Category Archives: Musical Musings

Shaman’s Harvest front man Nathan Hunt talks rock and wrasslin’

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Many wrestling fans (myself included) were introduced to the Southern rock stylings of Shaman’s Harvest when Drew McIntyre began using their song “Broken Dreams” as his entrance music in 2010. Considering the success McIntyre had in WWE as Intercontinental and Tag Team Champion (not to mention his continued success as the current Evolve Champion as Drew Galloway), and the subsequent exposure “Broken Dreams” got on RawSmackDown and other WWE events, the largely unknown Shaman’s Harvest suddenly started gaining a lot of new listeners. The band has continued its relationship with WWE, recording another entrance theme for Wade Barrett/The Corre (though I didn’t realize it was even the same band given that song’s more industrial pop sound) and appearing on the soundtracks for some of WWE’s movies. More recently, however, the band released Smokin’ Hearts & Broken Guns, it’s fifth album and first for Mascot Records. The album continues the band’s foot-stomping swamp rock sound, at times bordering on country and bluegrass territory. Hitting the road on Nov. 10 for a few headlining dates before joining up with Fozzy and Texas Hippie Coalition Nov. 20-Dec. 13, Shaman’s Harvest front man Nathan Hunt talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about working with Jim Johnston, how recording entrance themes has changed the band’s songwriting process and his love of The Bushwhackers.

My introduction to Shaman’s Harvest was when Drew McIntyre used your song “Broken Dreams” as his entrance music in WWE. How did he end up using your song as his entrance music? Was he a fan of yours or was WWE responsible for choosing his music?

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Jim Johnston is the genius behind all the music for WWE. We sent him our song “Dragonfly” and he wasn’t really into it for an entrance song or any of their pay-per-views or anything. But he liked the sound, so he wrote “Broken Dreams” and sent it to us and asked if we wanted to do it. We were like, “Sure. Hell, why not?” It was a good thing because they have something like 40 million viewers every Monday night. So it definitely helped us. Subsequently, he sent us a couple of other tracks after that and I’ve been working with him ever since.

Right. I didn’t realize you also did entrance music for Wade Barrett and The Corre. Was that a similar process where Johnston wrote the song, then sent it to you guys to record?

Yeah. Then he used “Dragonfly” in the Legendary movie, because he writes all the scores and soundtracks for the movies that WWE produces. I flew up to their compound up there to do that Wade Barrett track, “End of Days”. I’ve done a couple of others since then. We did another song called “Anger,” which he didn’t wind up using for an entrance theme, but he used it in another movie they made called No One Lives.

Since you submitted your music to Johnston in hopes of it being used by WWE, I assume you’re a wrestling fan.

Oh. Fuck, man. I think all of us grew up watching wrestling, or as we call it here, “wrasslin’.” Yeah. I mean, growing up, for me it was the Bushwhackers. That was it for me. I could relate. Obviously, the Undertaker is absolutely legendary. When he came out, man, I hated his guts because he was such an asshole.

Yeah. He was evil, but people eventually started to like him.

Yeah. Well, I think he just had the longevity. And the badassness he had, people started looking up to him. Which is easy to do because he’s, like, 7-foot-something, isn’t he?

Why did you hate him so much? Was it because of who his targeted opponents were?

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Yeah. Back in the day it was Hulkamania. There were the good guys and the bad guys and there was such a separation between the two in the ’80s. And he couldn’t lose. He was just going through and destroying people. As a kid, I wanted the good guys to win. That entrance music is probably the most iconic entrance music ever. There’s actually a thing, I think, where nobody else can use those tolling bells. I think that’s a copyright for the Undertaker just because when you hear that first bell, you know who’s coming out.

What was it about the Bushwhackers you liked so much?

I just thought the were badasses and they were just slightly unhinged. They weren’t quite all there and they were just cool, man. They were probably the first tag team I ever really got into.

I was a big fan of the Bushwhackers, but I don’t often here anyone say the Bushwhackers were their favorite wrestlers. 

Yeah, man. They were definitely my favorite tag team.

You just released a new album, Smokin’ Hearts & Broken Guns? Has WWE used anything off of that album yet?

Not yet. We’ve been in talks with them about it, but we’ll just see what comes up. Usually how they work is as they develop characters or as characters develop themselves, that’s when the brains get together and decide on what’s going to work for who. So it just stays in their pool of tracks and hopefully they’ll decide to use it for a pay-per-view or something. We’ll see.

Aside from the songs you recorded specifically for WWE, would you say that wrestling or any of its personas have ever influenced your music or songwriting process?

Probably, man. “Dangerous” off the new record kind of has that feel of being straightforward and being a badass. After working on some of those songs with Jim, you kind of start thinking of songs as entrance themes. When you’re doing an entrance song, you’ve got to visualize a guy walking down, most likely real slow at first, then it picks up, then you’ve got to think about the pyro and all that stuff. Which is completely different than when you’re thinking about just writing a song for radio. I think quite a few of our tracks, after working with Jim, build as the song progresses throughout the track. So, yeah. It’s probably influenced us in our style of writing, a little bit.

Shaman’s Harvest is headlining these first few tour dates, then you’re being joined by Chris Jericho‘s band Fozzy. Have you ever performed with Fozzy before?

Photo by Travis Duncan.

Photo by Travis Duncan.

