The Scorch Will
Rise Again: Jason and the Scorchers Reawaken Nashville To a Clear
Impetuous Morning
By Bill Friskics-Warren
No Depression Magazine
Seattle, Washington - November-December, 1996
Copyright 1996-2004 No Depression Magazine
The year is 1982, on the Sunday before Labor Day; the place is Cats
Records, on West End Avenue in Nashville. A thousand people have packed
the stores parking lot to see Jason & the Scorchers, who
in the past year have taken the city by storm with their shotgun marriage
of country music and punk rock.
We had flatbed trucks pulled up in the parking lot, remembered
Steve West, who promoted the Cats show and now runs Nashvilles
328 Performance Hall and Go West Presents. We didnt have
backdrops or anything - just a P.A. The lack of pageantry only
heightened the immediacy between audience and performer, emphasizing
the anything-could-happen mood that marked Scorchers shows at the
time. On this particular night, the crowds excitement was at
fever pitch; the band had just pulled back into town after a series
of road dates promoting the release of their debut EP, Reckless Country
Soul.
During the first song, West recalled, Jason slammed
the microphone into his mouth and broke his tooth off. Adrenaline
must have masked singer Jason Ringenbergs pain, because he performed
like a man possessed, even by his own maniacal standards. During one
of guitarist Warner Hodges lead breaks on White Lies,
Ringenberg shot up the stores signpole, an American flag in
tow, like an explorer who had just discovered some uncharted frontier.
Jason & the Scorchers historical moment had come and gone
long before Americana became a radio format and No Depression
became a magazine, but the Nashville-based rockers have as much claim
to being founders of todays alternative-country movement as
any group to emerge in punks wake. No other band boasts the
Scorchers country pedigree, none rocks as savagely, and none
has a recorded legacy that can touch the mid-80s triptych of
Restless Country Soul, Fervor and Lost and Found.
The Scorchers influence on Uncle Tupelo, the Bottle Rockets
and countless others is undeniable. It may be commonplace now for
roots-rockers to perform cover versions of classic honky-tonk songs,
but back when the Scorchers were running Hank Williams, Jimmie Rodgers
and Eddy Arnold through their punk blender, it just wasnt done
- it might even get you hurt or run out of town.
Literally, you could go into certain places and do what we were
doin with country music - forging it, melding it, slamming it
together with punk rock and rock n roll - and get beat up. And
we almost did several times, said Ringenberg, recalling the
bands early 80s heyday during an interview in the back
room of Tootsies Orchid Lounge in Nashville, two weeks before
the early October release of the Scorchers inspired new album.
Clear Impetuous Morning (Mammoth/Atlantic).
Whereas A Blazing Grace, the Scorchers 1995 reunion album, proved
that the band could still rock and still had something to say, their
new record finds them kicking their way back to the top of the cowpunk
- or, in todays parlance, alternative-country - heap. Raging
with affirmation and insight, and playing with relentless mid-80s
intensity, Clear Impetuous Morning is the Scorchers taking command
of the musical subgenre they all but invented.
While the new album finally may earn them the recognition theyre
due, Ringenberg isnt exaggerating about the hostile receptions
the Scorchers often encountered back when they were taking early-80s
Nashville by storm. At the time, many believed the Scorchers were
poking fun at country music. Little did they know that the foursome
were devoted to the sounds they grew up listening to on the Grand
Ole Opry. Nor were they aware that guitarist Hodges parents
played with Johnny Cash, or that drummer Perry Baggs father
sang old-timey gospel.
Others, like the Vanderbilt coeds who almost booed the Scorchers offstage
when they opened for the Talking Heads in 1982, simply missed the
point. But nothing, not even the prospect of getting their asses kicked,
could stop Ringenberg, Baggs, Hodges and bassist Jeff Johnson from
unleashing the glorious noise they heard banging around inside their
heads.
Mixing country and punk seemed a natural thing to do,
Ringenberg said. Warner, Jeff and Perry - they knew country
music and played it a lot. But they were also fierce, ferocious rock
n rollers. Then here comes this kid off an Illinois hog farm
thats never even been south of the Mason-Dixon Line who stills
got hog poop on his shoes, he continued. You put all that together
and it was just an outrageous chemistry.
