| moe.
Rob Derhak - vocals, bass
Chuck Garvey - vocals, guitar
Al Schnier - vocals, guitar, keyboards
Vinnie Amico - drums
Jim Loughlin - percussion
From modest beginnings
in a Buffalo basement over two decades ago to today’s
multifaceted success, the members of moe. have never lost sight of
the earnest, elemental goals that they aspired to from their very
first show: to deliver honest, heartfelt music and to ensure the
audience has a good time. Considerate and conscientious in their
actions and decision-making, moe.’s refreshingly unpretentious
attitude has won them a devoted legion of dedicated fans (ranging
from seasoned concert-goers to eager young newcomers) and has given
rise to a thriving cottage industry – a self-contained
nation-state in which the band and their audience live as equals,
thriving on a reciprocal appreciation rare in today’s
increasingly fragmented musical landscape.
2010 marks the
twentieth anniversary of moe.’s frontline of Rob Derhak (bass,
vocals), Chuck Garvey (guitar, vocals), and Al Schnier (guitar,
keyboards, vocals), who continue to perform together with the
addition of drummer Vinnie Amico and percussionist and
multi-instrumentalist Jim Loughlin. Keeping a consistent lineup
intact and productive over two decades is no small feat. moe.’s
saga is made all the more remarkable because they have consistently
done so on their own terms, as independent artists who actively
manage their own affairs while staying well ahead of industry and
technological developments, including successfully self-releasing
their own music and offering instant on-site digital concert
recordings at their shows.
“We never really had the
rock star attitude,” explains founding bassist and vocalist Rob
Derhak. “It was always about – to a fault almost –having
a personal connection with the fans on stage. No matter where we
play, we want them to know that they are part of the show –
like we were playing in a living room. We need their participation to
inspire us, and, when we first started, we needed their apartments to
sleep in…”
Even with their twentieth anniversary
in sight, there is little inclination towards nostalgic reflection or
self-congratulation within the walls of moe. They still describe
themselves as a rock’n’roll band, without qualifications,
compilations, or asterisks – even though their kaleidoscopic
music spans all the way from tight, incisively well-constructed
songcraft to fluid, conversational extended improvisation,
incorporating everything from straightforward rock and Americana
influences to bouyant Jamaican and South African inflections. Much
like their music, their career has defied the traditional rock band
trajectory, with a brief flirtation with the major label system only
reinforcing the fact that they function best when in control of every
aspect of their music and how it is documented and presented. In
honor of their anniversary, the band has compiled Smash Hits Vol.
1, a sort of Young Person’s Guide to moe., featuring band
and fan favorites – some recast in new recordings which
showcase the band’s ongoing evolution. “It’s what
we and others perceive as our strongest crowd pleasers of the past
twenty years,” Rob muses. “It’s a compilation that
you can listen to over and over again. Something your mother might
enjoy.”
The moe. saga was set into motion in the late
eighties, on the campus of the University at Buffalo in western New
York. It was there that transfer student Derhak met freshman Chuck
Garvey. “I didn’t know a lot of people,” Rob
remembers, “but I was friends with this girl Sam White, and I
was eating dinner with her one time, and this guy came in who she
knew from high school named Chuck Garvey. She introduced me to him,
and we immediately started talking about cartoons – Tom and
Jerry. It was like we had known each other forever.”
“I
was at UB to study architecture first, then illustration,”
Chuck explains, “but I grew up with music. Both my parents are
musicians and music teachers: my mother taught stringed instruments
and my father taught wind and brass instruments…the best thing
about them was that they never tried to teach me anything, they just
made music available to me, which actually drew me into it more.
Playing music became a natural, fun creative outlet, and –
unlike the stuff I was studying in school – no one would be
hanging over my shoulder, telling me what to do.”
“Chuck
was a guitar player,” Rob continues, “but I didn’t
play anything. My roommate had a 12-string acoustic guitar. I noticed
other people playing instruments, so I decided to teach myself to
play. I took that twelve string and proceeded to annoy everyone. I
got completely obsessed with it, to the point where I’d barely
realize that I had been sitting on my bed for five hours and not
going to class.”
Chuck and Rob began playing music
together, casually and informally, around the dorm. “The best
place to play,” Chuck explains, “was in the common
bathrooms. It sounded great, because of the tiled surfaces.”