We played with them in Peoria about a month ago and all those guys are really nice. Chris might be one of the hardest-working people I’ve ever met in the music industry. Most of us tend to be a little on the lazy side and imbibe a little bit with the alcohol and all that stuff. But he works hard. And it’s not like he’s a wrestler or an actor trying to be a musician. He really is a musician and they’re a badass band. Way more badass than I expected before I heard them. They work hard and the dude is running podcasts out of the bus, then doing shows and sound checks and meet-and-greets. We opened up for them and he sat there and watched our whole show from the balcony. Not a lot of headliners come out and do that. He’s a genuine dude.

There’s a common thread that runs between the three bands on this tour, yet each band has its own distinct sound. 

I think a great show is to have three bands that, like you said, have a common thread, but they’re not the same thing regurgitated over and over again. You’re going to get different aspects of rock ‘n’ roll throughout the entire fucking show. It’ll be a little bit of everything. It keeps it more interesting and people don’t get bored.

The personalities involved in those two bands will also keep things interesting.

They’re definitely out front. I don’t think anybody’s too reclusive out of that bunch, and neither are we. So there’s going to be some shenanigans. Plus, you’re at the end of the tour in Atlanta and usually some crazy shit goes down there at the end.

www.shamansharvest.com

Shonen Knife remains in “Overdrive” after more then three decades

Courtesy of Good Charamel Records.

Courtesy of Good Charamel Records.

When you can count ’90s alternative rock giants like Nirvana and Sonic Youth among your biggest supporters, success should come as no surprise. But when you’re an all-female garage rock trio from Japan, garnering a worldwide following might still seem a little far fetched. And to still have continued success in the United States more than 20 years later is something of which anyone should be proud. Sitting down with Shonen Knife at Anime Weekend Atlanta a few weeks ago, however, I quickly realized this band is still incredibly humble. Having just performed the previous night at East Atlanta 529 rock club, Shonen Knife was preparing for an afternoon performance in front a very different audience of anime lovers. And despite its brevity and broken English, this interview was one of the more interesting ones I’ve done in quite a while. Singer/guitarist Naoko Yamano, the only original member of the band, sat down next to me while bassist Ritsuko Taneda and drummer Emi Morimoto created a semicircle around us. But when I asked questions, the two of them would smile, nod and giggle from time to time while Yamano did all the talking. Currently wrapping up its Overdrive tour of North America (which included the band’s 1,000th show last month), here is the result of Wrestling with Pop Culture‘s sit-down with Shonen Knife at AWA.

You normally perform at rock clubs like the one you performed in last night. Will AWA be your first anime convention performance?

Last year we played at AyaCon, a British one.

How does a rock club performance compare to an anime convention performance for you?

Courtesy of Good Charamel Records.

Courtesy of Good Charamel Records.

Mostly they are the same. But this convention is more big; bigger than last year’s Britain one.

What is the biggest difference playing in a smoky bar and playing in a convention ballroom?

I like both. I like to play the very dark and to play at a bar is fine. But playing a very clean huge place is also fine. So I cannot compare.

One of the Goo Goo Dolls produced some of your more recent work. How did such an unlikely collaboration come about?

Our album called Osaka Ramones, the Goo Goo Dolls bassist Robby [Takac] produced. It’s all Ramones cover songs and it was released in 2011. He is owner of our American label called Good Charamel. He understood about underground music and he produced our cover songs. Our latest album Overdrive was produced by myself.

Overdrive was just released in April. How would you say it compares to your previous albums?

The new one is inspired by ’70s American rock and British hard rock. Previous ones, Pop Tune and some others, are punk albums or something like that. But I wanted to make something new, something different. Recently I liked to listen to ’70s music and I like that.

When you started gaining interest and attention from other bands and fans in America, was that a goal you were trying to achieve or did Nirvana, Sonic Youth and all these other bands somehow discover your music on their own?

We were playing without conscious. Fortunately many bands became our fans, so it’s very lucky.

Do you know how they originally discovered your music?

Courtesy of Good Charamel Records.

Courtesy of Good Charamel Records.

Originally, in the early ’80s, Shonen Knife released vinyl in Japan and an American guy who owns record label called K Records came to Japan and he bought our album. Then he made a contact to me by postal mail and he wanted to release our album in America. So we send master tape to him. It was the start point.

Do you have any new music you’re working on? Do you know when your next album might be released?

I’m always very lazy and I start make songs when I book studios. So if I book studio for the next album I can start writing songs.

How do you decide when you’re going to book a studio to begin working on a new album?

I never look back and am looking just forward. Because I’m lazy, I never make long future plans. I think it makes me very fresh.

What are your plans after this tour concludes in October?

After this tour we have plans to go to India and have shows. It is first time for us. Now we are working on taking visas. Then we have some shows in Japan. Then we go to Australia and New Zealand next January and February.

Do you have a lot of fans in India?

I don’t know. We get to play at music festival in India, so I hope there are many Sonen Knife fans.

www.shonenknife.net

Crash Dragon gets fired up for performance with Monstrosity Championship Wrestling

Photo by Haley Hagle.

Photo by Haley Hagle.

