
Sixteen
Deluxe: Squeezing Out Sparks
An
interview with Carrie Clark
By Gail
Worley
As critics rush to
categorize every subtle nuance of the modern rock
genre, the label most often applied to Austin's Sixteen
Deluxe
is that of "Noise Pop." But the
quartet's major label debut for Warner Bros.,
Emits Showers of Sparks, being so heavily
saturated with essences ranging from Mazzy Star,
The Sex Pistols and San Francisco's long-defunct
Pearl Harbor & the Explosions, is deserving
of a category uniquely suited to their hard edged
yet ethereal sound. Offered here for your
consideration: "Dream Punk."
"Yeeeaaah, I
think it totally works," says the groups' 28
year old lead singer/guitarist, Carrie Clark.
"Just speaking for me, I think that's safe
to say. We are real influenced by everything from
Mazzy Star and My Bloody Valentine, Spacemen
Three and Spiritualized, Blondie, Pink Floyd and
the Ramones. We've got such a total wide range of
music [taste] that - I hate to say it - between
the four of us (her band mates are guitarist
Chris "Frenchy" Smith, bassist Jeff
Copas and drummer Steven Hall) we like
everything. I'm generally the most Indie rock of
everybody. I grew up on MTV and [programs like]
the IRS Cutting Edge.
If what you crave
is an overdose of feedback alongside a wall of
fuzz that will vibrate your skull and echo
through every synapse of your brain, you'll find
that in abundance on Emits Showers of Sparks.
Clark's adaptable vocals range from Chrissie
Hynde sass to Hope Sandoval's soporific croon.
"Burning Leaves," a cathartic
heart-tugger finds Clark and Smith collaborating
on a just-slightly-off-key harmony ala Joe Doe
and Xene Cervenka. Similarly, "Mexico
Train" sounds like it would have been at
home on X's Los Angeles. Regarding
"Lullaby," arguably the most narcotic
song on the record, Clark confesses, "I
wrote that song right when I was just learning
how to play guitar, around 1990. I was taking a
lot of acid at the time. So yeah, that song's
psychedelic."
Not to be confused
with the plethora of bands with numbers tagged
onto their names and the bumper crop of
"Deluxe Somethings," Clark defends the
bands name. "We called ourselves the
Sixteens, after the Sweet, that song on
Desolation Blvd. I'm passionate about glam rock,
so we were gonna call ourselves the Sixteens.
Then a friend of ours- way before the rage of all
the "Deluxe" bands- was like "Man,
put Deluxe on the end of your name! It'll look
cool." It was really that simple. I wasn't
thinking that there would be this whole wave of
16 Horsepower and Super Deluxe. We thought we
were being original, gosh darn it, and we
weren't." Not to worry Carrie, there aren't
that many Dream Punk bands floating around out
there right now.
******
How old were
you when you first started playing guitar?
Twenty one
(laughs). I never took guitar lessons. I took
piano lessons and knew how to make bar chords,
but I never said "I'm going to play guitar
in a rock band" until I was 20. Chris is a
really good, really accomplished guitar player.
We just compliment each other on what we do...so
together we're like one big guitar player.
It's nice to
see that the band appreciate the importance of
good visuals to go with the music.
Oh yeah, we're
going out [on tour] with our film guy, who we got
to know through the local scene because he did
films for Ed Hall, a punk rock band from Austin
who were around for over ten years and were real
close friends of ours...that's where we got the
idea from. When we started playing, that was a
rock show. It's not a rock show unless you've got
lights. And they're giving us a budget to take
out a light guy. Corporate rocks rules!
What's the
most surreal thing about getting signed to a
major label?
Oh man, I would
say - this is the fan side in me coming out - the
most surreal thing that happened to me was [when]
we were riding out to California on our last tour
. Our manager called and said "Guys, the
Flaming Lips listening party for Zaireeka is
gonna be happening at Warner Brothers the day
that you're there" - the Flaming Lips are
one of my favorite bands in the universe. There
we are, in Burbank, California with all these
adults around, like the President of the record
company, Steven Baker. We're sitting there,
drinking beers and listening to this very
strange, four CD experimental art coolness. It
seemed more like "Hey, shouldn't this be
happening at someone's house in Austin?" It
was something that we would be doing any way and
people are giving money for us to do this, and
that's a trip. The whole thing of signing to a
major label is surreal, if you look at it that
way. It's not 100% peachy all the time but it's
what we chose to do. It's like a total Johnny
Rotten style scam, to have somebody give me a
load of money so I can sing about the time that I
took ecstasy in San Francisco (laughs). We look
at the full major label thing as "This is
the Rock and Roll Swindle." We've got
everybody fooled. That's totally punk rock!
There is a
definite Sex Pistols influence in your music. I
noticed "No Shock" has an intro similar
to "Bodies."
