Thursday, August 6, 2009

Printmaker, Sean Hurley

Portsmouth, New Hampshire

On Monday, August 3, 2009, I met with printmaker Sean Hurley in his cozy Portsmouth kitchen to chat about his life as a young artist.  Between sips of cool tap water, Sean braved the evening's muggy air to divulge his thoughts about his work and the pleasure he finds in his trade.












Spitting Image:  Hello and welcome back to Spitting Image Interviews.  I’m here today with Sean Hurley, a Portsmouth, New Hampshire printmaker and he’s been kind enough to sit down with me today and chat with me.  So, Sean, thanks for joining me today. 


Sean Hurley:  Hey, no problem, Brian.  My pleasure.


SI:  So, Sean, I....why don’t you just talk a little bit about, first of all, what your job entails and what your responsibilities are as a printmaker in Piscataqua Fine Arts.


SH:  Well, I guess, I guess the first thing that I would start off with on that note is that my....my job at Piscatcua Fine Arts is almost a little bit independent of my occupation as a printmaker.  What I do there, I’m the gallery manager and we are a combination gallery and print shop; a printmaking studio.  So, my job, really, is to manage the studio and to keep it running day to day and I help....help with the printing work of the owner of the shop, whose name is Don Gorvett, and then, independent of that, I use the studio as my own, which is the benefit of....of being there.  So, I....I make my own work and sell it there at the shop as well.


SI:  That’s a nice opportunity.


SH:  Yeah, it’s....it’s.  I think it’s the kind of thing that I have to, like, step back and look at every day and just realize how lucky I am to have such a....such an amazing opportunity every day.


SI:  And you studied printmaking at the University of New Hampshire.


SH:  Right.  I did a....a BFA with a focus in printmaking at UNH.


SI:  And before attending school, attending UNH, had printmaking been on your radar at all?  Is that something that you had, at all, pursued?


SH:  No, not really.  I was definitely an artist all my life, you know, with varying degrees of intensity and commitment, but probably my favorite thing to do since I can really remember, when I was a little kid, I was always drawing.  You know, I would just spend all day drawing, all during summer breaks I can recall and, like, first grade, you know, where you’d just sit outside and draw, and kind of fell away from that a bit in high school, but when I went to UNH as an undeclared fine arts....or, not fine arts....liberal arts major and started dabbling in fine arts classes my first semester and print making, as I started doing it - doing etchings, which is what I still do now - was really just an extension of drawing.  So, it’s really almost like a linear progression from what I was doing when I was a little kid.  I’m, actually, still mostly drawing the same things, the same....my subject matters haven’t changed now in about twenty years which is kind of funny.


SI:  So, is printmaking to you, in some ways, an extension of your drawing?  Is it, in your mind, the next step to take?

SH:  Yeah, I guess....one thing that I....I say to people a lot, who come in the shop and ask about the technique, to me, you know, there are ways of doing printmaking that are very painterly or ways of doing it that are very experimental, and the method that I practice I almost think of as....as a drawing with an engineering problem thrown in the middle of it, and I’m really interested, like I said, in drawing and I’ve also been always interested in science and, like, taking things apart and figuring out how things work, so to me it’s just, like....it’s adding this sort of technical problem into the course of doing a drawing and it....it....it just makes the whole thing a little bit more....more technique oriented.  And you still have the freedom of working with a drawing but I....I come up with a very concrete plan in terms of the technique and the methodology that I’m gonna use is very systematic, so it really....I guess it really is, in a way, an extension of drawing with a....sort of a....a technical craft thrown in the mix.


SI:  Do you think that any....that had anything to do with almost a boredom with just the act of drawing?


SH:  Oh, I don’t think so because to me drawing is still....it’s the foundation of what I do and by far it’s the most satisfying part.  I mean, when I’m working on a print, the drawing isn’t what....it....that doesn’t stress me out at all, you know, the drawing....when I sit outside and draw for a few hours that’s just....it’s....it’s really a very pleasurable and very, almost like a very meditative kind of thing, whereas all the technical stuff that I, once I start the print, I’ll be dealing with for several weeks as I go.  That’s the kind of stuff that I really lay in bed sleepless at night and try to work out in my head and that’s....it does....yeah, it’s almost a stressful thing in a way, but it’s like a big challenge and surmounting that adds a whole ‘nother dimension.  So, certainly there’s no boredom in the drawing.  The drawing is like a deeply pleasurable thing for me.  