Even in this modest
setting, Rob’s imagination and ambition were sparked, and he
quickly arrived at a grand scheme. “I decided at one point that
playing music is what I wanted to do, and that I didn’t care
about school,” he says, smiling over two decades later at his
youthful gall. “I had this devious plan…I knew I wasn’t
good enough to play guitar, but I could probably play bass. So I
corralled Chuck into it.”
It was a prescient choice on
Derhak’s part, as the understated Garvey entered the picture
with an uncannily apt background. “I had been playing guitar
since I was 13 or 14,” Chuck explains, “but even before
that, I played saxophone. That’s where I got some exposure to
music theory and learned a lot about how a band works. I played in a
small jazz quartet, and I learned about band dynamics; about how to
put things together and make it sound good. I was also forced to
play solos and try to make stuff up, to improvise.”
As
that first school year wound down, Chuck and Rob continued playing
together during the summer recess, returning to school in the fall,
where an opportunity presented itself. “I had been playing
guitar and bass for maybe eight months,” Rob explains, “and
this girl I was dating said ‘My friend Ray plays drums, and I’m
having a Halloween party in our basement. You guys could play our
party.’ We met Ray, hit it off with him, and learned a bunch of
covers.”
“I remember,” Chuck explains, “that
for that first party, we played some Jimi Hendrix, REM, Squeeze, Joe
Jackson…we made up a Halloween medley out of different weird
things like The Munsters theme. We did Steely Dan’s
‘Green Earrings.’”
“We dressed in
black leotards, slicked our hair back, and called ourselves
Sprockets,” Rob admits. “After that, Ray became our
drummer. He had a friend named Dave Kessler who played guitar, and he
came on board. We had a sax for a while, so we became a quintet and
settled on the name Five Guys Named Moe – which eventually
became just moe. It took about six months of practicing before we had
our first bar gig.”
The early repertoire – a
convergence of punk and new wave, classic rock and pop, with
eccentric notes drawn from Frank Zappa and Steely Dan –
provides a crucial clue to moe.’s eventual stock in trade:
quizzical, tightly-constructed songs refracted through compelling,
extended improvisation. “We were all fans of musicianship and
good songwriting,” Chuck explains.
“The one
consistent factor was that we all really liked Frank Zappa,”
Rob adds. “His ideal sort of modeled what we wanted to do.
That’s what we were emulating, in our own way.”
The
saxophone player soon departed, and moe. began composing original
songs to be performed by the now four-piece lineup. “We started
with two originals and then worked our way up,” Rob explains.
“We didn’t think about it,” Garvey adds.
“We just did it. They were almost like pop songs, but with a
little bit of weird edge to them.”
“Eventually,”
Rob continues, “we made a tape in an attic with a four-track,
which had eight original songs on it.” Via Sam White, who first
introduced Rob and Chuck, that tape eventually found its way to
guitarist Al Schnier, who was living four hours away in Oneonta, New
York.
“I heard that tape,” Al recalls, “and
I thought, ‘This is the kind of band I want to play in.’
I think even I said that out loud. It had an attitude – it had
an edge, it had a sense of humor to it. Even though at the time I was
playing in a psychedelic rock band, I was listening to a lot of what
was not yet being called alternative music. I really liked the
Butthole Surfers and Fugazi, and Firehose, and the Meat Puppets. When
I was younger I really liked stuff like the Jam, the Ramones, the
Clash, Elvis Costello…so there was always this parallel
thread, running alongside more organic music like Bob Dylan and the
Grateful Dead. The two paths don’t have to be mutually
exclusive.
“Of course, I
never thought I’d be playing with moe.,” Al continues.
“But six months later I ended up moving to Buffalo, and my next
introduction to the band was actually sitting in with them. I never
even got to see them live! Their other guitarist, Dave Kessler,
couldn’t make the gig – and they asked me to fill in.” As Kessler gradually phased himself out of moe., Schnier joined up
full-time, lending not only his estimable musical chops to the fold,
but also a focus and drive that eventually spurred the band on to new
heights.
“Over the next three years,” Al
explains, “we worked really hard in Buffalo, actively writing
and rehearsing all the time and booking shows whenever and wherever
we could. We built up a really good fanbase in Buffalo and began
working outside Buffalo – the college circuit in New York, into
Ohio, New York City, New England, Toronto. By the end of those three
years, we started playing every Thursday through Sunday. I ended up
losing my job, our girlfriends were all frustrated with us. The band
was consuming our lives, and we either needed to decide to go for it
or not.”