Kennesaw, Ga. is known for a lot of things, but fire-breathing reptiles aren’t usually on that list. But when vocalist Dami Umling, bassist Bryce Sailors, drummer Phil Wirsig and guitarists Stuart Lyle and Ryan McKay decided to form their own Kennesaw-based band, Crash Dragon was born. With regular performances at Atlanta venues such as The Loft, Vinyl and the Masquerade, Crash Dragon’s brand of pop rock has garnered the band a strong following in it’s relatively short existence. Having recently competed in the Masquerade’s Musician’s Showcase, the band returns to the Masquerade for a very different type of event on Sept. 12. In between Monstrosity Championship Wrestling matches, the band will perform catchy songs such as “Poison” and “Where We Belong”. As the band prepares for perhaps its strangest show to date, Wrestling with Pop Culture chats with its members about video games, monster movies and more.

I’ve only recently seen Crash Dragon perform. How long have you been a band and how did you come together?

Umling: We’ve been a band for a little over a year now. We all met because most of us go to [Kennesaw State University]. We were actually playing Rock Band one day and we were like, “We should just start a regular band.” Then we did and it was awesome!

What were some of your favorite things to play on Rock Band?

Umling: Pearl Jam!

Sailors: Some of us liked to play Pearl Jam.

Umling: Bryce loves Pearl Jam.

How did you come up with the name Crash Dragon? Is that a reference to a video game or something?

Lyle: That’s actually a funny story.

Umling: No. It’s really not that funny of a story. We wrote a bunch of words down on a piece of paper and picked out two of them. They sounded cool, but there’s no meaning behind it, really.

Sailors: It’s just a cool name.

Umling: I mean, it works out because my two favorite video games are Crash Bandicoot and Spyro the Dragon, but that’s not the premise behind it at all.

Maybe on a subconscious level it had something to do with it. 

Umling: Yeah, maybe. If we’re reaching for something, then, yeah.

You’ve performed at the Masquerade and other Atlanta venues numerous times. Last month you competed in Musician’s Showcase competition. How did you end up doing in that?

Photo by Haley Hagle.

Photo by Haley Hagle.

Umling: That was our first battle of the bands-type thing. Usually we just play regular shows.

Lyle: We made it to the finals of the Masquerade Musician’s Showcase, which was really exciting.

This will be your first time performing at an MCW event. How much do you know about what you’re getting yourselves into and what are you anticipating this Friday?

Umling: We really don’t know a lot about what it is. They asked us to play it and we were intrigued.

Sailors: We’re excited to play it.

Umling: Yeah, we are. In my mind I just see a bunch of monsters wrestling. And I really hope that’s what it is.

That’s exactly what it is. There are wolfmen, vampires, zombies and even a few human wrestlers.

Umling: Awesome! Sweet! I’m so excited.

Sailors: Alright!

Umling: I totally want to zombify myself on stage.

Professor Morté is the one who performs all the monster magic, so he will be happy to perform some magic on you as well. He can bring out your inner dragons or whatever else might be hiding inside you.

Umling: I want to be a mummy dragon.

Wirsig: I want to be a zombie dragon.

Are you particularly interested in wrestling, horror movies or anything like that?

Lyle: I get scared easily. But Dami is a big horror movie fan.

Umling: I love scary movies. It’s one of favorite genres of movies. I force everyone else to watch them and Stuart gets scared. Stuart will probably be scared this Friday. If anyone’s wearing a mask, Stuart’s going to be scared.

Lyle: Yeah, that’s probably how it’s going to go.

Chambers of Horror will be involved with this event. Some of those guys wear some weird masks.

Umling: Don’t worry, Stuart. We’ll protect you.

Lyle: Oh, thank you!

You mentioned one of your influences when we were talking about Rock Band, but tell me more about the bands that inspired you to start Crash Dragon.

Lyle: I’d say we’re inspired by a mix of alternative rock with some classic rock influence in there. We have a female vocalist, so that gives us a really unique sound.

Umling: We all listen to different stuff, really. There are certain bands we all like, but we all listen to different stuff across the spectrum. We pull influence from a lot of different things. We’ve heard people say we’re a mashup of Paramore, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Weezer, but we also do have a lot of classic rock influences. We play whatever we think sounds good.

Wirsig: I don’t think we’ve ever sat down and been like, “We’re influenced or inspired by this artist” or whatever. We just kind of go with it and see what happens.

Sailors: Usually it’s just like, “Hey. Check out this funky bass line” or “Hey. I wrote a song on guitar” and we just kind of work from there.

What I’ve noticed most about your sound is that almost anyone will enjoy some aspect about it, or at least not completely dislike it.

Crash DragonUmling: We have a lot of different-sounding songs. I wouldn’t say we have one cohesive sound. We have a song that has kind of a reggae  feel to it, we have songs that are more classic rock, songs that are more pop. We definitely have something for everyone.

Do you have an other shows coming up after the MCW event on Friday?

Lyle: Currently, no. After this show we’re going to focus on recording a few more songs. We put out an EP recently and we’d like to build our way up to a full album.

Umling: The three songs from our EP are available for free download on SoundCloud and ReverbNation, as well as free physical copies at the show.

