OtR: I'm going through this phase where I feel
like I haven't said anything meaningful or interesting
or witty for several months now. I read so many
interviews with artists and I listen to a lot of
public radio where authors and musicians and various
creative people are constantly talking about their
ideas. Everyone is so articulate and colorful. I'm
feeling very run-of-the-mill.
ACM: We were looking back over the
newsletter you send out. It's very thoughtful and
introspective and mentions a little background on each
of you. What do you do to entertain yourself when you
go to a town to do a show...
OtR: Well..., the antidote for touring, for
most of us, is seeking out antiquarian and rare
edition bookshops where we can fill the gaps in our
libraries... We're fairly bookish people. Bookshops
are the most popular haunts, but Brian enjoys wooing
nubile girls, Ric likes to hunt for pre-CBS
Stratocasters, and Karin likes to slip away to coffee
shops and quiet nooks-and-crannies. I'm always looking
for a good chess partner. (At home, when I have time
to enjoy, I like to sit in my library and read.
There's so much to read. It's something that gives me
so many ideas. You learn so much from books. They're
not considered incredibly hip, I suppose. There's so
much visually high-tech media nowadays. Books may be
getting neglected, but there's nothing like a
book...something magical and mysterious and blatantly
spiritual about books. It's a shame that the flash of
MTV-style media has taken away from the subtle power
of the printed word.) The most wonderful thing about
touring is meeting people. I'm amazed at how fiercely
intelligent some of the people are that we've met
along the way. Some have become beautiful friends.
Often, there isn't a lot of free time on tour. It's
hard work. But you also develop a rhythm after awhile
and it can be very discom-bobulating to come home.
ACM: Among the literature that you read, are
there any favorite authors that you find fascinating,
or that possibly even influence some of the songs you
write?
OtR: Ric was one of the first members of the
band to really start getting into C.S. Lewis. Between
Karin, Ric and I...we probably have most of his works
in early editions. Rare hardback copies. He's had a
big impact on our personal lives. And I really enjoy a
lot of the writings of Dylan Thomas. That's a cliche...I
know that a lot of pop musicians, including Bob Dylan,
like his work. I especially like his prose writing.
Thomas referred to himself as 'one: I am a Welshman;
two: I am a drunkard; three: I am a lover of the human
race, especially of women.'... I've always liked Oscar
Wilde. Also, of course, William Shakespeare is
unsurpassed. The nice thing about this band is that we
get a lot of letters in the mail from fairly
articulate people. They turn us on to various writers.
It's fun to exchange ideas through the mail with the
people that we meet, or those who find our music and
seek us out...a very positive thing about being in the
band. Letter-writing is another lost art, it's a
discipline ...very rewarding thing to do. Karin has
been reading everything she can get her hands on by
Rilke: Letters to a Young Poet, Rilke on Love and
Other Difficulties, etc. Ric likes Charles Williams
and Madeleine L'Engle. According to Karin, Ernest
Hemingway has influenced us as a band. Also, M. Scott
Peck. I have recently been reading the writings of
Thomas Merton which have kindled a sort of awe for the
Catholic Church. Brian has been reading Anne Rice.
ACM: Do you find it difficult writing
letters or reading while on tour? You're currently
touring with Adrian Belew. Is that a fairly fast-paced
schedule or do you have time to pursue your interests?
OtR: Touring, I find, is an exercise in
extroversion. If I'm home, I tend to be alone quite a
bit. I'm fairly introspective, introverted, and
contemplative... When you get geared up to go on tour,
it's easy to get happy and bouncy and... (you're
meeting a lot of people that you don't know...) things
tend to get a little superficial sometimes. It is very
fast-paced; I find it very difficult to find any
solitude. We're at the stage right now where we all
travel together. There are usually at least five of
us, but we tend to stay in one hotel room. People are
sleeping on the floor, and it's very much a
group-oriented endeavor. It's hard to keep your
perspective when it's so gregarious. And to answer
your question, I find it impossible to write while on
the road.
ACM: Is it different for you when you get up
on stage and actually do a show? Do you prefer the
recording aspect more, the writing, or maybe a balance
between these and touring?
OtR: The most meaningful part of being in
the band is the feeling I get sometimes when I'm
trying to write a song... just by myself. I'm sort of
tapping into things. Sometimes I don't understand the
ramifications of everything that I'm writing. It's
very rewarding to watch a song grow, and then live
with it for a while. You learn things from it. I do
enjoy playing live. I think there are difficult
aspects to both, and both can be very rewarding. In
the studio, we try to make every note count. We don't
achieve this, but we strive for it most of the time.
