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CHARLES DOUGLAS |

CHARLES DOUGLAS |

CHARLES DOUGLAS |

SATANICIDE |

DAYTONA |

LUNA |
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Charles Douglas
Enabler/ No. 6 Records
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Review:
Who is Charles Douglas?
How is it possible that he is not adored by legions of fans?
These are questions you will undoubtedly ask yourself three songs into this knockout disc.
Charles Douglas puts the fun back in rock, sounding like a kid brother of Lou Reed's who's
more interested in having a real good time than taking a walk on the wild side.
Instrumentally, THE LIVES OF CHARLES DOUGLAS builds from a solid core of drums, bass, and
guitar. Keyboards and horns help color the sound and create some memorable hooks that jump
from the speakers and practically demand that you sing along. This disc also features
the drum work of Moe Tucker, who sounds just as cool as she did thirty years earlier. After
just a few listens to THE LIVES OF CHARLES DOUGLAS, you might very well wind up smiling
in the same way that the artist himself is one the album's cover.
-- Nick Berry, Muze.com (September, 1999)
File Under: Sons of Lou Reed Recommended if you
like: Velvet Underground, The Modern Lovers, Beat Happening In 1976,
John Cale produced the debut from Jonathan Richman's Modern Lovers,
one of the earliest, and best, of Lou Reed's acolytes. Now, Cale's
V.U. bandmate Moe Tucker has her chance with a new disciple. Tucker
produces Charles Douglas's solo debut, The Lives of Charles Douglas,
and Douglas, who under the name Alex McAulay led Vegetarian Meat,
doesn't hide his debts to Uncle Lou. His self deprecating tales of
rejection--by girlfriends, by society, of self--and his flat, talky
intonation recall early Reed's short, riffy songs, and they're
energetic with an edge of spiky urban alienation and Jonathan
Richman- like wide-eyed wonder. Best of all, Douglas enlisted
stellar musicians. Anchored by Tucker's tom tom-heavy drums, the
band features a tag team of inventive guitarists having a great time
slumming with steady, straight rock and roll: Ultra Vivid Scene's
Kurt Ralske, St. Johnny/Grand Mal's Bill Whitten, Vegetarian Meat's
Manish Kalvakota, and Douglas himself. "I know I'm crazy, I know I'm
stupid, I know I'm never gonna make it," Douglas sings in "Earlybird
School." True, perhaps, but with songs as edgy and catchy as
"Summertime" and "Baby Come On," Douglas has at least made a fun
album of minimalist rock 'n' roll. -- Steve Klinge, =====
E-MAIL INTERVIEW (September, 1999)
Q:
I think "The Lives of
Charles Douglas" is a very fine album. Summertime is a blast of an opener and
what with you sounding so much like Lou Reed on that one, and Moe Tucker
producing, people are going to mention the Velvet Underground. What did the VU
mean to you? Do you have some favorite VU or Lou Reed songs?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
The VU are
my favorite all time band! I remember when I was fifteen or sixteen I got a copy
of the "Velvet Underground and Nico" album and thought it was the best record
ever. It's still my favorite VU album, though my favorite VU song is
probably "White Light/White Heat" because it sounds so deranged. I also like "Run
Run Run" and "Sunday Morning" a lot. I'm also a big fan of Lou's solo work (well,
most of it). I really love that song "NYC Man" off "Set the Twilight Reeling"
along with all of Transformer, of course. My big wish is that I could have seen
the VU live in the late sixties. Wouldn't that have been awesome, with the light
show and Warhol and everything? I must have listened to the VU records about ten
thousand times and I never get tired of them.
Q:
I'm curious to understand how
Moe Tucker signed on to produce your album. What was she like in the studio?
Does she still work checkout in Atlanta, GA? Last I wrote about her, that's what
people said.
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
I was always a big fan of Moe and her unique drumming (as
well as her solo record "Life in Exile After Abdication" which is a really great
record). I saw her address in a magazine in 1995 (I think it was The Bigtakeover)
and wrote her a letter and sent her a copy of my first band's record (Vegetarian
Meat's "Let's Pet" CD). To my surprise, she wrote back and we spent several years
just sending letters and records back and forth. Eventually when it came time for
me to make the Charles Douglas album, Moe agreed to produce it and play drums. I
don't think Moe has to work a crappy job anymore. I know she's been doing some
other production work as well as continuing to release solo records. She is one
of the nicest people I've met in the music world--she is so friendly and down to
earth. Working with her on the record was the most fun I've probably had in the
last five years. I hope I get to work with her more in the future. Her drumming
is so different from everything else out there--it really helped make the songs
sound good.
Q:
What's quite interesting about the record (apart from the great
songs, more about them later) is the "quite famous" people who work on it. How
did Kurt Ralske, Bill Whitten, Claudia Silver get involved? Did you have to pay
'em a lot of money?!?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
Well, Kurt got involved because we decided to
record the album at his nifty NYC studio called Zabriskie Point. Claudia, who is
actually married to Luna's Dean Wareham, ended up singing because Dean was
hanging out in the studio with us for a while (I'm a big fan of Luna). Bill
Whitten joined up as guitarist because he's done some records for No.6. Hey, have
you heard Bill's Grand Mal record "Maledictions" on London Records? It's a cool
rock and roll record (you'd really like it, I think).
Q:
Does Ralske really play
flugel horn? Totally Wasted sounds fabulous with the horns!
