|
A Game of Cards The Wild Acoustic Chamber Orchestra - W.A.C.O. for short - are not pop musicians. They are not accessible, they are not marketable and they have none of the earmarks of a typical Los Angeles ensemble. They aren't seeking representation or major label affiliation. They aren't washing-the-dishes background music, make-out music or cruising-down-the-freeway music. They are a challenge to absorb and they demand attention from listeners in a time when anything above somnambulant ambience is regarded as a threat to national security.
The misses, oddly enough, occur when Gregoropoulos oversteps himself, aiming for the kind of complex and unnecessary tempo shifts that have been the curse of "progressive" music since musicians realized that counting out 13/4 or 19/8 was a clever idea. But the band have improved enough to at least negotiate the hard time signatures; kudos to propelling force Pablo Garcia, the bassist, for this step ahead. That said, it's more proof than is needed to make the case that this disc isn't standand fare. Offbeat beat often feel affected in rock bands like Rush, and the same law applies here. An outside arranger or producer would be a welcome addition. They ain't *NSync or Mandy Moore or Destiny's Child, they ain't Limp Bizkit or Dave Matthews, and they ain't even Magnetic Fields or the Ass Ponys. W.A.C.O. stand alone. Whether or not you commit to swimming in the music as it plays is your choice, but the Wild Acoustic Chamber Orchestra cannot - or will not - be ignored. We're better off for it, completely. |
|
A Game of Cards ...the band fiddling around with its Tom Waits-meets-Raymond
Scott chamber-pop sound until |
|
Sylvania |
|
Like Neil Young, W.A.C.O. singer/pianist Steve Gregoropoulos has a soft spot in his heart for reviled Republican presidents, finding it poignant that Richard Nixon muttered to paintings during his last days in the Oval Office. Given Steve's reputation as Silver Lake's most notorious, although friendly, curmudgeon, it's not entirely surprising when he claims that "Andy," a ballad from W.A.C.O.'s new debut CD, is "a homosexual love song about Andrew Johnson." Of course, when it comes to Gregoropoulos' internal
universe, strict interpretation isn't the point. "'Take a Gun to the
Movies' is specifically about them having weapons checks at New Jack
City," he says over hot chocolate at a tropical Silver Lake cafe. "There
was all this watchdog bullshit going around, a combination of hype -
selling the movie - and repression." Yet the tune unfolds brightly,
with jaunty string-section strokes and flute chirps layered over sinister
phrases like "There's a sinkhole in the evening" and "Mr. Sweetie has
got an iron lung." Half the fun of deciphering Steve's thickly veiled, knotty lyrics is guessing which scenester or historical figure the song is "about," and even then the story is rarely literal, as in the Eva-Peron-goes-to-China fantasy "The Long March," which Steve recently rewrote, a la Elton, as a "tribute" to Princess Di. Still, it's a puzzle why Gregoropoulos, who hates any form of cliche, would name his CD so prosaically. "I wanted the record to be titled Darling Clementine out of pure woefulness. 'Clementine,' the old prairie song, is full of massive double-entendres and bondage-and-domination imagery," he insists. The album sways with the kind of music you'd imagine death-camp inmates played on fiddles as they lurched into the gas chambers. The string section is used for frantic, paranoid effect ("Get Out of My Brain"), and to trace fragile melodies behind an Ian Curtis-somber vocal in "Love" and in "Beautiful," where Steve's spare piano figure crumbles like cake underneath Justin Burrill's delicate acoustic-guitar threading. Even prettier is "In Your Room," which is just as haunting as Brian Wilson's "In My Room," minus the solipsism. Instead of staying in his own sandbox, Steve imbues his love object's room with so much mournful adoration that the place sounds more like a sanctuary. But whose room is it? "When I was still living with Elizabeth [Herndon, ex-wife and W.A.C.O. trombonist/flutist], these a birds kept falling out of their nests, and the cats kept killing them," Gregoropoulos says. "We saved this one bird and tried to feed him, and he lasted a pretty long time. We kept him in a shoebox . . . the shoebox was his room." Steve's room used to be in Boston, then Amsterdam and Berlin, when he played with W.A.C.O. founders Burrill and bassist Fran Miller in the Wild Stares. After relocating to L.A. in 1988 and hooking up with drummer Kyle C. Kyle (Dred Scott, the