SI:  Now, why don’t you, just, sort of, describe what the process of printmaking looks like, as far as....as you were....sort of, layed out a second ago, as far as what your planning looks like and then what the materials you use are and how they’re used.


SH:  Sure.  Well, printmaking, basically, is any method where you’re using some sort of a surface to apply an image that can be reproduced in multiple....apply it to a paper.  So, it can range from a wood cut where you’re using a carved block of wood to print an image on to a sheet of paper, a lithograph is another method of printmaking, and what I do is etching - what I focus on, at least.  And an etching entails using a metal place which in my case is generally copper and the plate is etched  out with an...using an acid and the lines are basically, by the action of the acid, insized into the surface of the plate, and then, basically, you’re smearing ink into those lines and....and laying a sheet of dampened paper down on top of the inked plate and then running it through a piece of machinery called the etching press which is basically a hand operated printing press and, as it rolls through the etching press the....the papers push down on to the inked plate, you know, with great pressure and the ink is transfered from the plate on to the sheet of paper.  And, I guess, in relation to my drawing, the actual method of doing it: I take a blank piece of copper and i cover it with a, sort of, an acid resistant wax and then draw into that with a needle, and anywhere that you draw with the needle, basically, you’re scraping the wax off the surface of the metal and then you bathe that in an acid, and the acid is resisted by that wax wherever it’s unbroken, but wherever I’ve draw through with that needle, the acid touches the metal and bites that line into the plate.  So, if I want to etch very shallow lines that will just hold a little ink and print as a light grey, leave it in the acid for a short time.  A deep, long etch will....will leave a....a very deep heavy line that’ll hold a lot of ink and make a deep black, so you can see where the, sort of, engineering aspect would come in to play - figuring out which parts of the plate are gonna be etched deeply, which are gonna be etched shallowly.  You can come back and re-etch more lines over areas that you’ve already worked, so it’s a very....it’s very....it takes a lot of planning and a lot of careful consideration because it’s....you know, once you put that plate in and etch it, whatever happens happens and you’re gonna have to deal with it.  So I’d rather not be left with a plate that’s etched too deeply or too lightly, I wanna get it right.


SI:  And how do you....if you have an idea that you’ve sketched by hand, drawn, is it....do you transfer that image to the new material by sight or is there any, sort of, stencil technique used at all?


SH:  Well, I always start out with the drawing that I do outside - outside because my work usually is landscape and architecturally based.  Most of my prints are, you know, scenes of buildings and things like that, so, it always starts going to the site and drawing .  And usually I draw on to paper first.  Once in a while, I’ll bring the plate out and draw right onto it but that’s a whole ‘nother challenge in itself.  So, yeah, I’ll do a drawing on the paper usually....usually fairly roughly developed - not too precise - and it’s usually redrawn by sight on to the etching plate.  I will trace and transfer just the most basic outlines of the shapes, just so they’re the right sizes and proportions, but all of the shadows and details are all filled in by hand and, I’d say, probably seventy percent of them are just invented onto the plate as I....as I work.  And the....the finished etching always looks drastically different than the drawing that it was based on.


SI:  Now, you mentioned some of the subjects of a lot of your work which seems to be, as you mentioned, a lot of buildings, a lot of architecture, in particular, architecture that, I guess you could call, relics of, kind of, industries past - that, sort of, sit today almost out of place from, like, the modern economic landscape.  Is that accurate and would you mind, sort of, expanding on that a bit?