In a live concert, we stretch arrangements and Ric and
Brian open up a lot more. They're both wonderful
players and I tend to rein them in probably a little
too much in the studio. But live, they have the
freedom to really cut loose and play.
ACM: Do you ever find yourself adding to or
changing songs in the process?
OtR: We're a lot different live than we are
on tape, and we like both. But live, we're a bit more
aggressive all around. Things are stripped down and a
little bit more direct. We also tend to allow
improvisation to creep in. Sometimes songs get
extended and arrangements grow over time. We have
people who feel that the live performances are much
stronger than the recordings. Then, we get people who
appreciate the recordings more. Hopefully, we land on
both feet in the middle somewhere.
ACM: You'll be at Cornerstone this summer,
so those who attend will have the chance to compare
your live performance with your recordings. You've
more dates ahead with Adrian.. Then, where will you
be?
OtR: For an unsigned band, we do get around.
We're based here in Southern Ohio. On this particular
leg of the tour, we'll be as far West as San Francisco
and Sacramento. We'll be playing a couple nights in a
theater in Boulder, Colorado. And, we'll see some
mountains, which is rare for us. Not as rare for
you... Then, later in the summer, we'll be doing some
of the large festivals in Europe, namely Flevo and
Greenbelt (Flevo in Holland, and Greenbelt in
England). We hope to do some club dates over there as
well. We were fortunate enough to do some touring with
Bob Dylan... some dates in Wisconsin and Iowa. And we
hit Chicago every so often. We try to get around as
much as possible.
ACM: Do you feel that being an unsigned band
gives you some additional freedom, or do you find it
has some limitations too?
OtR: I suppose the limitations are that you
have to do everything yourself. Sometimes the creative
process gets neglected in the interest of business and
planning and promotion and so forth. Obviously,
artistically, there's really nobody telling us what to
do. We do have a publisher, ...a wonderful person. He
put up some money for the most recent batch of
recordings that we did and we recorded them at a
studio in Nashville. Everything prior to that had been
done on home-spun gear here in Cincinnati. When it was
his dime, so to speak, we did feel a little
pressure...that we better have something to show for
all of this, because it tends to get expensive quickly
when someone is putting you up in hotel rooms, paying
for a studio, and flying an engineer in. He doesn't
put a lot of artistic parameters on us, so this batch
of songs that we're releasing July 1st is pretty
diverse. That is one obvious freedom of not being on a
label. Stylistically, we are free to pursue virtually
anything that our hearts concoct.
ACM: So, up until now, you guys have been
eking out a living and working part-time and/or
full-time. When I called the other night to arrange a
time to talk, you mentioned that you guys pooled your
resources in the past to work towards something
together.
OtR: I always said that if this band didn't
fly, i.e. if we don't eventually get signed to a major
label and make records that are widely distributed,
and so forth... If that doesn't happen, I want to be
out on the street, decrepit. I want to know that all
my resources and energy went into it. I don't want to
live the rest of my life wondering what would have
happened if I would have tried harder, or used more of
my savings. I mean we've put everything on the line
and borrowed a lot of money along the way. Most of it
is paid back, but we have a lot of VISA cards, and we
think nothing of putting six or eight thousand dollars
on VISA to make something happen. We try to count the
cost, and put everything we can muster into it.
ACM: An all or nothing approach... Do you
ever get concerned that you may end up on the street
yet?
OtR: Well, there is nothing wrong with
making a new start. I mean, I'm still relatively
young. I have lots of interests. We're going to try
very hard to make it work. I feel very good about
starting over with nothing. I don't fear it. I feel
very good about doing something with all my might.
ACM: How long have you been working together
as a band?
OtR: The summer of '89... We got together
and started writing material. We recorded about a half
dozen songs...the first half of our first cd, 'Til we
have Faces. Karin didn't live in Cincinnati at the
time and, over the course of the next year, she
relocated down here. Ric and Brian did some touring as
side men during that time. Then, in the summer of '90,
we finished our cd. In September we started playing
clubs around the Midwest. So, it's been about a year
and a half now that we've been performing. We played
Cornerstone last summer and met a lot of people there.
The rest of our performing takes place in your typical
college setting on a weekend night. We were kind of
concerned whether our music, certainly not party
music, would be received well in that context.