Actually, we got
accused of sounding like "Dive"
(Nirvana) on that one because of the part that
goes (makes "Nr Nr "guitar sound ).
Nirvana did
not invent grunge rock. Iggy Pop was around years
before Kurt Cobain.
Oh man, I saw Iggy
Pop live at SXSW two years ago. Iggy Pop still
kicks ass. I didn't get into Iggy Pop until I was
in my 20's. I listened to Duran Duran (as a
teenager). I was going to marry John Taylor
(Laughs). Hanging out with Duran Duran, that
would be an ultimate rock moment. That will be
one of my goals for next year.
And you're big
TV fans too.
Yeah, I don't
watch TV except for on tour, but Steven - he
knows everything there is to know about TV.
Classic TV...we watch a lot of Nick at Nite on
the road. Steven's like the kid in Willy Wonka
and the Chocolate Factory, (Mike TeeVee) and
Frenchy's more like the current white trash
Fox/Warner Bros. television...Melrose Place.
Guilty.
But I can't get
into Melrose anymore because all the new
characters are like totally bunk. There's this
high turnover rate of characters. We're hardcore,
old school Spelling fans. The height of 90210
[was] when Dylan was all fucked up and crazy.
When Dylan stopped smoking heroin, it was just
down hill on 90210. We love South Park! Eric
Cartman is my all time hero. I'm totally in love
with Eric, especially that episode where he ate
beef cake all the time and got buff. We got
really fat last tour - none of us exercise and we
love to eat a lot and drink a LOT and we all got
really fat. We saw that episode on tour and we
were like (imitating Cartman's voice) "We're
not getting fat, we're getting buff!"
(laughs).
Why is Chris
called French Fry or Frenchy?
He used to have a
really nasty, nappy, greasy head of dreadlocks,
circa 1990. The place that he was working at was
like 'Boy, you look like you got a set of french
fries on your head.' and they started calling him
French Fry. He adopted that and French Fry just
kind of went into Frenchy. He fancies himself to
be able to speak French when he gets drunk, so
that kind of works as well (laughs).
The more drunk
you get, the better it sounds.
Exactly. Everybody
in the band has a good nick name except for me.
Jeff has the Copus Millions and Steven has AC and
Little Kev. I don't have anything and I'm
disappointed about it. Our sound guy is MC
Bathtub. I'm working on getting a nick name.
What's it like
touring with a bus full of boys?
I don't like
touring, but I like being different places. I
hate travelling, I hate the process. I like
riding though, in a van. And not to sound like a
weirdo, but I'm really happy we've got a female
tour manager for this tour because a lot of times
I'm the only girl. I'm a low maintenance babe,
I'm not super girly, but after a while I get kind
of tired of it. I keep wishing I had another of
my species near me.
I read that
you used to work as an art therapist, is that
something you're still involved in?
I used to be the
art and music teacher at Texas School for the
Blind and Visually Impaired. TSB and Wheatsville
Food Coop, where a lot of us work right now,
those are the two really good places for touring
bands to work because they're real flexible with
letting people go on tour, and you make good
money and have job security when you get back. I
started out just working day to day, daily care
with deaf/blind kids.
Deaf and
blind?
And mentally
challenged. Some of the kids were real hard core.
Actually, a lot of the material [on the previous
CDs] like "Baby Head Rush" and
"Reactive" are directly influenced by
working with TSB kids. I was on the Campus
Improvement Board and I was like, man, these kids
should have more music in their lives. You should
have a music teacher. So I created my own job and
gave myself a pay raise (laughs).
Very good, you
go girl.
By the middle of
the second year, the band was doing so well that
I had to leave the job that I created, but it was
cool. That was a pretty bad-ass moment when [I
realized] man, all these kids need a lot more
music in their lives.
It sounds like
you did a very good thing.
Yeah! There's lots
of kids singing Blondie songs at TSB. Lots and
lots of Flaming Lips and Blondie and ABBA songs
going down (laughs). Some Sixteen Deluxe tunes
too. I've got a good tape somewhere of me and my
crew, there was bunch of adolescent girls -
really crazy, literally, adolescent girls -
singing "Idea" with me. I think we
should bring them in and put them on an album
(laughs). I mean, I dug it. If I wasn't in a
band, I'd probably be doing that kind of thing.
You know, either playing music for mentally
challenged people or playing music with mentally
challenged people (laughs). Which is what I'm
doing anyway. It's just fun and it's easy. Rock
people and "exceptional" people are a
lot easier to deal with than real world office
people. They give you a lot more slack.
E-Mail Gail Worley
Visual
Audio Sensory Theatre
- In this feature,
Gail Worley discusses religion and
revenge fantasies with Jon
Crosby, the aspiring Gothman with
a VAST array
of sounds...
Gail's
monthly column, The
Worley Gig regularly turns in The NY
Hangover.
Back To Your
Regularly Scheduled Pandemonium
Online

![LinkExchange Network]()
