by Joe Gore.
Taken from Guitar Player, August 1991
Primus plays rock the way Dr. Seuss intended. In their crazy backwards world, progressive metal beds down with art-funk, instrumental flash tangos cheek-to-cheek with self-mocking humor, and ever-expanding audiences hail their favorite group with the fervent cry "Primus Sucks!"
Frontman Les Claypool is a headbanger's Cat In The Hat, a bemused master of ceremonies overseeing the band's ecstatic performances with goofy grin, rubbery body, and stupefying virtuosity. He plucks, strums, taps, and slaps a seemingly endless torrent of piledriver riffs while delivering his quirky songs in a Saturday-morning cartoon speed rap. And how many other rockers address their audience as "boys and girls"?
Together with metal-hippie guitarist Larry "Ler" LaLonde and hyperkinetic thunder drummer Tim "Herb" Alexander, Claypool has concocted a heavy but hilarious sound that he calls "progressive freak-out music," but which one critic describes as "thrash-funk meets Don Knotts, Jr." Either way, it's a ferocious but funny mix, the musical equivalent of a Hell's Angels wearing a "Kick Me" sign.
Primus can mock their cake and eat it too. The most successful group to emerge from the San Francisco Bay Area's much-bal-lyhooed "thrash-funk" scene, they've toured with Jane's Addiction, Living Color, and Faith No More, developing a huge following on their West Coast home turf, and play themselves in the soon-to-be-released sequel to Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure. Despite shoestring budgets, their first two albums, Suck On This and Frizzle Fry [Caroline], captured the intensity and spontanneity of Primus' live shows and became alternative radio hits. And now that Primus has hooked up with a major label and produced their best record yet, their smirk ethic may finally pay off big.
Sailing The Seas Of Cheese [on Interscope, a new Warner Bros. affiliate] tops the heaviness, funkiness, and just plain weirdness of previous Primus releases. The sel-produced album is tough and spare, the uncluttered textures highlighting the players' left-of-center stylings without undermining the trio's remarkable interplay. LaLLonde, a former student of Joe Satriani, ventures from cleaned-toned, exotic-scale leads to white-noise wipeouts. His solos weave like drunks, bumping into harmonic walls but never falling face-first. And Les' bass playing is pure guitar hero stuff; his 6-string fretless work behing Tom Waits' cameo vocal on "Tommy The Cat" suggests new possibilities for funk-metal cross-pollination.
Claypool's solos and bass-generated songs never take on the
monkey-with-a-parasol quaintness that so often marks over-stated rock bass
excursions. Busy but groovy, his parts often imply simultaneous bass and
thythm guitar lines. "ever since Primus started," says Les, "I wanted to hit
low notes with my thumb while playing rythm parts with my fingers. I had
seen Stanley Clarke play chords before, so I knew it could be done. The
technique is a lot like what they call 'clawhammer style' on banjo. 'Tommy
The Cat' is a good example of that, and so is 'To Defy The Laws Of
Tradition,' from Frizzle Fry. 'Pudding Time' [Frizzle Fry] and 'Those Damn
Blue Collar Tweekers'
The dense bass and drum parts lock down the groove and tonality, freeing
LaLonde to take harmonic liberties rarely afforded rock players in trio
contexts. Many of his lines are based on jagged altered scales, and
sometimes he just plays "out" with no concern for key. "I studied with
Sattriani for four years," relates Larry. "We went through all the modes in
every key and worked on theory and reading. But once in a while we'd try to
come up with weird things, just making noise. Joe would say, 'Always
remember that the wrong note is sometimes the right note.' But I think i've
used that more often than he would have liked!"
Despite his training, Larry sees his playing in decidedly anti-intellectual
terms: "A lot of times I just don't want to think about being in any key or
anything-you know, blatant disregard for theory. My solo on 'Jerry Was A
Race Car Driver' starts out as a symmetrical idea-a half-step/whole-step
diminished scale-but after that, I don't know what it does. It's just
reckless abandon."
LaLonde, 22, and Claypool, 27 hooked up a few years ago while playing
together in Blind Illusion, a San Francisco progressive-metal band with whom
Les has worked on and off for many years. Before that, Larry had played with
Possessed, a notorious death-metal band. "Ler hates talking about
Possessed," chuckles Claypool. "Once I was watching Geraldo, who was doing a
show on 'devil worship music' and interviewing some kid who had murdered
another kid. Geraldo said, 'Let me read some lyrics,' then he held up a
Possessed record with ol' Ler's picture on it!"
"It was my first band - I was only 16," mutters a sheepish LaLonde. "We did
two albums and an EP on Combat - I don't remember what they were called,
some satanic stuff. It was all shock value. None of us knew anything about
any kind of religion. We were just drunken El Sobrante kids trying to be
heavy. I finally quit Possessed because there was nothing there I wanted to
do. Blind Illusion wanted to do something totally crazy, and I was up for
that."
Blind Illusion was actually Les' very first band. He bought his first
instrument, a Memphis Precision Bass ccopy, so he could join up 13 years
ago. "I pulled weeds to pay for it," recalls Claypool,"and I eventually sold
it to a guy who hacked it into the shape of an albatross. Anyway, in high
school I had always wanted to play something. [Metallica's] Kirk Hammett was
in my algebra class. He was just buying his first Strat and starting a band.
I used to come to class singing Aerosmith and Rush tunes, so he said, 'Come
audition for my band as the singer.' I never did, but I met the guys in
Blind Illusion and played with them untill I learned about guys like Larry
Graham, Stanley Clarke, and Louis Johnson and became a fusion snob.
