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San Francisco’s All Teeth and Knuckles
is embarking in a mere few hours on its semi-national
tour (they go as far east as Chicago). We met up at their
practice space in West Oakland, which is home to DJ and
synth master Giovanni De La Cruz, and
where band founder and lead vocalist Patric “Sick
Face” Fallon has been crashing. The house
is trashed out from a party the night before. A chair
is upturned and general vacated disarray fills the room.
“There was an aquarium in that corner” says
Gio, with an air of mysterious pride with regard to its
absence.
The boys crack open a couple beers and we head to the
couch for a chat. We are all a bit sweaty in the Oakland
afternoon heat, and Patric plays kind host by offering
a drink, but we decline, explaining that we just sweat
all the time. No worries.
Patric: I’m the same way. Every time that we
play I end up drenched.
Kaffeine Buzz: That’s a good thing though;
people see that and they think, “That guy’s
working really hard.”
PF: And if you’re standing in the front you can
feel the sweat hitting you in the face.
Gio: Girls like sweaty dudes, too. It’s like,
pheromones
KB: Let’s start off with an All Teeth
and Knucles 101. What should people who are about to
see your show expect?
PF: The name of the album pretty much explains it all,
Club Hits to Hit the Clubs With.
It’s dance music, which can go any direction.
It can be disco, it can be R&B, it can be rock,
it can be punk. Dance music is just something you can
move to. We even throw comedy in there.
The whole live show ends up being a lot more embellished
than the recording cuz there’s a lot more freedoms,
with like, Gio doing live synthesizer, me doing things
with the live vocals, and there’s no live drums
on the recording.
You see bands like Hot Chip play and LCD Soundsystem.
They don’t always have live drums [on their recordings],
but they always do when they tour. And it brings an
extra element.
KB: Few purely electronic groups can keep a
show interesting with just their solid state performance.
Daft Punk is one of the few examples that come to mind.
Having an analog element and having more people on stage
just makes a show more interesting.
PF: Absolutely. Gio started out doing music as a DJ,
doing raves and techno stuff, but I started out strictly
doing live music; playing in punk and hardcore bands
in high school. I was in a band called The Evaluation
when I lived in Chicago for a bit. So not having a live
element is difficult for me. I’m just used to
having an unexpected element—something that’s
natural feeling, and you can watch it being made.
KB: I know there’s a few people that
perform with you, but this was a one-man project originally,
correct?
PF: I started the whole thing by myself, all with a
computer, a microphone and some anger. It’s just
been constantly progressing. I wrote all the songs.
Gio just does live stuff now, but hopefully he’ll
be more involved in the writing process. And then we
have a drummer that plays live with us. We were hoping
to hit the road with four—we had somebody that
was doing percussion and background vocals, this drum-and-bass
DJ UFO. He helped produce the whole album. He was going
to go on tour with us; but he just decided it was more
important that he just does his thing.
KB: Well, three out of four ain’t bad,
and we’ll be looking forward to seeing any number
of you when you come through Denver next week!
ATAK proved that taking their act on the road is
done in an organized fashion and that there are strict
rules that all members must adhere to. By the time the
interview came to an end, they had only gotten as far
as Rule 5. But here they are. Read and learn:
Rule 1: If it’s free, take it,
eat it, drink it, fuck it, especially if it’s
drugs.
Rule 2: If it means having a place
to stay, take one for the team.
Rule 3: No alcohol left behind.
Rule 4: Before excessive drinking
begins, all equipment and merchandise must be loaded
into the van.
Rule 5: Sex in the van is okay as
long as all other band members have a place to stay.
Kaffeine Buzz Presents All Teeth and Knuckles at
Larimer Lounge Monday, August 27, with CAPN Fresh and
the Stay Fresh Seals, Jason Roth. Check out our review
of Club
Hits to Hit the Clubs With.
www.myspace.com/allteethandknuckles
-Jef Hoskins August 22, 2007
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