Portraits of the artists…
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
A couple of weeks ago I got to
hear a great new recording by a duo calling themselves Maniac. They consist of
Jake Grigg, erstwhile guitarist and vocalist of Central Coast indie rock band
Something With Numbers, and Shawn Harris, former guitarist and vocalist with
California band The Matches. I then got had the pleasure of interviewing Jake
about their new recording – an excellent five-track EP entitled Extended Play – for Live To Ride magazine.
There’ll be a fine interview with the band in the next issue of that
publication. But during our chat, we got talking about the band’s art,
beginning with the band logo – a kind of sloppily executed rifle sight. I’ll
pick up the interview where Jake told me about it. But first, enjoy the clip to ‘Die Rad’. And then appraise the symbol. And then start reading!
JAKE GRIGG: Yep, it’s similar to that. It looks a bit like
an ‘anarchy’ sign as well.
JAKE GRIGG: I do have the weirdest face.
Dom Romeo: I look forward to you featuring in the
Archibald Prize some time soon, but back to the symbol: I suspect it may come
to the point where you won’t have to have the name. A t-shirt with just the
symbol will say the same thing, kind of like the Radio Birdman symbol.
JAKE GRIGG: Exactly right. And I’ve been asked before, “What
does it mean?” To us, it means the fun that we’re trying to exude out of the
music. Every time I look at it, I get that same feeling of fun. We wanted
something that people could see and just get that same feeling as hearing the
music. But it is just a circle and an upside down cross.
Dom Romeo: Jake, I know that you designed the Maniac logo, which is the circle and the cross, and there is one artwork that you did, of the circle and the cross…
JAKE
GRIGG: How could you tell?!
Dom Romeo: It’s the one that’s not got any other paint on it…
JAKE GRIGG: Yeah, exactly. It was a very inspirational piece – something I put a lot of time and effort into.
Dom
Romeo: I also like the portrait of the two of you
nude…
JAKE GRIGG: Thank you very
much. That was actually inspired by both of us naked. It was very
inspirational. We stood still in front of a mirror for about 30 minutes and I
stroked him.
SHAWN HARRIS: The brush!
JAKE GRIGG: The brush! I
stroked the brush…
Dom Romeo: Now, Shawn,
what I like is that there’s a painting that you did that has the logo on it,
where you’ve gone to great trouble to reproduce the look of it being painted
on. It’s a very ‘modern art’ thing1 – tell me about that.
SHAWN HARRIS: I was pretty
diligent in recreating the organic brush strokes of Jake’s original, yes. I
just got in there with a really fine sable and drew in all of the imperfections
if you had done the original logo like Jake did.
Dom Romeo: And along with the logo, the two portraits are… I don’t even know what you call that style…
SHAWN HARRIS: I think the
one you’re referring to is probably the most ‘pop art’ of all the pieces. It’s
three shades; it’s really almost made straight for silk screen, you know?
JAKE GRIGG: It’s my
favourite!
SHAWN HARRIS: Mine too,
hey!
Dom Romeo: Now, I don’t know much about art, but you can clearly paint – and I shouldn’t sound so surprised when I say that – but did you train as an artist?
SHAWN HARRIS: Yeah, until I got completely and wonderfully side-tracked with touring and playing music. I was in art school, en route to being an animator for Walt Disney, which I’d decided I wanted to do when I was about three years old. I wanted to work for Walt Disney. And then I found out he wasn’t alive any more and started playing the guitar and everything changed.
JAKE GRIGG: He’s frozen
now!
Dom Romeo: He is frozen!
SHAWN HARRIS: The only
reason I would every leave Maniac is if they thaw Walt Disney and he hires me
personally.
JAKE GRIGG: I’ll make sure
that never happens. Never happens! I’ll blow up the sun before that happens.
Dom Romeo: Do you paint a lot?
SHAWN HARRIS: I do, yes.
I’ve acquired something of a habit of painting to support myself because music
pays sometimes and most of the time it really doesn’t. So instead of being a
barback or, ah…
JAKE GRIGG: A storage king…
SHAWN HARRIS: … a storage king, or selling coat hangers to old people, like most of my friends do – who also are amazing musicians – I have somehow winged it with my graphic design company.
Dom Romeo: What’s your
graphic design company?
SHAWN HARRIS: It’s called Oxen. The website’s www.oxenoxen.com
Dom Romeo: What do you
fall back on in hard times, Jake?
JAKE GRIGG: I fall back
on…
SHAWN HARRIS: Me!
JAKE GRIGG: Yeah, exactly.
I fall back on Shawn, hopefully, selling some art.
Dom Romeo: I assume this series was painted here, in the process of recording the EP and the 31 other tracks that are yet to be released in some other form…
SHAWN HARRIS: Definitely.
One of the pieces is basically a ‘remix’ painting of the digital paintings that
is our EP cover. So it’s this really sloppy, stoned, crazy, colourful piece
based on that one.