Jett Bryant leaves his footprint with Drive-Invasion poster and Bigfoot performance

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

For the past 15 years, one rambunctious event has signaled the end of summer for many Atlantans. This year the Drive-Invasion moves from the Starlight Six Drive-In Theatre to Turner Field, scales back from its usual two days to a one-day event and takes place the weekend after Labor Day instead of Labor Day weekend. Despite all these changes (as well as some new features such as Jim Stacy’s Food Truck Midway), this year’s Drive-Invasion will maintain a lot of sights and sounds from previous years. I can’t remember a Drive-Invasion that hasn’t included Dear God No! star Jett Bryant, a tattoo artist at Memorial Tattoo, keyboard player for AM Gold and front man for outlaw country outfit The Scragglers. This year his heavy Southern rock band Bigfoot will once again be stomping around on one of two music stages. Bryant also designed one of this year’s event posters, which will be available as a limited edition print at the Drive-Invasion Artist Market. The week leading up to Drive-Invasion is “the calm before the storm” for Bryant. So it wasn’t difficult to get Bryant to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about Drive-Invasion for a few minutes (though cheap beer and Tater Tots didn’t hurt).

Bigfoot is a difficult band to track down for an interview.

I make sure that I keep two days a week specifically for drinking and nothing else. It’s a little me time and you fit right in on that.

How many Drive-Invasions have you performed at?

I don’t even know, man. Between Monster Bash and Drive-Invasion, they kind of all blend together. Between Bigfoot and Rock City Dropouts, I think I’ve played almost all of them. I didn’t start going to them until the third or fourth one, but I know Bigfoot’s played at least four, if not more. I don’t know if I’m counting Monster Bash in that.

My understanding is that this year’s Drive-Invasion focuses on bands that have played at previous Drive-Invasions.

I think they were just trying to keep it local this year and get people to come down and perform that are good at it. And it’s a one-day thing this year, which I’m going to have to get used to. I’ll show up that morning and have to leave that night. You can’t show up the morning before and leave the morning after like I’m used to doing.

Tell me about the poster you did for this year’s Drive-Invasion.

Drive-Invasion poster by Jett BryantI did the monster from The Horror of Party Beach drinking a tiki drink. I wanted something that would catch the eye and did a little nod to a buddy of mine with the orange tiki glass and the pink straw. When Jimmy [Bickert, Drive-Invasion organizer] asked me to do it I was originally going to do Jaws. Then I realized if I did Jaws it would just look like a Panama City Beach T-shirt. So I went with the other monster instead and it looks good.  I like it. It’s awesome. And we’ll be selling them at the show.

What time is Bigfoot performing?

I think we go on at 2:45. Don’t quote me on that. I think we go on early enough that I can continue to get hammered for the rest of the day. We’re maybe the third band, fourth band. I’m not quite sure. Early enough that I can get a buzz on before we play and continue to get hammered and probably end up in a hotel. That’s going to be the plan.

I’m assuming there’s not a Braves game at Turner Field that night.

There’s no Braves game, but there is a [Great Atlanta Beer Fest] in the next parking lot. So we might have some overflow from that, I hope. The more, the merrier. A bunch more drunks.

I’d imagine they might have some people from Drive-Invasion trying to sneak in for the beer.

They might. But they don’t have all the cool bands over there.

It’s been a while since Bigfoot released a CD, but I know you have some newer stuff recorded. What’s Bigfoot been up to?

We are elusive like the namesake. We don’t do anything. We come out of hiding to play these events, then we don’t see each other again for months. Except for my drummer is now my neighbor, so I see him all the time. But he’s more of my neighbor than he is my drummer. I’ve got most of his lawn equipment at my house.

We’ve got a lot of stuff recorded, but Jimmy Hall’s always out of town and he’s kind of like the lifeblood of the band. We can perform without him, but he’s the blood that runs through the veins when it comes to writing new stuff. He does guitar teching for Sugarland, so he’s always on the road.

Aside from performing and getting wasted, what else are you looking forward to at this year’s Drive-Invasion?

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

I’m looking forward to the [Silverscreen and Gasoline Car and Bike Show], as always. I’ll be honest with you, I know I love the movies but I never remember seeing them at the Drive-Invasion. I know the draw is going to see the drive-in movies. The bands are just an accessory to the event. But rarely do I remember seeing a movie at Drive-Invasion. I’m awake, I’m just drunk and talking shit somewhere. I want to make sure this is on the record. There’s been an ongoing event at the Drive-Invasion for years called Last Man Standing. It is exactly what it entails: who is the last man standing? It’s gone back and forth over the years, but last year I got the title of Last Man Standing. That means if we can’t do an all-nighter again I am the last champion. I want that on the record.

Do you have a trophy or anything to commemorate that?

There’s no trophy. It’s all here, man. It’s all in the heart. I know I won. But it’s going to suck not to compete again. It’s just about time, though. I’m too old for that shit.

Aside from changing to a one-day format, how do you think the Drive-Invasion will be received now that it’s not at the Starlight?

I think it’s going to be pretty good, man. I’m excited about it. A lot of people were kind of bummed out at first that it wasn’t going to be at the drive-in. But I’d say Jimmy [Bickert], Lisa [Williams] and Dusty [Booze] and all them have done a great job trying to keep it alive. I live for this weekend. My whole year revolves around going to Drive-Invasion.

www.drive-invasion.com

Doyle discusses WCW, “Abominator” and a possible Misfits reunion

Photo by Tim Tronckoe.

Photo by Tim Tronckoe.

