Saturday, May 22, 2010

Jandek

What is Jandek?

by Seth Tisue

Officially, Jandek is not a person. Albums and live performances are credited to “Jandek”, but the man on the album covers and on stage is “a representative from Corwood Industries”. Corwood is the record label; “Jandek” is the musical project. Both are directed by the same individual. The trinity of Jandek, Corwood, and “the representative” is both three and one.

These distinctions became clear only recently, when Corwood started negotiating Jandek performances with promoters. But an early hint was that the first Jandek album was originally credited to “The Units”, a name implying a faceless collective. Even the recent live releases do not credit individual musicians.

The name of the real person behind all this is known (see below). He normally avoids using his name in connection with Corwood or Jandek, but he has never made any great secret of it, either. Written communications from Corwood are signed “Corwood” or not signed at all, and in a further distancing move, he/they normally refer(s) to himself/themselves in writing as “we” — that is, Corwood — rather than “I”.

This leaves the rest of us in a bit of a quandary how to refer to him/them/it — this Jandek thing. It’s most correct to refer to “Corwood” (and “they”), and to “the representative” or “the Corwood rep”. But it’s also still common to just go ahead and refer to Jandek as a person, using “he”. Until a few years ago, nobody knew it was wrong. I still say “Jandek” and “he” on this site sometimes just in order to avoid verbal contortions.

Some aren’t bothered by informally using his real name — including a few of the musicians he has performed with, in their published interviews. Nonetheless, it’s polite for the rest of us to avoid it in most contexts out of respect for Corwood’s apparent wishes.

Getting started

For an introduction to Jandek and his music I suggest starting with this article:

Mystery Man: The Jandek Story
by Douglas Wolk (1999)

which lays out the basic facts and makes a good case for the music. And/or, you could watch this documentary, which is now available on DVD:

Jandek on Corwood
by Paul Fehler and Chad Freidrichs (2003)

Another important article is this:

Jandek and Me
by Katy Vine (1999)

in which a journalist tracks down the Corwood rep in person and has a beer with him...! Vine also talks about this, in less detail, in the documentary. I suggest you wait to read the full article until you’ve heard enough of Jandek’s music to make it meaningful.
Note that these articles are a few years old now, so they don’t cover some more recent developments. The documentary is a bit more recent, but still predates Jandek’s first live performance.
Then, if you still want to know more, read on...

Music (short version)

Before the live performances, Jandek’s recorded output described a great arc. At the beginning and again at the end, Jandek was alone. He moved towards collaborators and more accessible music, then away from them again.
In 1978 he began totally alone, not just without the help of other musicians, but practically without relation to other music. The first Jandek LP, Ready for the House, is credited to “The Units”, but it’s obviously a solo work, and the name was never used again.
As the years passed and more albums came out, gradually other musicians and vocalists were added. At first they were only on a song or two; later whole albums were group efforts. At the same time, the music became more extroverted. Electric guitars and crashing drums replaced acoustic guitars; the shy musical whispering of the early LP’s gave way to harsh, even crazed sounds. A woman vocalist sang more and more songs. The music changed again, becoming more melodic and structured and increasingly incorporating recognizable styles of music: blues, folk, sixties rock. A second guitarist and male vocalist appears. The man on the album covers appeared in sharp, fairly contemporary photographs instead of old blurry ones.
Suddenly, in 1993 Jandek made an about face. After one last group track, a long crazed improvisation called “The Electric End”, he said goodbye again to electric instruments, collaborators, and conventional styles. Since then he’s been alone again, usually with just his acoustic guitar. He went without even that on three voice-only discs in 2000 and 2001. Since then, he’s picked up acoustic guitar again as well as electric guitar, fretless electric guitar, and fretless electric bass.
Corwood dropped a bomb on Jandek fans in October 2004 when the man on the album covers came out of decades of hiding and played an unannounced show in Glasgow. There’s been a string of shows since, most of which have followed the same basic format as the first. The representative sings and plays guitar, dressed all in black and backed by local musicians on bass and drums. The group rehearses only once, the afternoon of the show. The music is electric, loud, and largely improvised. For each show the representative writes a whole new set of lyrics, which he keeps on a music stand in front of him.
But other shows have been change-ups. More often lately, the music has been quiet instead of loud. The representative might play piano or synthesizer instead of guitar, or recite a spoken word piece punctuated by harmonica, or sit in on drums with a noisy power trio. The other musicians might now play harp, or flute, or bass clarinet, or harpsichord. One audience witnessed an enactment of the primal Jandek scene: a man alone with his acoustic guitar.
A Jandek show can go on for an hour (typical at festivals), two hours (typical at other shows), or even three (happened once in Manhattan). There are no intermissions, no encores, and no CD’s and T-shirts for sale in the lobby. The representative never speaks to or even looks at the audience. Occasionally he smiles.
See the Live page for details on all the shows. Corwood is gradually releasing every concert on both CD and DVD, though there is now quite a backlog. New studio-recorded solo albums keep appearing, too.

