The House of Shred interviews independent
artist Ronnie Neuhauser
After recently discovering composer/guitarist
Ronnie Neuhauser's musical brilliance via his latest release,
Ronnie Neuhauser's Congregation Against Styrocultural
Brain Damage, the House of Shred caught up with Ronnie
to discuss his views on life, music and many other interesting
things.
HoS: Tell me about
your latest release, Ronnie Neuhauser's Congregation
Against Styrocultural Brain Damage.
Ron: Well it's essentially a concept CD with four acts.
Act one is a kind of calling to people who are dissatisfied
with today's "status quo." Act two is definitely a jab at
politics, because I find the whole political scene a complete
farce. Modern politics resembles the WWF. Act three is about
finding yourself spiritually, emotionally, whatever it is
that we do to find what we actually represent. Act four
is the antidote for the mainstream. I made this act four
all instrumentals. It's amazing how easy it is to be anti-mainstream
when all you have to do is that <laughs>.
HoS: What message
are you trying to convey with your C.A.S.B.D. project?
Ron: I want to get people to think about themselves and
what is going on around them. The bombardment of the media
everyday in our lives is very dangerous, and the most frightening
thing is when people actually believe and live by all the
bullshit that they are fed. It seems that this country has
molded an immense group of people whose sole purpose in
life is to buy stuff. It's like a knick knack culture, nothing
with true beauty has any value, they just buy all this junk
and in a week they get bored with it and set it in the corner
of their garage to collect dust and rust.
HoS: Define "Styrocultural
Brain Damage."
Ron: Well you have styro-food (cheap food) and you have
styro-culture (A cheapened culture) and the brain damage
being the neurosis/condition caused by this.
HoS: What's your
favorite track on the CD? Why?
Ron: Wow, that changes all the time. I guess at this point
in time it's "Commander N' Thief" being that the
election for the new puppet is just around the corner. The
lyrics are really absurd (how fitting), and I really love
the arrangement.
HoS: Tell me a
little about your guitar sound, it's very unique. What kind
of equipment do you prefer to use? Is there one particular
piece that you can't live without?
Ron: On the CD for guitar I used an Ibanez RG550 and an
Ovation 1986 limited edition acoustic. For amps, I really
love my Mesa Boogie Dual Rectifier head. The distortion
is amazing, so I really see myself being happy with it for
quite some time. For clean sounds I used a Lab L5 with Lexicon
echos. I like echo better than delays because of the tone.
I also used a Fender Ultra Chorus amp for some of the more
percussive sounds like on Tapsy Turvy. I even did some tracks
direct, it just seemed to work well at the time. My newest
addition is the Johnson Millenium 150 amp. I love it! It
is incredibly versatile, you get a wide array of sounds
from it. The swell sounds I get are incredible. I'm going
to use it a lot on the upcoming recordings.
HoS: If you could
add ANY guitar to your collection, what would it be?
Ron: I'm looking at a few. A Fender Strat, the Carvin Holdsworth
model, maybe a Paul Reed Smith. I'm not really sure which
one, since I have to try them all out and see what works
best for me and my rig. I think that's the way to go about
it. You have to see what feels and sounds good for what
you're trying to do. It's a very personal thing.
HoS: As a musician
and composer/songwriter, what inspires you?
Ron: Everything! A noise, a fart, politics, anything that
you could possibly observe. It's great, because there's
so much to take in on a day to day basis that you never
know what will inspire you or where you will end up!
HoS: Who are your
main influences?
Ron: Musically I have quite a list such as Frank Zappa,
Charles Ives, Allan Holdsworth, Captain Beefheart, Diamanda
Galas, gospel, soul, funk, Jesus Christ Superstar, Hair,
Tommy, all for different reasons some of which you may not
notice. I like theatre, I mean the list is endless. I like
experimenting and I think you'll see a lot more of that
on the upcoming CDs and my live show!
HoS: If we were
to look in your CD player right now, what would we find?
What are you listening to these days?
Ron: You would definitely find Diamanda Galas, either Malediction
And Prayer or You Must Be Certain Of The Devil.
I've also been listening to Captain Beefheart a lot and,
of course, there's always the occasional Zappa.
HoS: There seems
to be a lack of musicality, musical virtuosity and melody
in the current mainstream acts. What's your opinion on that?
What do you attribute that to?
