TELL ME WHEN IT'S OVER:
The Paisley Underground Reconsidered
by John L. Micek
The Rain Parade
Steve Wynn
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If you ask Steve Wynn for one of his favorite memories from his days playing on the Los Angeles club scene
back in the early eighties, you might be surprised by his answer.
It's not sharing the bill with such legendary combos
as The Rain Parade or Green on Red, or touring the
nation, or even recording an album in 1982 that's come
to be viewed as a seminal document of the time
(The Days of Wine and Roses -- more on which
later).
No, when Wynn, the former Dream Syndicate leader (now
a solo artist), thinks about the brief flowering of
West Coast bands that became known as The Paisley
underground, he thinks about a day trip to Catalina
Island off the coast of Southern California.
The year is 1982. It's a glorious Fourth of July
weekend, and members of the Dream Syndicate, Rain
Parade, Salvation Army and the Bangles (before the big
hair and "Walk Like an Egyptian") are all in
attendance. It is a day of sun, surf, barbecue and
camaraderie.
"It was the defining moment," Wynn recalled not long
ago. "We were all just happy together. We were all
into the moment."
So why should one memory, now 20 years gone, still
hold any importance? Why should the activities of a
semi-obscure group of bands still hold sway two
decades after they first took up their instruments and
committed songs to tape?
The answer is twofold.
First, Wynn's story should resonate with anyone who
even vaguely remembers their early 20s: that
magical time when your friends are your family, when
every sensation is the first one, and (if you're a
musician just starting out) rock is the food and drink
that gets you through the day.
"It was a surprisingly supportive scene," said Steven
Roback, who co-founded the Rain Parade with brother
David. "Part of it was preestablished friendships
between David and I and the Hoffs family. We grew up
together, lived two blocks from each other. In fact, I
performed in seventh grade musical with Sue [Susannah
Hoffs of the Bangles] as the lead."
The camaraderie between the bands was at least as
important as the music they were making. For a period
of several years, the Paisley Underground groups
crossed paths on tour, shared the same booking agents,
and worked on each other's projects.
The epicenter for the scene was the two-story, Los
Angeles apartment kept by desert rockers Green on Red.
The band's barbecues provided a place to schmooze,
drink and swap musical ideas. It is a place recalled
with great fondness by the Paisley Underground's
various members.
Rain Parade guitarist Matt Piucci puts it this way:
"We met the Dream Syndicate through a (Green on Red)
barbecue," Piucci recalled. "They had this place up
in Hollywood. From there, we met the [Bangles']
Peterson sisters -- Ooh yeah! They were very sweet
girls."
The bands that made up the Paisley Underground provide
a direct link between the early American underground
and the modern alternative rock and alt.country that
was to follow a decade later.
"It was a marriage of classic rock and punk,"
explained Pat Thomas, co-owner of San Francisco indie
Innerstate Records and the Underground's unofficial
historian. "It was a precursor to SubPop and the whole
alternative country movement. You've got bands like
the Long Ryders. Fast-forward 10 years, and everyone
thinks that Son Volt is God's gift to country rock."
Indeed, the harsh guitar noise of the Dream Syndicate
echoed later in the Pixies and Nirvana (Kurt Cobain
once cited the Syndicate as an influence) and the
twangy guitars of the Long Ryders and Green on Red
later provided a blueprint for alt.country pioneers
Uncle Tupelo.
"Uncle Tupelo started as we were unraveling," former
Long Ryders bassist Tom Stevens said. "We played St.
Louis once, and I don't know if (Uncle Tupelo leaders
Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar) were out in the audience
taking notes or what."
Although they disagree about exactly when they were
officially christened (listening to the various
musicians tell stories about the era is not unlike
playing a child's game of telephone), Wynn and the
others do agree that it was former Salvation Army
leader Michael Quercio who gave the movement its name.
Quercio -- who later went on to form the Three O'Clock
and Jupiter Affect -- jokingly dropped the Paisley
Underground reference during an interview. It stuck.
And again, depending on whom you ask, the communal
moniker was either a godsend or an albatross.
"We viewed it as joke," Stevens said. "We didn't like
to be pigeonholed on the one hand. On the other, if
people were writing about us and spelling our names
right, it was okay."
Wynn is slightly more charitable.
"I don't think [Quercio] thought it would stick like
it did", he said. "As dopey as it was . . . it was
helpful to have a banner over it. It didn't really
hurt anyone."
Those involved in the scene also agree on something
else: the umbrella label failed to take into account
the diverse bands that made up the Paisley Underground
scene.
On the one hand, there was the desert rock of Green on
Red and the country-punk of the Long Ryders. On the
other was the dreamy pop of the Rain Parade and the
Salvation Army/3 O'clock. The Dream Syndicate,
meanwhile, blended psychedelia with the anger of punk
and the mystique of the Velvet Underground.
