|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Lach has done this, and has inspired others to do the same. His desire to create music inspired by the Clash and Sex Pistols, as well as ‘60’s folk, led to the creation of the antifolk movement. The style can be heard in works of Beck, the Moldy Peaches, Michelle Shocked, and others, according to www.antifolk.net. This happened in the early ‘80s, after Lach turned his apartment into a completely illegal club called the Fort. Distanced from what he was hearing in folk music at the time, he started his first Antifolk Festival, as well as a new musical movement. Lach’s antifolk album Kids Fly Free is punk-based fun, bleeding as much electricity as possible from an acoustic guitar. His lyrics are as cynical as his vocal style, slowly dancing on the listeners’ funny bone, and provoking his or her mind into thought. Lach’s grasp on his art is demonstrated by his ability to speak his mind with clarity now matter how out there his lyrics might be. The recording is not digitized and features crafty gaps and spaces between instruments and melody lines that much of today’s corporate rock doesn’t. His musical arrangements are daring, sometimes expressing the melodic motif in a simple, surfy bass line played by Roy Edroso. Innovative instrumentation stands tall and feverishly behind Lach’s passionate, pleasantly harsh vocals. The songs on the CD, produced by ex-Bongo Richard Barrone, strip down the sugar-coated enhancements that normally distract from them, leaving the bare essentials needed to get Lach’s message across. In true folk spirit, Lach says what he has to say without censoring himself, leaving interpretation to the listener. What his lyrics do hold that much folk cannot is the tightness of some of the greatest rock writers, such as Joe Strummer. Lach’s words and music groove together. Labeling his music, however, is misleading. Only by creating his own style of music has Lach done it the most justice.
I think I was born playing music. In fact, I am thinking of releasing my pre-natal symphonies. I began piano lessons when I was five, though I already knew how to play from spying on my older brother and sister playing their lessons. What musicians did you listen to then that you still listen to now? Well, when I was a little boy I played and listened to Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and I still do. Grieg, Chopin, Haydn too. When did you start playing in bands? What were some of the band names? What type of music was it? I got into rock through ‘77 punk. The first album I bought
and kept for myself was Nevermind The Bullocks, Here Come The Sex Pistols.
After that, I got the Clash, the Jam and the Stranglers. I knew writing
songs and being in a band is what I wanted to do. My current line-up, Lach and The Secrets, has been
together for about three years and I couldn't ask for a better rhythm
section. They are like the best punk rhythm section around, Billy Ficca of
Television on drums and Roy Edroso of the Reverb Motherfuckers on bass. They
play on the latest CD, Kids Fly Free. What inspired you then to play music? Life. Other bands and songs. Love. Anger. Revenge. Redemption. Beauty. Despair. What inspires you to write songs now? The same, I guess. What makes a great song? The right marriage of words and music. I could go on and on as songwriting is one of my favorite subjects. But I am in the middle of getting the Summer Antifolk Fest together and planning the band's September tour of the UK. Time is tight. What do the musicians you work with add to your music? When I bring a song to the band, I play it through once for them. Then we start to go over it together. Billy is a great arranger and he really listens to the lyrics. He gets inside what the song is about and his drumming reflects it. Our musical relationship is sort of like Moon and Townshend, or Bonham and Page, in that there is a lot of conversation between the drums and the rhythm guitar, between the drums and the words. Roy is from a real punk, East Village background but he is also a brilliant writer, a great mind. So his bass parts combine a driving force that also can have the right incisive delicacy as well. On the albums we employ outside musicians from brass to strings. Our producer, Richard Barone, is very much a member of the band when we are recording as far as adding ideas and things. He is destined to continue to be one of the defining producers of the next decade. I know that sounds wild, but watch and see. Can you describe what "antifolk" is and how it applies to your songs? No. I have been asked this question about what is antifolk too many times. The scene has been going on for 15 years. You should know what it is by now. It's like asking Dr.Dre what 'Rap' is. Who are some other antifolk artists? Well, some of the artists who have come out of the Antifolk scene would include Beck, Michelle Shocked, John S. Hall, the Moldy Peaches, Hamell On Trial, Major Matt Mason USA, Rick Shapiro and tons more. Check out antifolk.net and antifolkonline.com to learn more. Can you take me through your creative process a little? How long does it usually take for you to write a song and what leads to its creation? Once I realized I was a songwriter I went about creating a songwriter's body. It's a secret how it is done. Now, I write most songs in the time it takes to sing them. It's ineffable. My teachers were the artworks of others. From Dylan to Rimbaud to Kerouac to Whitman. From Strummer to Lennon to Waits. It's all out there for the young poet to find, but beware the abyss and exult the innocent. Who are some contemporary artists that you like? Ones you dislike? I am not sure what you mean by contemporary. Is there a cut-off time? Is Bob Dylan contemporary? Is Oasis? Beethoven? Where do you see the music scene in five years? Music has always been affected by the technology of the time. The invention of the piano changed everything. Digital technology will obviously change everything about the market place as well as what sounds we will hear. Times are so tender now. However, no matter what, people will want to hear and sing songs. It is part of human nature. What plans do you have for the upcoming year? August 2nd -11th will be the annual Summer Antifolk Fest that I hold at Sidewalk Café (94 Ave. A, NYC). This year we also have two outdoor concerts, August 3rd in Tompkins Square Park and the 11th in Central Park. On August 3rd we will also have our first Antifolk parade in the East Village leading to the park concert. After that I am bringing my band Lach and The Secrets to the UK for a tour over there where my CD Kids Fly Free was released on Track Records on May 7th. Being on Track is cool, they first put out The Who, Hendrix and Johnny Thunders. The tour was booked by the Agency Group who also handle the Strokes and the White Stripes. When we return home I hope to head back into the studio to begin work on my next album. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ©2002, Chorus and Verse | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
|
|||||||||