This interview originally appeared in the now defunct Revolt on March 5, 1997. It is posted here by kind permission of Adrian Bromley.
Point Of Ares
Not Your Average Band –
Q&A
By
ADRIAN "Energizer" BROMLEY
REVOLT Music Editor
Massachusetts’s
eclectic theatrical/Wizard Rock trio Point Of Ares are a cut above the rest.
Their music is not only well-crafted, but it is also highly imaginative and
creative. Based on the book trilogy
Enemy Glory by
writer/lyricist/singer/bassist Karen Michalson (POA is rounded out by guitarist
Bill Michalson and Kevin Dion on drums) the band has recently released their
debut album Enemy Glory on Arula
Records. By e-mail Karen Michalson found time to talk about all the good things
that go into the work of POA, and talks about writing and the music industry in
general. Michalson’s words are truthful and a good guide for any up and coming
band to take to heart. Read on:
REVOLT:
Most bands nowadays seem to go along with trends - what is hot. Your band seems
to have stayed away from that and developed your own sound and direction. How do
you keep focused on what *you* want to do?
Karen Michalson:
For me there’s no point in writing music if
I’m only going to try to sound like whatever is currently hot. If that were
the case I’d do something else. There’s a lot of better paying jobs out
there that require conformity as the price of success, so if I just wanted to
follow trends I could easily work in a different field and make a hell of a lot
more money at it. When I made the decision to commit myself to music, I went
through a long period of introspection about my values, my goals, what it meant
to calI myself a musician, etc. and one of the things that became clear to me
was that public recognition wouldn’t be worth a damn if it was based on trying
to sound like somebody else. I’m also in the fortunate position of being
blessed with two bandmates who share this attitude and with being in a situation
where the three of us have genuinely complementary visions for songwriting.
Although we often have healthy disagreements about particular songs, we all
generally agree about POA’s vision and direction.
REVOLT: The
difference between a writer and a lyricist for songs?
KM: Working in two mediums has forced me to think about this a lot, but you’re the
first writer who’s asked. In my opinion (for what it’s worth) a writer
creates art in which language is the sole element. In fiction and poetry the
words have to work harder because they have to convey everything
– rhythm, voice, tone, intent. There’s an example of my writing
on the spoken word pieces of Enemy Glory, which are actually selections from my novel. The first
has no musical accompaniment and the second only has me playing bass under the
words, for atmosphere.
A lyricist, however, has to be conscious that his/her work is only one element in a song, and that the words should be there as one voice in the ensemble, that the guitar is another voice, the bass is another, etc. All of the elements of a song have to work together to say something -- if the lyrics say everything, the music sounds redundant. When I’m working on a bass line or Bill (POA’s guitarist) and I are working out a progression together we have to make damn certain that the music we’re writing works as more voices that say things the lyrics may only imply -- that the words and music form a whole experience greater than any one part, but in which every part is absolutely necessary. When Kevin lays down his drum parts the same thing is true – his drums are one essential voice with its own take on the ensemble called a song.
REVOLT: Is Enemy
Glory more than a concept record or story?
Is there a sense of realism in the songs and ideas?
KM: I
hope not. Otherwise it wouldn’t be art. Well, I don’t know -- the vision and
points of view are true to my real life attitudes, but true is different than
real.
REVOLT: Were
there more songs than these? Why were these 15 chosen?
KM: There
are more songs but these 15 were written
specifically for this album rather than chosen out of a larger repertoire. We
decided to write a concept album, mapped out a template for the album, discussed
which characters from the novel and which situations would get represented, how
it would be structured -- then we wrote it to our own specifications. It was a
very planned, very structured approach to songwriting in
that we had a structure and an outline in mind before we even began. We
absolutely did not want to say, "well here’s our ten best songs let’s
throw them together on a CD and see what happens.” A lot of bands do that and
end up releasing a collection of songs that don’t really say anything as a
collection, although the individual songs may be well-crafted. It was as
important to us to write an ALBUM as it was to
write songs.
REVOLT: What
bands have inspired you? Both past and present.
KM: Rush.
