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Jambase.com
September 19, 2001
"Happy To Know That Some People Are Mad":
Mike Rivard and Club d'Elf
One
place where you might find jazz aficionados, electronica
addicts, hip-hop enthusiasts and admirers of the avant-garde
all congregated under one roof is at a Club d'Elf showa
rare and peculiar performance, featuring a revolving door
of outlandish and well-versed musicians.
Since
establishing Club d'Elf in 1998, Rivard has observed his
collaborative effort mutate into 40 artists, who contribute
their musical expertise to a consonant aberration within
a greenhouse of bizarre and fresh symphonic germinations.
"I
want the rhythms to come together," said Rivard "A listener
expects the song to continue a certain way but then we come
out of left field and sneak up on the brain."
Since
its inception in the town of Cambridge, Mass., Club d'Elf's
reputation has unraveled among a handful of nearby cities
along the East Coast. The group's most recent album entitled,
As Above (Live at the Lizard Lounge), was
released in January of 2001. This double disc captures the
live performances of Rivard and Company in a venue, home
to Club d'Elf's biweekly gig, beginning more than three
years ago.
"The
people at the club booked us for a night and that was how
the band was born," said Rivard. "I have a friend who books
the gigs and he suggested putting together an evening of
improv-trance and drum-n-bass. We tried it out on a Sunday
night and have been playing there ever since."
Aside
from Rivard, Club d'Elf features Erik Kerr on drums, Jere
Faison on dagomba drums and samples, Brahim Fribgane on
oud, and Jerry Leake on tablas and percussion, Tom Hall
on tenor saxophone. Guest musicians include drummer Kenwood
Dennard, guitarists Reeves Gabrels, Duke Levine and Ian
Kennedy, DJ Logic, DJ C, keyboardists John Medeski and Alain
Mallet, and tenor saxophonists Joe Maneri and Eric Hipp,
Tom Halter on trumpet, Mat Maneri on electric violin, Dr.
Didg on didjeridoo and Roberto Cassan on accordion. "It's
really cool because we have so many different people involved
and every show is different," Rivard explained. "Every night
we experience new things and we get a large audience because
the people there are attracted to different personalities
in the shows."
In
addition to playing the bass, Rivard also serves as the
conductor of the group. As Above (Live at the Lizard
Lounge)a hypnotic representation of the mind's
interworkings. If both the biological and psychological
functions of the brain: gushes of serotonin streaming through
the blood; crackling synapse sparks linking one neuron to
the next; nerve rhythms and human desires spawned in the
hypothalamus; could be viewed against musicthis album
would serve as the soundtrack.
"People like the record except for one guy who said we were
the worst band in the world," said Rivard. "It's important
to know that we are pissing people off. I'm happy to know
that some people are mad because that means I'm doing something
right."
Rivard's
many influences range from DJ Shadow, Fatboy Slim and Squarepusher
to Dave Holland and Dave Douglass to Moroccan and North
African rhythms. In fact, his most recent influences have
come from both movies and television shows.
"I
like the dark cutting-edge comedies like Mr. Show," he said.
"I would like to be the musical version of shows like Monty
Python and The Simpsons and interpret those really
fucked up, dark, twisted and surrealistic elements through
Club d'Elf"
Rivard
explained the group's peculiar name was coined from various
forms of inspiration; the psychedelic to the mythical to
the musical.
"A
man by the name of Terence McKenna who, is well-known figure
in the psychedelic drug scene was involved with plant based
compounds and elf entities in such hyperdementia," he explained.
"When said fast, Club d'Elf sounds like clubbed elf and
so it has that dark and sinister Lord of the Rings
element and as a bass player the word elf is commonly used
as an acronym for extra low frequency. So as you can see,
there are many elements involved in the name."
Rivard continues to spread the word of Club d'Elf, focusing
his publicity towards college students, who dig the "grooved-out"
trademark sounds of Medeski, Martin and Wood; he also hopes
to someday book a West Coast tour. "It's hard to get the
other musicians to come on tour with me because they are
all in other bands," he explained "It's much easier to book
gigs in unknown territory when you have someone like John
Medeski with you because MMW is known all throughout the
country."
Club
d'Elf is also nearing completion on a studio albuma
2-year project, while continuing to gig on a weekly basis
at the Lizard Lounge. "It's been slow getting the word out,
we can't really take out a half page ad in Rolling Stone,"
Rivard concluded. "But soon enough, world dominion will
be ours. Did I say that out loud?"
-Whitney Youngs
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