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After one listen to Beep Beep’s
debut, Business Casual, there
is no doubt that this band is of the eccentric variety.
Omaha, Nebraska has bred some pretty fascinating acts
lately, and this is one of Saddle Creek Records’s
latest gems.
Kaffeinebuzz.com caught up with the Beep Beep’s
lead singer, Chris Hughes, via phone from somewhere
in Texas. Be sure to catch Beep Beep this Friday, February
18th at the Larimer Lounge for their all ages show with
Denver acts Bright Channel and The Hot House.
Kaffeine Buzz: Where did the name Beep Beep
come from?
Chris Hughes: Well, let me think. I’m trying
to explain it succinctly here. Eric (Bemberger, guitar)
and I have these little pet games that we have with
each other, something when we say when we’re like
wrestling and stuff…like “Beep Beep,”
kind of inviting (each other.) We just kept it. It kind
of reflected the spirit of our relationship.
KB: How did you come up with the concept of
the cover art for Business Casual?
CH: The cover was done by a San Francisco artist named
John Bankston. Eric had discovered John, after seeing
a piece on display at a MOMA exhibit. Eric got back
from his travels and he showed me this artist and we
looked at some of his works and became in love with
John. We just took a shot in the dark and asked him
if he would be interested in commissioning a work for
our record. He was familiar with the label and he agreed.
John works in several mediums, and he has many scenes,
and one we were particularly interested in, one with
a transvestite scene. It was kind of an “island
of the he-shes” (scene) where they capture a man
and take him to an island to look for treasure, which
is frilly clothing. He has western scenes too which
are often depicting cowboys in certain situations, cowboy
intimacy, something that is not often expressed in classical
cowboy art. We were really excited by what he was doing,
and that’s how we created that. What was really
special about that work was that he listened to our
record and based it (the cover art) off of his interpretations
of some of the track. It was nice because it was such
a personal experience.
KB: Do you have a relationship to Saddle Creek,
personally, other than them just being your label?
CH: Well, yeah. They’ve been my friends for as
long as the label has been around. I grew up with most
of the people on the label, and the bands, in fact.
I do what I can to help out…with the Bright Eyes
record booming and before we left for tour I was helping
them stuff orders. Eric and Joel (Peterson, Beep Beep,
The Faint) and I have been in another band on Saddle
Creek called Gabardine, and, you know a lot of us have
played with other bands on the label right now too.
There’s kind of a rotating pool of musicians in
Omaha. We’ve know each other for eons.
KB: Your website mentions you retiring your
“lipid suit” after several years. Can you
explain what that means?
CH: A lipid suit is a fat suit. Eric wrote that about
me. I had a period where I had, I guess, a bout of depression,
where I kind of holed myself up in this shitty West
Omaha apartment and tried to eat myself to death. I
got up to 236 pounds, and then I just decided I was
a rotund fat body and that I either needed to lose the
weight or jump off a balcony. I opted to lose the weight
and am now down to the svelte figure I am now. I wasn’t
always a fat person, I just let it go for a while, and
when the fog of depression cleared, I was able to have
this vision of what I needed to do, and having man boobs
wasn’t part of that vision.
KB: What’s up with the naked men in the
cage on your website (a promo photograph of the band),
and why isn’t it also in the album?
CH: That’s a storyline, a little spoof. We kind
of wanted to show people “Midwest” was like,
by wearing traditional western regalia. In that photo,
I’ve made a pair of batwing chaps that have baby
boots affixed to them. Mike (Sweeney) our drummer, is
sitting there, and he has a matching vest that has pacifiers
affixed to it with baby spoon fringe on the back. What
you see in the background is what they call a “corn
crib” where they keep the corn to feed cattle
and hogs, and we have male mannequins detained in there.
I guess it was a fantasy piece, and I wanted to imply
that that’s what we were wrangling. We were ranch
hands, but we didn’t manage sheep or cattle, we
were wrangling mannequins.
There’s a photo-line, where in a lot of photos,
I’m embracing Mike, but sternly because he has
to let them escape. I want to let him know, that I’m
the boss, but let him know that’s its okay. The
mannequins also fill out the photo compositionally,
filling out the rule of thirds. Those mannequins are
from my mannequin collection.
KB: We’ve noticed that the whole Omaha
scene tends to be really sexually-charged and sexually
liberated, and this is interesting because that is not
how Midwest society is traditionally viewed. What do
you think spawned that and how do you interpret that?
CH: I have to guess that you are referring to some
of The Faint’s lyrics and Beep Beep lyrics, and,
well, I guess Conor (Oberst, Bright Eyes) sings about
that stuff too. “He always needs a lover he doesn’t
have to love,” (Bright Eyes lyric) you know, we’re
men, and we have hormones. What else are we going to
write about?
All the great bands that come through (Omaha)? There
aren’t any. All the cool museums? There aren’t
any. We write about what’s tangible and what’s
in front of us, and a lot of that is just our libidos.
There was a lot of that on our record and I don’t
know if that’s going to be the case on the next
one. It’s really just about whatever tickles our
fancy. There were a few moments where Eric and I exhibited
lude conduct lyrically, but that doesn’t mean
that it’s going to tap in on every song.
KB: What do you have in mind for the next record?
CH: Ideally, I want it to be better than this one,
that’s what any artist wants. They want to be
able to propel their vision forward and refine ideas
that have already existed and explore new ones. At the
same time, I want it to be a cornucopia of terror, I
want people to be startled and used and concerned on
every track, but I want it to encompass other genres
as well.
KB: What or who do you recognize as stylistic
peers to Beep Beep?
CH: I don’t compare myself to anyone really,
because we are spazzy and aggressive, but we don’t
have that hair-chest-man-beating thing going on. We’re
not gruff or like macho man like a lot of hardcore bands.
At the same time, I don’t know of another band
that does that, and lyrically, there’s not a lot
of bands that are doing what we’re doing and talking
about what we talk about. We created a record that was
what we wanted to listen to.
KB: When do you expect to be coming out with
another album?
CH: We are on a six week tour right now, and when we
come back, Joel is going to go off on a huge world tour
with The Faint and Bright Eyes. While Joel’s gone,
Eric and I are going to formalize some ideas, and tentatively
go into the studio in mid-August. It takes a little
to put things together, so I would say a tentative release
date would be February 2006, followed by a world tour
including South America and Africa.
KB: What other kinds of things do you collect?
CH: Oh, Jesus. I like vintage clothing, I like records.
I like just what ever tickles my fancy. If I have the
money and I like it, I typically buy it. I’m not
one of those minimalists that, you know, you walk into
their house and there’s a chair and a drinking
glass. I collect antiques, arts and crafts furniture,
pottery, metalwork, turn-of-the-century stuff. We like
toys.
www.ilovebeepbeep.com
Jef Hoskins and Bree Kutz - February 18, 2005
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