Story Just Wrote With Music: Interview with Doug Hoekstra[28 September 2006] "I do believe that, that even when someone is "bothering" the coffee drinkers, you can look around the audience and find folks connecting and digging what he or she is doing, and from those connections, all sorts of good things emerge, immediately or further on down the road."
By Nikki TranterPopMatters Books & Re:Print Editor
When a Doug Hoekstra album is reviewed—there’ve been 10 since 1994, including a much-adored live bootleg—the Nashville performer’s lyricism inevitably receives comment. “Poetic”, they’ve called it: “studied”, “sensitive”, spiritual”, and “true”. Adequacy magazine compared Hoekstra’s writing to Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, while PopMatters‘ own Dave Heaton, in his review of Hoekstra’s Su Casa, Mi Casa, paid special attention to the singer’s talent for “soaking up places and people, and then using his pen and guitar to capture them as completely as those tools can.” His songs are little stories, social and behavioral commentaries that urge the listener to look closer—at people, places, life, and art. From “Watercolor Rose” (Six Songs, 2005):
Hoekstra loves to explore life’s revealing imagery. His eye for important touches, backwards glances, and the potential for poetry in describing them is the highlight of Hoekstra’s latest creative endeavor, Bothering the Coffee Drinkers, a collection of 17 short stories from a predominant and familiar perspective—that of the traveling musician struggling to connect with his audience. Those stories not written from the direct POV of the artist usually study the independent music scene. Hoekstra’s experiences playing music across the globe (this month, he’ll headline in Madison, Wisconsin and Oslo, Norway), give his stories the kind of ultra-realism even the best rock novels often lack: awareness of the indie world from the inside. Hoekstra knows what it’s like to work with striving session artists, what it’s like to live in a bus, plane, slow-moving cab. He’s also stared into the faces of an audience either attentive, not listening, pretending not to listen, or couldn’t care less. In his book, each of these groups is served with equal parts understanding and criticism:
It’s a strange homage to the characters in that world, most clearly the road-tested backstage men and women, pulling together with little up-front glory to see that the frontman’s dream continues. They rope, rig, and pull, riding side by side with the likes of Johnny Q, the Doug-like singer/songwriter addicted to performing and propping himself up with little victories in the music world—“a song that was favorably reviewed in Billboard ... a song that wound up in an independent film that played on the Sundance Channel from time to time”. Whether directly Doug or not, the stories each contain multiple theories about music and art, popular versus independent, the challenges facing musicians at all levels. It’s a grounded, informative, extraordinary piece of work. PopMatters dished with Hoekstra about his lyrics, storytelling, life on the road, and the rewards of a life on the indie circuit.
Have you always written prose? How do they styles compare for you?
As for choosing one form or the other, for me, it tends to be pretty intuitive, just how I feel about approaching a certain idea. For example, Bothering the Coffee Drinkers is a book full of stories closely or vaguely related to the land of music and I don’t think it would be very interesting to go see a singer/songwriter sing a bunch of tunes about exactly what he’s doing at that moment, nor would I feel real comfortable doing it. I think the ideas are better served by prose. I’ve only written one song about the music biz—“Laminate Man”, which pokes fun at a music biz A&R guy who attends events like South by Southwest. On the other side of the coin, I have a new song called “Instincts”, that’s more poetic, it’s all about tried and true instincts of life letting this character down, which was somewhat inspired by our current leader’s (and I use the term loosely) ridiculous misguided over-reliance on his “gut” in matters of international importance. Anyway, I suppose that could be a story, but to me it seemed more meditative and better served by a bed of music and a series of thoughts put into a personal, less political, context by this character. So, it’s a song.
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Do your songs and stories come together similarly?
You appear to have spearheaded your own marketing campaign with this book. Is that a grind for you, the promotion, trying to open doors, to get your stories read, or is it a natural part of this job as of 2006?
How does the philosophy that “everyone is/has a story” affect your life day to day? Are you always looking for the next story?
Is “Bothering the Coffee Drinkers” [phrase and story] an apt description for the life of a traveling musician?
What’s behind that faux intellect thing at a lot of these coffee places—buying the triple lattes but ignoring the books and records all around. Is it fakery? Is it fair to say you’ve encountered more of the coffee drinkers than the genuine artists and thinkers looking to be enlightened or just entertained?
I remember once I was playing a pub in Brighton, UK, and the owner told me that when he bought it, it was a “no cover” pub. And, he said, he had to stand at the door every night telling people it cost five or ten quid or whatever to get in. They’d complain, and then he’d say: “Well, while you were sitting on the sofa watching football on the telly, these performers were practicing and working on their craft, and that’s why you have to pay.” And, then, he said, after about two years of this, him giving this spiel every night, the “punters” would show up and simply ask, “How much?” So, part of it is just the fact that some folks don’t put themselves in someone else’s shoes. Some folks aren’t willing to meet an artist halfway either, they want a human jukebox or a piece of writing that is exactly like what they know. I suppose that’s fine if that’s where you’re at, but if you are going to come along for the ride, then open up a little, engage, listen, help support it. All that said, I think I’ve encountered just as many thinkers and genuine folks in the audiences I’ve played for. Being an “indie” musician, one cultivates supporters who have tremendous loyalty and sensitivity to what you’re doing and that is very gratifying. Particularly over in Europe, if people respond and like you, they stay with you from project to project. I’m fortunate to have sown friendships all over the world, and learned a lot in the process, from people who are generous and open, sharing their lives with me as I come into their town, city, and/or country. So, hopefully the stories in the book reflect that even when the immediate picture may look a bit tough, there are, in fact, layers of reward in the experience. I do believe that, that even when someone is “bothering” the coffee drinkers, you can look around the audience and find folks connecting and digging what he or she is doing, and from those connections, all sorts of good things emerge, immediately or further on down the road. |
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