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  In the World:
                  Krist and Knott eke out a niche for musical exploration in CCM contexts


    By: Tim Thompson
    A&E Co-editor

    Online Chimes
   

Mike Knott and Jan Krist encourage artistic intergrity in CCM (or at least try).

      The recent boom in “alternative” Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) that’s enabled
bands like Jars of Clay and Sixpence None the Richer to achieve mainstream notoriety
is inconceivable apart from the pioneering work of artists like Jan Krist and Mike Knott.


 



As part of a loose coterie of musicians in CCM-related contexts who have valued art over image (specifically the bland, youth group approved image demanded by CCM), Krist and Knott have helped create a market base within CCM for artists unafraid to explore, well, “real life.” They have helped eke out a niche — however small — within CCM where musical exploration has somewhat of a voice.

Of course, both Krist and Knott have suffered ongoing frustration with CCM and have continued to seek other venues for their art.

Even so, both Krist and Knott have managed to create significant bodies of work. Their songs appeal to a narrow yet loyal group of listeners who, though they often find themselves solidly within the church, crave music that transcends the church proper.

The real importance of the works of Krist and Knott lies not in their musical innovation, not even in their raw musical talent, though they’re serious musicians. The importance of their work lies, rather, in their liminality, their ability to move between the “sacred” and “secular” without a rigid sense of dichotomy. In a Christian subculture that tends toward artistic stasis, musicians like Krist and Knott are the resistance.

On Krist

Jan Krist’s latest release, titled “Love Big, Us Small” (on Silent Planet Records, a small label that rescued Krist’s ouvre from a nasty contract debacle with her old CCM label), provides a panorama of her musical development while glimpsing her current direction via four new tracks.

“Tarzan Tells All,” one of the new tracks scattered throughout the album, is characteristic of Krist’s best work. It excels in subtle touches: shimmering feedback in the opening measures whistles in the background as tempo gradually quickens to the chorus. Krist’s voice remains expertly modulated throughout.

The song, which refutes black-and-white, reductionist ways of thinking, sings in a passionate (yet measured) voice; its stylistic simplicity foils the ignorance that expresses itself in oversimplified “Tarzan Talk” — “Me right, you wrong” (or to quote DeGarmo & Key, “God good, Devil bad”).

In fact, none of the tracks of “Love Big, Us Small” are unlikable — and perhaps therein lies a primary weakness. Krist’s work displays a remarkable homogeneity. Even though “Love Big, Us Small” spans an eight-year career (1992’s “Decapitated Society,” 1993’s “Wing and a Prayer” and 1996’s “Curious,” plus the four new tracks), it’s hard to tell an “early” song from a “late” song.

Perhaps that speaks for the strength of Krist’s songwriting; perhaps it points to a certain measure of genre conformity (Krist stands squarely in the neo-folk, singer/songwriter niche). But even the best qualities of “Tarzan Tells All” become less interesting when repeated song after song.

Still, the merit of Krist’s craft shouldn’t be downplayed. That it’s good enough to elicit the production efforts of the likes of Armand John Petri (Goo Goo Dolls, Sixpence None the Richer) speaks something — and not that Krist runs a big production budget, either.

On Knott

It’s hard to characterize an artist of Mike Knott’s prolificacy and longevity. Since 1981, when his band Lifesavers (later Lifesavers Underground or LSU) released “Us Kids,” Knott has been involved in about 27 albums, including four solo projects.

Knott’s work conjures, at various spots in its stylistic progression, such influences as the Beatles, Joy Division and the Ramones.

Late ’80s albums like “Shaded Pain” (Lifesavers Underground) are goth-tinged, Knott’s vocals consciously affected and “dark.” Early ’90s albums (like 1994’s solo “Rocket and a Bomb”) evince a dramatic shift to a looser, more ironic approach, Knott’s vocals noticeably stripped, unvarnished.

His recent work, like the “Aunt Bettys” album (released on mainstream label Elektra records) and “Strip Cycle” (’95) could be called “acoustic punk.” “Dogfish Jones” (’98), complete with Hammond organ stylings by the late (great) Gene Eugene, sounds something like a tripped-out remix of all Knott’s previous output.

As it shifted stylistically from goth-tinged and sober to ironic, half-sober, Knott’s work also relocated itself thematically. “Shaded Pain”’s imagistic lyrics (as in “Jordan River”: “The Jordan River is chilly and cold/ I’ll meet you, brother, on the other side”) gave way to gritty, street-level narratives (as in “Rocket and a Bomb”: “All I ever wanted was a good job/ Some bus fare, a rocket and a bomb”).

There’s much about Knott’s “mature” work that’s distinctive — trademark, even. His throaty, slightly schloshed whine (which possesses surprising powers of articulation); his seedy stories — “Aunt Bettys” is full of them, like “Suicide Sex Doll” and “Lush” (the names say it all); his refusal to deny his frail humanness (he’s the only CCM-related artist I’ve heard who sings about hangovers — cf. “Double” from “Rocket and a Bomb”) — all these make Knott one of the most compelling, creative voices ever to sojourn through CCM.

At the same time, though, there’s a substantial (though not equal) portion of monochromatic, unthinking “rock ’n roll” claptrap permeating much of Knott’s recent work (especially “Aunt Bettys”). What he gained in moving toward stylistic maturity — quirky storytelling, an ironic slant on being down ’n out — he seems to have lost in careful songcraft.

Knott’s output has always been prolific, but it seems his most recent works have been churned out with a near apathetic nonchalance. In songs like “Rock Stars on H” (from “Strip Cycle” and “Ford Supersonic,” an album of “Aunt Bettys” left-overs), banged-out guitar riffs, wheezing vocals and monotonous drumming make for less-eventful listening. Granted, “Rock Stars on H” is a parody of strung-out rockers — but I have to wonder to what extent Knott is parodying, well, his own music

 


 

                                                             ~Online Chimes

 

 

     

    

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