Music (long version)

To expand on that thumbnail history at greater length:
The first seven albums are (for the most part) the standard “classic” Jandek: just him and his acoustic guitar, very slow, steady guitar playing, plucked single notes only, melancholy mood. Sounds like folk blues if it sounds like anything at all, but it doesn’t really; it’s not conventionally based at all. One common, distinctive pattern is alternating high and low single notes on the guitar, in a kind of simulated counterpoint.
Some songs seem looser, perhaps improvised, while others are definitely recognizable songs. One early standout in that department is the often-recorded “European Jewel”, featuring a catchy descending guitar riff.
Around 1983, things changed. A female vocalist made her first appearance, on a song called “Nancy Sings”. A drummer made his first appearance, on a song called “John Plays Drums”. And Jandek started playing mostly electric guitar, in a harsh, clashing, discontinuous, dissonant style. As Jandek mangles the strings “John” crashes and bangs along with abandon on drums. It’s bracing.
The Rocks Crumble (1983) and Interstellar Discussion (1984) are mostly filled with this new style. It’s an interesting contradiction: most of Jandek’s music has been ghostly, whispered, and suddenly out of nowhere comes this horrible, wonderful racket that’s closer kin to free jazz, “The Black Angel’s Death Song”, and old Half Japanese than to any of the folk/blues models the early LP’s suggest. Jandek’s late-80’s/early-90’s electric LP’s are not nearly as loud and extreme. (The drums keep on crashing and banging, but more quietly.)
The next three or four LP’s in a row are different. They actually do have a good deal of the previous two styles (acoustic and electric) on them, but they also have “Nancy” all over them. Some of the songs are more-or-less-standard Jandek songs sung by “Nancy”. She has a very strong, clear voice. She can really belt it out: on one song, she sustains one note for eighteen seconds. Some songs are duets between Jandek and “Nancy” in which they improvise goofy lyrics, with lots of obsessive repetition of nonsense phrases like “I painted my teeth”. They sound like they’re having a lot of fun together.
Then suddenly, the next album, Blue Corpse is all acoustic, and “Nancy” is gone. The overall tone is very sad, with lyrics like:

“I passed by the building you were working in
I wanted to step inside it
I wanted to lie in your arms again
I passed by the building that you live in
And I wanted to die
I just stood there and cried...”

And that’s not the only song about a breakup. Did Jandek and “Nancy” break up and this LP is the aftermath? We don’t know, but the sequencing of the albums has always given me that impression.
The subsequent electric LP’s, You Walk Alone and On the Way, inaugurate a new phase in Jandek’s development. He seems to be working with a second guitarist. You Walk Alone has lots of two-guitar interplay between the two of them, and it’s easy to tell their styles apart; the other guitarist is a much more melodic, conventionally “skilled” player who strums chords instead of just plucking strings, pitch-bends, etc., and generally just owes a lot more to the kind of guitar playing you learn from records and from your guitar teacher. Some songs are almost straight blues. On these albums Jandek’s music sheds something something of its painful, awkward quality. That quality is one of the things that made earlier LP’s so compelling, but these albums work very well too.
The next few albums are grab bags of past styles and directions, collections of individual songs rather than albums with a coherent overall direction. It’s like flipping through Jandek’s musical notebooks. A second female vocalist sings some songs. A new male vocalist, perhaps several of them, sing some others. The drums come back, still crashing and banging, but much more quietly, in the background. There’s a few lighthearted songs, a few blues songs, a few devotional songs, and a pair of exceptionally long, pretty, and sad songs with crystalline guitar (“I’ll Sit Alone and Think a Lot About You” and “Upon the Grandeur”).
1992’s Lost Cause, then, came as a big shock. Side 1 was like the other recent albums, but then side 2 was entirely filled by an epic improv blowout called “The Electric End”, by the far the loudest, most crazed thing Jandek had done for years, or ever. As it turned out, and as hinted at by that track’s title, it was Jandek’s farewell to electric instruments, and as it also turned out, his farewell to working with collaborators for many years (with the exception of the male vocalist on I Woke Up [1997])
Above, I have discussed the first twenty-one albums as if we knew they were recorded in the order of release. But of course we don’t know that, and in fact, by around album eighteen, the impression of chronology largely dissipates and the albums feel like collections of outtakes from various times. A standard theory, which I favor myself, is that the group records are actually the earliest recordings, made well before 1978. The letters in Irwin Chusid’s book (see below) are consistent with this theory, and both sonically and stylistically the group records sound to me like products of 1969 or so. The early solo albums, though, are timeless in feel and impossible to date with any confidence.
So, in 1993, on Twelfth Apostle, Jandek returned to recording only by himself and using only acoustic instruments. The change almost but not quite coincided with Corwood’s format switch from LP to CD; Twelfth Apostle was the last LP. In some respects Jandek had reverted to the style of his earliest records, but in other ways his music developed and grown in many ways — the new records were obviously made by an older man. Glad To Get Away (1994) is the standout record from the early part of the late period — it most fully develops and sums up the new acoustic style.
After, Glad To Get Away, Jandek seemed to be somewhat at a loss about what to do next. His discs from 1996 through 1999 are an uncertain assortment of experiments with new directions, none of them followed up for very long. Lyrically he’s become increasingly open about taking stock, reflecting on his music, his past, his listeners, and his relationships, all in a big knot that he keeps worrying at but can’t untie.
In 2000, Jandek’s recorded career took a new and unexpected turn. The last cut on 1999’s The Beginning was a 15-minute piano solo. The song title, length, and placement of the track all implied a new direction — maybe he’d be giving up guitar and playing piano instead? This turned out to be half right — his next disc, Put My Dream On This Planet, had only vocals, no instruments at all. This seems to have been the new form of expression he’d been looking for: two more vocals-only discs followed close on the first’s heels.
After the voice-only discs, there is another break in style. Beginning with 2002’s I Threw You Away, every Jandek solo album (as opposed to live album) has consisted of vocals and just one of three instruments: electric guitar, acoustic guitar, or fretless electric bass. The singing and playing on these albums (fourteen of them so far!) is recognizably changed from the 1990’s solo albums and has much in common with the singing and playing at the live shows, so it seems reasonable to assume that he is releasing them more or less as they are recorded.
The music on the live albums is discussed on the Live page.

