Pick up next week's copy of The Ferndale Friends Newspaper (Out Oct 12th), to find this interview in print |
Ferndale has its own
manifestation of ferocious hardcore punk rock that’s’ aspiring toward the
pantheon of Dead Kennedys, Black Flag or Flipper, so memorize the name: Counter
Elites.
There’s something grim-chic about a Counter Elites concert: the music is aerodynamic and wound like a coiled spring, the tones are ominous the drums are tremulous and everything about it feels full blast. Jonny Genocide (under a protruding pompadour and sunglasses) sings (screams) and plays (attacks the) bass, while Switchblade Watson (concealed behind a bandana/baseball-cap and distinguished by his frenetic flails), plays drums.
There’s something grim-chic about a Counter Elites concert: the music is aerodynamic and wound like a coiled spring, the tones are ominous the drums are tremulous and everything about it feels full blast. Jonny Genocide (under a protruding pompadour and sunglasses) sings (screams) and plays (attacks the) bass, while Switchblade Watson (concealed behind a bandana/baseball-cap and distinguished by his frenetic flails), plays drums.
Crowds at metro area rock venues
have swapped conjectures that the two sweat-beaded miscreants behind those
outrageous guises are likely local musicians Jonathan Berz and Shaun Wisniewski
, longtime friends and collaborators on previous projects/bands. The duo
released their 2nd full length album, Pledge of Aggrievance, this month, after a considerably busy year
that fostered significant evolutions for the implicitly-provocative,
dada-inspired, art-of-the-hyper honing, propaganda-satirists.
Just like seminal/first-wave
hardcore punk outfits, The Counter Elites were careful to present a striking
iconography that could inspire as equally as intimidate, or perhaps incite.
When Berz and Wisniewski are in character, they’re zeal for this
disestablishmentarian dogma they’ve fosters (for fictional theatre’s
sake…mostly,) can create characters that seem almost psychotic in their
intensity. And that’s why it’s so fun to be at their shows. Fun…and loud.
The Counter Elites’ Pledge of Aggrievance Release Show Friday, Oct 14th at the New Way Barhttps://thecounterelites.bandcamp.com/ http://www.thecounterelites.com/facebook.com/thecounterelites
“Misfit…is probably a better
term, without sounding so obviously ‘punk,’” Berz said. “Most people don’t
understand what we do, or why, or maybe even don’t perceive it as music, and we
are totally OK with that. But for the people that we do fit with, we seem to
fit surprisingly well, and those people are almost always odd birds, or
misfits.”
Wisniewski recalls a show they
played with a not-so-theatrical/more-straight-ahead hardcore punk band. The
drummer came to him and said something about being ready to walk out during the
first half of their set, taking offense at their irreverence toward the punk
rock lifestyle…but the more they played, the more it dawned on this drummer
that the Counter Elites were something more intricate than that, a composite of
a few rather sophisticated (and even philosophical) concepts that could
cultivate a much-needed social commentary… (If by way of manifesting a
mythology that includes a fictional organization with preposterous aims…)
“We get a lot of that,” said
Wisniewski. “People who are confused. And, honestly, it’s just about putting on
an entertaining show and being good at what we do. So, I don’t think we really
fit in. Punk bands thing we’re making fun of them. Metal bands think we’re soft
for wearing costumes. Most indie bands think we’re too loud and aggressive. I’m
fine with this… I’m happy to know that if we’re on a five-band bill, we’re
going to be the one you remember next month when you’re trying to remember who
played that show.”
The band has begun to fit in,
here and there, with shows primarily hosted in Hamtramck, often paired with
comparable envelope-pushers and psychedelic performance artists like The Amino
Acids and Carjack! “We do, once or twice,” Berz said, “get to play for an
unusually large crowd, at least by our standards, and almost every time that
happens, it’s exclusively due to the support of Scott Boyink (Advanced Fish
& Chicken Systems Screen Printing).
Other influences to hint at their
specific aggressive/raw sound would be Sonic Youth, Minutemen, or even epically
costumed thrashers GWAR. These are bands you couldn’t actually corral into the
“punk” pasture; there was undeniable musicality, versatility, and authenticity
about those bands, just as Counter Elites aspire to an overall presentation
(visually, aurally, in personality and in declaration) that would be “powerful
and unmistakable.”
“I think we always had the
theatre/art aspect of live shows in mind,” Wisniewski said, looking back to
their debut performance (Jan, 2013). “It was never supposed to be just a punk band. I feel like from our
inception, the posters we make, the album art and music videos, our social
media posts, the stage antics, (the fact that (Berz) and I have, maybe only one
or two times, publicly stated that we are the Counter Elites and usually
play-dumb when asked about it…) All of those things are just as engaging as the
music and the message.”
