Holy Modal Rounders: Oddly Influential Folk

http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kuar/.artsmain/article/9/1338/1473909/People/Holy.Modal.Rounders:.Oddly.Influential.Folk/

In the early 1960s, an argumentative duo of outsider musicians 
developed a psychedelic breed of folk music and found a small but 
dedicated following. The Holy Modal Rounders' members are now 
inspiring a new generation of innovative folkies, as well as a new 
documentary.

All Things Considered
by Chris Boros
[March 2009]

Take me back to Random Canyon,
Where the gryphon's always riffin',
And the unicorn is horny in the spring.
Where the crystal coyote calls
Over sleepy garden walls
And the wireless wombat wanders on the wings.
And the wireless wombat wanders on the wings.
­ The Holy Modal Rounders, "Random Canyon"

In the early 1960s, the Greenwich Village folk scene took a left turn 
away from the clean-cut sounds of, say, The Kingston Trio. Bob Dylan 
was singing "Masters of War"; Phil Ochs had "Power and the Glory." 
That didn't sit well with Peter Stampfel.

"I really hated the seriousness of the people on the folk music 
scene," Stampfel says. "I thought it was stupid. I mean, it was 
beautiful stuff, but it was goofy, too. At least some of it was, and 
I thought the goofiness was one of the great things about it."

Stampfel admits that his own band, the Holy Modal Rounders, was 
silly. But it wasn't doing parodies of old folk songs. Its members 
knew the music inside and out.

"I got the idea in 1963: What if Charlie Poole, and Charley Patton, 
and Uncle Dave Macon and all those guys were magically transported 
from the late 1920s to 1963?" Stampfel says. "And then they were 
exposed to contemporary rock 'n' roll. What did they do? And that 
sounded way, way, way more interesting than trying to be Mr. Note 
Perfect 1929."

The Holy Modal Rounders filled out an odd profile in the thick of the 
1960s folk movement: It was challenging tradition by taking it into 
weird and psychedelic realms. The Rounders had a small but intensely 
devoted following, and one of the group's songs was even included in 
a major motion picture.

The duo's influence has grown steadily over the intervening decades, 
inspiring a younger generation of innovative folk musicians ­ and 
filmmakers. The Rounders are now the subject of the new documentary 
Bound to Lose.

Seriously Free Spirits

Peter Stampfel grew up in Wisconsin during the 1940s, and discovered 
folk music and the five-string banjo at the University of Wisconsin. 
His partner in musical crime was Steve Weber, a country-blues guitar 
player who grew up in Philadelphia. Weber dropped out of high school 
and lived on the streets of New York City for a number of years 
before teaming up with Stampfel. Even today, Weber is a free spirit.

"Even if you ain't got one yourself, you can break into a party and 
make it your own," he says in Bound to Lose. "And that's what I've 
been doing all my life. Ain't that right?"

The film's co-director, Paul Lovelace, was less than prepared for 
Weber's antics.

"I've never met anyone that just completely lives by his own rules," 
Lovelace says. "You can ask him, 'Where are you playing tomorrow 
night?' And he would have no idea, and no interest. But at the same 
time, he does take the music part of it seriously. His abilities as a 
musician, his abilities as a singer and a guitar player ­ he really 
has a lot of pride in that."

Weber's seriousness was evident from The Holy Modal Rounders' very 
first gig together, Stampfel says.

"We were on stage at some little club on Bleecker Street, and all of 
a sudden I hit a bad note," Stampfel says. "And Weber winced as if he 
had been kicked in the gut and played an excruciatingly dissonant 
chord on the beat following my bad note, followed by four more chords 
­ each one more dissonant than the one prior to that ­ and then he 
screamed and leaped off the stage. 'And I thought, 'Wow! This is great!' "

The Punishment Brothers

Both on- and offstage, Weber and Stampfel were like oil and water: 
Much of their relationship was built on bickering. Paul Lovelace saw 
a lot of this during the making of the documentary.

"Peter and Steve would bicker very, very often," he says. "They 
really are like an old married couple. They love each other to death 
at times, but they also just can't stand being around each other at times."

Bassist Dave Reisch noticed the tension the minute he joined the band in 1971.

"Peter and Steve had a strange relationship," Reisch says. "They 
bounce off each other. They also had a little shtick ­ they were 'The 
Punishment Brothers.' They said, 'I'm cruel and he's unusual.' "

Their odd behavior may have been fueled by drug use, which Stampfel 
does not deny.

"Our first album was recorded on speed and pot," he says. "All our 
early albums were recorded on... well, I was on amphetamine and 
marijuana and beer. How [the substances] affected it was what you 
hear when you hear the records."

Wins And Losses

Despite the Rounders' self-destructive behavior, their song "If You 
Want to Be a Bird" wound up in the movie Easy Rider. But the 
musicians couldn't capitalize, and the group split up in 1971. Weber 
and the rest of the band moved to Portland, Ore., where the guitarist 
succumbed to heroin addiction. Stampfel stayed in New York.

Years later, the two would reunite for the occasional album and gig. 
But Weber was a no-show for the band's 40th-anniversary tour in 2004. 
He refuses to talk to Stampfel and has disappeared somewhere in West Virginia.

"Yeah, he won't speak to me," Stampfel says. "His girlfriend 
convinced him that I have stolen the Rounder millions. I mean, 
there's occasional Rounders hundreds, but as far as Rounders millions 
goes, that would be nice, but no."

While The Holy Modal Rounders never reached a mass level of 
popularity, the band's cult status continues to grow. It's influenced 
a new generation of musicians, including bands like Yo La Tengo and 
Espers. But Stampfel says he wanted that influence to be broader.

"I felt that something big and amazing was going to happen to popular 
music that would change everything," he says. "And of course I was 
right about that, and it was The Beatles. The delusional part was 
that I thought it was going to be The Holy Modal Rounders."

Even though the title of the documentary says the Rounders were Bound 
to Lose, in the end, they won in a way, showing purists a thing or 
two about letting go.
--

More About The Holy Modal Rounders

» Watch the first five minutes of Bound To Lose.
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=21748727

» See a review of the Holy Modal Rounders' first album, published in 
Sing Out! magazine in May 1965 (opens a PDF file). 
http://media.npr.org/programs/atc/features/2009/feb/hmr_review.pdf

. 


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to