Corwood Industries

Jandek is unlike most reclusive types in that he is very prolific: 59 albums since 1978, with at least one album every year since 1981, including an early-eighties burst of creativity (seven albums in three years) and a new burst of creativity still in progress (at least two new albums a year since 2001, with four new albums in 2004, four in 2005, six in 2006 (three of them doubles), two in 2007 (a double and a quadruple), five in 2008, and three so far in 2009.
Jandek albums are produced by the Corwood Industries record label. In the John Trubee interview, Jandek cops to being its sole proprietor. Corwood has had the same address since 1978: P.O. Box 15375, Houston TX 77220.
Before the nineties, all of Jandek’s back catalog was in print and available. The LP’s gradually went out of print during the nineties, and for a time none were available, but in 1999 Corwood started a comprehensive CD reissue program, and by June 2003, all of the old albums were available again. (Graven Image, the first new Jandek recording to be issued on CD only, went out of print for a couple years, but was re-reissued in mid-2003.)
Corwood sells Jandek albums at bargain prices. Back in the 1980’s, you could order a box of 25 of them for $50. Of course, there weren’t yet 25 different albums back then, so you’d have to get some duplicates. Later on the price went up to $60. Now that he’s switched from vinyl to CD’s, you can order a box of 20 or more items (CD’s, 2CD’s, 4CD’s, and DVD’s). This is the same price extended to retailers, who then mark them up and resell them. Writing to Corwood will usually (this has remained true over the years) get you a one page mimeographed or photocopied typewritten catalog.
Here is a Corwood catalog from 1989 that shows the 25 for $60 deal. (Note that the last LP listed appears to have been added at a later date, using a different typewriter.) Click for full size image.
[catalog]
And here are Corwood catalogs from 1998 and 2001 that the current prices from that period: $8 per CD, $80 for 20 CD’s, and $3000 for 1000 copies of a presumably created-on-demand CD reissue of any of the out-of-print LP’s (now that all the LP’s have been reissued, this of course no longer applies). Click for full size images. Note the handwritten note on the second catalog.
[catalog]
[catalog]
Here’s an October 2005 catalog (click for full size image):
[catalog]
And finally, here’s a catalog that was current as of July 2009; it shows a slightly different price structure (new as of the release of Corwood 0791) for ordering a box or 20 more. Instead of listing separate prices for the different media types when included as part of a box, there’s a 50% discount across the board. Click for full size image:
[catalog]
At least in past years, Corwood quite consistently sent the LP’s to college radio stations. WHPK at the University of Chicago still has a complete set. WRCT in Pittsburgh used to receive two copies of every release. Corwood even used to advertise (!) — here’s a quarter page ad that appeared in Op magazine:
[advertisement]
In the documentary, some Op staffers tell the story of this ad.
I’m told that some ads were placed with more information such as album titles. It would seem, however, that these promotional efforts ceased some years ago — neither WHPK or WNUR have been sent any of the CD’s, and no recent ads have been sighted. (Some individuals do still receive free copies from Corwood, as promotion or perhaps just as gifts?)
Corwood has occasionally given permission for Jandek material to be used in other contexts:
  • In 2000, the Secretly Canadian label (based in Bloomington, Indiana) released a CD called The Unaccompanied Voice: An A Capella Compilation that includes a Jandek track called “Om”, taken from the 1990 Somebody in the Snow album. Reportedly the label invited to Jandek to contribute and were told something like “We will provide nothing new but you are welcome to take what already has been recorded.” (Interestingly, this was just before Jandek released his string of three vocals-only CD’s.)
  • A Jandek track, “They Told Me I Was a Fool”, from Ready for the House, is included on the Songs in the Key of Z compilation CD, compiled by Irwin Chusid as a companion to his book Songs in the Key of Z, which includes a chapter about Jandek.
  • “Mike” (BlackBook78@aol.com) said on the Jandek mailing list that “When I spoke with Sterling in regards to the compilations Jandek has appeared on, he mentioned that there was another one... that had come out in the ’80’s on vinyl... and he didn’t even remember the name of it.” I don’t know anything else about this.
  • {photo exhibits in Europe}