Early live dates at Nashville punk clubs such as Cantrells,
Phrank n Steins and the Cannery were more like explosive
chemical reactions. Those shows were totally spontaneous,
Ringenberg said. The rock community in Nashville was just discovering
itself and the Scorchers wwere discovering what we were. Some of those
shows were really bad and some of them were transcendent, brilliant.
The Cats Records show in 82 certainly fell into the transcendent
category, as did a second performance there in 1985, which drew 5,000
fans and brought traffic to a halt on the citys major East-West
corridor.
Ringenbergs electrifying Jerry Lee Lewis-meets-Iggy Pop stage
attack was what attracted Johnson and Hodges - and, later, Baggs -
to the singer in the first place. Johnson was the first member of
what eventually became the Scorchers classic lineup to see the
edition of the band Ringenberg assembled upon arriving in Music City
during the summer of 1981. The fledgling Scorchers were sharing a
bill at Cantrells with then-regionally acclaimed indie-rockers
R.E.M. Immediately after the show, Johnson called Hodges and invited
him to Ringenbergs next gig. This time, it was a slot opening
for rockabilly legend Carl Perkins.
I went to the Carl Perkins show and thought, God Almighty,
this guy is nuts, remembered Hodges, referring to Ringenbergs
incendiary performance. He spent the entire night in the crowd
with this long guitar cord. Everybody else up onstage was scared to
death. But Jason, man, he was the show.
It wasnt long before Hodges and Johnson had replaced the Scorchers
original guitar and bass players. Several weeks later, Baggs took
command of the drum kit, and the classic - and still current - edition
of Jason & the Nashville Scorchers was born.
We went real fast in those days, admitted Ringenberg.
In a couple of months we were gettin songs together and
fillin rooms, and we said, We need to get a record out.
Hodges adds: It was like you had to have a record to play.
Former bassist turned manager Jack Emerson was very insistent, explained
Ringenberg. Jack said, We gotta get a record out to prove
that you guys are the founding fathers of modern country. And we gotta
get it out now. We gotta get it out before the first of the year so
that we have a 1981 date on the record.
The EP, Reckless Country Soul, didnt hit stores until the second
week of 1982, but it immediately sent shock waves through the Nashville
rock underground. Originally released on the Praxis label, it featured
gonzo covers of Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers classics and an early
version of Broken Whiskey Glass, a song the Scorchers
later recut for Lost and Found, their first and finest full-length
album. The band also tore apart the Willie Nelson-penned Faron Young
hit Hello Walls, though the recording didnt see
the light of day until Mammoth reissued the EP, along with outtakes
from the Fervor sessions, earlier this year.
We cut Reckless Country Soul in four hours in somebodys
living room live to four-track, Ringenberg recalls. We
had to hurry because Perry had to go to work at the howling alley
that night. It was five songs, four hours, just raisin hell.
If the record didnt quite live up to Emersons claim that
the Scorchers had founded modern country music, definitive proof came
with the release of Fervor and Lost and Found, two of the finest marriages
of id-driven punk and hard-core country music ever recorded.
They called themselves Scorchers for good reason: They kicked
butt, commented country music historian Robert K. Oermann, who
was the senior music writer for The Tennessean, Nashvilles morning
newspaper, at the time the Scorchers burst onto the local scene. Oermann
also penned a USA Today story that helped break the band to the rest
of the nation.
Their shows were so physical, said Oermann. Jason
acted like a guy who had been attacked with a cattle prod. And I still
maintain that Warner Hodges was one of the most charismatic lead guitarists
of his generation. The two were like twin poles of electrical energy.
You could almost see the bolt of lightning that connected them. The
Scorchers never sold more than a million records, but nobody who saw
them will ever forget it.
If Hank Williams were alive today, observed Scorchers
co-manager Andy McLenon back in 1984, he would be playing with
the same intensity as Jason & the Scorchers, because for the pre-rock
era. Hank Williams music was equally as intense and on-the-edge.
