Showing posts with label Marked Men. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marked Men. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Lisa Doll & The Rock n Roll Romance

Photo by Shane Gardner

    The first time I heard Lisa Doll & the Rock n Roll Romance they were opening up for my favorite local band Scorpion Vs Tarantula here in Phoenix, AZ. They were a long way from their hometown of Baltimore, MD and still they kept up with the mighty SVT, which if you don’t know, is no easy thing to do. I immediately got the impression that this was not merely the name of a band but lead singer/songwriter/gunslinger Lisa Marie Doll’s way of life. The infatuation and passion she has for the music is evidenced in her songwriting. Threads of traditional rock n’ roll themes, New York brash n’ trash and power pop flash are all woven throughout her Neon Heat EP, which came out a couple of years ago. Bands like Lisa Doll & the Rock n Roll Romance don’t burn out or fade away they keep rock n’ roll alive out there, somewhere until their dying day.


Interview by J Castro

Let’s start out by telling me who is currently in the band and how you all met and decided to play music together:
LISA: It’s my music with a backing band which tends to rotate different people depending on their availability and life happenings. Not everyone is the touring type and don’t realize that till they go on one. I hope to one day have a consistent line up. Andrew has been involved since day one and the only one who has continued to stick around. He plays drums on the recordings but has been shifted around to bass and 2nd guitar depending on what’s needed live. We met years ago, when I answered a bands’ Craigslist ad looking for “a guitarist that’s into bands like The Cramps and 70’s style punk.” He was playing drums for them. The band never played live much but it gave me the confidence to perform my own music and when it disbanded I asked Andrew to join my Rock n Roll Romance project.

Can you remember what band or musician first inspired you to want to pick up an instrument and learn to play and write music?
LISA: When I was a preteen I was exposed to Green Day, Nirvana, Hole, and The Ramones. From there I matured to really dig Rocket From the Crypt, The Pixies, and The Marked Men and garage rock in general. The combination of all that and many more bands is what got me really wanting to pick up my own guitar. All these bands are very rhythm based in their guitar playing which is what I gravitate towards. I really suck at playing lead live. It feels like a different part of my brain has to clink in and out to do it.

The band did a video for the song “Don’t Wanna Break Up” that’s off of your Neon Heat 7” on Chucks Records. From the looks of it, it seems like it was fun to do.  Can you tell me a bit about your experiences making it?
LISA: Like most bands our budget is $0 for music videos, so DIY was it. I wanted to do a quirky but dark video kind of like Weekend at Bernie’s style. The idea is I can’t accept the obvious end of my relationship to the extent where my delusion involves me puppeteering his dead body about and even invoking the powers of dark magic and the electricity of rock n’ roll to resurrect him. Andrew and I took turns filming and setting things up and had lots of fun with it.


The band is currently based in Baltimore, MD. What is it like for a band like yours playing live out there? Is there a supportive “scene” that gets what you’re doing musically?
LISA: Baltimore is okay. I prefer to play out of town. I feel I get a better response and comradery from out of state peers. There is a very small Baltimore scene for rock n’ roll and garage punk and definitely some awesome people, but they are all in bands themselves which doesn’t leave much for a crowd.

Lisa, tell me a bit about your comic Free Candy, and how you got started doing tattoo art: 
LISA: My comic Free Candy is totally on the back burner right now! I really hope to start it up and make more issues. It’s difficult because it’s semi-autobiographical and based on my experiences, misadventures, and people I’ve met. I need an editor and someone to help me focus on where to go next. I’ve been through a lot of craziness and I need a cathartic way to get it all out. The comic kind of rubs people’s noses in their shit with a comedic angle. It covers relationships, being in a band, and the pirate-like world of tattooing.
            I started tattooing in 2011 and basically forced my way in. I took a lot of tattoo seminars, and started working at the bottom at shops in bad areas where I continued to learn what to do and NOT to do from co-workers. I wanted a traditional apprenticeship but wasn’t able to get one, but I wasn’t going to let that stop me. If you tell me “no” I’m just going to try harder.

Do you ever get tired of the Ramones and Nikki Corvette comparisons? I’ve been reading some of the press you’ve gotten and it seems most of them mention one or both of those. How would you describe your band’s sound to someone that’s never heard you before?
LISA: Yes, actually! Those are both amazing bands to be compared to don’t get me wrong and when the first press said it, I was extremely flattered! But they came out years ago so now when I see that comparison, it just means someone didn’t do their homework and just gobbled up other reviews and then barfed them back out. I think it’s just an easy thing for them to go to without having to really take the time to listen and form their own opinion. Early on, Razorcake mentioned my demo harked of Marked Men as an influence and I was super stoked because to me that meant he was really listening, more so then I think the average person would. He was able to sniff out a buried affection that I didn’t think was obvious at all.

