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LA Times Sunday Calendar Feb 13, 2000
California Dreamin' With a Cosmic Connection Beachwood
Sparks has a trippy link with some classic bands of the '60s.
By NATALIE NICHOLS
You meet the members of the psychedelic country-rock
band Beachwood Sparks in a charming little complex of bungalows tucked
behind a tall hedge in Echo Park. The day is overcast, but it shimmers
with that surreal clarity the city gets after a rain.
You look out the picture window of drummer Aaron Sperske's living room
at the buildings and streets sprawled across the hills like a black-and-white
movie backdrop and you think, with a view like this, it's no wonder
these guys believe in the magic of Los Angeles.
Although they look as if they could have stepped from the '60s heyday
of such L.A. acts as the Byrds, the Flying Burrito Brothers and Buffalo
Springfield, the members of Beachwood Sparks are careful not to put
themselves on a par with those groups. But when their self-titled debut
album comes out next month on Sub Pop Records, it's sure to draw comparisons
to those pioneering bands' acoustic-electric arrangements, evocative
harmonies and melodies, and distinctive musical atmosphere, which is
as identifiably Californian as the Beach Boys'.
"It's not what I came out here looking for, and it's not what I even
listen to," says bassist Brent Rademaker, 36, a 12-year L.A. resident
who was in the indie-rock band Further, and who, like the late Byrds
member and Burritos leader Gram Parsons, spent part of his youth in
Florida. "It's real natural out here. It just happens. There is something
mysterious about [Los Angeles], and it definitely comes across in the
music."
Neither Rademaker nor his bandmates--Sperske, 26, singer-guitarist Chris
Gunst, 25, and keyboardist/steel guitarist Dave Scher, 24, who all grew
up in the L.A. area--listened to those classic '60s groups as kids,
but they were drawn to the style together. "Why we do it, I don't know,"
he says. "We're definitely not saying, 'Let's cash in.' "
Despite its lack of commercial viability in a world where rock is getting
harder and country is ever more slick, the 3-year-old band has a loyal
local following that fills such clubs as Spaceland and Dragonfly. Beck,
a longtime fan, has had Beachwood Sparks open his L.A. shows three times,
most recently last spring at the Wiltern Theatre.
After releasing a couple of 7-inch singles on Seattle's Sub Pop and
the L.A. indie label Bomp! (which will put out the vinyl version of
the upcoming album), the group even drummed up some major-label interest.
"They were really big, and we were really broke," says Rademaker. "We
were thinking, 'Maybe this is the way to go.' "
After signing with music publisher Margaret Mittleman, Beachwood Sparks
was considered by Interscope Records, where Mittleman is an artists
and repertoire executive.
But with Interscope involved in the huge Seagram/PolyGram merger, the
band decided it didn't want to wait out the inevitable reorganization
period. Now the Beach- wood Sparks' members are perfectly happy to be
on an indie label. "When Sub Pop came around," says Rademaker, "that
was like a dream come true."
The
quartet intended its album to evoke a traditional '60s West Coast vibe,
but the players--perhaps a little too steeped in trippy tradition--speak
of their music as some- thing they don't entirely control. "We're just
tapping into the cosmic vibe, the endless circle of energy," Gunst says
with a straight face.
When they hit their stride, the songwriting becomes a combination of
meditation and conjuring. "It has a lot to do with whether you're all
jittery, or you're able to relate to your comrades well enough," says
Scher. "If everyone is calm enough, and relaxed and attentive, then
you really hear something."
That flow is important and exciting for them. "To stretch out musically
is what keeps it interesting," says Sperske. They also tend to embrace
whatever comes through the ether. For example, a pair of song snippets
on the album, "Singing Butterfly" and "Sleeping Butterfly," sprang up
spontaneously in a recording session. "Something just took us over,"
Rademaker says. "It was like writing songs on your own, it just came
out." Another time, he continues, "The guys were doing some vocal harmonies,
a double part on 'The Calming Seas,' and they just tapped in. The harmony
wasn't written, and it wasn't discussed. They just did it. That was
a magic moment, and that's the song forever."
For all their fascination with random cosmic moments, the players also
admire the virtuosity of bands such as the Burrito Brothers, and they
joke about their own ineptitude.
Yet the members of Beachwood Sparks succeed in capturing that old-fashioned
spacey rapture largely because, like their heroes, they focus so intently
on group dynamics, harmonies and instrumentation.
"It's a giant compliment [when] someone says, 'Oh, you guys sound like
an old band,' " says Gunst, "because to me they're the greatest players."
SEE ALSO:
BILLBOARD Jan 22, 2000
SOMA
June 1999
MISCELLANEOUS

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