Ringenberg, Johnson, Hodges and Baggs were as electrifying as they
were outrageous. Looking back now - and having experienced the visceral
thrill of those early 80s shows - theres no denying that
the Scorchers, the first modern rock band out of Nashville to sign
with a major label, galvanized a formative moment in the citys
storied musical history.
But if in 1985 the Scorchers were poised to conquer the world, by
decades end the bottom had dropped out. Excess, personal problems,
the fickle winds of the music business - all contributed to a fall
that was as dramatic as the bands rise was meteoric. It started
with Capitols ineffective marketing of 1986s Still Standing
just as the records first single, Golden Ball and Chain,
was getting some airplay. Soon Johnson left the group; by the time
the bands lukewarm Thunder and Fire surfaced in 89, the
Scorchers were all but finished.
We worked on Thunder and Fire for two years, said Hodges.
Jason wrote like 70 songs and we demoed and demoed and demoed
- just busted our butts putting the band back together [after Johnsons
departure]. I didnt think it was that bad a record. Maybe not
quite the direction we should have gone, but we gave the record company
the record that they quote/unquote wanted. We put a lot of time and
effort into it and then it just fell flat on its face. And then Perry
got sick with diabetes and we said, The hell with it.
The Scorchers didnt break up, we fell apart, continued
Hodges, who, after the split, moved to New York and then California,
working in the video business. I ran, he admitted. I
guess I hid and ran. I didnt know how we could try any harder
and be any less successful. I seriously didnt know how we could
put any more effort into it for so little return. We just couldnt
play the game anymore.
If you talked to each of us independently, said Ringenberg,
I think all four members of the band would tell you it wasnt
a good time in anybodys life. I did a solo record for Capitol/Nashville,
a watered-down Scorchers kind of record, and went through a bad divorce.
It just wasnt a good time at all.
In 1992, EMI reissued Fervor and Lost and Found, along with a couple
of B-sides and live recordings from the mid-8Os, under the title
Essential Jason & the
Scorchers, Volume 1: Are You Ready for the Country. Johnson was so
far out of the Scorchers loop that the label didnt bother
to send him an advance copy; he had to go out and buy the record at
Tower.
Amazed at how vital the bands early music still sounded, JJohnson
pushed for a Scorcher reunion. His former bandmates werent interested
at first, but Johnson didnt take no for an answer, and it wasnt
long before they were practicing, putting a tour together and talking
about making a record.
The Scorchers 1995 comeback album, A Blazing Grace (Mammoth),
symbolized their spiritual rebirth. It didnt break new ground
musically or lyrically, but Grace rocked harder than either Thunder
and Fire or One Foot in the Honky Tonk, Ringenbergs 1992 solo
effort for Capitol.
What A Blazing Grace did for us, way beyond what it may have
sold, was make people aware of the band again, Ringenberg said.
It also got us back together
as a band. Indeed, enthusiasm for the record - and for the Scorchers
reunion in general - got the groups members looking again toward
the future.
Today Ringenberg and Hodges, both nearing 40, exude an emotional and
spiritual maturity thats almost disarming, coming from two of
post-punks wildest showmen. But both agree it is this newfound
perspective on life that makes Clear Impetuous Morning - recorded
this past spring at Bakos Amp Works in Atlanta - such an uplifting
record.
Clear Impetuous Morning was just a great labor of love,
Ringenberg said. We never talked about sales. We never talked
about what we were gonna do with it
until it was done. After it was done, we said, Okay, lets
get this thing out there. But while we were making it, we did
it just for the pure joy of making it.
Thats not to say every song doesnt have its share
of pain, heartache and suffering in it, he continued. But
theres an element of joy and exuberance behind every song and
every lick on there. A Blazing Grace was an answer to the past. Clear
Impetuous Morning is definitely charging into the future with very
few inhibitions. Its remarkable for what weve been through,
personally and as a band.
Indeed, the delight with which Ringenberg sings the phrase Oh
what a rush to kick off the album is enough to get anybodys
heart racing. Co-producers Johnson and Hodges sustain that immediacy
and sense of abandon throughout. The rhythm section is devastatingly
tight, and Hodges guitar work, which avoids what he calls pyrotechnic,
whammy-bar crap, is as muscular and imaginative as ever.
