True
Tunes: Volume 8, Number 3
Finally Plankeye ......
by John J. Thompson ...
Their third record, Commonwealth, marks
Los Angeles-based Plank Eye's bid for the big time.
Their modern blend of punk and power pop has hit a
bull's eye in the ever growing realm of alternative
music fans. Not only has it become the best seller for
their label Tooth and Nail, but it has landed them a
major management deal and a tour with The Newsboys. An
aspect of Plank Eye that certainly hasn't hurt their
rise has been their down-to-earth personalities and
sincere love of God. As the following phone interview
conducted with lead vocalist Scott Silletta at a show
in Phoenix will confirm, these guys know how to be
real without being sour-faced or whiney
TrueTunes:How's
the big Newsboys tour going?
Scott:
Everything's going really good. Everybody's really
nice to us, and the Newsboys are really great. It's
neat to be able to come from the point that we were
at, opening and playing on our own to okay crowds, to
playing for huge crowds every night.
TT: So how does
the music translate from the smaller realms that
you're used to playing to the &emdash; I assume
you're playing some pretty big halls.
Scott:Yeah,
very big. Some of them are really big.
TT: So how does it
feel to get up on that huge stage and play in those
big halls?
Scott:I
think it actually comes off a little bit better. It
comes across really well, I think. It's kind of weird.
The biggest stage we had played on was at Cornerstone
this year, on the main stage, and that was very big,
and it was really weird. Now, the thing is, the
Newsboys have their set up, and the curtain comes down
and covers up their stuff, and then Geoff Moore has a
set up, so we basically get the edge of the stage, or
if not that, we're stuck between Geoff Moore and their
stuff. So we don't get much room, so it doesn't feel
like we're playing on these huge stages, because we
don't get very much space at all. We're lucky if we
even get enough room to move around on some of the
shows, just depending on the stage size. Like tonight,
the stage is big so we'll have plenty of room, but
some nights we're stuck between keyboards and other
stuff.
TT: So tell me how
Plank Eye came together.
Scott:In
1991 I got saved &emdash; September 25th, I think.
I had known Adam [Ferry], our drummer, since I was
fourteen &emdash; his older brother was my best
friend for many years. Then I got saved and I started
going to the church that Adam and Luis [Garcia,
bassist] go to. Adam asked if I wanted to jam with
him, and we had all been separately praying about
being in a Christian band. I'd been playing in a
secular band at the time. We started jamming. It was
Luis and Adam and myself for the first year and a
half. Then Eric Balmer [lead guitarist], was in a
hardcore band out of Orange County called Outnumbered.
Eric's band broke up, so we asked Eric to come play
for us. We got signed to Tooth & Nail.
TT: You got signed
right away, didn't you?
Scott:Yeah,
like a year and a half into the band.
TT: So since then,
it's been a pretty full-time type of thing for you
guys, right?
Scott:Almost.
In '94 we toured for a month, but we all had jobs too.
We all had jobs until a couple of months ago, pretty
much-- up until right before summer we all worked and
led halfway normal lives. Now we're never home...
TT: There seems to
be a very different vibe from Plank Eye regarding your
faith than what most of the other "third
wave" bands out of LA have. In a way you seem to
have more in common with the earlier bands like
Undercover, Altar Boys or Lifesavors than The Violet
Burning or The Prayer Chain.
Scott:Well,
the whole reason we started the band was because we
all wanted to serve Jesus and people, and see people
get ministered to or saved or whatever God was going
to do. When we started the band, we were doing free
concerts all the time at our church, just inviting
kids from all the high schools and different places
around to come to these free concerts, and we'd just
share the love of God with them and say, "Hey,
it's not about how good you are, it's about you, it's
about your personal relationship with Jesus. And if
you have drug problems, God can help you. If you want
God to help, He'll change your life if you let Him, if
you let God be God." We just wanted to share with
people and hang out. So that's what we did. I had
never really even seen any Christian bands except the
Crucified, Nobody Special, LSU and Scattered Few. I
really hadn't seen many Christian bands, or been in a
Christian music scene. I got saved and we started the
band like two months later. All I knew was that this
was what I felt God calling me to do. Whether other
people were doing it or not, we didn't care.