With his bodybuilder physique, devilock hairstyle and ghoulish corpse makeup, Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein is perhaps the most imposing member of the legendary horror punk band the Misfits. Because of his onstage presence, Doyle continues to be an underground icon in pop culture with his own action figure, his own brand of hot sauce and an upcoming comic book from IDW Publishing. Though his brother Jerry Only was the one who actually competed in the ring for World Championship Wrestling and Dragon Con Wrestling, Doyle’s connection to the squared circle goes beyond the ring to his short-lived Gorgeous Frankenstein project with then-wife (and former Randy Savage valet) Gorgeous George. After a few tours with Danzig, where Glenn Danzig and Doyle reunited for short Misfits sets, Doyle released his first solo album Abominator last October. As he prepares for the Annihilate America Tour beginning Aug. 15, Doyle talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about wrestling, music and the possibility of a proper Misfits reunion.

First of all, I’m looking forward to seeing you on this tour later this month.

At the Masquerade! The only two venues I know are the Masquerade and the Whiskey [a Go-Go].

Yeah. I’ve seen you perform numerous times at the Masquerade with the Misfits and Gorgeous Frankenstein.

It’s a great place.

I noticed some familiar names and faces in your band for this tour. Who all is in your band and how did they end up in this initial incarnation of the Doyle band?

My singer is from a band called Cancerslug. His name is Alex Story. He attended a tryout eight years ago and he was the only one I actually listened to. All the other ones were horrible. Our bass player’s name is Left Hand Graham and he plays with Graves. And Dr. Chud from the Misfits is on drums.

The Misfits had a brief stint in World Championship Wrestling in 1999 and your brother Jerry Only wrestled at Dragon Con the following year. How did you guys get into the wrestling business? Are you still involved in wrestling in any way?

I’m not involved with it any more. Vampiro wanted to use our intro. I thought we were going to play on the show, that’s what I was told. Next thing I know we’re walking out with the guy and he’s doing a match. They kept having us on for about two months. That was pretty much it. All I can tell you about wrestling is that it’s real. But I’m not really into wrestling.

That’s kind of surprising because you look the part. You’ve definitely maintained an impressive physique over the course of your career.

Yeah. It’s just a matter of taste I guess. I’m just not into it. 

Abominator, your first album under the Doyle moniker, came out last October. How did this album come about and why did you decide to do a solo record?

AbominatorI was writing for a while and I wrote a bunch of musical compositions, fully finished and arranged songs, recorded, drum programmed, the whole thing from start to finish with no vocals or vocal melodies. After I write the music I have a hard time writing the melody. When I listen to it, all I do is picture my hand playing that song. I thought of who do I know that’s a great writer and a great singer? Who could I work with? Who’d want to write with me? The first person that popped into my head was Alex. So I called him and, ironically enough, he was walking into a Danzig show in Houston. I said, “Do you want to write with me?” He was like, “Fuck yeah!” I said, “I’ve got 12 songs.” He said, “Send them all to me.” I sent him three. One of them was “Mark of the Beast” and he sent it back to me in two days just as it is in the record. It was exactly what I wanted and I couldn’t do it myself. I didn’t change any of his words or anything. I’d throw an idea at him if I heard something, which wasn’t that much. If he liked it he did it, if he didn’t [like it] he didn’t [do it]. I only wrote one word on the record and that was, “Abominator.” But I wrote all of the music – me and, on a couple of songs, a friend of mine named Lucas Banker, who is a record producer in Hollywood.

You’ve done some touring with Danzig performing the Misfits sets within his show. Is that why you’ve waited so long to do the Annihilate America Tour to support Abominator?

We did the Danzig tour, which finished in October. Then we had a tour set up with Gwar and three days before we announced the tour, unfortunately, my good friend Dave Brockie passed and it was canceled.

That would have been a great tour. 

Yeah. It was going to be great. It’s just a shame to lose such a good person like that.

With the Misfits, Danzig and Gorgeous Frankenstein, you’ve always had an energetic live show with a certain amount of theatrics. What do you have planned for this tour? What can people expect from Doyle?

Just to fucking fuck shit up. That’s all I do. I don’t have anything else planned. I never plan anything different. It’s always the same.

So no elaborate stage show or anything? You’re just going out and playing hard?

Stage show? I’m broke, man. We just go out and play. With the Misfits it’s pretty much the same thing, just go out and play.

I recently came across a bottle of Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein’s Made in Hell hot sauce. Is this a recipe you came up with? How did your name and face end up on a bottle of hot sauce?

It’s a recipe from Halloween Hot Sauce. We got together, I put some special stuff I wanted in there, they worked on it for a while and it came out really good. I’m working on a hotter one right now. I just tried a sample the other day and oh, my God, it’s so hot! It’s called Abominator.

Your tour begins Aug. 15 and goes right into Halloween season. What do you have planned for Halloween this year?

Photo by Tim Tronckoe.

Photo by Tim Tronckoe.

We might go to South American or Europe. I’m not sure what’s going on. We’re still figuring that out.

Do you have any plans to tour with Danzig again?

That’s totally up to him. I’m always open to it.

You seem to be caught in the middle of all the Misfits controversy between Danzig and Jerry. Is this stuff blown out of proportion or is there really that much discord between those two?

I would like to do a Misfits tour with Danzig and my brother. That would be great for the fans, it would be great for the three of us and it would be great for music in general. I think it would be really fun and I’m totally in. I’ve just to get those two guys to settle all their differences first and we’ll take it from there.

I can’t think of many other bands where all the most important people are still able to do a full-on reunion of some sort. I think the reaction for that would be enormous. 

Exactly.

Do you try to stay out of all that or are you trying to facilitate making it happen?