Actually, we built a fairly large and loyal following
over the last year and a half. We have an extensive
mailing list, and we've received a considerable amount
of airplay across the country here and there. Some
commercial stations along with college stations. It's
surprising what pops up.
ACM: How would you describe your music to
someone who hasn't heard it? Is there any particular
focus with your lyrics? Any style that you lean
towards?
OtR: When we first started the group I
thought about the direction a lot, but I don't think
we articulated our thoughts too formally to one
another. I know some of my concern was that we write
songs that could stand on their own, and that were
powerful without a lot of elaborate arrangement or
flashy playing. I wanted a simplicity and a restraint
in the writing. Also, I was interested in the folk
approach to lyrics... I liked lyrics that painted very
striking and specific images... and told stories. I
definitely haven't mastered the art of telling a story
in a song. It's a big goal. We definitely wanted to
stay away from a lot of the slick pop that was being
made in the 80's (with lots of keyboards and
sequencing). We wanted a lot of acoustic instruments.
This is all extremely boring to the average reader, so
I should probably say something more exciting...
ACM: Your last cd has a very elaborate cd
booklet, probably one of the most artistic I've ever
seen. Its' very complete, very striking... with lots
of very interesting illustrations and photographs. It
is even packaged in an onion skin cover. What led you
to go that far into the booklet?
OtR: I guess, to us, it couldn't have been
any other way. We tried to make the cd sound as good
as possible, with the equipment that we had to work
with...which was very limiting. We took great pains to
make it as good as we could. When it comes time to
present the band visually, we try to be as creative as
we can with the resources that we have. We're very
fortunate to know a very gifted artist who's a
photographer; his name is Michael Wilson. He's also a
bit of a mentor for the band. He has a book that he
published himself, with some of his photos and some
prose in it. It's a beautiful book, and I find his
work so moving. I was just thrilled to be able to
associate it as much as possible with our music. He's
done some photos for some other well-known bands. He
did the All Shook Down cover for The Replacements, and
he did the last BoDeans album. He did the last Lyle
Lovett booklet...the photography for the inside of
Lovett's Joshua, Judges, Ruth album which was recently
released... I don't know if elaborate is the right
word...we tried to make something beautiful. I think
the philosophy of the band has always been to go the
extra mile in anything we do, and to try to not leave
well enough alone, but go the extra step.
ACM: So, every aspect of what you do, you do
the best you possibly can, then take it a step
further.
OtR: That's probably accurate...we try.
ACM: Just looking back through some of my
notes... I would like to know where the name Over the
Rhine came from.
OtR: I was always a small town boy. Most of
us were raised in rural settings. Ric and Brian and I
had some musical opportunities made available to us,
which sort of led us to relocate in Cincinnati (which
is not a huge city, there's probably two and a half
million people in the greater Cincinnati area). But,
for some reason, we ended up living right downtown in
a little village called Over the Rhine. When we moved
down in '88 or so, it was undoubtedly the seediest
neighbor-hood in Cincinnati...and now it's sort of
appalling in its diversity. You have very rich, art
gallery types driving their Jaguars, and then you have
the couple of stoned pan-handlers with their
collective grocery cart hitting people up for change
so they can make it through one more night. There are
a lot of artists in the neighborhood...an old German
neighborhood, most of the buildings are 100-150 years
old. It's really...especially when we first moved
here...just an artist's dream environment, because it
was so full of imagery. Most of the songs that we
originally wrote for the band were written in my third
story bedroom overlooking the activity on Main Street.
We didn't have a name, and we tried the name on...it
was a perfect fit. We just adopted the name of our
neighborhood.
ACM: So, it just happened.
OtR: When we leave Cincinnati, we get a lot
of positive feedback on the name. People just assume
we're from Europe or something. Here in Cincinnati, it
was initially sort of frowned upon because the area
was almost an embarrassment to the city. But now it's
such a hip place to live, if we're not careful, we'll
be associated with some kind of yuppie hangout. But,
really, most people aren't familiar with the
neighborhood in Cincinnati, so it just conjures up
some image of a river or rainbow or something.
ACM: Now, you have a new project...a new cd
that's going to be available about the same time that
Cornerstone starts this summer. Was that a coincidence
in timing, or were you preparing it to take with you?
OtR: I think we timed the release date so
Cornerstone would be the first place it would be
widely available. The people at Cornerstone were very
kind to us and invited us back. They are treating us
like a normal band, even though we're unsigned. It's
our little way of saying thanks...timing the release
so you have to go to Cornerstone to get it initially.
