by Dwight Hobbes
Ain’t many beatnik poets left. Chris Shillock is one. As in true, old-school spoken word. Before even The Last Poets there was Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso and the rest of that bunch from the early 1960s. They pioneered the spoken-word part of avant-garde theater, preceding the likes of Amiri Baraka (when he was LeRoi Jones), Sonja Sanchez, Miguel Pinero and such contemporary icons as Sekou Sundiata and Rhodessa Jones. These days, in the Twin Cities, we’ve got premier proponents J. Otis Powell, Louis Alemayehu and Shillock sustaining the genre. John Christopher Shillock, as he calls himself after he finishes a poem or a book, profoundly impresses—with bleak stuff that is brilliant as hell.
His
books include “The Revolutionary’s Creed,” “Testament
of Fear,” “Millenium City” and “Irregular Conjugations.”
And he has read at a slew of open mics, including venues in Duluth, Tucson,
Chicago, New York and Mexico. In the Twin Cities, he’s all over the place—
Minnesota Spoken Word Association, Minnesota Fringe Festival, S.A.S.E.: the
Write Place, Powderhorn Arts Festival, Hopkins Center for the Arts, with Michael
Quinn and the Virgin Suicides at Terminal Bar and so on. And he has appeared
on Minneapolis community access television shows “Art Temple,” “Pulse-TV”
(no relation to this publication), “Cheap Theater” and, slated for
early Dec., “Spectator.” On air appearances include guesting on
KFAI’s “Write On Radio!” and on the pirate station, Radio
Free Twin Cites.
He now has a pair of releases that stand to ratchet his career up a notch. “An
Invitation to the Terrorists’ Ball” offers, in a deluxe DVD package,
live readings at a funky space called Skindog Productions. Shillock’s
richly emotive, baritone delivery of poems and translations is complemented
by artful footage that punches up the immediacy of his writing. While watching
the performance, you can, if you’re so inclined, pull out the booklet
and read along to such verse as the title cut’s “Throw away your
parachute. This is free fall. This is war. Leave your lovers standing there
at the corner, where they sold you out so long ago.” To boot, it is tightly
directed by Ian Shillock, Chris’ son.
For Invisible Jazz, Chris Shillock partners with vocalist-composer Tabatha
Predovich to head up a deft ensemble. Sparse bedrock (David Gullickson, drums;
Tom Zosel, tenor sax; Rich Patterson, guitar/composer; Lynette Reini-Grandell,
violin) underscores fluid, expert imagery. Textures range from old-style folk
rock (the Marty Balin-Paul Kantner flavored “Ballade”) to tasty
jazz (the title cut) to an eerie ballad of love and war (“Blue Nile”).
Shillock is in fine form with lines like “Invisible jazz in the city,
invisible hands pounding on steel. Machinery pulse deep underground. The city
shakes on the skin of a drum. You can catch the vibe throbbing in panes of cool
glass, high in your lofty window.” Predovich’s voice is tailor-made
for this material. Her dramatic, barebones style puts the right notes in the
right places, bringing out the best in each cut, rather than falling into the
trap of trying to be artsy.
Shillock brought in two singers before Predovich, writing lyrics and spoken
word verse for them to perform. They were, he recalls, “very serious about
their musical careers and figured out that this wasn’t going to make them
particularly rich or famous.” Then, Tabatha Predovich answered his classified
ad. Shillock initially says he went with her because “I needed a singer.
Nobody else would do it. Everybody else quit.” With some pressing, he
acknowledges that it wasn’t at all a case of settling for whomever he
could get. “She’s got a great voice. Every time I [perform] with
her, I’m astounded that this [artist] is working with me. She’s
got feeling. She takes my words and makes them her own, basically. I can sit
and write this stuff and she gets inside the words. She gets inside myself.”
One reason Pedrovtich worked out is that she does a bit more than sing—she’s
a fine spoken-word interpreter with attendant acting chops. She started out
in Minneapolis in 1990, creating Velvet Rat — an improv outfit unit accompanied
by a rotating line-up of musicians. In 1993, she was recruited by the English
band Elysium, and relocated to London. There she wrote, recorded and toured
until 1996, over time bringing the band into techno, a still-flowering genre
that already showcases the likes of phenomenal Twin Cities songbird Bobbi Miller.
Predovich came back to the States, specifically Detroit, Mich., working with
the band Radium on a sound culled from goth and punk. Didn’t quite work
out. So, in 2002, she and musician/songwriter husband, Rich Patterson, put together
another band, Uzza. They plan to eventually put it back together in the Twin
Cities.