SH:  Yeah, I’d say that’s....that’s pretty accurate.  I’m interested in architecture.  I guess that, again, goes back to, like, the....the engineering side of my brain and....and I love the way that, you know, light falls across, like, walls of bricks and how shadows are cast by pipes and....and roof tiles and things of that sort.  And I....I really like exploring.  I love ....I love exploring, like, urban....urban landscapes and, you know, just, kind of, wandering around like a ghostly, abandoned factory or mill or something where you have this vague feeling that you’re not supposed to be.  And, it’s almost like wandering around in....in the ruins of ancient Egypt or something which....which is another thing I was really in to when I was a kid.  So, to me, it has....it just embodies a lot of different things and I.....to be honest, I can’t even figure out completely, precisely to myself why I enjoy it so much.  I think it’s a combination of all those different factors and some of the recent work I’ve been doing has been structures and industry but not abandoned stuff, like, I’ve....I’ve done a....recently just did a print of downtown Boston which has a....a big excavation, so it’s a big hollow, empty building but then there’s some clearly active structures in the background.  and I’m working on a print right now of a....of a suburban street which actually has a man walking in to the distance and some cars parked along the road, so I’m trying to broaden my horizons outside of just the abandoned industry a little bit.  


SI:  And you think you expect to continue in that direction?


SH:  Yeah, a little bit.  I....you can’t get too locked in the same thing and I....I think that, like, the....the abandoned industry thing is definitely one part of what I’m into, but I’m almost more interested in the structures and feelings of those places than I am interested in abandoned industrial buildings as a subject.  And i started to notice that people....people started to see the abandoned industry as the theme of my work when really I just saw that as, kind of, a vehicle for expressing something visually that interested me.  So, I think it might be irresponsible of me to just keep doing those ‘cause I would continue to foster this, well, almost incorrect impression of what it is that I’m....that I’m doing, if you know what I mean.  


SI:  Pigeonhole yourself.


SH:  Right, right.  I....I love the way that abandoned factories look, I don’t necessarily love abandoned factories.


SI:  Gotcha.  As far as your presentation of your subject areas, or of your subjects up to this point, you seem to have a....a tone of realism in your approach.  Why is that?  Why does that tend to be your approach to....to your etchings?


SH:  Well, I....I’m not necessarily bound to realism, like I don’t just sit down and say, ‘I want to make a realistic drawing,’ but, for whatever reason, the drawing that I enjoy doing the most is....is what I guess you would call realism.  And....and it also relates to the technical aspect that I was talking about.  I....I think it’s pretty satisfying to, you know, figure out a way to manipulate a copper plate and some inks in such a way that it prints like a....a very realistic....maybe not even necessarily realistic, but that it correctly captures what it was that I was looking at on paper.  There’s, like, so many degrees of separation between my eyes seeing this thing and it actually being on this sheet of paper; from....you know, from me drawing it initially to redrawing it on to the plate and then etching it with the acid and the way that the printing is done, that having it come out looking....looking in a way that correctly summarizes what I....what I saw is pretty satisfying.  And I like....I like surmounting that challenge and I guess I am more interested in realism than abstraction.  Abstraction - it’s important and I think if you looked at any part of my....my work and, like, if you....if you cropped out any square inch, I would hope that there is a lot of interesting abstraction going on, but I want all of those little bits of abstraction to add up into a readable and recognizable image.  

SI:  And on top of that, the majority of the work that I’ve seen of yours tends to be in black and white, too.  


SH:  Yeah.


SI:  You know, why is that and does that at all tie in to, sort of, a sort of message you’re trying to convey about these, you know, old industrial buildings?


SH:  I guess I would just say that I’m not that interested in color and I don’t know why that is.  I’m more interested in....in crafting a space that you can move your eye through and in....in catching the way that light shines off of things.  It’s....it really isn’t even like a conscious choice.  I....usually when I get back from drawing, I have no memory in my head of what the coloration of what I was drawing looked at....looked like, but I could probably, just off the top of my head, draw exactly, like, the way a brick was broken in half or something.  It’s....color, for some reason, has just never interested me all that much and I remember when I was a kid I would do, you know, a drawing for school or something and my mom would always say, ‘Well, why don’t you just put one or two colors in.  It would make it look so much better,’ but I always have just enjoyed black and white.  And I would imagine maybe someday, if I continue doing the same type of work that I’m doing now, maybe as a further technical challenge I might introduce some color.  But I think that if I did start using color, like I just said, it would be more to challenge myself technically than it would be out of some burning motivation to really capture something coloristic about what I see. 


