Logo
Doubt
ISSUE #34.12 • MUSIC • COLUMN
[MUSIC]

Growing Pains


If at first you don’t succeed...

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 0 comments
Recently in "Here Comes Your Fan"

May 14th, 2008
Alma Matters | A tale of two high-school fundraisers.0 comments

April 30th, 2008
Soul Man? | Colin Meloy tries his hand, er, voice at Sam Cooke.1 comment

April 16th, 2008
The Accidental Venue | Exit Only fills a void in Portland’s all-ages scene.1 comment

April 2nd, 2008
What A Fool Believes... | is that there’s no sun in Portland this spring.0 comments

March 26th, 2008
Dinosaur Schminosaur | How OPB Radio Is Rollin’ With The New.0 comments

March 19th, 2008
Bizzare Love Triangle | Oh, you’re so awesome, Jens; as are you, Bon Iver.0 comments

March 12th, 2008
Simon Don’t Say | Portland Teen Idol is keeping it real, dog.0 comments

February 27th, 2008
He’s So Excited | Badman Recording Co.’s Dylan Magierek is officially a Portlander. And with a new local release and a just-signed hot-shit band on his roster, he just can’t hide it.0 comments

February 20th, 2008
Songs in the Key of Life | Nick Jaina spins a universal yarn with his latest.0 comments

February 13th, 2008
Rumor Has It | Discovering the joy of karaoke, private-style.0 comments


Songwriters’ Roast: Andy Giegerich (front) of the Honus Huffhines gives local songwriters a second chance at first impressions.
BY AMY MCULLOUGH | amccullough at wweek dot com

[January 30th, 2008]

Sure, gifted artists—be they authors, songwriters or painters—are inspiring. But their stellar work can also be totally intimidating. Perhaps that’s why it’s so gratifying when an artist releases his or her early work. We discover, for instance, that Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo, who released a collection of early recordings last month titled Alone, went through awkward metal, electro, grunge and alt-rap stages. It’s comforting to know that the scribe behind the “Blue Album,” one of the greatest rock recordings of the ’90s, suffered artistic identity crises (and produced subpar work) just like the rest of us.

Which is not to say that Alone or releases like it—Death Cab’s You Can Play These Songs With Chords, Bright Eyes’ A Collection of Songs Written and Recorded 1995-1997 and Modest Mouse’s Sad Sappy Sucker (which features tunes circa 1994)—aren’t enjoyable and curious to receive. Enter the local version: an event (and recording) called Tried Tried Again. The brainchild of Andy Giegerich, singer-guitarist for local indie-pop quartet the Honus Huffhines, Tried Tried Again will feature 14 area songwriters—including members of Curious Hands, Ross and the Hellpets, Sauvie Island Moon Rocket Factory and the Minor Thirds—playing their earliest (read: embarrassing, unsophisticated) tunes. “I’d been dubbing some old stuff from cassettes onto CDs and started thinking about what various peoples’ early stuff might have sounded like,” says Giegerich. Thanks to local collective/label Love Harder, that early stuff will be available on a free CD-R at the show.

Giegerich, a bespectacled Portland Business Journal writer, feels the whole concept can be summed up in one word: “sketchbook.” “It’s like studying an early and rudimentary series of an artist’s sketches to see how he or she arrived at their most compelling paintings—or develop[ed] their signature style,” he explains before a quick addendum: “Jesus, didn’t mean to sound that pretentious.” And the 44-year-old says he’s often found his favorite musicians’ youthful efforts not only interesting, but encouraging. “David Bowie’s early recordings, from the mid-1960s, are horrendous,” he notes. “What must his very first songs have sounded like?”














icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

When asked if anyone cares what Tried Tried Again’s performers’ maiden material sounded like, he admits the event’s a family affair: “These [musicians] are all friends of ours,” he says, “[but] most [of them] are pretty developed [songwriters], which is helpful for an exercise like this. Of his own green songwriting, Giegerich offers the following lyric from a song called “Blonde Young Fascists” that he penned when he was 21: “Listen to Reagan, he knows the score/ He’ll shoot off some missiles, then he’ll buy more.” “Pretty cringey,” he admits, “and there are plenty more tortured lyrics within.”

All in all, he says the performers involved thought Tried Tried Again just “sounded pretty fun.” “Josh [Mayer, one of the performers] said it’s ‘interesting and cruel,’” adds Giegerich, “which indicates to me that it could be pretty damn entertaining.”

SEE IT: Tried Tried Again, featuring performances by Jacob Anderson, Ross Beach, Dave Klopfenstein, Jack Tuftee, Abigail Adams, Dave Sullivan, Dan Cook, Josh Mayer, Chris Piuma, Sean Mersereau, Alison Dennis, Andy Giegerich & more, takes place Friday, Feb. 1, at the Red Room. 8 pm. Free. 21+. Read the extended Q&A with Giegerich here , and listen to "Blonde Young Fascists" here .

 

Rate This Story
Be the first to rate this story.

Comment on the "Growing Pains" article



Recently in Willamette Week
May 16th 2008Higher Ed | Reed College is exceptional for more than academics. It’s one of America’s most permissive colleges for experimenting with drugs.
May 16th 2008Best New Band 2008 | Portland music insiders take our local scene to the chopping block—and come out with 10 new faves.
May 16th 2008For The Love of Politics | WW’s endorsement page-turner has all the candidates worth falling for this election.
May 16th 2008Say Amen, Somebody | African-American ministers struggle to make their voices heard in America’s whitest city.
May 16th 2008Green With Envy | Seven things Portland should do if we’re serious about being green.
May 16th 2008Kvetch Fest | 27 things we hate about the city we love.
May 16th 2008Bitter Pill | A Portland doc flips on big pharma and reveals its “dirty little secret.”
May 16th 2008Gunfight at the OR Corral | A crusader who fought the Mob or a long-established Oregonian? Inside the shootout to become the next attorney general.
May 16th 2008Lean Cuisine | Has Portland lost its insatiable appetite for its restaurant scene?
May 16th 2008Barack In The Day | Long before Obama ran for president, he was a state senator in Illinois. Here’s what he did.