Past Columns
The Blair Witch-y Project
Industrial-disco refugee Chris Connelly heads for the woods with Tim
Kinsella.
By Bob Mehr
September 1, 2006
A couple of weeks ago German director Wim Wenders was at Reckless
Records' Wicker Park store, shooting footage for a documentary on music
scenes around the world, and between takes he decided to do a little record
shopping. One of his purchases was a new box set of CDs by Chris Connelly,
who happens to be the store's manager. "He actually bought the box first,
and then recognized my face from it," says Connelly.
Connelly's face is familiar to many in town, and not just from behind
the counter at Reckless. An Edinburgh, Scotland, native, he started his
career in the mid-80s, singing in the dance-rock group Fini Tribe, but soon
got involved in Chicago's industrial-music scene. In 1987, after meeting
members of Ministry in the London offices of Wax Trax, he was invited to
join Ministry offshoot the Revolting Cocks, which brought him to the U.S.
Since then he's also worked with Ministry and groups on the Invisible
Records roster like Damage Manual, Pigface, and Murder Inc.
By the early 90s, though, Connelly had also launched a solo career:
inspired by Scott Walker, David Bowie, and Robert Wyatt, he began embracing
more eclectic orch-pop, glam, and singer-songwriter fare. The box set
Wenders bought (one of a limited edition of 500 copies) collects his
late-period solo discs for Invisible: 1997's The Ultimate Seaside
Companion (Revisited), 2001's Blonde Exodus, 2002's Private
Education and the two-disc odds-and-sods set Initials C.C.,
2004's Night of Your Life, and a signed copy of last year's
Lounge Ax, Bottle, Elsewhere -- '94-'01, a mix of unreleased live
and studio material. "It's a nice appraisal of my tenure with the label,"
he says. "Putting it together was like looking through an old photograph
album."
In a sense the box closes a chapter of Connelly's career. For the past
two years he's been retooling his writing process, working on longer, more
free-floating tunes that tinker with improvisation and unconventional song
structures. He passed a home demo of some of that material earlier this
year to Joan of Arc's Tim Kinsella and Town and Country's Ben Vida; the
three had previously played together in Everyoned, an experimental group
that also includes Town and Country's Liz Payne and TV Pow's Brent Gutzeit.
"Tim and Ben, these were the go-to guys for me," Connelly says. "They're
old friends, and I really like their approach to long-form and
improvisational music."
"He approached me and Ben, but he had the ideas pretty firmly realized,"
says Kinsella. "He knew he wanted to make a record of these new songs that
were really long and repetitive, that gave you time to sit and lose
yourself in them. He was also excited about making a couple of the songs
more like collages or abstract sound pieces. Mine and Ben's job was really
just to get him where he wanted to go."
In the hopes of capturing a bit of the atmospheric vibe that Connelly
was shooting for, Kinsella proposed recording part of the album outdoors.
So in late June he, Connelly, Vida, and engineer Graeme Gibson hauled a Pro
Tools rig and a host of instruments -- cello, zither, bass, vibes, congas,
and more -- to a private campsite by Lake Wandawega, near Elkhorn,
Wisconsin. They set up on a basketball court near the water. "It was set up
like a normal studio, but with no roof," Connelly says. "It created a
really weird, strange ambience -- a creepy, almost Blair Witch-y
feel."
On the first day the four men tested the equipment and tracked spare,
sketchbook versions of the songs. The following day they brought in 11 more
musicians, including Califone's Ben Massarella, Make Believe's Nate
Kinsella, and Joan of Arc's Todd Mattei and Joe Tricoli. They took multiple
passes at each song, with most of the arrangements improvised or developed
on the fly between takes. The only hiccup was the weather -- on-and-off
storms forced the musicians to stop and cover the equipment with garbage
bags. "Anytime I would feel a drop of rain on my face, I was so paranoid
about the mikes being ruined," Connelly says. "But it gave my singing a
real sense of urgency."
A week after the Wisconsin trip, a smaller group reconvened at
Bridgeport's 4deuces studio for more recording, which involved cutting many
of the songs from scratch one more time. "Most of the versions we did in
the studio were one take," says Connelly. "It's a very rare situation where
everyone is so unified about the purpose and understanding of the music
that improv works so smoothly. We really lucked out."
With Gibson's assistance, Connelly, Kinsella, and Vida then took the
nearly five hours' worth of material and began merging tracks to create the
album. "It was a little like editing a film would be, I imagine," Connelly
says. "You have a lot of choices to make about what takes to use, and the
selection was very subjective. It all sounded good, but a record is only so
long, so you have to make some hard decisions about what to use. Ultimately
I think we ended up with something we're all really proud of." On the final
album, titled The Episodes, Connelly's usual compact lyrical forms
are chucked in favor of long, winding verses -- the three-part, 20-minute
"Son of Empty Sam" was constructed out of more than an hour of material.
The backing tracks are an ethereal mix of drones, repeating figures, and
wistful melodies.
Connelly is currently shopping the album, which wrapped up around the
same time he was finishing another project: a memoir of his early years in
Chicago's industrial-music scene. The book, tentatively titled "Concrete,
Bulletproof, Invisible & Fried," is due in February from SAF Publishing, a
British company that has released books on the Soft Machine, Shirley
Collins, and Suicide. Connelly describes it as part band diary, part
fish-out-of-water tale, written in the spirit of Michael Winterbottom's
Factory Records biopic, 24-Hour Party People. "That movie brought
humor into a musical situation that was viewed as very pompous and
serious," he says. "Similarly, what Ministry and the Revolting Cocks did
was viewed as very serious and bloodcurdling and strict, but it was so
goofy and so silly at the same time. I wanted to show that side as
well."
He'll have plenty to keep him busy before the book comes out: he and his
wife, filmmaker Shayna Connelly, are expecting their first child in
October. He also wrote the score for Leftover Voices, a film his
wife wrote and directed that she plans to begin showing on the festival
circuit next year. He hopes to have The Episodes out by spring, and
he's confident it can find a home despite its unusual sound. "I actually
think that's actually going to help," he says. "This is more radical than
anything I've done, and in my mind more interesting."
Correction
Due to an editing error, last week's column mischaracterized the
contents of Fred Armisen's forthcoming DVD. Drag City has tentative plans
for a Laura Kightlinger comedy CD that will be released separately, not as
part of the Armisen disc. 
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