The early songs were short (35
seconds at most), but newer ones have evolved into broader spans… “Even if a
song is short, we make it a point to create something complex and interesting,”
Berz said. The duo had been in a space-pop ensemble called Songs From The Moon,
when they started sliding more and more towards experimentation, genre-splicing,
and defiance of convention. They’ve abandoned any strict demand for verses or
choruses and instead flourish poetic (yes, poetic) stanzas (of anarchic
evangelizing) over break-neck hooks, swift cinder-block breaks and mean bass
riffs.
“I do hope that the degrees to
which we take our art inspire other individuals similarly stricken with apathy
and steamlessness to run with some
wild ideas of their own,” said Berz.
At this point in the interview,
the alter ego, drummer Switchblade Watson, took over to say that “… (Pledge of Aggrievance) is going to bring
(the Counter Elites) one step closer in (their) plan for global ownership…” Watson
continued, saying “I can’t give away our secrets, but we had literally hundreds
of unpaid interns working 60+ hours per week to make this the best record you
never knew you loved.”
“Now you know…”
The duo are pulling away from the “tiny song”
as a fixture for them. “I never really had it in my mind that we only had to
have one sound, or only short songs,” Berz said. “So, I guess this is less of a
‘punk record…’ Our sound has gotten huger and easier to craft, but we are still
just playing with melodies, rhythms, and convoluted political or cultural
criticism.”
Pledge is the album that finds this eclectically rambunctious duo after
they’ve matured (somewhat) and grown by way of negotiating their antics and
energies inside a lot of different physical spaces. But be sure, even if their
early songs could cyclone right by you, there wass the minutest of subtleties
sutured in… “So,” says Berz, “we, at first, would reduce the songs, just on
bass and drum, to the barest hyper-punctuation of the syllables.” (Berz has a Master’s
in English Composition and is an adjunct instructor at Oakland Community
College and Macomb Community College). “So… every syllable must have a
three-pronged-hit…vocal, bass, note, drum. It helped that (Wisniewski) was a
poet, and does not drum like a drummer but drums like a poet. He is highly
syllabically-aware in his compositional batter, and knows how to best
articulate that.”
In fact, this band was born out
of a research project into punk rock music and protest movements. Berz had been
invited to contribute writing on aggressive music for Eric Abbey, a local
musician (1592) and professor at OCC. As Berz was studying punk bands of the
70’s, he was also taking classes on Dadaism, surrealism, and independently
scouring books filled with interviews, zine collections, and listening to
hundreds of albums from the genre/movement.
“I started writing stanzas…” Berz
said, recalling that he never completed the actual writing project, but instead
wound up building what would become the first songs of The Counter Elites. “And
I came up with the idea for our own type of radical political performance
poetics, like the stuff I had been studying.
“A lot of the iconography came from the image studies I was
doing, and the propaganda campaigns I was researching, and the hundreds of
flyers I found from books like Why Be Something That You’re Not, and
collections like Sniffing Glue, Maximum Rocknroll and Touch and Go. I was
equally as involved in “old-school punk studies” as composition studies for
those years.“
“For me,” says Wisniewksi,
“punk rock was a giant animal that I was never too heavily involved in. That
includes listening as well as playing. As a kid in the early 90s I was big into
the heavy metal of the time, and that turned to grunge in the mid-90s, and
diving deeper into that music opened me up to a lot of the more experimental
and weird stuff of that era, but for whatever reason I never slid over to punk
rock…”
On the origins Wisniewski
expounded… “We discussed dressing up and having fake people in the band since
the inception. We were both just ready to do something creative with a live
show, but never take it too seriously, and I've always liked the paradox of
that dynamic. Like the music is fast, thrash-y, brash and heavy handed with
politics and propaganda and yet, there's obviously two normal guys wearing wigs
and sunglasses and weird outfits on stage…”
And then, on its
‘evolution,’ Wisniewski concluded… “We didn't start as a goldfish and change
into a bird. I feel like we started as a goldfish and turned into a whale…. I
think what Carjack does live, and the things that The Amino Acids have
accomplished have, for me at least, been like an open door for us as well as a
personal inspiration. But more than that, and I think bands like our band know
this to be true, when you're not "you"
in a band, it just completely changes how you act on stage, the things you'll
try as a band, what you can say, and so much more. It's a freedom that's
usually only offered at Halloween parties when you're in some anonymous mask
and no one knows your true identity.
No rules + Absolute
Creativity Allowed. “We will always be reaching for ways to make it more exciting
for both ourselves,” says Berz, “and the audience.”
From here, the band will
start working on their third album, almost immediately. Actually, it’s already
written and ready to go; 19 songs, called Good
Company Man, something of a rock-opera.
For the foreseeable future, The Counter
Elites will continue to make whatever musical, artistic and literary products
we can that are easy to whip up on a no-string budget on its way to inevitable
Total Global Ownership.
The Counter Elites’ Pledge of
Aggrievance Release Show Friday, Oct 14th at the New Way Bar
https://thecounterelites.bandcamp.com/
http://www.thecounterelites.com/
facebook.com/thecounterelites
https://thecounterelites.bandcamp.com/
http://www.thecounterelites.com/
facebook.com/thecounterelites
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