Album covers

One of the richest sources of speculation about Jandek, after the lyrics to his songs, are the photos on the album covers. They are almost invariably blurry, indistinct, enigmatic.
Here’s some of the things you’ll see on the covers:
  • Jandek himself, on 33 of the 59 covers. No one else ever appears (unless you count the cat on Worthless Recluse, the mannequins on The Place and The Gone Wait, or the pedestrians in the background on When I Took That Train).
  • The outside of Jandek’s house. Several different houses are depicted, it’s not clear exactly how many, although they all resemble each other, as if they are all in the same neighborhood in an older area of Houston. These are older houses, certainly no newer than the 50’s, and always painted white.
  • The inside of Jandek’s house, including some of his furniture.
  • Curtains. Jandek keeps his curtains drawn, as we are repeatedly shown from both the inside and the outside. Plus there are several photos with curtains as backdrops.
  • Musical instruments. There are three photos of the same drumkit, two photos of the same acoustic guitar, one photo of a guitar case that presumably contains this guitar, and one of Jandek and an electric guitar.
  • Streets, buildings, landscapes, and castles in the U.K. and Ireland. Beginning with 2002’s I Threw You Away, six recent album covers have featured snapshots from the British isles.

Several general progressions are evident:

  • Most early covers are black and white, most later covers are in color.
  • Most early covers show interiors, most later covers were taken outdoors.
  • Most early covers show places and things. Most mid-period covers (1985-1992) show Jandek himself. Since then most covers have again shown places again.

The album covers dating back to Jandek’s early life give some general impressions of his upbringing: parents that apparently cared enough to photograph him fairly often; visits to relatives (Worthless Recluse); a big white house, a little weathered, with flowers planted by it (Nine-Thirty, Foreign Keys); a guitar around his neck already as a teenager (Follow Your Footsteps). His clothes and hair are conservative on the covers of Lost Cause and Worthless Recluse, but then rebelliousness sets in: on the covers of Foreign Keys and White Box Requiem his hair and sideburns are long and shaggy, and then on Six and Six his hair is short again but now he looks like a rock-n-roll rebel.
Here’s my best effort to put all the photos of Jandek in chronological order. This is not at all easy and some choices are very much arguable.
[album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover] [album cover]
See the Discography page for further commentary on the cover photos.
The back covers of all Jandek albums are basically identical in format, although they vary in typeface and other minor details, as if they were done by a succession of different typesetters, each of whom was instructed to imitate the last one. The basic format is plain. The catalog number in small type in the upper right; “Jandek” and the album title in big bold type at the top; the track titles and times (uncharacteristic of Jandek to be so informative!) in the middle; Corwood’s address and a copyright notice at the bottom. The track titles and address are set off from the big titles at the top by two double lines. I have no special interpretation of this format except as evidence of consistency. (But, see One Foot in the North for a strange exception to the rule...) The back covers of CD reissues were re-typeset, not photographically reproduced from the LP issues. Starting in 2002, the CD’s started carrying printed UPC bar codes on the back.

