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Chavez:
Happy Days Again
from
Magnet (Jan. 1997)
by
Jason Ferguson
photos by Bob Berg
Usually, a band's second record
is one that's made under considerably more comfortable circumstances
than their first. They've become more acclimated to the recording
studio; they've had more gigs under their belt; they've spent
enough time together to relate more easily with one another;
they know what they want and, probably, it's a lot easier
for them to get it.
And this is why a lot of bands' sophomore records suck. The
nervous, scattered energy of being in the studio for the first
time and the reckless enthusiasm of getting a live show on
tape more often than not translate into debut albums that,
though probably lacking in forethought and clarity, are certainly
exciting. And when the comfort level increases and the freshness
wears off, second records usually wind up sounding like pale
imitations of the first.
Of course, sometimes between first and second records, some
bands--like Guns N' Roses and Chavez--wind up dispersed around
the country, pursuing extra-band interests. In this instance,
finding the time to squeeze in band work can be a little difficult.
And when it does come time to get in the studio, a multitude
of problems can set in that delay the process even further.
In the case of Guns N' Roses, the result was disaster in the
form of two overblown concept-rock albums. In the case of
Chavez, it was success in the form of the brusque and enervating
Ride the Fader.

Too fuckin' bad for Guns N' Roses, huh?
"The
thing was, we barely toured at all after the last record,"
says Chavez guitarist/vocalist Matt Sweeney. "After Gone
Glimmering came out (in 1995), we did 10 shows with Guided
By Voices and 10 shows with Bardo Pond, and then we did three
weeks in Europe with GBV. And that was it--we just stopped
cold. When we got back from Europe, we didn't have a booking
agent because nobody would take us, so we couldn't tour and
just wound up doing shows here and there. Then Scott (Marshall,
bassist) fucked off to L.A. and just disappeared to work on
movies, so Chavez has never played west of the Mississippi.
I mean, we play New York a lot, so you'd get the impression
that we're a happening band."
Although Marshall's absence from Chavez wouldn't have been
as essential an issue a year and a half ago--after all, this
is a band that practiced and wrote songs for eight months
without a bassist or a drummer--the increasingly collaborative
aspects of Chavez' songwriting necessitated that Marshall
be present for at least part of the proceedings. So, while
he was off in Hollywood, Chavez basically came to a standstill.
"While
Scotty was gone, we didn't do jack-fucking-shit," laughs Sweeny.
"We recorded here and there when we could, just for a couple
of days at a time without him, but it really wasn't amounting
to much, other than just getting some songs written. Scott
got back sometime around April ('96) and we started doing
more, but really the bulk of the album got done in August.

"We were so polarized this time," he continues, explaining
the effect that it had on Ride the Fader. "Before the
last record, we would play together and hang out all the time.
But for this record, Scott was gone and everybody was doing
different things and we didn't play at all. I mean, as of
October, we'd only played four shows in 1996. So this was
actually kind of a scarier record to do because it was a series
of really ridiculous scheduling things that led up to getting
this record done. There were literally times when Scott's
cab to the airport was waiting outside while we were playing
a song and when he would finish the song, he would put down
his bass and leave for months."
Since Chavez is the sort of band that likes to record its
albums live, it was necessary for all four members to be present
in the studio. "I think we're one of the more 'bandular' bands,"
says Sweeny. "We're really ultra-democratic when it comes
to writing songs. I mean, I was writing drum beats and James
(Lo, drummer) was writing melodies and we all just sorta switched
around stuff. James actually wrote that piano song ("Ever
Overpsyched"), and Clay (Tarver, guitar) wrote the words for
it. Everybody played their own instruments on the record,
but as far as the writing process went, it was pretty much
anything goes. It was pretty much the same way last time;
it was just more extreme for this album because things were
pretty scattered."
Which isn't to say Ride the Fader is any less successful
than Chavez' debut. To be sure, when the semi-supergroup first
appeared in 1994, they demolished the skepticism that would
naturally accompany a band featuring former members of Live
Skull (Lo), Bullet LaVolta (Tarver), Skunk (Sweeny) and Wider
(Sweeny and Lo) with a potent blend of angular, heavy rock.
Although some people seemed stunned by the shape-shifting
drama of Chavez (thus dubbing it "math rock" in total disregard
for the sheer organic power of the music), the band's first
album was certainly one of the most powerfully engaging, dramatic
and downright rocking debuts in quite some time.

Ride the Fader ups the ante. With Sweeney's vocals
mixed louder and with an all-around more confident approach--although
one might question how much more confident the band could
get after the bombast of Gone Glimmering's "Pentagram
Ring"--to the record, Ride the Fader is denser ("Tight
Around the Jaws"), poppier ("Our Boys Will Shine Tonight"),
angrier ("The Guard Attacks") and even prettier (the aforementioned
"Ever Overpsyched"). It demonstrates a considerable growth
in both the band's collective songwriting abilities, and a
stronger conviction in Chavez's own sound. Naturally, recording
the album was a pain in the ass. Lengthy sessions with producer
Bryce Goggin (who recorded three tracks on Gone Glimmering
and offered to produce the follow up) wound up being aborted,
resulting in only two album tracks ("Unreal Is Here" and "Memorize
This Face"). The band sought the last-minute production assistance
of John Agnello, who had produced two tracks on Chavez's debut.
"It
was the worst experience of my entire life and I wasn't expecting
that at all," says Sweeney, managing a laugh. "I mean, [Goggin]
had said that he really wanted to do the record with us, and
for whatever reason he had a really hard time with it. I think
he's been really busy and we're just these idiots that know
exactly what we want, but at the same time we're totally open
to suggestion. So, I guess we didn't like his ideas and he
didn't like our ideas. It was really bad and he just wound
up bailing. He said, 'Oh, I have to go do this Bettie Serveert
record. Oh, I have to go do this Lemonheads record. I'm sorry.
Bye.' And this was after wasting a lot of time on dumb
mixes of songs. I think he's a totally great and amazing producer,
but it just wasn't happening."
Given that Chavez wasn't the most stable musical ensemble
in Manhattan, the situation was only exacerbated. "That's
the thing," says Sweeney. "The four of us were having a hard
enough time getting out shit together just to be in the same
room. And then we'd go in to record and Bryce would want to
try something and it would take hours and we wouldn't like
it and he would get bummed out, and it just wound up being
a tremendous waste of money... And John was just this savior.
We called him up at the last minute and were like, 'Bryce
bailed on us and we spent all our money on nothing. What can
you do for us?' So, on short notice, we wound up pretty much
recording the whole record in a really short period of time,
because we were really under the gun. So we actually spent
10 days making the record and what seemed like a year on a
few songs with Bryce."
Nonetheless Ride the Fader managed to get recorded
somehow, and the results are amazing. However, as Sweeney
concludes, they're not quite as amazing as Chavez would have
liked. "I'd really like to see what would happen if we really
tried," he says. "I mean, we tried and we're totally
serious about it and we put a lot of effort into it, but it's
just all been in short spurts. I wonder what would happen
if we functioned like a real band and just weren't so retarded
about everything."
-- Magnet Magazine, 1218 Chestnut, Ste 208, Philadelphia,
PA 19107.
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