SI:  And it’s interesting because the printmaker that you work with at his studio, Don Gorvett, seems to incorporate a lot of color in his.  When you walk into his studio you see a lot of pretty wild colors in his prints....


SH:  Yeah.


SI:  ....and you’re quite the opposite.  Has he pressured you in any way or maybe tried to urge you to....to experiment a bit?


SH:  Well, when I first started working with Don a couple years ago, it was probably before my....my body of work was so clearly....clearly oriented towards....towards the kinds of ideas that I’m expressing now and....and certainly he helped me out and I did some color work of different kinds and experimented with some different, you know, methods and languages in my drawing and I think if....if I....if I showed you some of the drawings and prints that I was doing at that time you wouldn’t even recognize them as my work.  But, any artist has to find their own voice and figure out what it is that they do and that they’re interested in and, you know, the longer you work on your own....your own body of work, the more focused and individual it will be, hopefully.  And his work is definitely a lot about color and feeling and I think my work is coming to be about something totally different.  


SI:  So how was it that you came to team up with him in the first place?


SH:  Don first opened the shop in Portsmouth a coupe years ago when I was still a student and I knew of his work from seeing it in galleries and a few museums previously to that.  So, I met him and I was....I was excited to meet him and I was going to take a workshop with him and that just, kind of, never panned out and my girlfriend, actually, was gonna buy me a gift certificate to take a workshop with him for my birthday and he kept, kind of like, you know, avoiding it ‘cause I think he wasn’t really set up at the time to....to even do a workshop and she kept nagging him.  So, eventually, he just told her, ‘Well, why don’t you just have him come in and show me some of his work.’  And that was right around the time he....he had to move from his first location, which was across the street from where we are now; he’d only been there for about two months.  And right  at....around the time he had to move across the street to where we are now was when I came in and that was during my....my fourth out of my five years at UNH.  So, I kinda came in and I....I think he liked my work and, of course, I was sort of star struck by seeing what he did.  So, I sort of began as an intern and I helped him....you know, we moved the press in to that space; we did all kinds of the dirty work, in terms of getting a print shop set up, I did his website, and I started doing his graphic design and stuff, so little by little, I started doing odds and ends for him and working out of his studio and....and he was definitely a big artistic mentor at the time for me in combination with everybody up at UNH and little by little I guess I....I started becoming more of an active part of the shop and taking on responsibilities and also just spending more and more time and getting more in to, you know, trying to be a professional artist.


SI:  So, do you....how established do you feel now that you’re working here in Portsmouth?


SH:  [laughs]


SI:  ....and do you feel like you will continue to spend a lot of time there or do you want to, maybe, take your work elsewhere and, I don’t know, explore other places?


SH:  Oh, I definitely would say that I am absolutely not an established artist.  I think that’s the kind of thing that probably takes decades.  I mean, what....what....what is the benchmark for being and established artist?  Is it, like, that you know that you’re financially secure just doing your art because I think even by that....by that measure probably a lot of people you’d think are established artists probably aren’t.  I think I’ve....I’ve established that I want to be an artist and that I want to....want to professionally, you know, continue to make this work and have it be the main focus of my career.  I’ve established that to myself.  As for staying in Portsmouth, you know, I’d love to be in....I’d love to some day be in New York or Boston or some....a big city with an active printmaking community or artistic community but I....I think for now I’m gonna hang here and see what we can do at this shop.  We’re sort of on the ground floor of things here.  There isn’t like a long tradition of....of artwork or especially printmaking in Portsmouth and whatever....whatever we’re lacking in having like a real community of printmakers around us is made up for in, sort of, the excitement of knowing that we might be, you know, one of the founders of something that might hopefully someday be....be a lot bigger than us and I think it would be foolish of me to just give up on that prematurely before I see how it resolves itself.


SI:  Sure, and not that you’ve....you’re stuck to this area either.  I mean, your work has shown....been shown throughout the state, both in the seacoast area and southern New Hampshire, in Maine, Massachusetts galleries, and even a New York gallery, is that right?