Chris
Shillock was born in Lisbon, Portugal and grew up in South America and Europe
where his parents served in the U.S. Foreign Service. He’s got a
B.A. in Spanish from Haverford College in Pennsylvania and a master’s
degree in philosophy from the City University of New York. In 1972, he left
the Big Apple to attend the University of Minnesota. During the ’80s he
got active in several communist and anarchist groups. Since then, he has adopted
the working hypothesis that “the creative life is itself a radical act
in a world dedicated to ignorance and exploitation.” Along the way, he
also dedicated himself to raising a family. He’s no longer married but
does have three sons and as many grandchildren.
Hard as it is to figure for one of with sterling output, the man’s been
doing poetry only the past 10 years. Before that, he says, sitting at the desk
in his book-filled, downtown Minneapolis apartment, “I was trying to overthrow
the government, abolish property, make everyone the same.” Usually, when
I hear somebody talking like that it’s cause they’re homely as a
mud fence or mad as a hatter and, either way, can’t get laid, much less
get a life. So, they fill the void with some nobly maniacal manifesto. Shillock’s
handsome enough. And is not crazy (apparently, at least, any more than most
creative types). He is, though, as I can see in his perfectly lucid stare, absolutely
serious. It also turns out he isn’t talking about just the government,
he’s talking about any and all government, period. OK, why? “Because,
it makes sense. They’re no good. They’re all rich. They keep themselves
in power. Everybody would be better off if the goods were distributed evenly
to the people that actually do the work, that deserve it.” Very well,
he is a real, live anarchist. “Any government is a form of oppression.
We are perfectly capable of governing ourselves. Certainly the distribution
of property is inequitable. Those of us [who] create the property, that do the
work, don’t get it. It all goes to a handful of people that don’t
do anything. Except own the means of production. Everybody would be better off
if there were actually no property. Then, everybody would have more rather than
a few people having a whole lot and most of us having almost none.” He
has never used the Freedom of Information Act to see what FBI file or files
exist on him. He did, however, include the message on his answering machine
from FBI Task Force Agent Robert Wagner (St. Paul branch) as an audio
track on his DVD.
What prompted this freewheeling enemy of the state to become a poet? “I’ve
always done some writing. I did a lot of political writing. [But] I got kicked
out of every [political] group I was in. So, I’m thinking, ‘What
can I do?’ I met this guy, Scott Vetsch, at a bookstore in Dinkytown.
He invited me to a party. They were nice people. And they were having a reading
[at] one the bars downtown. Why don’t you come on? I went. I saw it and
I figured, ‘Hey, I can do that.’ And so I did. Not that he was filled
with a world of self-confidence. “People I respected said I was [good].
I don’t have that feeling within myself certainly. I look at my stuff
and there’s stuff there that makes me cringe. I really don’t know
what I’m doing a lot of the times when I’m writing. I just sit there
and keep at it until somehow it comes out right. I don’t really know,
a lot of times, until I perform. When I’m on stage. That’s where
I get the feeling, I guess. A lot more than sitting and trying to sound it out
in my head.”
Modest to a proverbial fault, he was pretty surprised when I told him Pulse
had assigned a story on him. Though it didn’t catch him completely out
of the blue. The publisher’s long been an admirer. “Every time I
go in there, Ed [Felien] has me take my shirt off.” That’s so Felien
can admire a tattoo on Shillock’s left shoulder, an image of French anarchist
Pierre Joseph Proudhon above the legend, “La propriete, c’est le
vol” (“Property is theft”). “For some reason, Ed thinks
I haven’t sold out. Of course, I have. You don’t get our age without
selling out.” Shillock’s 65. Felien’s not talking. I spoke
with Emily Carter, a good friend of Chris Shillock and probably the baddest
white woman in Twin Cities lit. She corroborates that his modesty is misplaced.
“Two things about Chris’ work stand out for me,” Carter states.
“One is the training and discipline that his background in the classics
[St. John of the Cross, Ezra Pound, Leonard Cohen] and knowledge of language
gives his poems. The other is their integrity. Of course, quality plus integrity
often add up to obscurity and that may be why Chris hasn’t been able to
quit his day job. Or retire. After a life of hard work and dedication to his
craft.” She disagrees, though, with that business about his having sold
out. “Chris is practical, of course. He’s managed to live la
vie boheme (the bohemian life) long past the point when most of us either
started out for the suburbs, went crazy or died.”
On
the cover of Invisible Jazz, Chris Shillock looks meaner than hell. Glowering
beneath a black, gunslinger brim, clad in Johnny Cash-black, he reminds you
of, say, John Huston, with that weathered, wizened thing. Beyond the requisite
poet’s mystique, though, the guy’s a pussycat. A grizzled old kitten.
“People,” he acknowledges, “always say I’m a nice guy.”
Then, he adds, “But nice finishes last. I want people to see the dark
side [of me].”
It’s Nov. 18 at the ever eclectic and eccentric Patrick’s Cabaret.
