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DEEP


The Black Dog inspires creativity -- its high ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows and spacious tables encourage daydreaming, journaling, doodling and other precursors to art making.


THE SHOWS




Twin Town High (vol. 8)

Your Locally Grown Alternative Newspaper


The Vets: Primal Screaming
Thursday 21 July @ 15:13:13
Live Musicby Holly Day

“Adam was the one who actually thought of our name, just because he sort of liked the ring to it,” explains The Vet’s lead singer and guitarist Andy Larson. “I mean, it sounds a little bit like a messed-up take on a ‘60s garage band name, you know, like The Jets, or something like that, except that it sounds a little weird. Like, nobody would call a garage band ‘The Vets.’ I, personally, sort of like the kind of vague political context of it, but it’s not really supposed to mean anything. It’s just supposed to be like ‘veterans,’ [and not veterinarians, like I’d originally thought—h.d.] because anybody can be a veteran of pretty much anything.” He adds, “It’s meant to be slightly ambiguous. We don’t think about our name too much. That’s one of the best things about being in a band, is that once you’re named, you don’t have to think about it anymore, because the naming process sucks. You just end up the three or four people in a room tossing out ideas, and then somebody’ll get excited, and somebody else’ll be like, ‘no,’ and then you’re back to it again, and it goes on for hours. Naming bands is hard.”

Download an mp3 of the Vets' song, "Raging Scathe."


Using the principle of a spider calling its babies to its web by way of tapping messages out on a tightly-wound piece of web, lonely prisoners trapped in the Bastille would wrap sinew around the bars of their cells and pluck them, ever so gently, until the spider, drawing on that memory of being a baby spider, would come creeping across the wall to the familiar sound. The prisoners would name them and draw comfort from their “pets.”

Intentional or not, the trio of Adam Burt (guitar), Andy Larson (guitar/vocals) and Ryan Parsons (percussion) have reproduced what an electrified, highly-stylized orchestra of these prisoners might sound like. Creepy minor notes being struck in one speaker, heavy-handed angry chords in another and an overall ominous drone that might be the sound of the spiders singing along—like in that PBS special that ran a while ago about the songs spiders sing. Apparently, they all sing in creepy, haunted house drones. One can almost see the summoned spiders running from one end of the room to another while the band’s on stage, perhaps stopping occasionally to puff out and flatten in some bizarre spider dance.

While growing up in a small town is, of course, nothing like being held prisoner in a windowless cell surrounded by a buggy French swamp (although the record does sport a picture from the sado-masochistic French philosopher Michel Foucault’s book Discipline & Punish), one has to wonder where the air of desolation and unresolved anger that pervades these songs come from. As I wondered this all weekend (or at least I think I did, because big chunks of musing and wondering seem to have been forgotten) at the Green Man Music Festival in Duluth, I couldn’t help but think that Moose Lake seemed like a pretty cheerful little place, especially if you like wildflowers and fishing. Larson and Burt both came from there, and belonged to a community so tight that Burt’s father took over the position of band director of the high school after Larson’s grandfather retired. “I just picked up guitar because they were around the house a lot, and started playing,” explains Larson of his own musical beginnings. “My parents both play guitar, and my dad makes them, too,” he elaborates. “He’s built some pretty cool acoustic guitars over the years. I’ve got one in my apartment that he built the neck on.”

In high school, Larson hooked up with Burt because “he was the only other person in high school who was into music.” Their first band, The Early Americans, brought them here to the Twin Cities from Moose Lake to play at the now-extinct Foxfire with other Twin Cities’ bands, and Larson and Burt spent time with Low’s Alan Sparhawk as two of the original members of The Blackeyed Snakes, with Larson on drums.

“Adam and I both moved down here for school at the U,” explains Larson on the how and why they left Moose Lake. “It just seemed like the place to go, and I’d gotten to know a few people just through coming through here with The Early Americans. There seemed to be all this really, really awesome, fun music coming from kids that were our age, except that we didn’t know anybody else from our area that was into stuff like that.”

And, despite the overall gloomy, dark nature of the album, there is a definite feeling that this band is having fun performing—fun in the way that screaming at an irritating younger sibling can be really good fun sometimes, or just getting something big and noisy off your chest for the first time. The Vets yell stuff at lots of people on this album, from the President to capitalists to people polluting the environment to Bush’s silent majority and their unwillingness to question the questionable.”I’d say, by and large, I’m actually a pretty easy-going sort,” says Larson about his music. “But I think more so than anything with this new record, it’s just channeling that vague world-feel of what’s going on around us, especially politically and economically in the world, and this country. We can all go about our daily lives doing what we normally do, but there are all these things going on that we don’t necessarily want to think about, and if we did think about it with some consistency, we probably wouldn’t be very happy people. But I went to school for political science, and I can’t help but watch it a lot, and I think some of the music on the record is a reaction to what’s been going on.” ||

The Vets perform on Sun. July 24 at the Triple Rock Social Club with Warhammer 48K, The Blind Shake and Tornado. 5 p.m. All Ages. $6. 629 Cedar Ave. S., Mpls. 612-333-7399.

Head on over to our mp3 page to download hundreds of tunes, including the Vets' song, "Raging Scathe."

Find out more about The Vets on their website at MySpace.com/TheVets.

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