SH:  Yeah.  I show....I show actively in....in Provincetown, Mass. and have done pretty well there and have had a....a show....I had a show there last summer and have another show there later this summer and this past winter got some....some work in to the....the Old Print Shop in New York which was a big honor for me.  They were a shop that really was fascinated with and they were like a go to website of mine to look at the....the artists that I admired.  I haven’t yet been down there to see my work there but just knowing that I have some things within the limits of the building and on there website is pretty exciting for me, too.  So, you know, I’m....I’m in Portsmouth and I’m working here but the goal is to get the work out a lot further away than I can be all of the time; hopefully....hopefully get it circulating and get it known .


SI:  Well, Sean, thanks so much for sitting with me and chatting with me today.


SH:  No problem.  I enjoyed it.


SI: Great.  Well, take care.


SH:  Cool. Thanks, Brian. 

 


Sean Hurley (8-3-09).mp3 - Spitting Image Interviews

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Saturday, August 1, 2009

Musician, Jake Merhmann

Dover, New Hampshire


On Thursday, July 30, 2009, I met with Jake Mehrmann, songwriter and lead singer of seacoast New Hampshire favorite, Tan Vampires.  We ducked into the air conditioning of Adelle’s Coffeehouse in downtown Dover and chatted over a few freshly brewed iced teas.  Neil Young, The Velvet Underground, The Steve Miller Band, and the whirring espresso machine provided us with some musical accompaniment.


*Remember, this interview is available to you in audio form at the conclusion of the transcript.*









Spitting Image:  Hello and welcome to.....welcome back to Spitting Image Interviews.  Today, I’m sitting with Jake Merhmann, the lead signer and songwriter of the group the Tan Vampires.  Today he joins me at Adelle’s Coffee Shop in downtown Dover and both of us are enjoying a nice little iced tea on this brutally hot day.  So, Jake, thanks for joining me today.    


Jake Mehrmann:  No problem. A pleasure.


SI:  So, as I said, Jake is in a well established group in the area, has a good reputation both as a solo performer and with his group the Tan Vampires.  Jake, the first thing I’d like to know is, sort of, what the genesis of the Tan Vampires was as a project?


JK:  Well, I had been in a band called Data for....I think it was probably four of five years in that band in slightly different incarnations existed.  And that band, kind of, fell apart for various reasons and I decided that, instead of being bummed out about that, because I had been pretty invested in it for a long period of time, I was just gonna lock myself in my apartment and record a record.  And it was right around the time that the RPM Challenge was happening so I figured it was a good opportunity to do that.  So I....


SI:  Sure


JM:  I had a couple of ideas for songs that had....I had had for a while that didn’t feel like they’d fit in with the sound of Data, so.... or at least not the sound that everybody thought of in the band, so.


SI:  So you were one or the only songwriter for that group?


JM:  It was a little different.  It was a little more collaborative than what Tan Vampires has been, which has been sort of like a solo thing for a long time and more recently I have put together a regular band.  But it was more a situation where, generally, I would bring in an idea, whether it be a guitar part or something, or someone else might bring in an idea, and then we would play, just play around that idea, and just kind of jam around that idea, record what we did and then myself and usually Mike Filitis, who is the bass player in Tan Vampires now - he was the bass player in that band as well - would take that and turn it into a song or we would try to work it out as a group into some....you know, it was a little....It was a very different process from the way that I write songs now, but.


SI:  So when you began the Tan Vampires as a project, did you have....intitially have intentions to, you know, present the music initially, or was it more sort of a little closet project of your own?