Ron: I think it comes and goes in waves. It's trends actually,
and god do I hate trends! From my perspective, the 80's
had all these guitar players performing these hot licks
over incredibly horrible bubble gum tunes. Now there are
these individuals who are pissed off because they were raised
in the suburbs, and while mommy and daddy were out working
all kinds of hours so they could buy lots of junk for the
family they ignored these kids and let MTV raise them. So
now you have a bunch of kids who think music is what's on
MTV, and we know how low MTV's standards are. It's gotten
to the point where actually being able to play is a bad
thing.
HoS: What do you
think of the current U.S. music scene?
Ron: I think it's in a very bad state. I like to say that
the music business isn't about promoting art, it's about
promoting super-stardom. Music is now just the vehicle and
it's an old broken down Pinto! You see, the record industry
has the majority of people believing that what is less than
mediocre (and smells a little) is pure genius. Look at the
facts, the majority of pop music has never been good. The
people who really do great stuff get ignored until they
die, and then some necrophiliac jackal/record executives
create "Master Series" recordings paying homage to this
"Great Artist." Meanwhile, they are raking in the bucks
royalty-free. Of course, all the pop bands the record companies
screw over feel the brunt when they are tossed away like
yesterday's leftovers. Then these bands realize they didn't
really like music, they liked being "Rock Stars," so they
are forced to get a job at the local burger joint because
all of their excessive living (which has to be paid back
to the record companies) has left them flat broke.
HoS: Any thoughts
on the Metallica vs. Napster thing or MP3's overall?
Ron: I think MP3s are fine. The problem starts when the
artist loses control of his or her compositions. Say you
studied for ten years and you finally pull all your resources
together to write these fantastic compositions. In the meantime
you've spent countless hours on study and practice. Countless
dollars on equipment, lessons, gas to take you to gigs that
pay shit or not at all, and some jackal comes along and
decides he's gonna give your hard work away for free without
your permission! You'd be a raging maniac right? With Napster,
they are just another middle man between the artist and
the listener. Until they can find a way to protect the artist's
rights they shouldn't exist. The artist should make the
decisions--no one else! I mean, do they actually believe
these MP3 sites are out for what's in the artist's best
interest? If you do you probably believe there is a difference
between Republicrats and Demoblicans.
HoS: Who would
you like to work with in the future?
Ron: Probably a group of people straight out of music college
who are open-minded and not too tainted by academic law.
See, they'll be fresh and full of piss and vinegar and not
yet tainted by the music biz, so they will be less apt to
run off with a wedding band or a cover tribute type band.
Hopefully, they will be in it for art's sake.
HoS: If you could
have a "Dream Band" who would the members be? Why?
Ron: I can't really mention all the people I admire, because
most of them are composers and are heavily involved with
their own gig. I'm like that, I run a somewhat totalitarianist
"musical" state.
HoS: What lies
ahead for Ronnie Neuhauser?
Ron: I'm in the midst of building my own studio. I want
to become totally self-sufficient, so I can record and release
everything myself the way I want it done. I have my own
website, recording equipment, I have my own company called
No Cheez Records, so If I can make enough money to do my
art 24/7 I'll be pretty happy. As for projects, I am now
working on a bunch of them. I'm doing two instrumental albums,
one more rock-driven and the other avant garde called "Hell
Off Exit 8." I'm also working on an experimental rock opera
called "Gangr'ear," which is about the decomposing of art
pun intended. I also want to release a duo or trio
vocal/guitar CD soon. Another thing I'm very excited about
is working on an animated wire art video for my suite "New
Nomadic Man" of which the first movement is on my current
CD. I met Matt Osborne who does some wonderful wire art
and knew that would be perfect for the suite. I have many
other ideas on the back burner, but what I have mentioned
is more immediate.
HoS: And now the
hardest question: If you were stranded on a desert Island,
and could only have 5 CD's to listen to for the rest of
eternity, what would they be?
Ron: OK, I'll give it a shot. Frank Zappa - The Yellow
Shark, Captain Beefheart - Shiny Beast, Diamanda
Galas - Malediction And Prayer, Edgar Varese - preferably
the album produced by Frank Zappa, for I have heard it was
a very wonderful accurate compilation. Charles Ives - The
Universe Symphony and I'm sorry, I'm going to have to
rebel (see, that totalitarianist thing again <laughs>)
and add one more, Frank Zappa - One Size Fit's All.
The House of Shred would like to thank
Ron Neuhauser for his time.
Check out the Official
Ronnie Neuhauser Website.
Listen to tracks from Ronnie Neuhauser's Congregation
Against Styrocultural Brain Damage at mp3.com.
Read The House of Shred's review
of Ronnie Neuhauser's Congregation Against Styrocultural
Brain Damage.
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