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QUESTION METHOD: THE MOTHER HIPS
For
more than a decade, Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono
have been performing their unique brand of California
Soul in their rock band called The Mother
Hips. The band released three albums
with Rick Rubin's American Recordings before self-releasing
Later Days in 1998,
and in 2001 they released Green Hills
of Earth which was named by Rolling
Stone critic Bill Crandall and the San Francisco
Chronicle as one of the year's ten best records.
Bluhm's solo work also includes the album Land
and Sea Chanteys and his solo acoustic
California Way. Loiacono
released Listen to My Shapes,
a record he recorded with his band called Sensations.
The two formed Ball-Point
Birds, exemplifying their softer acoustic
side and released a self-titled record in 2002
with another one set for release in 2006 entitled
Two Discover. The Mother
Hips have performed with Wilco, Johnny Cash, the
Old 97's, Cake, Cracker, and the Black Crowes.
They have released the Red Tandy EP
in late 2005 and will be releasing a full-length
Mother Hips record, the
first in five years, in the Fall of 2006.
1.
Which was the first record you bought with your
own money?
TIM: Kiss Alive II
GREG: AC/DC’s Highway to Hell
2.
Which was the last record you bought with your
own money?
TIM: Brian Eno’s Ambient 1:
Music for Airports
GREG: Michael McDonald — If That's
What It Takes
3.
What was the first solo you learned from a record
— and can you still play it?
TIM: I sort of learned the one on Neil
Young’s "Down by the River," but
I always lose track after he leaves the one-note
part. The Mother Hips played “Everybody
Knows This is Nowhere” at a show a while
back, and I played that solo — but definitely
not note for note.
GREG: The solo in Paul Hoaglin's "I"ll
Have You Know." I can play most of it still.
4.
Which recording of your own (or as a sideman)
are you most proud of, and why?
TIM: My record Land and Sea
Chanteys, because it still sounds
far-out to me, like it was made by somebody else.
You know how you get bored of just being yourself
and just sounding like yourself all the time?
That record doesn't do that to me.
GREG: I really like the second song from
my album Listen To My Shapes.
It's called "Slow to Show.” I didn't
play any fancy guitar on it. I am most proud of
the feel and the vocal performance on that song.
We caught the mood I was trying to catch. Or it
caught us.
5.
What's the difference between playing live and
playing in a studio?
TIM: Hopefully very little. In terms
of trying to get an exciting or special performance
in the studio, I’m even more critical than
on stage, because it has to bear repeated listening.
There are so many other things to think about
in a studio, whereas on stage I am very focused.
Usually.
GREG: The energy live is coming from outside
of me — the audience and the other players,
whereas it comes from within me when I'm in the
studio. Or another way I see it is that when I
play live it is more of a bodily experience and
when I record it is more of a mental, heady experience.
6.
What's the difference between a good gig and a
bad gig?
TIM: For the band it is a matter of how
the performance went. Did you communicate with
the other musicians? Did the band connect with
the audience? Did you hit any clams? A lot of
times the band will think a show was terrible
and the audience will think it
was great.
GREG: A good gig for me is when I am locked
in with the audience and the musicians that I
am playing with, no matter how many people are
involved. A bad gig is when my mind is somewhere
else and I can only focus on bills or the argument
I had with a friend instead of focusing on the
music.
7.
What's the difference between a good guitar and
a bad guitar?
TIM: A good guitar feels good to play.
A bad guitar discourages you from playing it.
GREG: If it makes sound and stays in pretty
good tune, I'll call it good.
8.
You play electric and acoustic. Do you approach
the two differently?
TIM: Electric guitar can have sustain
and reverb, and that surely effects how I play,
in terms of note choices and phrasing. My electric
tone tends to be a bit middy and fuzzy, so I have
to play pretty simple to get stuff across. When
I play acoustic live, I just mic the guitar [instead
of using a pickup] so I can dig in without worrying
about sounding harsh.
GREG: I do. Typically, I attack more on the
electric guitar. I like to stab, chop, and pick.
On the acoustic I usually play with a more open
touch. I like fingerpicking and open tunings.
I like to use my wrist a lot.
9.
Do you sound more like yourself on acoustic or
electric?
TIM: I think it's the same on both.
GREG: Sometimes I am a easy, flowing person,
and sometimes I stab, pick, and chop. So I guess
it is 50/50.
10.
Do you sound like yourself on other people's guitars?
TIM: Acoustic, yes. Electric, no.
GREG: Yes. I think so. Sometimes when I play
Tim's guitar I automatically start doing riffs
that he would do.
11.
Which living artist would you like to collaborate
with, and why?
TIM: Neil Young
GREG: I would love to colaborate with the
Flaming Lips, Will Oldham, and Merle Haggard.
All together!
12.
Which dead artist (music, or other arts) would
you like to have collaborated with, and why?
TIM: Gene Clark
GREG: John Fahey.
13.
What's your latest project about?
TIM: Recording soundscapes and instrumental
tracks in my home studio. I have always been so
focused on lyrics that it is nice to let notes
tell the story for a while.
GREG: I made it with my band Sensations.
The album is called Listen To My Shapes,
and it is my first "solo album" —
where I had all the songs and arrangements for
them before we recorded. I am really happy with
the way it came out.
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