TT: So what do you
think of the rest of the Orange County scene?
Scott:It's
funny, everyone does what they want to do. It's
between them and God, really. I mean, as far as we go,
there's times when we feel led to preach the gospel
and say whatever God has on our hearts, and there's
times when we don't feel led to say anything except
maybe introduce the songs. If we don't feel led by the
Spirit, we don't do it. I don't just talk on-stage in
front of people to please the crowd or to make someone
go, "Right on, praise God!" I don't try to
be a crowd-pleaser; I try to be real with people.
Sometimes our songs, especially on Commonwealth, are
not happy-go-lucky, lyrically, and the whole feeling
of the song is more of a different feeling; I don't
know how to explain it. You know, sometimes it hurts
to be a Christian, it hurts to be a person, a human
being. For us, I just want to be real and be
vulnerable and open myself up to people and go,
"Hey, you know, I sin, I fall short and I'm
messed up in my walk." I don't feel worthy of
God's grace, just like many other people don't. But
it's not by the things I do, it's by Jesus and what He
did on the cross for us. And for me, that's what I try
to convey through the music I play and when I talk to
people. I try to be real with them and be broken
before them and be honest and say, "You're going
through the same thing I just went through." Just
try to be honest and relate to people. Our ministry is
so much more one-on-one with people than just... We
could say whatever we want on the stage and get people
stoked and not go out and see them afterward, and
they'd probably still think, "They were great,
praise God for them." But we like going out there
and talking with people and letting them ask questions
and stuff. Just pour out their hearts to us, cry, pray
with us, whatever.
TT: How do you
think that being in a band that got busy so fast has
affected your growth as a Christian?
Scott:Nobody
ever asked me that, but I've been waiting for someone
to ask me that forever! I'm not quite sure why God did
that to me, but I know that it's what He wanted me to
do. I think He did it to build my character and to
help me lose a lot of myself and learn that He saved
me. I didn't save me, He chose me, He predestined me
to be His. He wanted me. He knew that I was going to
mess up, but He wanted me anyway because He loved me.
I mean, I've messed up so much, you don't even know.
I'm just like anybody else. Everybody falls short,
messes up, sins. Sins of the flesh, sins of the heart
-- whether it's in their heart or there's an action,
everybody does something and messes up and blows it.
We all do it. We all mess up. But God just keeps
showing me His grace, over and over again. I still
don't understand why, but I just try to look forward
to what God's going to do, and try to be in God's
will, be reading the Word and seeking Him, just trying
to be a Christian.
TT: Where do you
want to see Plank Eye go in the next year or two?
Scott:Wherever God
wants to take us. I don't know. There are a lot of
neat things happening for us right now, and God's
opening up a lot of doors. This is God's train, we're
just riding it. If He told us, "You guys are
done, get off the tour and go home," we would do
it. If He said, "Keep going, I'm going to do this
and this is what's going to happen," then we'd go
along for the ride. This is completely the Lord's
vessel. We're just trying to keep it surrendered to
Him and just do whatever He's doing. We're not putting
our hands in it; we're trying to keep our hands
completely out of it and let God be God.
TT: What do you
think of the boom of popularity in the industry and
the church of your type of music, modern
rock/alternative?
Scott:Finally!
This kind of music's been popular in the secular scene
for six, seven years. Christian music always seems to
fall a wee bit behind the times. [laughter] We've been
doing this for five years, almost. For me it's a
little frustrating, because I've been playing this
kind of music since eighty-something, and finally
we're being accepted in the Christian industry, not
just looked at as the "underground"
Christian music scene. I hope it opens up doors for
everyone else, so everyone else can finally come out
of the underground scene closet and stop getting stuck
playing for little tiny crowds or only getting to do
certain things. There are so many good bands, so many
good Christian bands that are so excellent and
awesome! I wish that this door that God opened up for
us will open up for all those guys too. There's just
so much good music that's selling maybe 10,000
records. These bands are just incredible and great and
they're not even getting any recognition or even
getting to play good concerts. That was probably the
hardest thing for me, watching a lot of other big
Christian bands, pop bands, getting called
"alternative" or "modern rock" and
they're not. Like the Newsboys know they're a pop
band. That's what they do, and they're good at it.