ACM: You mentioned that you're new material
is a little more diverse, ...do you feel that it's a
stronger project, because of the resources you had
this time?
OtR: I definitely don't feel it's a lot
stronger. It's a little different, but there again,
even though we were in a pretty decent studio this
time, it's still very much a rush job. It's not an
album project, it's very much a demo project. I don't
know why, but it's become sort of a policy to invite
people to snoop around in our sketch books, by putting
out these demos. I think it's good for us to get
feedback from listeners. I guess I should have
mentioned that we're using the term album
loosely...even the first cd is just a collection of
songs that we demoed out, to get a feel for the
direction the band was going to take, and there are
certainly flaws in this new batch of songs. I read so
many writers, Dylan Thomas e.g., (one of my favorite
authors) ...in the preface to his famous book
Collected Poems he says that if he changed everything
he didn't like about the poems in his collection that
he'd have no time to write new poems. I sort of feel
that way sometimes. When we get a record deal, and
it's time to work on a record...hopefully there will
be months involved where we can have time to live with
the material and capture the sounds of the instruments
the way we want to. Even then, I'm sure we won't
achieve everything we strive for. Right now, we just
don't have the resources to spend a lot of time in the
studio. But sometimes, when you're forced to work
quickly, little surprises come up that are not without
charm. Hopefully, people will find elements of this
collection that they like.
ACM: What would it take for you to be able
to take that next step, ...and sign with a company and
spend that time in the studio. What would be the
carrot to encourage you to let go of all the freedom
that you have?
OtR: It wouldn't take a whole lot, if a good
major label...and someone with integrity as a person,
wanted to sign us. We'd be happy to forego some of the
artistic freedom that we enjoy now, in exchange for a
company that could distribute us and take some of the
business aspect off our hands.
ACM: Is the appeal for a label more to make
the product more accessible to the general audience,
or is it to free you up more to be artistic and to
spend less time on the the business end. What's the
pull for you?
OtR: I think when we get a record label,
hopefully we will be able to focus more on the music.
And, obviously we're concerned about making the music
as available as possible to the public, not that
everybody has to like it and shoot us up the charts.
It's just that we're spending so many hours just to
make the band known and get the word out. A major
label has all sorts of networking capabilities and
distribution systems in place, and they can make that
their responsibility to let people know that we exist.
ACM: Is there anything else you could say to
describe Over the Rhine?
OtR: I always am surprised that people
tolerate the idea of one more band. Do you ever feel
that there are too many bands trying to make it? Like,
enough already...I don't want to hear about the next
band that has to get signed to a record label.
Sometimes I just feel a little self-conscious...I want
to be in a band too. I ask myself, why does the world
need one more band? It started out for me that I felt
I had something I wanted to say. It's been a couple of
years now,...it's been pretty hard work. I think that
artists start out wanting to express themselves, and
they clamor and clamor, and fight and claw for the
opportunity to finally stand up on a soap box and say
their piece, and by the time they do get everbody's
attention, they can't remember what it is that they
wanted to say anymore. I feel that way sometimes. We
work so hard to gain the audience, and get airplay,
and get the stuff distributed in stores, and we're
working very hard for a platform. I hope that when we
get there, that there is still something meaningful
within us that needs to be said, ...make it worth it.
It's fun to take our brand of music into an
alternative bar. And we try to write poetic lyrics,
and a lot of them deal with fairly serious issues of
spirituality, and the difficulty of maintaining
meaningful relationships, and the difficulties of
survival in our materialistic culture. A lot of the
times I feel the big percentage of organized religion
is sort of missing some of the innuendos and
subtleties of what Jesus taught. These are the sort of
things we are discussing in our songs...in the context
of alternative clubs and bars across the Midwest and
elsewhere. It feels good too. A lot of people were
skeptical that 'alternative' people would be into what
we are doing, because we come across as caring about
what we do, and that's sort of ...very uncool. It's
much cooler to be detached and above it all, and
distant. Anyway, it can be very rewarding in those
settings, to see people give the music a chance and be
drawn in, and have people say, "I wouldn't
normally listen to this, but it's working." Maybe
because our songs attempt to be somewhat literate in
their approach, we tend to meet some fairly
intelligent people that have a lot to offer us. I've
enjoyed meeting some very bright students and so
forth, and continue developing a relationship through
correspondence.
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