Genesis (early). Rush. Pink Floyd. Rush. Jethro Tull. Did I mention Rush? King
Crimson. Rick Wakeman. Patti Smith. Oh, and Rush. But I’ve probably been more
inspired by other writers than by other musicians. Read an Edward Abbey essay
sometime -- the deep structure of his desert descriptions is musical. They take
the top of your head off and you can’t tell if you’re reading or listening.
Roberto Calasso makes me want to write bass lines that tell mythic stories
without words. John Barth -- his novels taught me a way of thinking
that becomes music when it doesn’t become fiction. The lyrical
descriptions in John Ruskin’s or Walter Pater’s essays. But ultimately --
and this is the height of hubris or the sordid depths of self-cannibalism or
both -- I draw most inspiration from the characters I imagine and write about in
my fiction. The sole reason I play bass is I wrote a novel about a bass player.
I’m not embarrassed to say this.
REVOLT: How
important is it for the music to cooperate with your words?
KM:
It’s not merely important it’s essential to the point where if the music and
words are not cooperating, the song-in-progress gets jettisoned. I don’t want
to sound too scripted about what we are – but we really take very seriously
the archetype of the poet-musician – the bard who is equally adept at language
and music. Well, that is what we are. When
we’re not true to that, our music suffers.
REVOLT: Do
you think songwriters of the 90’s have lost heir creativity? If so why?
KM: I
don’t generally like the commercial music of the 90’s. The emphasis has been
on not knowing how to play, playing sloppily, no guitar solos, repetitive
monotonous rhythm guitar -- and, I know I’ll get some hate mail for saying
this – I’m more enthusiastic about bands that strive for excellence than
bands that make a virtue out of making everything sound rough. I’m very
suspicious whenever I hear a musician say, "We deliberately went for the
stripped down, raw sound – we wanted the
instruments to sound a little off" because it implies that this approach
was a conscious choice and that they could have played better had they chose. If
you can play better, why do you feel you have to hide it? Will people like your
art better because it’s not the best
you can create? There’s something criminal about self-mutilation, and
something worse than criminal in being willing to pretend you’re a lesser
artist than you really are to satisfy somebody else.
And
on the other hand, if you can’t play better stop posing about it and
pretending. Like any other artistic movement, I think the stripped down 90’s
sound worked at first as a statement -- but now it’s gone past the point of
cliche and become, in many cases (not all) an excuse for lack of dedication to learning music.
REVOLT: Do
you feel that music is a means of informing? If so..how does your music inform?
KM: Some
musicians certainly do use music to inform, and it works very well for them. We
don’t. Well, I don’t know, you’d have to ask our audience if they feel
particularly “informed” about anything after one of our shows. For me, music
is a means of entertaining, casting a sacred space and inviting people into an
alternate dream for awhile. It’s role playing in
sound. If someone feels informed by this, well, that’s his business and his
reaction -- I won’t stand in the way – but my primary goal is to create
another world for people to visit and dream in and imagine themselves in. What
they do there is their business – I’m just providing a service.
REVOLT: POA
seems to be a much more maturer form of music - what kind of fans do you
attract?
KM: Our
fans are extremely intelligent. I certainly don’t want to categorize people --
but the "typical" POA fan -- if there is such a thing
-- is a guy I met at one show who spent most of our set writing poems in
a notebook (about our set) and came up to me afterwards to show me his poems and
we talked a bit about whether the lyrics in "Slouching Towards Chaos"
were Nietschean or Sartrean (they’re neither, but that’s beside the point).
Another "typical" fan is a guy that touched me to the quick by placing
a medallion around my neck after one show -- the medallion had an arrow (like
our logo) and he told me it was a warrior symbol from a martial arts tradition
he was studying -- he wanted to talk about our lyrics, our battle-imagery, etc.
Across the country we get quite a bit of fan mail from people who describe
themselves as neo-pagans, libertarians, goths, Dungeons and Dragons players. I
answer as much as I can, because a lot of people really want to talk about the
topics our music touches on -- ancient Greece, personal liberty, the destruction
of excellence by mediocrity, Randian philosophy, the power of fantasy.