Motels), the Wild Stares unplugged the drum machines and guitars and brought out cellos, violas, mandolins, flutes and clarinets, and recast itself as the Wildstares Acoustic Chamber Orchestra. The band's revolving lineup has featured Rob Zabrecky (Possum Dixon) and Koko Puff (Sluts for Hire), and now includes Adam Brisben (Masher), Heather Lockie (Leather Hyman), Dave Travis (Carnage Asada), Teddy Pentagram and Rebecca Lynn (The Bibs), and Jennifer Tefft. Refreshingly, Gregoropoulos likes where he is, saying, "I'm a defender of Silver Lake. I definitely want to be on record as part of the Silver Lake-backlash backlash." Just don't get him started about your average guitar-rock band. "I'm not really burned out on electric music. I just wouldn't want to incorporate electric music into W.A.C.O., or it would start to sound like American Music Club or Wilco or one of those bands that are sort of electric/acoustic-sounding," he says. "Is there anything inherently wrong with doing the least commercial thing? If you look at it as a wave pattern, some sort of cyclical dynamism, I'd like to think of it as being ahead of the curve." When asked if there's an instrument he'd never use in W.A.C.O., Steve replies, "I wouldn't use a synthesizer. [An acoustic instrument] has some presence, you know, properties and sounds of its own." Just like W.A.C.O. itself. "Everything in W.A.C.O. is completely idiomatic. Every part has been written for particular people to play. And I used to be such a lazy composer that I would write a bunch of parts and give them away. I wouldn't even Xerox them, and then a different person would come in and I'd have to write different parts, because I couldn't remember what I'd written. It's plastic music." |
|
Darling
Clementine
Review by Laurel Bowman, Alternative Press, May 1998 It's so much fun to find an album
that challenges. It's even better when the album moves you,
charms your pants off and cracks you up. Those are the rare albums that
become part of your life, that define key moments, and that almost feel
like This is one of those albums--but not for sentimental or cathartic reasons. Affection for Darling Clementine comes reluctantly, like loving a really weird friend. And ironicallly enough, there seems to be a surplus of weird friends in WACO. Led by pianist/vocal gymnast Steve Gregoropoulos (formerly of Wild Stares), this 10-piece chamber orchestra play a tumbling mix of headfucking freeform jazz, Tom Waits yarn-weaving and Rachels-like neo-classical. Particularly poignant is "While You Sleep," a melancholy lullaby in 7/8 time with some original phrasing. You simply must hear Gregoropoulos croon "Angels waltz above you as you sleep/Christ! I wish you could see them!?" to truly appreciate the verity of the delivery. Each of the songs on Clementine
lopes along as if composed by a sprawling drunk devising new musical
ways to spout his ranting tales of weapon play and spite. If this
generation had a vaudeville, WACO would be the headliners each night.
|
|
|
| LA Area Nightlife by Bob Cantu, BAM magazine, 7/11/97 Ever since the tragic demise of the Davidian
cult headquarters back in the early '90s, the word Waco (as in Waco,
TX) has conjured up many unpleasant memories. Why bring this up, you
ask? Well, apparently the LA-based band WACO suffers as a result of
the homonymic moniker. Most people who are familiar with the many-member
group know that WACO is actually an acronym for Wild Acoustic Chamber
Orchestra. The name happens to be quite fitting for this conglomerate
of musicians which includes a stand-up bass, violin, flute, trombone,
cello and occasional triangle in their line up. The band's recent appearance at Largo--which, by the way, was the first in a summer-long series of shows at the intimate West Hollywood venue--started out with a somewhat chilly response when their name was announced. However, it wasn't long before the audience eventually warmed up to the band's captivating sounds. Largo turned out to be an especially appropriate setting for this band because, as you may know, there's always a piano available onstage. And that just happens to work out perfectly for WACO's composer/ leader Steve Gregoropoulos, who prefers to play a real piano rather than the electric one he normally carts around. So all in all, the show--which also featured Caroline Edwards and Geraldine Fibbers' guitarist Nels Cline--turned out to be quite a success. But perhaps WACO should consider changing their name to something less controversial. Might I suggest "Orchestra Junior" or simply "O.J." for short? |
|
Spaceland show 08.04.02
|