No, man. I’m going to try to be the catalyst here to get that shit together. I talk to both of them, so I’ve just got to talk to my brother and talk to Glenn.

www.officialdoyle.com

Jerry Buckner brings “Pac-Man Fever” to the inaugural Southern-Fried Gameroom Expo

 

 

 

A week or so ago, a pinball enthusiast friend of mine told me about this weekend’s inaugural Southern-Fried Gameroom Expo. Though I’m not an avid gamer these days, I did spend more of my youth than was likely healthy playing a variety of arcade games, pinball machines and home consoles. While my friend’s main interest in the SFGE is the International Flipper Pinball Association-sanctioned Southern-Fried Pinball Tournament, attracting pinball players from across the country, I soon realized there’s much more pop culture relevance to this event than one might expect. Sure, there’s a gaming area, high-profile gaming sponsors and other attractions for the Xboxers and Playstationers. But there are also film screenings, podcasters and other activities with enough pop cultural relevance that even casual video game fans are likely to find something of interest.

Southern-Fried Gameroom ExpoOne of the more intriguing aspects for me is an appearance by Jerry Buckner, one half of the Buckner & Garcia duo responsible for the ’80s hit single “Pac-Man Fever” who has gone on to have an award-winning career in music, broadcasting, voice acting and more. Come to find out, he also happens to reside in the Atlanta area, not far from where I spent many days listening to my “Pac-Man Fever” record as a child. Buckner will be appearing at the SFGE for the first public screening of The King of Arcades on June 20, as well as a panel and meet-and-greet on June 21. Before he slides the proverbial quarter into this weekend’s festivities, Buckner talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his power pellet of a hit, almost writing music for WWE and returning to the video game world with Wreck-It Ralph.

First of all, until a few days ago I was unaware that one of the guys who wrote “Pac-Man Fever” lived in the Atlanta area. How long have you  lived in Atlanta and why did you move here?

I’m originally from Akron, Ohio. I had a guitar player/singer friend from Akron who moved to Atlanta and shortly after convinced me to come down and work here. This was back in the ’70s and he said there were some things going on in the music business here. I was very interested in that as a songwriter, so I came down and played in some local bands. Eventually, my schoolmate and friend from Akron, Gary Garcia, followed suit and came down with me and we began doing jingles, commercials and writing songs. That’s how “Pac-Man Fever” came about in 1982. We actually had a few minor successes prior to that, but nothing of the magnitude of “Pac-Man”. So that’s how I ended up in Atlanta and I never left. I’m still here.

I actually still have my 7-inch copy of “Pac-Man Fever” and never knew, as a kid, that you guys lived right down the street when you created it. 

I lived in an apartment in Doraville when we wrote the song. We had been working at a studio in Marietta doing jingles and various things at the time and we went to dinner at this little place on the Marietta Square and that’s where we saw our first Pac-Man machine. We started playing it like everybody else and got hooked on it. At some point we thought, “Hey! Maybe it would be cool to write a song about this.” So we did and took it over to Arnie Geller and Buddy Buie. Buddy was the songwriter/manager/producer for the Atlanta Rhythm Section at that time. They liked the idea and we worked on the song in the front room of this little apartment in Doraville, then went in and recorded it. That’s how it all started.

So it wasn’t something you were hired to do to promote the video game?

No. We just took a shot at it. What we tried to do with that song was, we didn’t want to just do some kind of throw-out song and throw some sound effects in. We wanted to write a pop song that could stand up on its own legs pretty well musically, then add things in. It was just an idea we came up with and we did it.

Being from Akron, you’re certainly familiar with Devo. During that time there seemed to be a lot of bands like Devo and “Weird Al” Yankovic that were doing parody songs and things of that nature. Did any of that stuff influence you guys?

Pac-Man FeverI didn’t know Devo personally, but we had a connection to them. I had a band called Wild Butter in 1970 and the bass player’s brother opened up a studio and a bunch of groups came through the studio. Devo was one of the groups, unknown at the time, that came over and recorded. There were several groups from Akron that came over. In fact, Chrissie Hynde used to come out to where we used to play and she told us, “I’m going to be a star one day.” And eventually she was. Anyway, there was that time period when all those groups were recording in this little studio and it was pretty interesting to hear some of that early stuff. I can’t say there was influence, though. Gary and I grew up with the Beatles, pretty much like everyone else in our age group. And we loved blues and a lot of different kinds of music. We played together as a duo, we were in different bands together, you name it, we did it. We weren’t necessarily trying to write a novelty song as much as it was just an idea that came and we decided to do it.

We were working with an artist named Steve Carlisle, who also was from Atlanta, and he sang the theme to WKRP in Cincinnati. We were working on two different projects and recorded the extended version of the theme song with Steve. In fact, “WKRP” and “Pac-Man Fever” were, at one time, side by side on Billboard. But we weren’t necessarily influenced by Devo or any of those other groups. We just liked pop songs and tried to write a pop song utilizing Pac-Man.

I understand that the success of that song resulted in an entire album of songs inspired by video games. Tell me a little more about that.