REVOLT: Will
there be a continuation to Enemy Glory?
KM: If I
write another Enemy Glory novel the
possibility exists. My literary agent is very close to selling the original Enemy
Glory trilogy (that our album is based on) right now, and if that works out,
there may very well be another Enemy Glory
book.
REVOLT: If
the band ever signs to a major label - how important will control of your
creativity be?
KM: As
important as it is now. This is not a purely academic question, as we are
talking to a major label now (just flirting). The reason we decided not to sign
with an indie label and to release our own stuff to start with was to have
complete artistic control. Our CD is selling remarkably well across the country,
and our fans really like what we’ve done. If we had taken the advice of a few
of the indies we flirted with -- I’m convinced our product would be less
sincere and ultimately less successful. And we’re really happy where we are
right now -- we have an audience that seems to genuinely appreciate our music
for what it is -- some very willing guests in our fictional-musical universe who
want to play with us -- so we’re not necessarily going to jump onto a major
any more than we did onto an indie – it depends on what the major has to
offer.
REVOLT: Do
you think music can heal?
KM: Heal
what? I don’t know. I think it’s well documented that certain tones and
rhythms effect brain chemistry, and that you can certainly feel high from
anapestic drum beats and so on – but is this a "healing" or just a
temporary mood shift induced by an aural drug. And if music can heal it can also
hurt. A lot of stuff can happen in a sacred space.
REVOLT: Why
is it that music nowadays has taken on more of a money role rather than
expression?
KM: It
always has, going back to the days when musicians made bids for the patronage of
a Duke or King. If the artist didn’t create work that pleased the patron, the
artist didn’t get paid. And if that meant writing contrary to one’s artistic
sense to please the bad taste of some patron, well it happened a lot, and it
still happens. There’s a lot of truth to economist Roald Coase’s Theorem,
that market, not ownership, ultimately determines how things get used. Face it,
a musician may own his/her work, but if that work has more market value when
remixed a certain way, chances are that sooner or later it will get remixed. I
see this in colleagues who have learned that their talent is worth more (will
command more money) playing covers they genuinely dislike than in
playing/writing originals they mean. And
so they play covers and complain about how ”lucky” I am to write my own
material. The whole idea of ”artistic expression” isn’t much older than
the turn of the 19th century, anyway. It was developed by the Romantic poets,
most of whom were independently wealthy and didn’t have to worry about making
a living as poets. I’m not saying there’s no truth to the concept, but that
for most of civilization’s history it was not generally an articulated
concern. Shakespeare wrote plays to please the Queen, draw an audience, and make
money. This is not to say he didn’t write great plays -- but that the idea
of "integrity of expression" was not necessarily his first
preoccupation – he made a lot of political choices in his history plays
especially – flattering the Queen and denigrating her rivals. Is Henry IV 1
and 2 an expressive set of plays? They are funny and tearful and tragic and
brilliant. Did he write them for money? You bet! For me the crime isn’t
writing for money per se, the crime is
being willing to mutilate your own talents for money, to appear to he less than
you really are for the world’s fleeting amusement.
REVOLT: What
new bands do you admire? Why?
KM: I
like Dream Theater. James LaBrie is a great vocalist, and John Myung is a
brilliant bass player. I’ve seen them live a few times. But I don’t listen
to a lot of new rock music. I like classic rock and I like to listen to music
outside the genre.
REVOLT: How
important is the internet to musicians? How do you use it to your advantage?
KM: For
independent bands like Point Of Ares it’s essential. Being able to market and
promote your own music worldwide -- what a revolutionary concept. The Internet
gives bands like POA the power and confidence to be able to say major labels,
"well, we have a fan base that likes our music as it is, and we’re making
a profit and doing what we love to do the way we love to do it, which is why
we’re in this in the first place, so we’ll have to give a lot of thought to
how much artistic control we’re willing to give up in this deal."
There
was a time not too long ago where the only way to promote your music on a large
scale was through a major, so the choice was more like, ”Well, do you want
some of what you meant to get heard or do you not want to get heard at all?”
Fortunately, musicians today really don’t have to make that choice, for possibly the first time in history.
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