"In those days, there was a complete division between funk and metal. If I
slapped at all, everybody would say, 'Hey - it's Disco Les!'" Before forming
Primus, Les did hard time in the Tommy Crank Band, an R&B cover unit. "We
played Booker T. & the MGs, Wilson Pickett, Teddy Pendergrass," he
remembers. "It was four sets a night, up to five nights a week - that's how
I learned discipline and how to actually groove. We did some cheesy stuff,
but we had great players, guys who played with Tower Of Power and Sheila E."
Primus debuted in '84 with an artier, less metallic version of their current
sound. Four years later, after guitarist Todd Huth quit to raise a family
and Les' audition to replace the late Cliff Burton in Metallica didn't pan
out, Claypool snatched Larry from the dormant Blind Illusion. (LaLonde,
incidentally, replicates Huth's parts for the older Primus material.) Suck
On This, recorded after the new lineup had been together for about a month,
became a regional hit and sent ripples through the national college radio
scene. Last year's Frizzle Fry made a bigger splash and coincided with the
full-blown emergence of the San Francisco thrash-funk scene, a loose network
of bands fusing hard rock and dance elements. "The Red Hot Chili Peppers and
Fishbone were the first ones to really pop out with a crossover between rock
and funk, or just aggressive funk," notes Les. "They really opened the door
for us."
But in many respects, Primus stand apart from their supposed compatriots.
They bypass the willfully obnoxious stage manner and misogynistic lyrics
favored by other bands on the scene. (Claypool may dwell on oddball topics
like fishing and breakfast cereals, but his goofy imagery doesn't demean the
thoughtful content of his songs.) And despite Les' slap-happy chops and the
sudden marketability of metal-edged dance grooves, Claypool chafes at the
"thrash-funk" label.
"The term pretty much makes my lips curl," he states. "Still, it's more
accurate than calling us a funk band, since i'm the only one in the group
with any sort of funk background. Actually, I think the term 'funk' is being
bastardized; people just hear a slap bass and assume it's funk. To me, funk
is Tower Of Power, P-Funk, the Average White Band. But hey, when I was a
kid, heavy metal meant something completely different thanwhat it means now.
Maybe i'm just an old fart.
"we're a mishmash. I mean, look at our CD collection: There's Jelly Roll
Morton, King Crimson, Tom Waits, Bob Dylan, Laurie Anderson, Frank Zappa,
Peter Gabriel, Motorhead, the Afros. It's pretty varied, and so are we."
Les Claypool's Basses Aren't Standard Funk Machines. "I've played a Carl
Thompson piccolo bass for yearsm" he notes. "It's like one Stanley Clarke
used, but tuned to tuned to standard pitch. It has 29 frets, a 32" scale,
and a Kahler whammy bar. I bough another Thompson from a friend a year ago,
and then Carl getting calls from people who saw his bass in our video. We
finally got in touch. He's an amazing human being, a really weird guy who
likes the fact that i'm werid too. He works out of his apartment and doesn't
build too many basses anymore, but said he wnated to make me the best bass
of his life. He assembled this amazing 6-string fretless out of pieces of
rare wood - purple heart, padouk, maple, walnut - all laminated together,
butcher-block style. He calls it the Rainbow Bass, and the serial number is
his date of birth. It's a 36" scale, and he made everything except the
machine heads and electronics. He got seriously ill while hewas building it
- he says it almost killed him.
"While he was working on it, I used a Japanese Tune fretless. I'd played all
the 6-strings, and this Tune sounded and felt the best - and at half the
price of a Warwick. When I first ripped the frets out, it freaked me out - I
could hardly play it, because you really have to be on it to make a fretless
sound good with chords. It was a whole new ball game, but by the time I got
the Carl Thompson fretless, I could actually play it. Maybe it was the
Wheaties.
"I also have an Italian hollowbody. When Eko went under, Fat Dog at Subway
Guitars in Berkeley bought their entire stock. It's newly assembled, but all
the parts are from 1965. I'd always wanted a Hofner, but the Eko blows the
Hofner away. I used it on 'Toys Go Winding Down' [Frizzle Fry]. My upright
is an old '30s Kay I bought from a retired school teacher for $300. Now it's
autographed by Screamin' Jay Hawkins and Tom Waits, so it's priceless." Les
pumps the electrics through an ADA MP-1 preamp, an SWR SM-400 head, and a
couple of MESA/Boogie 2x15 cabinets.
Larry LaLonde has long relied on the same Floyd Rose-equipped Fender
Stratocaster, but he reccently acquired a new instrument from the Ibanez
custom shop. "It's based on their basic Strat shape," he explains, "but I
had them bevel the outer edge a little. It has a humbucker in the bridge and
two single-coils. Ampo-wise, it's Marshalls forever - I have two JCM800s, 50
watts each. I use an ADA MP-1 ao I can switch programs, not so much for the
actual sound. I also use a Yamaha SPX-900 [digital processor], mostly for
harmonizing and making crazy noises. I used it on 'Those Damned Blue Collar
Tweekers' for this sound that Tom Waits really likes: I Play the chord B
flat, C sharp, and A on the top three strings at the 14th fret, going
through a wah with the harmonizer adding some notes that shouldn't go
together, something like seconds and tritones above. I'm getting more into
foot pedals too - I've got a Boss digital delay, and I used thgis great old
Electro-Harmonix Doctor Q envelope follower on the album."
Wood For Weirdos
The Cheesy Primus Page ||
Ram Samudrala ||
me@ram.org