The billing is Christopher Shillock/Tabatha Predovich. And things are not off
to what seems a promising start. Less than a half-hour to showtime the sound
check is done, but exactly three people have walked in the door. I dread the
prospect of a talent like Shillock having to perform in front of maybe a polite
handful of patrons in one of those awkward, dead houses, where the applause
is self-conscious pitter-patter, embarrassing everyone there—performer
and audience alike. Ten minutes later, I look up from scribbling notes. There
is traffic, after all. Seats fill. In the lobby, a knot here, a knot there and,
by a quarter of, it’s a crowd. Hell, J. Otis Powell is in the house (the
lone black face in the place besides mine). There’s smiling, chatting,
the touching of one another on the arm: all the makings of a nice, warm get-together.
I spot, in the background, taking money, serving tea, coffee and fancy water,
Patrick Scully, a soft unassuming presence tall as a tree, looking for all the
world like a kinder, gentler Clint Eastwood.
It doesn’t take long to reveal that Shillock may just be onto something
hot with this ensemble. There is, straight off, the image—like it or not,
given the choice between art and art with compelling stage presence, audiences
will eat up art with compelling stage presence every time. Without his practically
ever-present hat (someday he’s going to find it missing and a ransom note
in its place), wearing glasses, he looks like a lecturing professor—who
happens to not have any color in his closet except black. Tabatha Predovich,
on the slim side, in black jeans and a black blouse, with straight, two-toned
(red & black) hair, has a model’s face and a stark gaze that would
choke a pimp’s best line off, dead in his throat. With these two in front,
you’ve got the crowd’s interest before anyone says or sings a word.
As the set starts off, I look around at some fascinated folk: all very white,
very earnest and much impressed, enjoying the hell out of some authentic bohemia.
Good
thing: Tonight, the sound isn’t particularly well-mixed. The first number,
“Dark Night,” works because it’s pretty much all Shillock,
voicing lines like, “It was an Edward Hopper evening in our hotel room
downtown. Light dredged in through the curtains. It tangled in our clothes.
It set our garments glowing in the dark and polished woods.We draped ourselves
in twilight for our furtive little waltz, our bodies hid in marble, that was
veined with alcohol.” When the drums, sax and guitar kick in for the second
number, “Invisible Jazz,” Predovich’s vocal vies with the
sax. Shillock is drowned out. Things work out better for “Orgy Song,”
ribald humor for the erudite, that has Shillock and Predovich trading rich one-liners
to depict a horny couple imagining hot enough sex between them to satiate a
roomful of Old-World Romans. With “Blue Nile,” the sound finally
balances out. Shillock gives a reflective read, Predovich ringing clear in ironic
counterpoint. The brief set is over. The crowd’s happy. And I’m
hoping (in vain, it turns out) that I can make it back tomorrow night, when
the sound problems should be fixed and violinist Lynette Reini-Grandell is scheduled
to sit in.
Up next for Christopher Shillock/ Tabatha Predovich is a show on Dec. 11 at
Acadia Café in South Minneapolis, for which Shillock has engineered a
strong bill: His band, Desdamona and David Daniels & the Talkin’ Roots
Crew.
Hip-hop star Desdamona, is about a break this side of going national. She bagged
a fourth Minnesota Music Award with her CD, The Ledge, and is gearing
up to go in the studio for the follow-up, projected for early next year. David
Daniels, ganja guru to the counterculture set, uses spoken-word to lens American
life through Rastafarian sensibilities. His concept CD, Talkin’ Roots,
sold out before he had time to even think about financing a second printing.
Shillock picked this lineup for a reason aside from the mere sight of watching
poetry fans, hip-hoppers and stoners sitting around giving one another funny
looks. He believes in breaking down boundaries between spoken-word genres. Desdamona’s
looking forward to it for the same reason. “I like being a part of an
eclectic bill and hearing what other people are doing,” she says. “It
gets stifling and uninspiring to be around artists that are making similar kinds
of musical expression. It feels like there is no expansion and we get caught
up in our style or the way we think we’re supposed to do it. It gets too
comfortable. I like to be uncomfortable. You can feel yourself changing in the
moment.” As for Daniels, “I know from my own experience with hippie
stoners that they are very reluctant to support artists who are not fellow hippie
stoners. One of the reasons I invited Chris to be part of David Daniels &
Friends at Surcumcorda (in 2001) is that I wanted to inspire hippies to explore
good work outside of that realm, following the spirit of The Grateful Dead who
once brought Miles Davis to open for them.”
Ultimately, Chris Shillock’s performing and writing is driven, he attests,
by “the same [thing] that drives my politics. I want to restore poetry
to its preeminence as a popular art form. Also to use it to make people feel
and think. And, then, to act.” ||
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