Dom Romeo: I like the drips on that!
SHAWN HARRIS: Yeah, me
too. I got right into letting that one be what it was aiming to be. I just kind
of moved out of the way for that one; it painted itself.
Dom Romeo: They’re all
portraits; did anything abstract come out of the time you were recording?
SHAWN HARRIS: Um… we could play you some tracks that could probably be categorised as ‘abstract’…
Dom Romeo: A lot of
musicians come out of the art school milieu – Ian Dury for example was a great
British artist who was a musician as well…
SHAWN HARRIS: David Bowie showcases his stuff all the time.
Dom Romeo: Paul McCartney
and John Lennon both went to art college. Was music always there in the background
when you were a kid, wanting to draw?
SHAWN HARRIS: Music always was, absolutely. This is a weird reference, I don’t know if either of you guys know it, but Harry Nilsson actually did a soundtrack for an animation called The Point. That was actually my favourite record as a kid. Since then, I think Blackalicious has sampled it and made a hip hop song out of it – the song ‘Me And My Arrow’. That was my favourite thing as a kid. Then I come to find out, as I get a bit older, Harry Nilsson was a bit of a protégé of John Lennon, recorded an album with John producing…
Dom Romeo: Pussy Cats…
SHAWN HARRIS: Yeah, an amazing album… It’s really funny. The stage that me and Jake are at right now – all roads lead back to Mecca. Whether it’s these paintings or it’s music that we’re creating, all of our references seem to point back to those first records that we heard, before we even knew what was pop, what was rock, what was cool, what was not cool, what our parents listened to or what our neighbours who worked on cars in the garage and had long black hair and tattoos listened to, had no concept of any genre of music or anything – those first songs that connected to us are coming back to be huge influences.
Dom Romeo: What are they?
Give me some examples.
SHAWN HARRIS: Like I said…
JAKE GRIGG: Carole King,
man…
SHAWN HARRIS: …Harry Nilsson, The Point…
JAKE GRIGG: Carole King, Tapestry.
SHAWN HARRIS: Tapestry. I heard that album a million times, and Jake’s been playing it non-stop for the past month and I know every word, like, ‘Damn, man, I was seriously raised on this…,’ you know?
Dom Romeo: Now, you
mentioned David Bowie; there’s one track on the EP that the saxophone to me…
SHAWN HARRIS: Ha ha!
Dom Romeo: …sounds exactly like David Bowie playing it.
SHAWN HARRIS: Yes, man, yes!
JAKE GRIGG: Yeah!
SHAWN HARRIS: I’m a flute
player myself – that was my first instrument. But it’s actually the same
fingering as the sax. So I’ve been working on my chops: I want to play that so
bad. I’m not up to speed yet.
JAKE GRIGG: We’ll probably get Bowie to do it.
SHAWN HARRIS: We’ll probably get Bowie.
Dom Romeo: It does sound like it came straight off one of his ’70s albums.
SHAWN HARRIS: That’s the best compliment you could give us, man! A good friend of ours, Matt Appleton, played sax on the EP.
JAKE GRIGG: We said,
‘Sound like Bowie!’ He’s really good at emulating that.
Dom Romeo: I didn’t mention Captain Beefheart when I was listing the musicians who paint. The guy’s a professional artist. He won’t go back to music because it took him too long to be respected as a painter.
SHAWN HARRIS: Really?
Well, I’ll always go back to music.
JAKE GRIGG: And if he doesn’t, I’ll always make sure he does, some way or another.
SHAWN HARRIS: Listen, as
long as there’s music, there’s visual art. The two will always go hand-in-hand
and I will never be in a position where I feel like I have to choose between
the two. But if I did, I’d choose music.
Dom Romeo: Now, Jake, I don’t want you to be offended, but I heard someone who was admiring the exhibition say, ‘If I could, I’d have Shawn paint my portrait’.
JAKE GRIGG: I’m offended!
SHAWN HARRIS: Ha ha!
Dom Romeo: Now, Shawn, I
don’t want you to be offended.
SHAWN HARRIS: Okay, okay, okay.
Dom Romeo: If I could, I’d
have Jake paint my portrait.
SHAWN HARRIS: Yes! It’s like Jake’s got that primal genius, man. He’s just showed up, just figured out how to use a wheel and some fire and taps straight to the source. That’s why I write songs with him, because he does that with music as well.
Dom Romeo: Gentleman, I
think that’s an awesome ending for a great interview. Thank you very much!
SHAWN HARRIS: Thank you.
JAKE GRIGG: Thanks heaps, mate. Cheers.
Footnotes
1) See Lichtenstein's Yellow and Red Brushstrokes, 1966, in which brushstrokes are depicted, but with no actual brush strokes showing… (read Tom Wolfe’s The Painted Word for more information).
2) Or is he? Apparently, Disney being cyogenically frozen is an urban legend. Well, that's what Wikipedia says, so who knows?