Biography

I have no clue where the name “Corwood” comes from. What about the name “Jandek”? I’m reminded of Ursula K. LeGuin’s novel The Dispossessed, which portrays a society whose citizens are assigned a name at birth consisting of two random computer-generated syllables; for example, the main character’s name is Shevek. There is a company in England called Jandek Kits (6 Fellows Avenue, Kingswinford, West Midlands, DY6 9ET United Kingdom) that produces some kind of amateur radio equipment; can’t say if there’s a connection. When I was in Budapest some years ago I saw a big sign on a building reading “AJANDEK” — perhaps it’s a Hungarian name? (I have since been informed that “ajandek” means “gift” in Hungarian...) A net search turned up a Heinz Jandek who is a computer programmer at the University of Cologne in Germany, a Rostislav Jandek who lives in the Czech Republic, an Irving Jandek in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, and a Hartmut Jandek who got third place in a sailing competition in Spain in 1996 (way to go, Hartmut! we’re all proud of you), so apparently it’s not an unknown surname. None of this tells us much.
So who is Jandek? No one knows for sure. For decades, he never performed live. He doesn’t perform live or give interviews; he has never made any public statement of any kind. The Katy Vine story above is the only documented encounter anyone’s had with the man in person. She must have done some detective work to track him down, but I suspect it was probably not all that hard. Jandek hides himself, but he hasn’t gone to extreme lengths to cover his tracks. After all, his picture is on his album covers! Residents of Houston report seeing him around town, going about his business. Corwood Industries is a business, and some kinds of information about registered businesses are a matter of public record. But please don’t go after him; when Katy Vine tracked him down, he didn’t refuse to talk, but he mostly steered the conversation away from music, and when it was over, he “stress[ed] that even though he had had a nice time, he didn’t want to be contacted in person by a fan or a journalist or anybody about Jandek ever again.”
Even if you hung around the Houston post office, you might not catch Jandek himself, but only a Corwood Industries delegate or functionary. If you write Corwood Industries a check, it comes back signed on the back by “Sterling R. Smith”. In the old, pre-live-performance days, several people reported having spoken on the phone with a man named Sterling Smith who handles things like orders from distributors, but who categorically denied that he is Jandek and refuses to answer any questions about him. However, when Irwin Chusid spoke to Smith in 1980 (see Songs in the Key of Z, page 60), Smith talked about the records as “my music”. Katy Vine reports that the man she talked to was the man pictured on the album covers, but he wouldn’t directly admit to having made the music, but the overwhelming impression from various details in the article is that in fact he had. And one record store owner who spoke with Mr. Smith reports that his voice was the voice on the records. So it seems reasonable to assume that Sterling Smith is Jandek, and that the strategy of pretending that Sterling Smith is from Corwood Industries, but is not actually Jandek, is a strategy that was only adopted after the early 80’s.
Epistemological disclaimer: here, I’m going to try to connect the dots, to make the inferences and possible generalizations that the records and other available information appear to suggest. For example, I will speak as if we knew that first-person song lyrics are at least semi-autobiographical, and other such reasonable-seeming but undeniably questionable assumptions. But as you read bear in mind what I won’t explicitly mention again: the possibility that some of the available signs may be misleading or even intentionally deceptive. Personally, my feeling is that Corwood might hide or misguide, but wouldn’t intentionally fabricate or deceive.
If you write to Jandek care of Corwood, you may get a few handwritten words in reply, particularly if you ask a factual question about ordering or request permission for something. Other kinds of questions and communications may simply be ignored, but you never know. Irwin Chusid, for example, exchanged a number of letters and phone calls with Sterling Smith in the early 80’s. I don’t know any other such extensive contact with the man in the years afterwards, but in the last few years the live performances have obviously brought Corwood into much greater contact with the outside world, both in person and by phone or letter.
Direct requests for interviews by Richie Unterberger in 1986 and Chusid in 1998 were refused. In the early 80’s, Smith seems to have been fairly forthcoming with Chusid on some matters, but not on others: “He rambled in a halting monotone, his speech punctuated by aposiopesis (the sudden breaking off in mid-sentence as if the speaker is unwilling or unable to continue). I asked questions; he gave oblique answers. He wouldn’t explain what he did for a living.”
So, other than general impressions gleaned from the album covers, very little is known about Sterling Smith’s life.
Presumably he was at least 20 when he made Ready for the House, which would make him at least fifty now. In 1999, Katy Vine wrote that he appeared to be “late-thirties”. According to the copyright records at the Library of Congress, Sterling Smith was born in 1945, making him over sixty now. The man at Jandek’s live appearances could certainly be that old, though he looks younger. I have no trouble accepting the birth year in the copyright records.
Chusid reports that Sterling Smith said on the phone that he had “no friends”, but if that was true in 1980, it certainly seems to have changed in only a few years, judging from all his collaborators, and from the evident involvement with other people in his lyrics. In Vine’s article he is seen at a bar with his pals from the office.
He may have a connection to Ohio, perhaps even grew up there. “Nancy” is from Ohio (see “Collaborators” below), and there are some Ohio references on Jandek albums (see “Themes”, below).
He is a traveler. Nine-Thirty (1985) has songs about a trip through the American southeast. “Rain in Madison” is presumably about a trip to Madison, Wisconsin, and the lyrics refer to sitting in a car. A letter quoted by Chusid refers to Smith’s “experience in living in lower Manhattan”. Five album covers since 2002 are snapshots taken in Europe. Katy Vine says her interviewee “had visited big and small cities all over the U.S., Mexico, and Europe.”
It seems from the Katy Vine article that he is now a professional or office worker of some kind, wearing “beautiful cufflinks” and living in “one of the city’s nicer neighborhoods”, but his career is “of increasing disinterest”. Consult her article for further tidbits.
Note that there are many Sterling Smiths in the United States, including several in Houston; it’s not that rare a name.
Please resist the urge to dig any deeper into Smith’s personal and/or professional life; it’s none of our business.

Collaborators

An outside vocalist makes her first appearance, on a song on Chair Beside a Window called “Nancy Sings” — we’ll call her “Nancy”. On this first song she sings in a high breathy voice, while on later albums she usually sings in a lower, brassier voice, so while we can’t be absolutely certain it’s the same person, it sure sounds like it to me.
The following year, a drummer makes his first appearance, on a song on Your Turn to Fall called “John Plays Drums” — we’ll call him “John”. The word usually used to describe “John”’s drumming is “primitive”, not in the Maureen Tucker steady-pounding sense, but more of an untutored crashing-and-banging sense. He usually sticks to hitting one drum at a time.
“John” and “Nancy” are both very important to Jandek’s music. In his book Irwin Chusid gives an excerpt of a December 1982 letter from Sterling Smith about John and “Nancy”. It’s worth quoting here:

Nancy was Nancy [last name withheld], a southern Ohio cosmopolitan hillbilly type who ran across my path one day and I asked her to sing what I had written as I played the guitar. There were no notes or anything and she just picked up the paper with words and sang and I played guitar as simple as that!... She’s featured in many future cuts, mostly electric. The cut “No Break” on side 2 features her sister Pat [last name withheld] on vocals, myself on elec guitar and Nancy in a very unaggressive drum stint.
[Other tracks feature] myself on 6 string elec guitar + vocals, John [name withheld] on base [sic] and John “Poe” on drums. They were around the house “Poe” lived there next door. I asked them to sit in. I don’t believe “Poe” ever played drums beore. I was so impressed. I couldn’t think of another drummer so absolute except maybe Ginger Baker from Cream...
There is a multitude of further electric composition. With a myriad (maye 12) other performers. Also cuts on entire sides of myself overdubbing base, 6 string, vocals and drums all performed by myself...


I have yet to go back and carefully review the albums in light of the information in this letter. There’s been some detailed discussion of this on the Jandek mailing list that I plan to review and incorporate into this page at some point.
On later albums, particularly You Walk Alone (1988), there is clearly a second electric guitarist. The acoustic guitarist on Blue Corpse (1987) is probably this other guitarist, not Jandek. Jandek is heard saying “Take it, Eddie” before a guitar solo, so we’ll call him Eddie.
Two songs, “Sadie” and “Give It the Name”, from On the Way (1988), are sung by a male vocalist who is definitely not Jandek (and presumably not named Sadie either). The first three songs on Blue Corpse are sung by an alternate male vocalist as well, as are a few other songs on albums from that era (circa late 1980’s). (A few people on the Jandek mailing list are still disputing this, but I regard the case as closed — the two voices are easy to tell apart. It’s harder to tell whether there is a third male singer or not.)
There are drums on the early 90’s albums, which sound like they’re played by John to me, although much more subduedly than on earlier LP’s. Nancy’s sister Pat, who initially appeared briefly on Chair Beside a Window, is featured at greater length on Somebody in the Snow. While the sisters’ voices are similar in many respects, they’re fairly easy to tell apart because Nancy’s singing is clearer and stronger.
Some of these extra musicians might actually be Jandek himself using overdubbing, but I don’t think that’s usually the case. The extra guitarist(s)’s style(s) are quite distinct, and on several songs, you can hear the musicians saying things to each other. Nonetheless, we know from the letter I quote above that there are some one-man-band overdubbing jobs. The Rocks Crumble is a possible one-man-band candidate. Another candidate is side two of Somebody in the Snow. For example, “Remind You” has Jandek doing separate and sometimes overlapping vocal tracks in the left and right channels, so that’s definitely overdubbed. That suggests Jandek could be the drummer on these tracks as well. Elsewhere there are some songs, such as “I’ll Sit Alone and Think a Lot About You” from On the Way, where the guitar and vocals are both by Eddie, so if Jandek is playing anything on those songs, he’s playing drums.
I Woke Up (1997) is the only CD-era Jandek album with obvious outside musicians. Most of the vocals are taken by someone who I think Jandek calls “Mike” at one point. “Mike” mostly recites rather than sings. This CD also has drumkit on one song and hand percussion on one song — could be “Mike”, or “John”, or Jandek himself.

Antecedents and followers

An interesting thing to know about Jandek would be how aware of his precedents he is. It’s interesting to compare and contrast the Godz (definite vocal resemblance, similar ragged rhythms, and a similar way of straddling the acoustic/electric divide), Skip Spence (Oar is amazingly Jandek-like), the Shaggs, early Half Japanese (in reference to Jandek’s loudest rock stuff), Loren Mazzacane Connors, Tim Buckley (I’m thinking specifically of Lorca), Hasil Adkins...
So far as I know, before the release of Summersteps Records’ Jandek tribute CD, there existed only two cover versions of Jandek songs:

  • One is by Dump, which is a solo project of James McNew of Yo La Tengo, and it’s on a 7″ released in approximately 1995 by 18 Wheeler Records in an edition of 1000 copies. The song covered is “License to Kill” from The Living End.
  • The other is by Charalambides, and it’s on a compilation called Drilling the Curve on Fleece Records out of Houston. The song covered is “Variant” from Blue Corpse.

The tribute CD, released in 2000, contains versions of Jandek songs performed by Low, Gary Young, The Goblins, Amy Denio, Ivory Elephant, and others. The cover photograph of a graveyard was supplied by Corwood. Summersteps’ website includes track listings, ordering info, and scans of the two disposable cameras full of graveyard photos sent by Corwood.
Since then some more Jandek covers have surfaced:


Palace’s Days in the Wake (Drag City, 1994) has a cover photo that appears to be a direct Jandek homage (complete with curtains), and the music sounds a lot like Jandek’s, too.
For a while in the nineties there was a band named after the album Telegraph Melts.

