|
DUCK AND COVER: Odds are Deadbolt doesn't like you, either.
|
INTERVIEW
Curse
Words
The wisecracking
voodoobilly bruisers of Deadbolt say what they mean--and say it mean.
by
PHILIP DAWDY
pdawdy@wweek.com
The "pleasures"
of Deadbolt have little to do with music, basically because these
guys couldn't keep a beat to save their mommies' lives. Over the
past 10 years, Deadbolt has been all about persona rock: These are
men of a million faces (Tijuana hitmen, African mercenaries, voodoo
truckers and more), each of them as angry as a Serbian parable.
Their music, a primitive proto-rockabilly rumble interspersed with
sinister jokes and vicious insults, denies all that is harmolodic
about four-chord furies and tells you to take all your little pretensions
about indie rock AND STUFF IT, MAN. Harley Davidson, the singer-guitarist
with the angry auto-mechanic mug, recently answered a few prompts
about what makes his time-bomb personality tick.
Willamette
Week: For someone who has never heard Deadbolt before, describe
your aesthetic, describe voodoobilly.
Harley Davidson:
It is the dark, the evil side of rockabilly.
What's your
problem with regular rockabilly?
Well, you know
I have no problem with it, it's nice--if you like hearing songs
like the hot-rod song, you know, and Jenny Sue at the malt shop
and then bopping the night away.
And you'd
rather have songs about killing people and drinking?
Yeah. Exactly.
We like to have a different theme for the albums. How many things
can you write about? There are about three things: sex, drugs and
rocking. Or, if you are like Jewel, you can write how we should
be as people. Talk about the homeless.
I heard you've been on television in the past few years.
Jenny Jones.
What was
the deal with that?
It was my ex-wife--she
was the crazy one with the tattoos. She was watching TV and it said,
"Do you have a spouse who has too many tattoos and piercings...?"
So I called them up and we sent the pictures off. I covered myself
up, got a haircut. I had a long sleeve shirt and we made it, man.
I looked like a yuppie.
In whose
nightmare do you look like a yuppie?
In everyone's,
man. I had to play the part. I couldn't go out there with my tattoos.
We had to get on the show.
How much
did they pay you for this ordeal?
Well, they flew
us out there. And we got like a hundred bucks a day in credit at
the hotel we were staying at. Each, like a hundred bucks each.
So that all
went to the bar?
Yeah, basically
the bar. And I was driving room service crazy. A bottle of bourbon,
the N.Y. steak.
So your drinking
has grown a lot. How have you grown musically?
Musically? Not
one bit. Though I think I did learn one more chord.
And what
chord would that be?
I think it's
a C.
And you still
play through a mile of reverb?
Yes, my man,
yes. Trenchant in reverb is the voodoobilly.
Leo Fender's
best friend.
We are all Fender
men. We don't play those wussy Gibsons.
"Wussy Gibsons."
That's going to start a fight with somebody.
Ah, tell them
I like a man's guitar.
You guys
used to go to San Francisco and be on the hunt for hippies after
the show. What do you do now that there are all those dot-commers
in San Francisco?
We go after
them, man.
Why is that?
Aren't they good, moral upstanding people? They're just there to
make everybody rich except us.
Well, some say
this whole dot-com thing is collapsing. R.A. [MacLean, Deadbolt
bassist] lives in San Francisco, and we had him change our attack
from hippies to the dot-commers. A lot of the fucking hippies moved.
We'll hit Eugene, of course. Every place we go into, we have our
rage against hippies, we bring out all the people who live there
and aren't hippies.
Presented
with an option between the hippies and the dot-commers, which would
you go after?
One thing with
the hippie is, when they wake up in the morning, they just say,
"Hey, I look like shit and I'm going to stay this way all freaking
day. I'm not going to comb my hair. I'm just going to slap on some
fucking patchouli, OK?" It's like the Jiffy Pop thing on their head.
Have you seen those things? It's like the big Jiffy Pop net. It's
like yarn and shit. I hate those things. "Hey, Jiffy Pop head!"
Fuck.
What about
the anarchists? They wear a lot of black and you wear a lot of black.
I don't want
them on my team. Just because they wear black doesn't mean they
pay their dues. I hate those guys.
What are
your thoughts on Blink-182?
You know, they're
all right, I guess. I would like them if I was a 13-year-old boy.
So basically,
you're saying once you start drinking you can't appreciate them
anymore.
I guess not.
You know, it's kind of funny. The thing with those cats, you know,
I guess it's broke again--punk after Nirvana. And then we have Blink-182.
The Green Day Blink Vortex. Punk revolution.
Well, thanks
so much for talking, Harley. We're going to run some of this and
just annoy people. You'll probably have a hippie protest at the
show.
Well, you know,
I really am pissed off. I thought the death of Jerry was going to
bring it all [to an end], but I've just seen an influx of them.
Well, all
this bluegrass stuff is coming back. Are you a big banjo picker?
No. Maybe those
guys should quit picking the banjo and start picking the lice out
of their girlfriend's hair. Maybe they should try that.
You are a
bad man.
I know I am.
But I just...you know, go fuck yourself.
Is that the
Deadbolt philosophy?
G.F.Y.
|