By 1991, Ray Schwartz had departed the band
and was replaced by Jim Loughlin. “moe. was the first band I
ever drummed with,” Loughlin recalls. “I was actually a
working bass player at the time. They were easy to get along with,
and I had a good sense of them musically because I had been listening
to recordings of them for a couple of months by the time I finally
played with them. The only hard part was trying to add something of
myself to their tunes without totally altering the songs. I
definitely had a very different approach to the drums then Ray did,
so I needed to figure out how to play these tunes in my own way
without really changing too much.” With the resourceful
and dedicated Loughlin on board, the band was one step closer to
making a major decision.
“I had to make this my life,”
Rob explains. “It was this epiphany I had. I didn’t know
how to go about it, but I had to learn. Looking back, moe. was the
first band I had ever been in – it’s not supposed to
happen this way. By 1994 I had a job delivering flowers – that
was the last day job I had. That was when we all sat down to talk
about the future. We had started getting more and more gigs. We got
to a point where we could play at the Wetlands in New York and draw
500 people, on our own. Everything was pointing upwards and we needed
to talk about making it happen for real. It wasn’t an easy
decision for all of us, but it was an easy decision for me.”
“We all sat down one day,” Al remembers, “and
decided that we certainly liked what we were doing, and even though
it wasn’t ever ‘the plan’ to do this
professionally, it was just the direction we were heading and it was
worth giving everything we had. At that fateful meeting, we decided
we were going to go for it.”
“So then, we moved
into a house together in Albany,” Chuck picks up. “If we
weren’t on the road, we’d set up the next day and start
rehearsing and writing.”
“When we all lived in the
same house,” Al adds. “We spent all our waking hours
together. If someone had something they were working on, the whole
group knew about it. You had very little privacy. If you had a riff
you were working on, it wasn’t long before someone joined in on
it, and before long you had a full-scale rehearsal working on your
song.”
When moe. decided to make the transition from
being a team of enthusiastic amateurs to full-time professionals,
they never lost their enthusiasm nor their willingness to learn. The
rigors of playing live were beginning to have an impact on their
sound. “Early on, we realized that we had more time to fill
than we had songs,” Chuck explains, “so we would blow out
parts of songs. We learned quickly that you have to keep your ears
open, and try to invent something. We got really good at it, and
really good at being able to read each other. That offered a lot of
freedom and informed how things would evolve in the
future.”
“There’s something to be said for
youthful vigor and the willingness to take chances and not really
give a damn,” Al reflects. “We didn’t have anything
to lose then. Very quickly, we discovered your personality comes
through your playing. It’s largely this musical conversation
and everybody’s musical personalities are there – some
people will interject more in a conversation than others, some may
lay back, some may be more dominant.” These daring yet graceful
improvised moments have remained a part of moe.’s set, as they
often employ improvisation as a means of connecting unrelated songs
into long, dazzling stretches of non-stop music.
“While
we were doing this,” Rob says, “Phish and some other
bands that use a lot of improvisation started to become popular.
There was this movement happening.”
moe.’s first
two full-length releases, 1992’s Fatboy and 1994’s Headseed, were recorded after-hours in a comfortable
environment – a 15-track studio (actually 16, with one broken)
in an apartment above a Buffalo music store. These formative sessions
emphasized how very different recording is, compared to the concert
experience. “When we go into the studio,” Rob explains,
“we try to make it more appealing to the broadest audience –
keeping the songwriting as the focus and not the improvisation. When
we play live, the songwriting aspect is there, but over the course of
the year we’ll play a song 50 or 100 times, we keep everything
fresh by having improvisational parts makes it more interesting to
us.”
“The main thing is,” adds Chuck, “from
everything you learn on the road playing songs, you take the best
bits that you’ve discovered. In the studio, you try to distill
the song into just those elements that people react to.”
“After Headseed,” Rob explains, “we had quit our jobs and
moved to Albany. We had been there for maybe a year before we started
getting courted by A&R people from record companies. We ended up
going with Sony 550.”
“We thought, ‘We
signed with a major label and that’s it – we’re
successful.’” Chuck explains. “But, looking back
now, I realize that we would have had to sell half a million or a
million records for them to be really happy and put their muscle
behind us. That would have been potentially destructive for us. We
learned that you can’t forsake your core fan base. After two
albums with Sony, we learned that doing it on our own would be
better: we’d have a stable career, calling the shots on our own
and being very honest about everything we were doing. With a major
label, that might not have been the case.