Data

Jandek’s aesthetic is austere, but not perfectionist: he releases multiple versions of songs, cuts off songs by stopping the tape in the middle, and flaunts his disregard for what most people would consider good “singing” (although note that he always sings, he never talks his way through lyrics a la Lou Reed or the male vocalist on I Woke Up [1997]). A lot of songs end with a sort of sharp thump that might be Jandek hitting the stop button on the tape recorder, or striking the body of his guitar. He does have an obsessiveness with regard to his albums (steady release schedule, consistent appearance) and a flair for cross-reference: songs have sequels; lines from songs later become album titles; characters reoccur (e.g, “The Janitor”, “Janitor’s Dead”).
Here are all the proper names that appear in the titles of Jandek songs: Judith, Jenny, Max, Jessica, Gretchen, Alexandria, Michael, Steve, Robert, Fatima, Harry Idle, the Quinn Boys, Sadie, Helena, Phillip, Ezekiel, Joab, and of course the aforementioned “Nancy” and “John” (“Nancy” is mentioned again in a 1994 song title). There are three references to historical figures: Jackson, Napoleon, and “Governor Rhodes” (presumably the Ohio governor who was in office at the time of the Kent State shootings).
Many of Jandek’s album titles previously appeared as lines from earlier songs, sometimes with more than ten years intervening. He particularly often raided the lyrics of his first two albums for titles. (See also notes to You Walk Alone.)

Themes

Here are some common themes in Jandek titles and lyrics:
Numbers and dates
Six and Six, “Number 14”, “May 7, 9:15 a.m.”, “May 3”, Nine-Thirty and “Nine-Thirty”, “Twelve Minutes Since February 32nd”, “Number 512”, “Part II”, “Bring it Back to Seventy-Five”, “Four by Four”, and the strangely numbered “Spanish in Me 003”, “European Jewel 613”, and “European Jewel 501”. “First You Think Your Fortune’s Lovely” contains the line “Three times four is twenty-seven.”
Rivers and Spain
In Jandek songs, people float down rivers. Often to Spain, sometimes specifically Madrid. Sometimes over and over in the same song (“Only Lover”). Spain pops up in other contexts as well (e.g., “Spanish in Me”).
Ohio
Jandek doesn’t have a Texas accent, and in “Georgia East” he sings “You people sure are strange to a city boy from up north.” In “I Want to Know Why” “Nancy” sings “Why did I ever leave Ohio?” One song title, “Chilocothe”, is the name of an Ohio town, and another, “Governor Rhodes”, apparently refers to a former Ohio governor. There are several other Ohio references in other songs. And in Chusid’s book he says Jandek described “Nancy” in a letter as “a southern Ohio cosmopolitan hillbilly type.” It’s reasonable to guess that Jandek himself is originally from Ohio as well.
Religion
More common on later records. Titles include “Show Me the Way, O Lord,” “The Spirit”, “Preacher”, “Nothing is Better Than God”, “Spiritual Song”, “Bring It in a Manger”, “Angel” {or maybe this is just a love song?}, “God Came Between Us”, “Twelfth Apostle”, “Ezekiel”, and “Joab”. “Blood and Bone”, off Staring at the Cellophane, is about Jesus, and in “Take My Will”, off Glad to Get Away (reprised eleven years later on Raining Down Diamonds), Jandek asks: “Jesus take my will, give me yours.” Jandek isn’t exactly Amy Grant, but he is apparently a Christian. (Or at least, he is deeply fascinated by Christian themes and imagery.) Jandek threw us all a curveball in 2005 though when two consecutive album covers showed a young Jandek bearded and wearing a kind of hat associated with Muslims; and as if to confirm this impression, the second disc is called Khartoum.
Love songs
Too many to mention, and not all of the unrequited-love variety, either. Jandek’s love life seems to have been pretty active.
Beginnings and ends
Album titles include The Living End and The Beginning (both also song names), and 2004’s The End of It All. Other song titles include “The Second End”, “The First End”, and “The Electric End”. Those are just the ones with the actual words “beginning” or “end” in the title, but particularly since the mid-nineties, Jandek seems obsessed with ends and beginnings in general. Since 1994, he’s had I Woke Up, New Town, “Closing”, “First Awake Moment”, “Just Die”, “One Last Chance”, Pending Doom”, “Stopped”, and “The World Stops”. And if you add the themes of entering, leaving, and returning, of going inside and outside, then also just since 1994 you have Glad to Get Away, “Going Away My Darling”, “Going Away”, “Approaching the City”, “Get Back Inside”, “Steal Away Home”, “I Went Outside”, “In the Cave”, “Out of the Cave”, “I Stepped Out Of It”, “The Highway”, “I Just Might Go Now”, “I See the Open Door”, “Find Me Again”, and “I Hadn’t Been There Before”. And that’s just song titles; if you read the lyrics, the last ten years of Jandek have been an almost nonstop turning over of these themes. Each recent album gives the impression that it might be Jandek’s last, but then soon enough another one comes along. His next-to-latest release was called The End of It All, but it hardly seemed possible it could be so, and sure enough, only two months later another one came along.
Depression
A lot of Jandek’s music could be described as depressive if not depressed, and some would say depressing too. (He’s made some serenely or exuberantly joyful music too, especially in the mid-1980’s.) Starting in 2000, though, with the trio of a cappella releases, many of Jandek’s lyrics lost their often elliptical or oblique character and started treating depression head-on, in the starkest and bluntest terms imaginable. “I Need Your Life” (from Put My Dream On This Planet) is the lengthiest and most harrowing example. This trend has continued even at live appearances; in Gateshead on May 2005, the first words out of Jandek’s mouth were “Depression/ There’s no way out” and two songs later he began, “Every morning when I get up/ I want the day to end.” Jandek's concert in Manhattan that September (not available on CD yet) treated the theme at length: “It's a swamp I'm stuck in... I can't see a reason to continue... Just don't care... Can't think up a reason to do anything”, and many other similar statements, though the evening concluded with a measure of mental peace: “So this is what I'm living for...”. His most extended lyrical treatment of this peaceful state was earlier that year in Glasgow in the suite “The Cell” (also not available on CD yet), where Jandek counts his blessings; the suite is linked by the repeated line, “What do I have?”