We’ve come to the segment of the interview that I like to call “four questions I stole from other interviews.” You may elaborate on the following four questions as much or as little as you see fit.  Let’s begin:

1.     What’s the first concert you attended without your parents?
LISA: A local community center show in my hometown with local high school bands.

2.     What’s the first band T-shirt you ever wore?
LISA: Probably Marilyn Manson or Nirvana.

3.     What was the first band picture or band poster you had pinned up on your childhood bedroom wall?
LISA: I think Nirvana as well he, he.

    4. Name the first record you picked out and purchased with your own money: 
LISA: Oh geez, I have no clue what the first one was. I believe it was Green Day’s Dookie.

Where are the best places that people can log on or go to hear or purchase you music?
-Itunes
-or Youtube

What lies ahead in the near future for Lisa Doll and The Rock n Roll Romance? 
LISA: I have been working on new music for the last couple months. I’m really excited about the new stuff and can’t wait to get it out there! I’m hoping to attract some label attention. We’ll be sure to go on tour again as well!








Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Hex Dispensers



     One can take any given Hex Dispensers song and create a very good screenplay out of it.  The song’s lyrics put you into the skulls of paranoid, delusional individuals straight out of a Coen Brothers movie.  Or it can plant you into the desperate situation of a science fiction calamity.   All of this is delivered with one of the most contagious brands of garage punk combusting in the universe today.   The music rockets into your psyche and forces you to beat your feet and shimmy your shoulders like you’re under some kind of Haitian Voodoo trance.  The full meaning of the name Hex Dispensers has now become clear to me.  I’m going to go find my copy of the Serpent and The Rainbow now.


Interview by Jay Castro

Who’s answering the questions here?
Alex Cuervo

Who is in the band and how do you earn your keep in it?
Alex Cuervo - guitar/vocals
Alyse Mervosh - drums/vocals
Rebecca Whitley - bass/guitar/vocals

Where are all of you from, originally?
The band is from Austin, TX. I'm originally from El Paso, TX. Alyse is from the Washington D.C. area, and Rebecca is from Houston, TX.

What is the bands origin story, how did you all meet and come together?
We had our first rehearsal on 06/06/06 (Really!) Original lineup was myself, Alyse and Tom "Kodiak" Micklethwait (who recently left the band to focus on his amazing BBQ business, Micklethwait Craft Meats). The three of us had been playing in a band called This Damn Town which was winding down and we wanted to keep playing together, so we started this one. We were later joined by David Bessenhoffer on bass. Tom and Dave left the band around 2010 and Rebecca joined on bass. Tom re-joined for about a year, but left again, so now it's back to being a 3-piece.

I’ve seen an interview of you guys talking about the original sound of The Hex
Dispensers being nothing like what actually came out when starting to write and
play songs. What sound did you have in mind when starting out?
I guess initially we talked about something between the Coachwhips and the Marked Men. The raw, fucked up, blown-out quality of the Coachwhips mixed with some of the more refined songwriting and precision of the Marked Men. I can see where we were trying (on some of the early stuff), but the end result became something totally different - mostly because we couldn't pull off that recipe. Not in our wildest dreams.

Tell me about alexcuervo.net and what is it all about? What inspired you to go into
that musical direction?
It's been a longtime dream of mine to write music for films (and television, and video games), and I started getting really serious about it a couple years ago. My day job is writing custom music for clients (advertising/digital, etc...), but my long-term goal is to write music for films/tv/games all of the time. I also do some graphic design and print production freelance work, but lately the music work is more frequent. So far, I've only scored a couple short films and have licensed music for a feature film. I'll be working on scoring for my first feature film this summer - an experimental documentary called Yakona that I'm very excited about. I'm not the primary composer on it - but it's a really ambitious and creative film and I'm blown away to be involved with it.

You recently contributed music to the film “Bad Kids Go To Hell”. With that, plus
the mood of Hex Dispensers records, I am guessing you are fans of Horror movies
and/or books. What are some of your all time favorites of the genre?
Yeah - I'm big into horror and science fiction films/books/comics etc. I strongly prefer supernatural horror or monster movies to the slasher/torture porn kinds of films. I'd say I really just like genre films in general, be they sci-fi, horror, suspense, fantasy or whatever. I guess it's important to point out that we don't really consider ourselves a "horror rock" band, as I'm really not into that aesthetic at all. I just write about stuff that interests me, and the whole spooky/occult/supernatural thing just comes naturally to me. It's hard to pick favorites, I mean I'm crazy about all the classics, like the Shining, the Exorcist, Night of the Living Dead, etc. Some recent films I've really enjoyed have been Cabin in the Woods and Drag Me to Hell. Believe it or not - I really really liked the remake of Evil Dead. I think everybody that's hating on it thinks that they're "supposed to". I found it really well made and totally in the spirit of the original. Lot's of reviewers keep making the rookie mistake of comparing it to Evil Dead 2 instead of the original Evil Dead - which is super annoying.