The one major benefit to
the whole thing was that they put us in a real modern studio
environment for the first time, and we learned first-hand how to make
an album really professionally.”
moe.’s major
label debut, No Doy (1996) initiated a bold series of albums
that found the band constantly redefining the recording process, with
the goal of reconciling their two greatest assets: their
seemingly-effortless spontaneity and their formidable abilities as
songwriters. Its follow-up, Tin Cans and Car Tires (released
by Sony in 1998) welcomed drummer Vinne Amico into the fold.
Perfectly balancing time-keeping and propulsive duties, Amico quickly
melded to the group’s sound. “I first became aware of
moe. from being a part of the Buffalo music scene,” Amico
recalls. “ I love to play music, so being able to play
music for a living and joining the fun and camaraderie made joining
moe. an easy decision. Learning a whole catalog of original
material, learning moe.’s writing style and being a part of
that, and leaving my wife and kids at home while touring was more
challenging.”
“For the first album with
Vinnie, Tin Cans and Car Tires, we rented this giant old
mansion in the Catskills,” Rob recalls. “We set up in
there and did all the pre-production there – arranging the
songs, fine-tuning the writing, working out our parts. Then we moved
into a separate studio and recorded the stuff. It worked out great.
But now I know that we could have just stayed where we were and
recorded the songs in the same spot, without moving a single thing.
We now have the technology to build a studio anywhere. For our most
recent studio album, Sticks and Stones, we wrote, preproduced,
and recorded it all in the same place…”
The following
album, Dither (2001), saw moe. splitting with Sony and marked
their third recording for their Fatboy imprint, which they had
already released the Fatboy cassette and compact disc Headseed, and which has released every studio and live moe.
project since. Dither also marked the return of Jim Loughlin,
in the role of multi-instrumentalist, mainly focused on percussion
(including mallet instruments like vibraphone and marimba) but also
contributing acoustic guitar and flute. “As we got more used to
recording with more sounds and parts,” Rob explains, we needed
somebody to cover that stuff live, and Jim was the logical choice. He
had been drumming for the band Yolk, but had just quit, and we knew
he was a multi-instrumentalist. The timing was right.”
“At
the time, I was working a straight job building running tracks,”
Jim remembers. “So when they asked me if I wanted to do some
rehearsals and a tour with them, I said yes immediately. I hadn’t
played live in almost two years and the opportunity to not only play
again, but to actually do something that allowed me to play a bunch
of different instruments, was not something that I could say no to.”
“Jim wants to be
a color guy,” Chuck adds. “It’s great, because Jim
can fill out the sound in a lot of different ways, to the point where
we can all actually play a little less and have more of an ensemble
impact. It gives the guitar players a lot of room to explore and
steer and navigate it into new directions. It’s a powerful
base.”
“Jim and I have known each other and
played together since before the band moe. existed,” Vinne
Amico explains. “The challenges were – and are still – fitting in with each other without getting in each others way, or
stepping on each others toes.
What makes it easier is that I
have been able to simplify my parts to fill less space. I can come up
with easier parts that fit better. I don't have to think about what I
am playing, or what Jim is playing, because we have been doing it
together for so long that we think a lot alike on stage.” While
his battery of on-stage percussion is imposing, much of what Loughlin
contributes is remarkably subtle – from perfectly-placed conga
accent to shimmering washes of vibraphone.
“I really
love Dither,” Chuck continues, “because of the
songwriting, and the fact that the songs are given really
well-executed, concise treatments. It’s not necessarily a fan
favorite, however, because it’s not what we sound like on
stage.”
moe.’s next
album, the widely acclaimed Wormwood, was an audacious
recording experiment, in which rhythm tracks recorded live were built
on in the studio. “It gave us a mix of live energy and studio
control,” Chuck elaborates. “It has a flow that is like
our live shows, the material is really good, and there are unique
quirky elements. It has a lot of elements of an interesting, enduring
album.”
“We got a live vibe,” Rob explains,
“then used editing software to cut down some of the songs and
to combine takes from one night’s performance with other
nights’. We strung it together and then improvised over it in
the studio. A lot of people really like that album and consider it
one of our best albums.”