"These bands in L.A. had extremely diverse musical
personalities. Some of them were extremely hard
rocking, and that's why the Paisley Underground is
truly a misnomer," Roback said. "The whole thing was a
spontaneous resynthesis of many influences, which
happens periodically, colored by the personalities of
the people and the times. Rain Parade was very much a
recasting of our punk interests in more musical terms,
inspired by our fascination with music history."
Indeed, if you spend any time talking with its
constituents, it rapidly becomes apparent that the
Paisley Underground's members are music junkies in the
truest sense of the word. Wynn and Piucci, in
particular, are repositories of vast stores of rock
history. Combine that knowledge with a punk D.I.Y
ethic, and the scene explodes.
"We all came out of punk," Wynn said. "We had a huge
musical awakening in 1977, and it just blew
everything else away. In 1975, you couldn't do that.
But by 1982, it was second nature."
That melding of styles also lends the music a certain
timelessness that is lacking in other records of the
period. Indeed, the Dream Syndicate's The Days of
Wine and Roses or Rain Parade's stellar debut,
Emergency Third Rail Power Trip, still sound
refreshingly modern and could easily occupy the same
indie airspace as the Strokes or the Anniversary.
"I think it's because they wrote good songs,"
Chicago Sun-Times rock critic Jim DeRogatis
said of the scene's staying power. "It's illuminating
to compare the '60s revivals of the era -- the West
Coast Paisley Underground and the East Coast garage
scene. The bands from the former stay with the fans
much more than the latter because they wrote strong
material that stood the test of time, while the latter
were largely devoted to covers and style (and fashion)
over songwriting."
But by 1985, the scene had disintegrated amid
personnel changes, disputes over songwriting, and the
old demon: record deals gone bad.
"Unfortunately, they were all united by the fact that
they all took turns for the worse when they were
signed to major labels," DeRogatis wrote in his
seminal work on the scene, Kaleidoscope Eyes.
"In the days before Nirvana, they proved there was
money to be made if the bands were left to their own
devices," DeRogatis wrote. "It's possible that
corporate meddling was to blame. The bands may have
lost heart as, with the sole exception of R.E.M.,
American guitar music was unable to achieve both
critical and commercial success."
For a brief, flashing moment, it appeared that the
American underground had conquered rock. And through
the prism of two decades, the members of the Paisley
Underground remain fiercely proud of their legacy.
"The reason the L.A. scene has endured is because the
music was really good," Roback said. "I mean things
did get a little absurd when these . . . A&R people
started showing up at gigs and throwing money around.
But these people were all very talented, and
regardless of the label, capable of great things. For
about three or four years, all of those bands were on
a serious roll, producing great music, which was all
different . . . The rest is mainly hype."
But the artistic achievement was important enough for
Innerstate's Thomas (whose own New York band, the
Rochester-based Absolute Gray, provided the
Underground with its East Coast branch office) to
spend several fruitless months attempting to compile a
still-unreleased Paisley Underground boxed set.
He began compiling the set in 1997 at the behest of
executives at Rykodisc in England. "I got a phone
call out of the blue", he recalled. "And they were
looking for the phone numbers for some of the key
members. I was working at a record store and the owner
was good friends with the head of A&R at Ryko and he
convinced him why I should have the job. Finally,
they flew someone out to meet with me, and by 1998, I
had the job."
What followed is a textbook example of the whims of
the record business. After spending six months
compiling photographs, tracking down old B-sides and
compiling live cuts, the rug was suddenly pulled out
from under him.
"Ryko got bought out by Island, and they fired the big
bosses," he said. "Pretty much every project got
canceled. Every few months, someone from Ryko will
call and ask what's up, but I'd be surprised if it
ever sees the light of day." He's briefly toyed with
releasing the set on his own label, but the costs of
such a project would make it prohibitive. "To do it
all top-notch would cost about $30,000," he said. "If
we were to do it ourselves, it would cost about
$10,000. What needs to happen is that someone needs to
take the bull by the horns. I'll get excited when and
if that happens."
Several hundred miles north of Thomas' Oakland offices
that has already begun to happen.
Founded little more than a year ago, the Portland,
Oregon-based indie, the Paisley Pop Label, has
dedicated itself to keeping the spirit of the
Underground alive. In its brief existence, the label
has released demos and outtakes by former Windbreaker
s Bobby Sutliff and Tim Lee, an Absolute Grey live
set, and, more recently, a collection by former True
West members Gavin Blair and Richard McGrath called
The Foolkillers.
Label owner Jim Huie (himself a frequent collaborator
with former True West guitarist Russ Tolman) also
moderates a Paisley Underground mailing list. It is,
he says, his way of keeping the faith.
"If the Paisley Underground built upon the '60s,
then it's certainly possible that a younger crowd
might take inspiration from the Dream Syndicate and
the Long Ryders."
For his part, Wynn said he's glad that the Paisley
Underground's legacy has endured and picked up new
fans.
"It's attached to a lot of strong feelings from
people", he said. "I don't know how many are people
who were there at the time and how many are
25-year-old kids who are discovering it for the first
time . . . I think it still sounds kind of
non-formulaic in ways that other music does not. It
still does stand out."
30 April 2002