JM:  It was sort of a....just a little self indulgent thing [laughs] that I decided to do.  I felt like I needed to do something so I, you know....it seemed like an opportunity to do some things that I had felt the freedom to do and an opportunity to work out, like, a way to do things on my own and not have to rely on, like, a band to, like, complete songs and things like that, ‘cause I think that I had, sort of, allowed myself to rely on....or I felt, at least, like I had allowed myself to rely too much on other people in the band instead of just finishing something on my own.  If I, if I hit a point in a song where I felt like I wasn’t sure what to do next, or something like that, I would just bring it in to the band, which works out well sometimes and sometimes, like....you know, when you have other people’s input you get ideas you normally wouldn’t have, but I felt like I relied on that in a way; that I didn’t feel like I could be self sufficient with what I was doing and I wanted to be.  It didn’t really have anything to do with the other guys in the band, not working with them.  I....so I decided that I was just going to do that, so I had, you know, some ideas, a few ideas that hadn’t really worked out and so I started with those and wrote those, like, ten songs or whatever, recorded them in three weeks [laughs].  Had a little digital eight track and then played it for some people and they heard it and told me I should play.


SI:  Did any of those songs ever find its way in to Data material at all?


JM:  No, ‘cause Data was....we had tried to use a couple of them but by the time, and I think I may have, like, probably ripped off a couple ideas from that band on some of those things, but there was....the band was, like, basically done before I started working on that.


SI:  I see.


JM:  And a lot of the material was, like, I wrote during that period, not like [inaudible].


SI:  So, when you were writing a lot of that initial Tan Vampires material was there any emulation involved as far as the style of music you were writing or had it, sort of been, just, sort of the end of a natural progression in your own songwriting without really paying much attention to any particular songwriters?


JM:  It’s funny, I mean, I’m a few years removed from it at this point; that record at least.  But I guess I had started to feel for a while, like, a little out of touch with what we had been doing as a band, Data.  I felt like I wanted to do something a little more subtle because we were kind of a loud, over-the-top rock band and I had been feeling for a while like I wanted to do something a little....I don’t know how to....I don’t like to use the word mellow because I have negative connotations with that word. [laughs] 


SI: Sure.


JM:  But a little less ‘in your face‘ and maybe, like, a little more nuanced, you know.


SI:  Sure.  


JM:  And....‘cause a lot of the music I think I had been listening to at the time was more like that and not, like, loud rock stuff.


SI:  Well, one thing I....what really sticks out is, I’ve heard a number of your....those initial recordings you’re talking about and, at least compared to what you’re saying about the Data songs you’d written, they’re very sparse and it’s very limited in instrumentation; generally acoustic guitar and vocals and some....there is some electric guitar and some very minor percussion.


JM:  Yeah, and there’s horns and stuff on some too.


SI:  Sure.  But certainly compared to what you’re describing as Data’s material, it’s much more maybe focused and, sort of, minimalistic I guess you could say.


JM:  Yeah, I mean, part of that was....I mean, a lot of that was aesthetic but part of it was fairly by necessity with the materials that I was using.  You know, I only had those instruments and I had eight tracks to do what I wanted to do.  Which....it was kind of liberating, you how: having limited options and, at least for me, is a good thing for creativity ‘cause otherwise I have a tendency to try every....take....take an idea in every possible direction I can take it in which can be self defeating sometimes because you can always think of another way to do something and originally just make it a judgement [laughs] call and decide, ‘ok, this is going to be this,‘ and move on.  


SI:  Right.  


JM:  I get caught up in that sometimes, I think, and it takes me a long time to finish things.  Having the constraints on that allowed me to just do it; the time constraints and the physical limitations of how I recorded it.


SI:  Yeah.  Okay.  I can absolutely see that.  What’s interesting, too, is that when you listen to those first recordings that you did for the RPM challenge, which, by the way is a regional Seacoast recording challenge....


JM:  It’s become international....


SI:  That’s true!  It is international.


JM:  It started, it’s based out of Portsmouth, but....


SI:  Which, sort of, challenges people to record an album during the month of February and then send it in to The Wire magazine to....and they will have a listen and then have a big party, essentially, later on for all the people that completed the assignment.  But, listening to the recordings that you did for the RPM Challenge and then listening to you perform with your full band today - the same material but sort of the....the sound, I would say, in some respects is dramatically different....


JM:  Oh, yeah.  I would have to agree.


SI:  ....as far as, just talking about, too, how sparse some of your other material was and  minimalistic.  When you listen to your band perform today - much more, you know, ambient sounding at times and, sort of, airy and atmospheric from a lot of your other members.  Was that a decision that you wanted to make when you brought these other guys in or was that something that they contributed when they came in [inaudible]?


