Inspired by a photo that Miro Jugum posted of The Picketts doing an in-store at the long-gone Tower Records store on Mercer Street in Seattle -- in which the band mambers were holding copies of The Rocket with them on the cover -- I've dug out that cover story from my personal archives. Here it is, below.
A side note: Grant Alden and I were starting up No Depression at the very same time. Since I was writing about The Picketts for The Rocket, we needed another writer to do a piece on the band we were planning to run in the first issue of No Depression. That writer ended up being our good friend Mary Schuh. You can find it here:
The Picketts in No Depression #1, Fall 1995
A side note: Grant Alden and I were starting up No Depression at the very same time. Since I was writing about The Picketts for The Rocket, we needed another writer to do a piece on the band we were planning to run in the first issue of No Depression. That writer ended up being our good friend Mary Schuh. You can find it here:
The Picketts in No Depression #1, Fall 1995
----
From The Rocket, August 1995
By Peter Blackstock
It
would be easy to call the Picketts the best country band in Seattle, but first
we must ponder the question: Are the Picketts a country band?
Guitarist
John Olufs cranks out riffs with the kind of raw twang that recalls the heyday
of legends such as Buck Owens and Merle Haggard. But if you tune into country
radio stations these days, Owens and Haggard are nowhere to be found, cast off
to pasture in favor of your Garths and your Trishas and your Billy Rays and
your John Michaels.
Singer
Christy McWilson has one of the most classically beautiful country voices since
Loretta Lynn. But what's she doing over at stage right? Don't these guys know
that you're supposed to put the cute girl singer in the middle and rename the
band Christy & the Cowboy Nation?
Instead,
center stage belongs to Leroy "Blackie" Sleep -- a drummer, who plays
standing up and shares vocal duties with McWilson. Since when have drums been a
spotlight instrument in country music?
OK,
let's check these guys' credentials. Rhythm guitarist Jim Sangster boasts
bass-playing duties in the Young Fresh Fellows, Seattle's most celebrated
garage band. Olufs and bassist Walter Singleman were in Red Dress, who were --
well, it's hard to say what they were, but they sure as heck weren't no C&W
hat act.
Yet
the Picketts ARE the best country band in Seattle.
Meet
the new country. It's about the same as the old country, really -- except that
the old country has long since been passed over in favor of a starmaking
machinery that stresses individuals over bands, smooth sounds over solid songs,
and image over talent. It's no wonder country has become a commercial equal
with rock and rap on the pop-music playing field in recent years: In its effort
to reach the masses, Nashville polished off the edge that defined country music
in the first place.
So
it's really not all that surprising to see the seeds of country taking root in
the underground. As alternative-rock bands proliferate to the point of
implosion and young punkers begin to wonder if there's really anything new
under the sun after all, a traditional form such as country becomes more and
more appealing. Especially when the genre is crying out to be reshaped and
reinvented by fresh, creative blood.
But
doing this stuff well takes more than merely an attitude and a guitar. It helps
if you have a certain amount of respect, rather than merely disdain, for the
music that has come before you. The best alternative-country bands have taken
the time and effort to seek out the great forgotten works of decades gone by,
and have simply set about "to go through that music and take the parts and
put them together in a different way," Olufs suggests.
"There's
so much back there to be inspired by," Sangster adds. "And the more your learn about that
music, the more interesting things you bring to the kind of music that we've
all played before."
As
much as the Picketts have absorbed what has preceded them, however, they're not
interested in being a retro band. "You have to make it happen right now,"
Olufs says. "It's really about having a feel for what you're doing, not
with knowing so much the history of things."
Sangster
agrees. "You could know everything about every record put out and what you
do could still be really crappy," he said. "And there's definitely a
lot of music that's like that -- it's overthought, it's overeducated and it
doesn't have any verve."
For
McWilson, who spent much of the '80s singing with the girl-group cover band the
Dynette Set, the ability to use a traditional foundation as a springboard for
personal creativity has been a gradual learning process. "I started off
really emulating other things, but now I'm moving into my own experience,"
she says. "I feel like I'm pruning it or shaping it to something that's
more relevant to me. I've gone from copying it to using it more as a form of
self-expression."
A
good example is a song she recently wrote that was inspired by an old
semi-novelty country hit called "The Girl on the Billboard." Both
songs use an unusual device -- verses with lines that run on about three times
as long as you expect them to -- but McWilson's lyrics have nothing to do with
the rather sexist slant of the original. "It's kind of an answer, in a
way," she says. "It's based on that song, but it's a reinterpretation;
it's like my female response to it."
It's
also one of the best songs she's ever written, part of a healthy new crop of
Picketts tunes that are ripe to be recorded for the band's next album. At the
moment, however, the group finds itself in the somewhat awkward position of
celebrating the release of an album that has basically been finished for almost
two years but is just now seeing the light of day.
The Wicked Picketts, the follow-up to
the band's 1992 Paper Doll on local
label Popllama, comes out this month on Rounder Records and gives the Picketts
their first real shot at becoming nationally known. Until now, they've had to
settle for regional recognition and a healthy pocket of fans in Austin, Texas,
where the band has played several times.
Long
an established haven for country bands that don't quite fit into the Nashville
mainstream, Austin not surprisingly has welcomed the Picketts with open arms.
"The last couple times we were there, I've felt like that's where we live,"
says Sleep. "We go down there and
people recognize us on the street and in the store, and they write stuff in the
paper about us. We'd be riding in a cab, and the guy would recognize us. I was
just blown out by that."
In
fact, the first time the band went to Austin, to play at the South by Southwest
music conference in March 1992, rhythm guitarist Kels Koch liked the town so
much he moved there. That marked the last in a long list of lineup changes that
had hindered the band's momentum in their early years. No shortage of talented
and accomplished local players have had stints with the Picketts, including the
late Jim Silva, Gerald Collier (Best Kissers in the World), Larry Barrett,
Brian Kenney (Lazy Susan), Steve Marcus and Jeff "The Dog" Leslie.
Sangster, who had been playing with the band occasionally, took a full-time
role after Koch's departure, and the lineup has remained the same since then.
In
addition to their trips to Texas, the band also has toured the West Coast a
couple of times, but their upcoming plans to tour behind the new record will
mark their first opportunity to take their music to rest of the nation. As fate
would have it, however, those plans are basically on hold for a couple more
months, as McWilson has been playing the single-parent role for most of this
year while her husband, Young Fresh Fellows leader Scott McCaughey, has been on
tour with R.E.M. as a backing musician.
If
timing hasn't exactly been on their side with touring prospects and album
releases, it does seem to be playing a positive role in terms of musical
climates and trends. With acts such as the Jayhawks, Wilco and the Bottle
Rockets gradually broadening the audience for roots-influenced bands, the time
seems ripe for the Picketts to bring their music to the rest of the country.
Which
reminds McWilson of an amusing anecdote from the band's earlier days. "Jim
said something to me at a show where I was really depressed, and he put his
hand on my shoulder, and -- I've never forgot this -- he said, 'Don't worry,
Christy -- by the time people like the kind of music we like, we should be
really good at it!"
That
time is now.