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Tuesday, March 30, 2010

George Stathos

Big Fat Greek Wedding Band

by Dana Goodyear



George Stathos, who describes himself as "the tallest Greek you'll ever meet in your life," is the elegant, lugubrious front man for My Greek Wedding Band, an outfit that, until recently, was known to connubially minded Mediterranean New Yorkers as George Stathos and Company. The band decided on the new name around the time that "My Big Fat Greek Wedding," the five-million-dollar movie that features the band's music, had grossed twenty million of the two hundred and fifteen million dollars that it has grossed so far. "The 'My' and the 'Greek' remind you of the movie title—and the 'Wedding,' of course," Stathos said over a glass of retsina at Uncle Nick's in Hell's Kitchen. "When I told some other Greek musicians about the new name, they said, 'That's a terrible name! Why're you gonna use that name?' And I said, 'Well, can you think of a better one?' And they said, 'No—but if you got any extra jobs throw them our way!' "

Stathos, who is six feet three, has dark-gray woolly hair, big ears, and ledgelike cheekbones. He plays the clarinet, which he calls "the folk instrument of Greece," and speaks better Greek than his second-generation parents. For the past fifteen years, the band—clarinet, accordion, guitar, bouzouki, darbuka (an hourglass-shaped hand drum), and female vocalist—has performed seventy to eighty gigs a year, including baptisms, folk festivals, back-yard parties, engagement parties, and weddings. Over the years, Stathos said, more and more clients were asking for modern Greek music played at "rock volume," or, worse, he said, "they were hiring d.j.s." Then one day about nine months ago, Stathos got a call from a musician named Emanuel Kiriakou, who said that he was looking for traditional Greek players to record pieces he had composed for the film. Kiriakou, Stathos, and his band performed some original songs for the "Greek Wedding" score, among them "Tsifteteli" ("Belly Dance"), "Tis Nyfis Ta Vimata" ("The Bride's Dance"), and "Kefi in Katavia." ("Kefi" means "good feeling," and Katavia is an imaginary place with a Greek-sounding name.) Stathos was paid four hundred dollars for each of the five songs that were used. "The movie was so perfect because we got to actually play a classy Greek wedding and play traditional music, without people saying, 'What's that weird Chinese music?' " (Stathos thinks that a clarinet being played too loud through a microphone has this effect.)

Only "Kefi in Katavia" made it onto the movie's soundtrack CD, which also includes songs by a Toronto group called The Greek Wedding Band. "They don't have it trademarked, as I do," Stathos said. "I checked with my attorney." Stathos plans to record and release his own CD as My Greek Wedding Band soon. "My dream is to play Greek music in its purest form for everyone—Greeks, non-Greeks." (A dream he won't speak about for fear of attracting the evil eye is a possible Broadway musical adaptation of the movie, and a CBS sitcom, which is already in the works.) Stathos is think- ing of advertising in American bridal magazines and has taken out a spot in the National Herald, the oldest Greek-American newspaper in the country. But the most visible form of promotion right now is the blue flyers that have been turning up in lower Manhattan, at places like Starbucks, offering the services of the "musicians from the score of the hit movie." "I don't know how those got up there," Stathos said. "I think one of the guys in the band did it. I'm like, 'Don't do that. That's kind of schlocky.' I think it was the drummer—he's crazy. All drummers are crazy. Did you know that?"

Stathos, who used to charge two thousand dollars a gig, now asks for three to five thousand. He is talking to a West Coast manager (actually, his old manager, from the seventies in New York, who is now a distributor for Kronos foods) about playing in L.A.—"high-level gigs for rich Greeks."

Like the band's name, the name of Stathos's fiancĂ©e and publicist, Diane Golfinopoulos—formerly Golfin—was re-Hellenized for the Greek moment. (Her grandfather had changed it when he emigrated from Greece.) "Now, with the whole new Greek-identity thing, we're adding syllables back to our names," Stathos, whose grandfather shortened his name from Stathopoulos, said. "Cristo!" he shouted to the waiter. "Cristaki!"