JM:  I guess that, I mean, I had gotta kind of bored playing by myself.  It limits what you can do sometimes, you know.  Having another set of hands and another musical brain involved allows you to do other things.  I feel....for me, personally, like, when I go see music I generally....there....it’s not always the case, but I generally prefer to see a band than a solo performer.  It might just be because there are a lot of solo performers that I am underwhelmed by [laughs], but there are a lot of bands like that, too, unfortunately.  


SI:  [laughs]


JM:  But my....yeah, i guess I was imagining other things that I wanted to do and it, in my mind, I felt like I needed to have a band and I had been talking to a few of these guys, you know, sort of speculatively for a while about working together and I played a few shows with Mike Effenberger.


SI:  Who is your keyboard player.


JM:  Yep.  Who I had sort of known for a long time and I’ve known most of those guys since high school or shortly after.  And we’d played a couple shows together and I really liked what he brought to it.  He’s pretty phenomenal; sort of a Seacoast music legend [laughs] even though he’s only been around here for a few years I think.  But he....I really liked what he brought to the table in terms of the atmosphere and things like that and then I thought, ‘Hey, let’s try some....to try to bring a few other people in’, you know.  I wanted drums because I didn’t....that was the one thing on that recording that I had made that I had felt was missing and I wanted because I had no way of....I didn’t have a drumset and I had no way of recording drums so I asked Jim Rudolf, who I’ve known....I....we played together in a jazz group in high school actually.  I was like seventeen or eighteen.  And I’ve always loved his drumming and he’s just a great guy in general so then I figured it would be cool to have him involved.  So then Mike Filitis, who I had worked with already and who I....we have always had a a very good repoir in terms of, like, our....like, our aesthetic taste tends to be similar and, you know, we tend to work very well together working on material.  And then Nick and Chris, as well, I have known for a while and liked, you know....mostly just liked the way all those guys play as a....played and I figured we’d try it out to see what would happen.  Things have kind of developed from there.


SI:  Yeah.


JM:  Long story short. [laughs]


SI:  Right, yeah.  Well, and they are....I mean, individually, it is obvious that they’re, in their our right, talented instrumentalists.


JM:  Oh, yeah.


SI:  And what I understand is most of them are involved in other projects, too, aside from the Tan Vampires.


JM:  Yeah.


SI:  And, but what you mentioned, which is kind of interesting is that your musical background isn’t solely based in rock music.  


JM:  Oh, yeah.


SI:  So, prior to even playing guitar you were involved in, sort of....were you studying music in college at one point?


JM:  I did for a couple years.  I was a jazz performance major on the saxophone and then when the reality of what that meant kicked in, I think I panicked a little bit, realized it wasn’t really what I wanted to do.  I mean, just not....I didn’t see it providing me the opportunities to do what I wanted to do, personally, with music.  I think I had....that was around the time that I started to play guitar and try to write songs and I felt a lot more affinity from doing that, you know....just....I don’t know.  It’s kind of cooler in a certain way, I guess.  [laughter] I don’t know.  Maybe that was all that it was, but.  But, I don’t know, yeah, it just felt, it just felt more natural to me.


SI:  Yeah, but interesting you actually met some of the people you play rock and roll music with today....


JM:  Oh, yeah.


SI:  ....you know, in more formal training.


JM:  Yeah, pretty much, that’s how I know all of them except Mike Filitis, who is a high school friend of mine, you know.  We also were, you know, you know, involved in various bands and things together, but less structured sorts of things previously, or, at least, like, you know, we were in bands with friends and then, like, I was in a band with some people that Mike was in a band with at another point; things like that.  And then we met up again a year....like a few years later to do Data.  You know, that kind of worked out well, but the other guys I’ve known more through the formal background for, like, the school oriented music stuff and....but just stuff that did....  We all, except for Chris Klaxton, went to school in Manchester [New Hampshire].  Mike and I went to Manchester Central and Jim Rudolf, Mike Effenberger, Nick Phaneuf all went to West High School in Manchester, and Chris went to Pinkerton, I think.  I could have been, Timberlane.  Sorry. [chuckle]  Timberlane it is.  But we were all in various music things together with....on and off.


