After ten
years of touring the world, Hazmat Modine’s third studio album,
Extra-Deluxe-Supreme, digs deeper into American soil.
Ten years
ago, Barbès Records released Hazmat Modine’s debut album, Bahamut, which
quickly went on to become a cult classic. Pitchfork probably captured it best
by describing it as “generalized roots music that takes from pretty much any
roots it sees fit,” and went on to praise the album as “true world music, weird
and wonderful to the last note.”
Now ten
years later, Barbès is releasing Hazmat Modine’s third studio album:
Extra-Deluxe-Supreme: an artistic statement that is the culmination of ten
years of musical adventures around the world.
The new
album confirms Hazmat Modine’s place as a band of outsiders oblivious to the
rules that govern today’s music scene. The group itself is a heterogeneous
collection of musicians with a fondness for odd instruments and an
all-inclusive view of what constitutes American music. Extra-Deluxe-Supreme is
their most classically American album to date. It draws from Gospel and
R&B, from Country Blues and early jazz, and displays a strong attention to
songcraft, inspired by a long line of American songwriters from Tin Pan Alley
to Stax and Motown.
Hazmat’s
sound is still defined by their signature tuba and harmonica, as well as their
original horn section, guitars and accordion – with the addition of your usual
assortment of marimba, doshpuluur, Igil, railroad spikes, claviola, rocks and
cimbalom.
Hazmat’s
eclecticism is probably what got them noticed in the first place. The band is
known for having collaborated with famed Tuvan throat singers Huun Tuur Tu, Benin’s
Gangbe Brass Band as well as Natalie Merchant. They count “American songwriting
and African music” as their “biggest influences,” and first got noticed by
German director Wim Wenders for the Calypso-like Bahamut, which Wenders
included in his movie Pina.
Extra-Deluxe-Supreme
does away with the more obvious genre hopping and exotic colors of its
predecessors. After ten years of leftfield collaborations and extensive touring
in places as varied as Siberia, Borneo, Brazil, Germany, Mexico, New Zealand and
Turkey, Hazmat Modine seems to have absorbed it all and wholeheartedly embraces
its own forged identity as an American band with its own idea of what American
music means.
“Twenty
years ago” explains bandleader Wade Schuman “I had to sort through all the
complicated detritus of singing in an idiom that has its origins in Southern
and rural music but I also embrace being a New Yorker. I like the idea of a New
York music which by its nature is eclectic.”
One
essential New York tradition remains that of the professional songwriters,
starting with Tin Pan Alley and the likes of Irving Berlin (who inspired the
song Plans) “Tin Pan Alley affected everything. It was really about the idea of
a journeyman songwriter and the fact that we were creating our own music in the
20th century.” You could say that they created the template for all the
songwriting teams that would emerge later in Memphis, Detroit, or the Brill
Building.
In keeping
with the idea of a songwriting team, most of the songs on the album were
co-written by Wade Schuman and bandmate and guitarist Erik Della Penna.
“Sometimes I’ll write the verse, and Erik will write the chorus. Or if I have a
melody he will write the lyrics. We have absolutely no system,” says Schuman
about their collaboration. “Neither of us has a preconception of how to do
things”
Still,
Hazmat Modine has not renounced its fondness for eclectic sources and
transcultural feedback, as exemplified by their collaboration with Alash, another
band from Tuva. “I brought in the Tuvans again because I thought that they
intersect perfectly with a certain kind of American idiomatic language” says
Schuman. “On the song Your Sister for instance, I’m going for a kind of rural
American sound but the irony is that the Tuvans are playing their own version
of the fiddle and banjo and flute – it’s exactly where the tonality of Asia and
the Midwest meet.”
For the past
ten years, Hazmat has kept a busy touring schedule in most of Europe – with
forays into Asia and Latin America. The band has been the recipient of France’s
prestigious French Charles Cros Award, a German Records Award and was nominated
for a BBC award. Its US appearances, however, tend to be limited to their
hometown.
It is true
that Hazmat Modine may confuse American audiences. “In most bands everyone
looks kind of similar to each other but I think Hazmat doesn’t fit anybody’s
idea of a normal band. We are not one ecosystem” says Schuman. The band
includes men and women of all ages, blacks and whites, rock and jazz musicians.
The diversity is a reflection of Schuman’s wide range of interests. “I think
that’s an important ingredient to what the band is. I pick people who wouldn’t
naturally go together. People who have a very different background from me and
from each other.”
And indeed,
band members have all contributed different aspects of the American musical
experience Reeds player Steve Elson toured with Johnny Otis and then went on to
work with David Bowie for many years. Guitarist Michaela Gomez is a veteran of
the rich Brooklyn trad jazz scene. Trumpet player Pam Fleming has toured with
Burning Spear (and smoked weed with Fela in Lagos) Accordion player and singer
Rachelle Garniez has worked with Jack White and written for musical theater.
Erik Della Penna has toured and recorded with Natalie Merchant for over a
decade, as well as worked with Joan Baez and Joan Osborne. Drummer Tim Keiper
has spent years playing with Vieux Farka Toure, Cyro Baptista and the Dirty
Projectors. He has visited Mali numerous times to study calabash and N’goni.
Hazmat’s
only other original member, along with Schuman, is tuba player Joseph Daley.
“Joseph was my guru in a way because he saw something in the kind of raw band
leader that I was; he saw something that we could do.”
Joseph Daley
is a native New Yorker, born in Harlem to a West Indian family and raised on
the Lower East Side. As a teenager he started playing out with Latin musicians
such as Monguito Santamaria and Jerry Gonzalez. He went on to work with some of
the most influential artists of the past forty years including Sam Rivers,
Charlie Haden’s Liberation Orchestra, Taj Mahal and Howard Johnson.
The
heteroclite nature of the band remains one of its most defining characteristic
– and perhaps its main driver. The sense
of creative freedom and disregard for constraining rules that permeates Hazmat
Modine’s music is particularly evident on their latest album, which Schuman
calls “the product of a maturation of a kind of musical journey” “’
“I think our
band is like a really good NYC diner” concludes Schuman. “The food comes from
every tradition you can think of, but in the end it’s really the ultimate
American comfort food.”
No comments:
Post a Comment