We recorded “Pac-Man” and Buie-Geller shopped it to every label and nobody wanted it. They didn’t really know what Pac-Man was, which was part of the problem. So they put it out themselves, it got played on a local station and the song just exploded. People went crazy for it and within a few weeks CBS Records purchased the master and released it nationally right before Christmas. Right after the first of the year, when it became apparent it was going to be a national hit, they said, “Look, we really want an album to go with this.” We started working on an album and we wanted to do some regular songs. We recorded two songs and they sent the vice president down to listen to what we were doing and, “Oh, no. We want it to be all game songs.” We knew if we did that we would get labeled as just doing that, but we wanted to go along with the program. So we converted two of the songs to game songs, then created the rest of them and that was the album. It’s kind of an amazing thing because people know those album cuts, I’m not going to say as well as “Pac-Man,” but they know those cuts pretty well and like them and request them. So the whole album became kind of a pop culture phenomenon.

I read something about a song you wrote for E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial that confused me a little. Explain that song to me, if you don’t mind.

That was our nightmare story. E.T. came out the summer of ’82 and “Pac-Man” was a national hit while the movie was out. We went to see the movie and we were drawn into it like everybody else. It was a great film. I had this song I was working on about a family pet I had lost and out of sadness wrote this little melody on the piano about this dog. We got the idea we should do a song about E.T., so we took this melody and switched the concept to E.T. It came out as a very pretty ballad. They took it to CBS, CBS loved it and said, “This has got to be the next single.” Our manager flew to California to meet with Steven Spielberg to get his approval. They had the meeting and our manager told us Spielberg played it over and over again and Spielberg said, “I wish John Williams had come up with this song for the film.” When Arnie came back to Atlanta, he said, “I think they’re thinking about pulling the film back and putting the song in the film. Spielberg loved it!” We were all excited because that was going to be a major thing. Suddenly there was a fly in the ointment and within a couple of days problems developed. Neil Diamond, who was a huge artist at the time with CBS, had the “Heartlight” song. When CBS found out he had the song at the same time, of course he had the juice to get his song released ahead of ours. So CBS declined to release ours and “Heartlight” came out and took all of the thunder of the movie. They released our E.T. song a few months later and, ironically, where it was played, it still got tremendous reaction. But they didn’t promote it. They just let it die. So it was a very sad thing and we were very upset about it. It really drove a wedge between us and CBS and we got out of our contract because of it.

Did it appear on your next album?

Well, we didn’t do any more recording for CBS. We thought we had a deal with RCA, but we didn’t. So we decided just to go into production of other artists and groups. “E.T.” came out as a single, but was never on an album. We redid the Pac-Man Fever album in 1999 when CDs became big, we did another version of “E.T.” and it is on the current Pac-Man Fever
album as a bonus track. But it’s not the original.

What are the main differences between the original Pac-Man Fever album and the 1999 version?

When we did the original album, back in those days we didn’t have the ability to download stuff and get stuff off machines. We had to actually record it live off the machine. Those sound effects were kept with the masters and the masters were kept at Studio One, which I think was eventually sold to Georgia Tech. By 1999, those masters were so old that they could have brittle. They couldn’t find the sound effects track anyway, so we weren’t able to get those original soundtracks and we had to go in and try to find them. Some of them weren’t so easy to find in 1999. Most of them sound pretty close, but they’re not exactly the same. People who really know the album are  kind of critical of us for not using the same thing. The problem is, CBS would not put the album out again because we had to get different licenses for that album from the different companies and they didn’t want to have to go back through all the legal problems to re-release it. But people wanted a CD version of it, so we decided to do it ourselves. So we had to try to recreate everything and it’s not going to sound quite the same, as hard as we try.

So, you also did a bunch of songs for the Waffle House jukeboxes. I always loved those songs.

I appreciate you saying that. They’re the type of pop songs Gary and I liked to write. Gary didn’t work with me much on that. He did do vocals on some of the tracks. That came about because Mary Rogers, who was married to Joe Rogers Jr., the owner of Waffle House, was an excellent singer and having a lot of success on her own. They got the idea to do some songs for the jukebox, so in ’84 she asked me to help out. We began doing songs for the jukebox and it turned out to be a good idea – people liked them and it was kind of a novelty when you came in there. We ended up doing a lot of those songs. Funny thing is, all my kids and their friends were more impressed by the Waffle House jukebox songs than anything else I’ve ever done. People seem to think that’s a pretty cool thing and I enjoyed doing them. We were still doing them up until about a year and a half ago. They’ve kind of put it on hold for now, so we’ll see what the future holds. Of course, they’ve changed that whole system and don’t have jukeboxes. It’s more of a digital computer thing that plays through the speakers.

A couple of years ago things kind of came full circle for you when you did a song for the video game-inspired movie Wreck-It Ralph. How did that come about? Was that a song you were already working on or something you did specifically for the film?

Wreck-It RalphIt was an amazing thing that occurred. I got a call from Tom MacDougall at Disney, who’s in charge of music, and Tom said they had this movie coming out and there was a song they were working on and it would be great if we did the song. Gary passed away suddenly in November of 2011, just prior to when Disney contacted us, so I wasn’t sure how it would work out. One of the guys in the band, Danny Jones, who plays drums and also is an excellent singer, talked about it with Gary’s widow and decided Danny could maybe sing the song. Disney was happy with that as long as it said Buckner & Garcia and it had the Buckner & Garcia sound. We all agreed to do it and there’s a producer in L.A. Disney used named Jamie Houston, who worked with a lot of big acts and several of the American Idol winners. He started on the song and sent it to me, we worked on it and completed it, then he flew in and produced the song. Disney loved what we did and included it in the soundtrack – it was actually the title track to the movie – as the number two song on the actual album. It was so sad Gary could not be part of that. He would have just been thrilled with it. But it’s opened a lot of new doors for us, which is greatly appreciated. To sit in the theater and see your name in the credits of a Disney film is just fantastic.