SI:  Well, I mean, it has worked out well.  It was just this year that you were awarded the  Seacoast Spotlight Award for - I’m not sure if I’ll have the right term right - was it best alternative band?


JM:  Yeah, yeah.  Something like that.


SI:  Well, congratulations on that.


JM:  Thanks.  Yeah, yeah.  It was pretty nice to get that.  I was pretty surprised with that....it turned out like that.  [chuckle]  I wasn’t really expecting to win.


SI:  Now do you have any interest in....you know, I mean, that may have been an unexpected award, but clearly you’re getting a lot of recognition in the area and your do perform very regularly in the area, including a residency at the Barley Pub in Dover.  Do you have any interest, ambitions in performing outside of this region and to, sort of, maybe touring at all in this country?


JM:  Yeah.  I mean, I think we all want to do that.  We’re....We’ve been trying to work on recording something that rep....like, captures what we sound like as a band more than the recording that I have that I just recorded by myself.  And...  It’s been a little hard to schedule things to have everybody in the same place at one time.  You know, six guys who all have a lot of different projects going on, a lot of.....you know, personal lives, things like that.  [inaudible]  And I’m pretty bad at logistical sorts of things like scheduling and organizing and that sort of thing, so.  I’m hoping that we can get some sort of recording done in the next couple months and then once we have that I think it will allow us to get out of the area a lot more because, you know, a lot of venues and things like that they won’t just take your reputation, they want to hear what you sound like.  Even if....even if we have friends in bands who say, ‘oh, we want this band to play with us’....


SI:  They need the cold, hard proof.


JM:  Yeah, won’t take your word for it. 


SI:  Sure, sure.  I just wanted to ask you a little bit about, sort of, some of the lyrical content that you write.  Not to pigeonhole or....because I haven’t actually heard, like, the entire, your entire catalogue but much of what you write seems to be about love and longing and even nostalgia in some ways.


JM:  Yeah.


SI:  Oftentimes, heavy subject matters to some degree.  Is....are these topics that you sort of go out of your way to write about or are they, sort of most comfortable, come to you most easily?


JM:  It’s funny.  I like that you said the nostalgia thing actually ‘cause I’ve never had anybody pick that, say that and I feel like....I’ve always felt like that was an aspect of it.  But I guess when I sit down to write a song I tend to....my approach tends to be pretty exploratory, you know.  I don’t......  And I don’t generally have, like, an idea about what I want to say or anything like that.  And I’m not one of those people who, like, has a statement I wanna make and, like, writes a song about that.  And for some reason it always seems to come out with that sort of thing, you know, whether it be, like, you know, a relationship type things or, I don’t know, I guess heavier kind of stuff but....  But I never really intend for it to be that way and it’s funny because sometimes I get frustrated with myself for writing stuff like that all the time because I feel like it....a lot of it can, you know....it kind of borders on the morose sometimes and I don’t feel like a morose person at all.  I think I’m pretty lighthearted and pretty even keeled most of the time and....  And, I don’t know, maybe that’s just, like, the way that I let go of that sort of thing, you know.  I mean, that’s how....just how I look to even express those things.  But it’s always fun for me when people assume that the things that I’m singing about are, like, personal things that I’ve, like, been through or, like, based on personal experiences because they’re generally not.  You know, I....  My perspective made to some of the, like....if, like, insights I may have had and had on the songs may be based on my personal experience, like, you know, to an extent, but I generally try to avoid writing very personal songs and they seem to come off that way, though, you know.  There are certainly, probably details in some of them that are based on personal experiences that I’ve had.  I would think that’s probably unavoidable.  But, yeah, for the most part, i guess, I’m just trying to write stories or something along those lines.  


SI:  Sure, sure.  Well, Jake I appreciate you taking the time to meet with me today.  It’s been a pleasure, informative and I wish you and the Tan Vampires the best of luck.


JM:  Thanks, man.  


SI:  Thanks a lot. 




Jake Merhmann (7_30_09).aif -

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Monday, July 27, 2009

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