“We approach each of our
records differently,” Al says. “I don’t think one
is necessarily better than the other. I don’t really have a
favorite – maybe the next one!”
moe. extended the
inventiveness with which they conducted every aspect of their career
into the concert arena with the first moe.down festival in 2000. “We
had actually wanted to do it for years,” Chuck recalls, “but
we waited until we could find a way to do it right the first year. It
took some planning and a lot of brainstorming…but we wanted to
put together a package that sounded good and would draw people, with
great facilities. We wanted to make sure it felt a little bit like
home.” The first year, moe.down drew 3,000 attendants to the
Snow Ridge Ski Area in Turin, New York. Subsequently, moe.down
attendance has topped 10,000, bolstered by savvy booking that
combines an eclectic range of rising talents with established artists
such as the Flaming Lips, the Violent Femmes, and Medeski, Martin,
and Wood, with John Scofield. In addition to moe.down, moe. hosts the
ski- and snowboard-themed snoe.down. They also put together two moe.
cruises. They will cap off their twentieth anniversary year by
hosting the tropical throe.down – a vacation for the band and
their fans in the Domican Republic in January 2011.
Via their
transcendent live performances, their well-crafted studio albums, the
thriving taper culture, and their unique events, moe. developed a
vital relationship with a dedicated, ever-expanding fan base. “There
was never a moment,” Al explains, “when we decided ‘Hey,
people really like us – we need to capitalize on this!’
It’s been a very organic relationship that’s grown like a
friendship. None of it was manufactured because of a contest or
someone told us that we needed to capture e-mail addresses…and
we’re not counting on our next single to maintain it.”
With
the release of Smash Hits Vol. 1 in the spring of 2010, moe.
tackle that most predictable of career milestones – the
greatest hits package – with typical irreverence and
innovation. An informal poll was conducted, with the band members all
chiming in with what they thought to be the group’s most
popular songs – not necessarily their personal favorites, but
songs that fans have reacted to strongly over the years. Then they
asked the people around them – management, wives, webmasters,
guitar techs, etc. – to make similar lists. The lists were then
compiled and tallied, with all the votes weighed equally, and a track
list emerged.
What initially began as a collection of
pre-existing recordings slowly mutated, and the collection now
includes eight new recordings. “We tried to license a few of
the songs from the Sony albums from them,” Al recalls. “They
said why don’t you license your stuff to us, and we’ll
put it out?” With the limitations and constrictions of the
major label still fresh in their minds, moe. politely declined. “We
decided we’d re-record the Sony songs that had made it to the
top ten,” he continues. “Sony owns those recordings, but
not those songs. So we recorded those, along with one other song that
we had never made a studio recording of. Then we mastered everything,
and we realized that those songs we recorded in the apartment in
Buffalo didn’t sound as great, so we actually returned to
Buffalo to record at GCR Audio. “Saint Augustine”,
“Mexico”, “Yodelittle” and “Spine of a
Dog”. The idea is not to be revisionist: it’s just to put
out a contemporary, well-made version of these songs for
posterity.”
“This anthology is for first-time
listeners or people who want their first taste of the breadth of our
catalog,” Chuck echoes. “We didn’t agree on
everything, but in the end it definitely seems like the songs we’ve
chosen have had the most impact on our live shows and have last the
longest as fan favorites. To a certain extent, it’s really the
songs that people have responded the most to for the longest time.
Once we came to that realization, it was relatively easy.”
The
members of moe. are approaching their twentieth anniversary with
surprising nonchalance – not surprising, considering the casual
disregard they’ve had for standard industry practices. They
approach their career as a something still in progress. “There
is not a set moe. way of doing things,” Al explains. “We’ve
been constantly improving the design, to make the songs better, the
shows better. We’re always tweaking every little aspect of the
band – in terms of efficiency, of presentation, of the content.
It’s a hands-on affair run by us, our family, and our
friends…just the fact that we’re still doing it 20 years
later is a testament that it must be ok.”
“We have
learned,” Chuck adds, “that our personality is measured
more by what we do live. These songs have a life beyond the
recordings and our fans are invested in that. They expect that we’re
going to perform the songs a little bit different and they are going
to evolve over time, which is tremendously liberating for us as
musicians and songwriters.”
“Looking back,”
Rob reflects, “there wasn’t any particular point where we
went from doing one thing to doing another thing – it was
ongoing. We’re still part of an ongoing evolution. Everything
comes from learning from past mistakes and past triumphs. We aren’t
trained: our manager didn’t really manage anyone before, our
road crew didn’t do what they do until they worked for us.
That’s how the band works.”
“I’m just
surprised,” Chuck concludes, “that we haven’t
killed each other yet!”
NOTE TO EDITORS: moe.'s name is properly spelled in all lowercase characters and ending with a period: "moe." Print, TV, Syndicated Radio
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