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Psychedelia sans psychedelics: Chicago's CAVE
I thought I'd follow up my San Francisco c. 2003 scene report with something much closer to home, though I offer this local roundup with the significant caveat that I don't go to a whole lot of shows and hardly listen to new records--my scope here is necessarily limited. Still, I'm not sure I'm alone in finding the whole underground scene here in Chicago a bit lackluster lately--last summer's infamous final show at the Mopery seemed to close out a particular chapter, and I'm not sure a new narrative has yet taken shape.

The Chicago underground c. mid-2011 is still seemingly awash in 'psychedelia', which wouldn't bother me in and of itself, if only there weren't a continued dearth of actual psychedelics in the city. Maybe I just don't run in hip-enough echelons, but I haven't seen or heard of any 'cid going around for at least a calendar year; psilocybes pop up only sporadically (pun intended) and fleetingly, and even the general quality of grass leaves a lot to be desired. Not to say that the music doesn't have its own merits, but the stretched-out Krautrocking of bands like Cave and Ga'an could really use some corollary chemical enhancement. Just sayin'--when your band releases albums with names like Psychic Psummer and pulsating, day-glo cover art, you're kind of making an unspoken promise that there will be good drugs available in the vicinity of your act.

Psychic Psummer was way back in 2009--I'm not seeing a whole lot of forward-motion, Chicago bandwise, since then; in fact, the tripped-out bongwater-treading has only become more egregious. I'll admit that I haven't heard a lot of this stuff, but a sampling of band names culled from the show calendar over at Acid Marshmallow (see what I mean?) is demonstrative: Dark Fog, Red Plastic Buddha, Nude Sunrise--it reads like a shopping list from post-peak Haight-Ashbury. One wonders what Steve Krakow (aka Plastic Crimewave/Psychedelic Steve),Chicago's banner-carrier for hallucinogenic music back when it was not very hip, makes of all this weak-dose noodling that masquerades these days as 'psychedelic'--perhaps he could remind the kids that the word's literal meaning (derived from the Greek) is SOUL-MANIFESTING,and it's not something that can be bought from Guitar Center. Anyway, it's not quite as stultifying as the noise/drone snoozefest that reared its head in the late 00s, but clearly the whole neo-psych thing has run its course, if it ever had one to begin with. Unless you're going to dose me up good and heavy before the show, I'm calling a moratorium on droney jams and one-chord freakouts, 'K?

There are, to be fair, a few bands taking the drug sound to new and interesting places. The great Mayor Daley, for instance, who have a long history of pothead bassists (I was one of them, c. 2006), have been gradually creeping toward a stoner-metal approach, their charred, resinous compositions regularly exceeding the 10-minute mark; the songs, however, are rigorously crafted, the product of much sober, industrious rehearsal, propelled by Paul Erschen's painterly drumming and Kelly Carr's nuclear-siren wails. Their comrades in Cacaw, meanwhile, still play with building-burning fury, with ex-Coughs Carrie Vinarsky and Anya Davidson vying for the city's most alarming vocals. It's been consistently fascinating, in fact, to watch various ex-Coughs forge their own musical paths since that band broke up in 2006--saxophonist/noisenik Jail Flanagan virtually inventing a genre with the flailing, operatic Forced Into Femininity; former drummer Jon Ziemba applying a soulful falsetto to the minimalist R&B of Bomb Banks; percussionist Seth Sherchanneling Italo-prog with the aforementioned Ga'an.

And while it's great that these veteran weirdos continue to make gutsy, challenging music, I keep waiting for a new generation of upstart freaks to come charging out of the city's basements with a whole 'nuther program. Aren't kids dropping out of the Art Institute any more--a grand Chicago tradition--to pursue reckless noisemaking? Or maybe there is a whole new crop of interesting bands and I just don't know about them cuz I'm not on facebook or whatever? Of course, I could mention some great shit coming out on Chicago's own Moniker Records, but that would be a touch incestuous and not at all in keeping with my stringent standards as a totally professional music writer...

 


Comments

mmmm
04/22/2011 23:27

Running, Weirdo Free Jazz dudes, Chicago Hardcore scene (Raw Nerve, Disrobe, Sea of Shit, tons more). Is Alex Barnett included on the noise shit list too?

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bocat
04/23/2011 16:02

Wow. Getting good with the hood.

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04/23/2011 22:43

I know what you mean. Your research is pretty damn shitty, but I do agree, and hope that musicians take this as a challenge, and not a threat. It's not just Chicago, it's worldwide - "psychedelic" is taken as a genre name , not something that requires any personal or musical experience. I don't think it's about the availability of drugs - most of us need a drug-induced psychedelic experience to reach the astral plane, but I firmly believe that some can reach it without doing taking any substances. (Look at Southern California, where people have great access to drugs and an environment that welcomes Psychedelia - have you heard any great bands from there lately?) Good music will rise again, and beyond the excellent bands you have mentioned, it does exist in small pockets - musicians just need to work harder. Too many hobbyists, not enough musicians.

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Essalyie
05/11/2011 13:14

hmm, I don't think drugs are a necessity to the enjoying of psychedelic music.almost none of the great Japanese psych gods of past and present take part
(no drugs to be had in japan in the 60's and 70's) and these gyus suceed nonetheless in bring themselves and listeners to a higher level with their music alone! In my mind that is a much truer test of successful psychedelia or any style of music really.

I think there are some good points In your article but you fail to mention some great underground Chicago bands that I enjoy, though there no doubt a lot that I, too, am missing:
el is the sound of joy, bitchin bahas, tiger hatchery, sadhu sadhu, I love you, zath.... None of these bands are straight up psych acts at all and I'd be hard pressed to find a band that is (except maybe Krakow's band and dark fog?) Most others draw inspiration from many different places.

So Maybe it's the just the word "psychedelic" that we
should phase out, it's used so frequenly and so carelessly. by sloppily throwing experimenting bands into that category (or them throwing themselves into the myre) I think it changes ones expectations and thus our listening experience.

Just Do your thing Chicago, whatever it's called, or don't call it anything! You are still one of the best scenes out there.
All great players and very transcedenal acts, drugs or no.

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Essalyie
05/11/2011 13:18

excuse the typos, got sent off before I could proof! ;)

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jealousy
05/16/2011 03:05

you talk more than you think and it doesn't add up

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