I made a conscious effort to stay out of ground Ive already
covered, he said. When Jeff and I were working on the
guitar tracks, I said, If you hear something that youve
heard 400 times before, just stop me. Songs such as Uncertain
Girl and Tomorrow Has Come Today reveal that Hodges
playing has taken a melodic turn, at times reminiscent of Bob Moulds
phrasing from the mid-80s glory days of Husker Du. Elsewhere,
he conjures the punked-up Chuck Berry aesthetic of kindred spirits
Keith Richards and Johnny Thunders.
Ringenbergs singing and command of narrative are likewise undiminished.
Going Nowhere and Cappuccino Rosie, both co-written
with Nashvillian Tommy Womack, exhibit as much humanity, humor and
pathos as early Scorchers classics such as Still Tied
and Broken Whiskey Glass. But these new songs dont
merely evoke timeless verities about longing and loss, they flesh
out their themes with characters and stories listeners can connect
with.
Nowadays, Ringenberg sings less of sin than salvation: The resiliency
and hope that can be heard on Self-Sabotage and Everything
Has A Cost - the latter a gorgeous duet with Emmylou Harris
that seems a lock for Americana programmers playlists - are
no doubt born of the bands own struggle and rebirth.
But the moral and musical high point of Clear Impetuous Morning is
a demolition of Drugstore Truck Drivin Man, the
Gram Parsons/Roger McGuinn sendup of Ralph Emory, the Nashville deejay-cum-veejay
who in the late 60s dismissed the Byrds visionary synthesis
of country music and rock n roll.
We started playing Drugstore Truck Drivin Man
during the A Blazing Grace tour, said Ringenberg. We try
to work up at least one or two covers for every tour. The song worked
really well live. We had a lot of fun with it. Conceptually, its
a crime that the Scorchers never did a Gram Parsons song. But this
one seemed like the perfect choice. Were from Nashville and
weve been slammed by Ralph, you know, the whole nine yards.
We sing it with a lot of pride, Ringenberg continued.
Because we feel like you have to have a lot of confidence in
yourself to sing Drugstore Truck Drivin Man and
to remake it. Were proud of the fact that people are saying
that weve done the song justice.
The Parsons connection also rings true from a legacy standpoint: From
the rock side of the equation, only Parsons can match the Scorchers
influence on todays alt-country movement. The Scorchers may
have enjoyed plenty of acclaim during the mid-80s, but if the
Americana chart had been around back then, they likely would have
reached a wider audience.
I have no bitterness or darts to throw, said Ringenberg,
referring to the lack of convergence between the Scorchers heyday
and the current alternative-country boom. Im kinda proud
that people point to us as one of the pioneers. Its validation,
and that makes us feel good.
Ringenberg has obviously kept up with the current crop of country
rockers, some of whom probably formed hands in part because of the
Scorchers influence. There are some awfully good people
out there, he said, singling out Wayne Hancock, the Backsliders
and Uncle Tupelo offshoots Son Volt, Wilco and Courtesy Move, among
others.
Any time you have a form of music or movement, there are good
hands and bad hands, people copying and people leading the charge
creatively. But Ive gotta hand it to folks who are trying to
make something viable out of this, because its hard for artists
who are doing this kind of thing because you cant get on country
radio and its hard to get on rock radio. So I think its
a good thing.
One thing I resent, he added, is how a lot of people in
the alternative-country world still slam Nashville. That really bothers
me because theres a lot of great music here. I mean. Hank Sr.
came out of Nashville.
Sure, theres been a lot of bad stuff. But theres
also been a lot of brilliant, brilliant music thats come out
of this town. Even lately, there have been some great things. Steve
Earle came out of Nashville, you know. It always bothers me when people
take this anti-Nashville stance and say that everything out of Nashville
is corporate schlock. Thats not the case at all. This is a great,
great town for making music. The Scorchers are proud to be from here.
Were from the other side of the tracks, no doubt - but those
are beautiful tracks.
©
1996-2004 No
Depression Magazine
All Rights Reserved