They're so good live. It's amazing. They're just a
great band, and they can play their instruments.
They're rad guys and they totally love God.
TT: You're
answering a question before I even ask it. To all
those "alternative" people who throw their
nose up at anything successful &emdash; what do
you want to say to them about the Newsboys?
Scott:As
far as a lot of the Tooth & Nail type bands, I'm
sure some people are like, "Oh, Plank Eye's
selling out, they're going on a big tour with the
Newsboys." And what I would say to them is, every
band goes in with the intentions of playing their
music and having people like it. You can get to a
certain level and just get stuck there, or you can go
to the next level. We haven't changed our music at
all. We're doing the exact same thing we set out to do
from the beginning. We're just progressing, getting
better &emdash; and that's what should happen.
Every record should get better and better. For us,
it's not selling out. It's the next step you take to
get bigger or to get to the next level and not be
stuck playing little tiny clubs and little tiny
churches with youth groups. If selling out is having
people buy your records and like you, then I guess
we're selling out. [laughter] A lot of people think
Jars of Clay is "selling out," all these
people are selling out. But nobody's selling out!
People are buying their records &emdash; Amen!
Praise God! They're going to be able to make a living
and stop having to work at the Quickie Mart on the
side.
TT: Which means
their band's going to get better. Which means they're
going to get to play music full-time, do what they
love to do and do what God's called them to do,
finally.
Scott:A lot of
people have a weird perspective on that &emdash;
"Oh, these bands are selling out." Nobody's
selling out! They're playing their music. Praise God!
DC Talk just got their deal with Virgin -- that's
incredible! That's going to open up doors for
everybody. Newsboys got their deal with Virgin, it's
incredible.
TT: What about
Plank Eye?
Scott:Who knows?
[laughter]
TT: Nothing we can
announce yet?
Scott:Oh, I
have no idea. There's nothing in the works. We're on
Tooth & Nail records, and we love Brandon Ebel,
and we love Dave Bahnsen, and we love First Company
Management. Everyone takes care of us, and they love
us, and they pray for us, and they dig us. So we have
no problem with what we're doing now and the blessing
God's given us with this tour and all the people
surrounding us who care for us. We're totally
thankful. Brandon Ebel's been more than helpful to us,
been more than a neat guy. Tooth And Nail got a
distribution deal with Caroline Records, which is
owned by Virgin. We've already sold a bunch of units
to secular stores, and we're not in the Christian
section, we're in the regular section. Finally! MxPx,
us, Driver Eight, Morella's Forest, Joe Christmas,
Ghoti Hook...there are probably nine or ten of us on
the label that are being put out through Caroline, and
the neat part is that we're all going in the secular
section. We're not going in the Christian section, and
it's not just that we're getting stuck in the store
and nobody's going to know who we are, but Caroline's
really pushing it and really getting it so people are
going to know who we are. Putting us in listening
stations and doing stuff like that. People are
actually going to hear who these bands are and get to
come see them and know when they're playing and it's
just amaziing!
TT: Now, picture a
kid coming up to you who is you, five years ago. Just
got saved, in a band, and they want to know what to
do. What do you tell him?
Scott:I get
it every single night! And I don't mind them coming up
to me and talking to me, because I like to, and it's
even cooler when they come talk to us and ask to pray
with us. But what I tell them is, read the word and
pray together. It's important to pray together,
fellowship together, enjoy each other, learn the
differences of each other and how to deal with them in
the right way, and just love each other. And pray. If
God wants to use it, He will. If God wants to take
that band and do what he's doing with us, then He
will. Everybody and their mom has a band nowadays.
Just about every kid I talk to says, "Oh, I have
a band!" That's cool. But if God wants to use
them, He will. And if they're willing to be used,
He'll use them. I really just tell kids to pray, and
wait. If the Lord is in it, then He's in it. I know
for me, it's like, all the times I've fallen short,
God still uses me and loves me. That's amazing to me.
God is so good, so faithful when we're faithless!