A.C. COTTON
This interview is with Alan Charing who has a new album out with his new
band, A.C. Cotton.
|
TR: What's your south?
a place where i can disappear when i'm done, live on
a farm or in a shack, raise alligators, probably
somewhere in cajun country, louisiana.
TR: Have you been to Nashville? And did you like it?
Yes. and No.
TR: And if not do you plan to go?
we'll be back there
i'm sure. it just seems really touristy and like there
is no real heart to it now... but i don't know; i've
only passed through a few times, short stops. maybe it
was my fault for going to a seafood restaurant in a
city nowhere near any ocean.
TR: Or where do you want to go, where does the root of
your music live?
I do feel like it comes from being
out here in Portland. I moved from boston and did take
some stuff with me, a lot of influences from there,
but i do FEEL like my music is in the west. Not
western, but of the west, like kerouac said, the east
of my youth and the west of my future. I WANT to go
everywhere i can.
TR: Do you feel there is a resurgence of Rock and Roll
in the indie world, music that's getting away from the drone and shoegazine,
fist airing, of hip-hard-rap like Limp Bizkit?
In the indie world,
yes. in mainstream, no. I think the term "indie" now
is even too limiting. i don't feel that straight rock
and roll like ours even fits into what most would
consider an indie sound, but we like it, and we are
certainly independent. but that old style of rock and
roll doesn't seem as easily accessible besides maybe a
band like the black crowes. if people had more
exposure to it in a mainstream way, i bet they would
dig it too. everything is trying to fit into something
now, and thats a sure way to be unoriginal and
unartistic. you just do whatever feels good and people
will get it or they won't. doesn't matter if it sells
TR: Which end of the spectrum do you like better;
Rolling Stones or XTC?
stones.
TR: If you were to make a family tree for your band what
bands are your parents and ancestors?
bob dylan-godfather
the band-mom
the stones-dad
tom petty and bruce springsteen are uncles
kurt is a dead grandfather
roger waters and leonard cohen are eccentric
cousins
and the black crowes and crazy horse are brothers
the beatles are like great great grandparents who
won't talk to us.
TR: What's your favorite guitar, and what guitar do you
play the most often?
i have a '74 les paul which has been pretty good to
me. also a music man. and a tele. that family is
pretty sturdy. i had a gretsch country gentleman, but
the way i play, it was impossible to keep in tune.
when i am home, or writing songs, i use a beautiful
hollow body vox that i bought from a friend of mine it
isn't good for live shows either, going out of tune,
but it is all i play at home or writing. i guess
that's my favorite in many ways.
TR: How often do you tour? Nationally or locally?
we try
to get out of town now once a month, even if its down
to california and back for a weekend, just to keep at
it. we did a month of touring last summer to the east
coast and through the south, and plan to do that again
at the end of this summer, hit the festivals and see
as much of the country as we can.
TR: What recommendations would you make to other bands
on music as a career choice?
1. you better love it, and really want to do
it. don't just take up space just for kicks.
2.its
great if you don't want to make any money for a long
time
TR: Do you have a day job and what is it?
freelance waiter
TR: What does it take to have a hit song?
don't try for
it. just write what you want. if you are a good
songwriter, hopefully you will get the recognition,
and even then probably not. but i'll let you know when
it happens
TR: What is your definition of success?
to be able to
feel good about what i am doing. not necessarily happy
all the time, but proud. knowing there's nothing else
i can do. to be able to keep myself alive doing what I
love, and keep going in a positive direction. a lot
of people say success is happiness, but i know a lot
of people who are successful and unhappy. or vice
versa.
TR: Would you sell your songs to a pop-star if they wanted to record them?
no. not really. not yet. they are a part of me; it
would be weird to hear it from someone else, and i
probably wouldn't like it. it wouldn't sit well. my
ego wouldn't stand for it
TR: Would you be happy being a one hit wonder?
no, but i
would take the money if it came
TR: What bands should we be listening to?
a.c. cotton,
all the old bands i mentioned before. sonic youth,
frank black, a lot of jazz, bob dylan bob dylan bob
dylan
TR: What bands of the 90's didn't get the attention they
deserved?
american music club, tree, poster
children, freewheelers, elephant sandwich. or maybe
they really did and i just don't know it. bosstones
took a long time to really hit too.
TR: Do you find redemption in your songs?
hell yes. i better.
Learn more about Alan Charing and A.C. Cotton at the website http://www.accotton.com
|
|
|
|