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
Yes! Kurt
is an awesome flugel horn player! His brother is actually in the New York
Symphony or something, so I guess it's a musical family. Kurt is an extremely
talented guy! Like Moe, he is also very friendly and fun to work with. He even
let me stay at his place when I got kicked out of the Gramercy Park Hotel
for causing "problems". His studio is really cool and he has a great collection
of records, including an instructional 7" called "How To take Care of Your New
Pet, Volume 6: The Hamster". I often call Kurt and leave crazy messages on his
machine for no reason, or snippets of new songs. Kurt's band Ultra Vivid Scene is
another of my favorites (esp. his record "Joy" on 4AD) so working with him was
"groovy".
Q:
Tell me about the recording of the album. Did it take very long? Were
there disasters, happy accidents, strange developments? Are there things you
want to change if you had a chance?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
Many strange things happened
(strange things seem to happen everywhere I go) but no real disasters. We did
the record in two 5-day sessions in the summer, with a couple weeks in between
for us to go back home and hang out. I'm really happy with how the record came
out. I was kind of nervous about playing with someone as awesome as Moe, but I
think it ended up working out really well. You know, Moe also played some
cool keyboard parts (the spacey keyboard thing on "Bad Man" is her). Oh, and I
got kicked out of the Gramercy Park Hotel for acting crazy and taunting another
band (a humorless British band on Arista Records, I don't want to even say their
name) that was staying there. I also set the fire alarm in my room off (twice in
one night). Then there was the bar, where every night me and guitarist Manish and
No.6 label manager Bobby would sit drinking and drinking and drinking and yelling
and acting crazy.
Q:
Your songs pack a dollop of wry humor. Would you ever
describe yourself as a humorous kinda guy?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
My sense of humor is very
different from most people's. People probably just think I'm weird (which I am,
but...) Manish and I found a horrible "Mexican Murder Magazine" thing and we
showed people all these pictures of corpses in it and everyone got
frightened.
Q:
Who is Ganapathee? She sounds like a Hindu goddess to me.
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
Yay! You're right! Ganapathee is a Hindu God, of good luck, among other things.
Ganapathee is also known as Lord Ganesh. Ganapathee has the head of an elephant,
but the body of a human (Ganapathee's head was cut off by an angry Lord Shiva, I
think). I spent some time in an ashram in the Pocono Mountains trying to become
sane (it didn't really work) and I learned about Ganesh there.
Q:
Which song was
the hardest to write on the album?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
The hardest to write was actually
"Baby Come On." I couldn't think up lyrics to it. I remember writing down a bunch
of words in my hotel room about an hour before we went to the studio to record
it. I think some of it I just ended up babbling on the spur of the moment and it
ended up on the record. The hardest song to sing was "earlybird school" because i
kept getting the verses mixed up.
Q:
What did you study at Brown
University?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
I went to Brown to study pre-med with the eventual goal of
going on to medical school. Guitarist Manish Kalvakota went to Boston University
to study pre-med too. But then Vegetarian Meat started and that was the end of
school and studying for both of us. I also took some film classes when I was at
Brown. In fact, one of the last things I did there was direct a video for a
Vegetarian Meat song (it's a horrible, crappy video but it's funny to see us
running around, out of our minds)
Q:
I'm sorry I missed Vegetarian Meat totally.
Who was the only person in Vegetarian Meat? How many records did VM
make?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
Vegetarian Meat was me and Manish Kalvakota. We made two seven
inch singles for No.6 Records along with a full length CD for No.6 called "Let's
Pet" (produced by Wharton Tiers). We also did some recordings with Kramer that
were never released. We used a drum machine, so it sounded really low-fi and
crazy. We went on a disasterous tour in 1995, as well as playing a bunch of shows
in NYC between 1993 and 1996.
Q:
Your press bio mentions you had a nervous
breakdown. If you'd rather not talk about this, I understand, but what really
happened? Hope you're well now.
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
I'm doing okay. On the sanity-meter I
am no longer in Syd Barrett/Skip Spence territory. Having mental problems is
really hard. All the medications they try to give you don't really work and they
just make you feel crazier. I did demo versions of some of the songs when I was
on all these drugs (The Day You Went Away, which was originally a tribute to
slain rapper Biggie Smalls) and they sound absolutely insane. I also wrote
that song "Ganapathee" when I was in a pretty crazy state.
Q:
Are your touring at
the moment?
CHARLES DOUGLAS:
No, although I have been playing acoustic shows
around Chapel Hill. I played one a few months ago that was really fun where I
wore a Burger King crown and made the crowd sing along to all the songs. Because
the band is scattered right now (me in Chapel Hill, Moe in GA, others in NYC) we
haven't really been playing much.
>I am really glad I heard your album cos I
think it's been a long while >since I heard a bunch of unpretentious solid songs
that rock and make me >smile! Thanks for the time, Charles. >--Chung
THANK YOU! I'm so glad
you liked the record! Definitely keep in touch & I'll send you
that Veg. Meat record soon! Take care, Charles
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