actually the entire nine-piece band, overdubbed eight times
so that they sound like some massive tribal gathering. And Lurie makes
sure of his extraordinary vocal skills on the hilarious shaggy dog story
"Yak", making manifest the undercurrent of humor which runs through all
of the Lizards' music.
The Lounge Lizards emerged from New York's No Wave scene in the late
Seventies, at first playing the post-punk circuit along with bands like
Pere Ubu and the Cramps.
"We started as this punk jazz band", Lurie
says, "completely irreverent and basically afraid to play anything beautiful.
Everything was tongue in cheek. Then after about three years we tried to
take it seriously and it was a disaster. Then our musicianship improved
and the music began to take on a like of its own".
All kinds of music - James Brown, Indian brass-band music, Nino Rota
- began to infiltrate Lurie's compositions, with the music's experimental
currents balanced by an unabashed love of big, tough rhythm. Lurie had
one of many musical epiphanies when he was in Morocco for the filming of
"The Last Temptation of Christ" and jammed with some local Gnawan musicians.
"Instead of feeling like I was hearing what they were doing and they
were influencing me", Lurie says, "they had released something in
me, something that was really dying to get out that I couldn't quite find".
Soon it got to the point that the band's name barely fit the music
any more - instead of a cool, ironic posture, the music had taken on an
uplifting, downright spiritual aspect. These lounge lizards want to take
you higher.
"It's religious music played by wise guys", Lurie explains.
Of course, John Lurie isn't just a Lounge Lizard. He turned in sensational
co-starring performances in the Jim Jarmusch films "Stranger Than Paradise"
and "Down By Law", making this bohemian Bogart the toast of the hip independent
film set. Lurie became a favorite of some of the world's foremost directors,
appearing in "Paris, Texas" (Wim Wenders, 1983), "The Last Temptation of
Christ" (Martin Scorsese, 1988) and "Wild At Heart" (David Lynch, 1989).
Lurie's film work doesn't stop there - the man, the French paper Liberation
has hailed as "a genius", was nominated for a Grammy for his soundtrack
for "Get Shorty" and has written the soundtracks to ten films - including
Jarmusch films "Stranger Than Paradise", "Down By Law" and "Mystery Train",
as well as the more recent "Manny and Lo".
And Lurie's screen time continues as he writes, directs and stars in
his own TV comedy series "Fishing with John". The first half-dozen episodes
find Lurie travelling the globe with the likes of Tom Waits, Dennis Hopper,
Willem Dafoe, Matt Dillon and director Jim Jarmusch (the fearsomely, eclectic
soundtrack is also upcoming on Lurie's label, Strange
and Beautiful Music). The project might seem like a stretch for somebody
whose primary concern is music, but as Lurie puts it, "Why should Marlin
Perkins be the only person who can tell you what animals are thinking?"
Look for it on the Independent Film Channel in June.
Movie stardom was not exactly a boon for Lurie's band. "I had a
really hard time when the Jarmusch movies came out", Lurie says. "I'd
been doing this music and it was my whole thing, and these movies are one-tenth
of my energy, and suddenly they were gigantic things and that's what I
was known for".
But then brilliant albums like Big Heart and Voice of Chunk
reclaimed Lurie's credibility. The band toured Europe, Japan and the U.S.
constantly ever since, winning rave reviews the world over. The Lounge
Lizards have been blessed with a perennial allure; the band's following
has never abated, and a marvellously mixed following of jazz fans, rockers,
young folk and old folks always pack the Lounge Lizards' transcendent live
gigs.
What they're all drawn to is the undeniable magic to a Lounge Lizards
show. At times, the band seems to practically levitate the audience. "We
work hard on this intricate thing and we perform it almost like it's a
religious rite", says Lurie. "We release this... thing. It's almost
like a cult, except the members change". Does that make Lurie some
sort of downtown Jim Jones? "I don't think the guys in the band would
go that far", he says. "Which disappoints me".
The New York Times' Peter Watrous wrote of a 1995 show, "The music
is amazingly committed emotionally. Mr. Lurie is unafraid of either traditional
beauty or the mix of intelligence and pleasure".
The Lizards have always featured the cream of the crop of the downtown
New York new music scene. "I'm kind of like the Art Blakey of the Lower
East Side", Lurie quips. Lizards alumni include Arto
Lindsay, Marc Ribot, slide guitar virtuoso
Dave Tronzo, Bob Dylan musical director Tony Garnier, Skeleton Key's Erik
Sanko, Elysian Fields' Oren Bloewod, Billy Martin and John Medeski of Medeski,
Martin and Wood.
The secret lies in the Lurie's uncanny sense of how to cast his band
so they create well together. "It's not because of musicianship either
- it's more down to a personality/soul/energy thing, how they link together",
Lurie says.
"It's just comes together. Like with this current band,
it's like this current line-up has always been the band".
The way the Lounge Lizards connect so directly to all kinds of audiences
is almost miraculous - how can such sophisticated musicianship and songwriting
be so inviting? How can so many characters in the band, such a wide variety
of influences and ideas coalesce into something so incredibly right? "There's
nothing like this stuff, nothing like it", Lurie agrees. Then he stops
for a moment and wonders aloud. "Is there?"
No John, there isn't.
Europe Jazz Network
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