Just out of curiosity, have you ever done any work for WWE or anything wrestling related?

No, but I almost did. Funny you would even ask that. Back in the ’80s, after “Pac-Man Fever,” Arnie, our manager, was in New York and became Cyndi Lauper‘s manager. Of course, Cyndi was one of the main people that got that whole wrestling thing happening on TV in the ’80s with Vince McMahon. Arnie used to laugh about some of the guys that would come by the office to see her. “Rowdy” Roddy Piper used to come by all the time and Arnie liked Rowdy, said he was a pretty good guy. At one point, Arnie said they needed a theme song. So we put something together and sent it up there, but they really were looking for more raw rock ‘n’ roll kind of stuff and we were more pop/top 40 kind of stuff. So that didn’t work out for us at that time, but we almost did it.

They have an in-house composer named Jim Johnston who does probably 99 percent of WWE’s music now.

If there’s one guy doing it, I think he’s doing a great job. I love watching Monday night Raw. It’s fun to watch and the music matches up great with each of the characters, so I’d say he’s doing a great job.

The inaugural Southern-Fried Gameroom Expo is this weekend and you’re going to be a big part of it. What exactly will your role be at this event?

The King of ArcadesWhen I was approached last fall, they wanted me to come by and hang out, maybe do some question-and-answer deals, sign some autographs, talk to people and just kind of be there on Saturday. In addition to that, there’s a documentary called The King of Arcades. Sean Tiedeman, an independent filmmaker, co-produced it with Adam Goldberg, who does The Goldbergs show on ABC. They put this film together and asked me to be in it to talk about our album, which I did. They’re screening that film on Friday. It’s a great film about ’80s video games and a guy named Richie Knucklez, who is very well known in the game industry – he’s had arcades, he’s had a band. Richie re-cut “Pac-Man Fever,” but it’s a straight-ahead rock ‘n’ roll kind of thing, and that’s in the film at the end. Billy Mitchell’s in it, he’s the top video game player of all time, with a bunch of other people. So I’m looking forward to that and looking forward to meeting people and hanging out. Incidentally, these conventions are starting to happen more now and we’ve had invitations from Houston and Dallas later on in the year and they want the band to come play. We really weren’t prepared to do that at this show in Atlanta, but we may actually go play in Houston and Dallas and see what happens. It’s fun to be part of all this. We kind of became a part of pop culture with the video game attachment and it’s fun. I love doing it.

You’ve also done a lot of voice acting. Do you have any new or upcoming projects in voice acting, music or elsewhere?

I got into radio for a while by accident. I did it for fun, then people said, “Hey, we’ll pay you.” Then I got into voice acting, which is a little bit different than doing voice-overs because you’re actually doing characters. I enjoy doing it. As far as that goes, I’m doing a variety of different things. I was the narrator for a History Channel show called Big Shrimpin’, which ran for eight episodes. What I’m really excited about musically, because of the Disney track, we’re working on some new stuff. I really can’t say the names of the projects because they don’t want us to. But there’s going to be a couple of new songs about some huge games. It won’t be Buckner & Garcia; it’s going to be younger artists singing. We’re working on that project and that should be a lot of fun once we get that out.

www.jerrybuckner.com

The Casket Creatures make horror rock fans scream with delight on “She Screams”

Usually when a band is forced to replace some of its more prominent members, it’s a setback that hinders recording, performing and overall creativity. But Doctor Frankenstein himself couldn’t have reassembled a rock ‘n’ roll monster as quickly and powerfully as The Casket Creatures have. With She Screams, vocalist Eddie Cadaver, guitarist Derek Obscura and bassist Cliff Damage have concocted a collection of seven songs that retain the horror punk aesthetic The Casket Creatures have become known for while adding an extra jolt of energy to electrify even more then before.

She Screams She Screams begins, appropriately enough, with the sounds of a woman screaming as the band takes a more hardcore metal approach on “GKMF” (which stands for “get killed, mother fucker,” in case you were wondering). The Casket Creatures then take the listener through a fast-paced sci fi storytelling session with the hopeless haunted house tale “Haunted,” the rotten romance of “Graveyard Girl” and the apocalyptic horror of “The Final Night”. Then you come to what I consider to be the main event of She Screams, “Planet Wolftron” and “Zombie Werewolves From Outer Space,” a spooky song about extraterrestrial wolfmen who crash land on Earth only to become reanimated and go on a rampage. The EP concludes with the title track, a somewhat surprising ballad-like number reminiscent of something from The Rocky Horror Picture Show with it’s deadly love story and melodic instrumentation.

To say The Casket Creatures have matured with She Screams would imply that these guys have grown up. But that’s not really what we want from a band that sings about alien invasions, zombie outbreaks and other supernatural salaciousness. But you can definitely hear an improvement in the musicianship here, and the lyrics maintain a wittiness that can only come from equal doses of brains, blood and fun.

The Casket Creatures celebrate the release of She Screams at Wrestling with Pop Culture’s third anniversary party with Monstrosity Championship Wrestling at Club Famous on March 14.