Who inspired you to learn how to play music and pick up an instrument in the first
place?
Wow - it's a really long list! I've always wanted to play music since I was a really little kid, but I never had any kind of lessons or instruments. I just banged on upside-down trash cans or whatever. Back then I was all about Foreigner, ELO, Queen, or whatever my big sister was listening to in the 70’s. As time went on I discovered skateboarding, which turned me onto punk rock and then it was just a matter of digging up whatever I could find, which in El Paso Texas in the mid 80’s wasn't super easy. Once I discovered magazines like Flipside and Maximum Rock & Roll, I just mail-ordered tons of stuff as I could afford to and it grew from there. By the time I was 16 I was playing drums (badly) in a punk band, and then I went on to sing for another one and I've been at it since.

If The Hex Dispensers could tour with any band/musician from times gone by, who
would it be and why?
Hmmmmm... It's a tricky thing you know, because I could say Black Sabbath, and it would be crazy and decadent, but we would have been booed off the stage every night - so where's the fun in that? I guess the Ramones original lineup would be great just because it would be so awesome to see them that much - and we'd be less likely to get booed, but we'd play a really short set and get the hell out of the way as quickly as possible.

I recently read that out of all different art forms, music has the power to alter a
person’s disposition the fastest. Do you agree with this? Do you have any favorite
music that you can put on that will always lift you from a slump?
I totally agree. It's weird, that sometimes if I'm down in the dumps - I like to listen to really sad stuff. I just hunker down and let myself get super bummed out, and let it pass through. I have a playlist of go-to songs for just such an occasion. "Goodbye" by Reigning Sound really gets me super sad. Beautiful song. "The Grand Tour" by George Jones is another one on the list. If I'm feeling aggro or exercising (neither of which occur all that frequently these days) it's kind of a mix of grimy/weird hip hop like early Wu-Tang or Death Grips with pseudo-metallic hardcore like From Ashes Rise or Black Breath.

I recently read an interview with Keith Richards saying that anyone buying digital
music is getting short changed. Do you agree with this and if so, why?
I like vinyl for it's tangible quality - but I'm a digital convert. I love making playlists and having a ton of music on me all the time. I'm not a purist at all when it comes to fidelity - so digital is A-OK with me. Alyse and I will still spin records while we're having brunch at home or on an occasional Friday night, but mostly - we listen to digital music.

I don’t like using the term “guilty pleasure” because I don’t think anyone should be
made to feel ashamed of anything they like. However with that being said, what to
you listen to that you think a lot of Hex Dispensers fans may be surprised by?
You're right - "guilty pleasure" is a stupid concept. If you're ashamed of liking something then you're too worried about what other people think, and that's shitty. Just stop it. Like what you like and stand up for it. I listen to a lot of film soundtracks and instrumental music because it's what I want to do. I'm just as likely to be listening to Clint Mansell, Explosions in the Sky, John Carpenter, or Mogwai as I am Black Flag, Devo, or Thee Oh Sees. I like a really wide range of music: 60’s soul, 70’s Country, Psych, Hip Hop, Hardcore, New Wave/Darkwave/Goth, Industrial/Experimental, Delta Blues/Folk Blues... all kinds of stuff. I tend to gravitate towards dark, or somber/melancholy kinds of music - but I cast a pretty wide net.

What music have you unleashed on the world and where can people go to hear it or
buy it?
www.thehexdispensers.com - Most of the Hex Dispensers discography is there, as well as some solo releases of mine, and my instrumental electropunk side-project: Espectrostatic.

What does the band have in store for us in the near, or not so near, future?
We're planning on recording a 7" this summer, and we'll be doing a short European tour the first week of September, but other than that and playing Chaos in Tejas - not much is planned. We don't play all that often. I'm working on an Espectrostatic LP which is all instrumental and kind of late 70s/early 80s sci-fi/horror film soundtrack type stuff. Alyse and I are also thinking about starting an instrumental band, but it remains to be seen if we can pull it off or not.





HEX DISPENSERS - My Love is a Bat (OFFICIAL VID) from Jon on Vimeo.