Remnants of Machinery Remnants of Reason

Wayyy back in September of 1998 I had the chance to talk to Monty Colvin, bass player extraordinaire for the Galactic Cowboys. The Cowboys have been kickin' around the Houston area for the last 8 years, and have managed to put out 5 full length albums that sound like no rock that you've heard before. After a threatened split in '94, Metal Blade madman Brian Slagel signed the Cowboys, allowing the legacy to continue further. Their latest release is titled "At the End of the Day" and is a stunning mix of all styles. No, it's not Marduk or Cannibal Corpse, but they've got enough "edge" on them for me to consider them in the metal sphere, and besides, if the music's good, who cares what it's labeled, right? Something of interest to me, I did this interview right around the release of the Starr Report, who knew how far it would be taken! 

RoR- So, what do you think about this whole Clinton thing, with the Starr Report?

MC - I think that the whole situation is a disgrace, and that he should step down. That's me, though.

RoR - I kinda like how he tried to play the "I have a private life too" angle. It just seems a little different, you know. I don't agree with the railroading he's getting, but the whole thing is just ridiculous.

MC - Yeah, like, no kidding, that's like, a public office that we're all paying for pal. I think that you (the people) should stick to your business? I mean, I understand, the guy's human, and people make mistakes, but, at the same time, he's the president of the United States!

RoR - It's a little different.

MC - Yeah, it's a "little" different.

RoR - So, I guess I wanted to prepare for this a little bit, so I went back and listened to all the old GC stuff again, and there's a real big division for me after the first two albums. I wondered how you felt when you look back in history, I mean, the first two albums are on Geffen, when Geffen was trying to make it big. They had you guys, probably the best artists on there, and they didn't know what to do with you.

MC - [Laughing] Right.

RoR - So how do you see this, do you see it as two different bands, or more as a natural progression?

MC - Well, yeah, it seems a little more gradual to me because it's been over the course of almost ten years. Yeah, you know, music was different ten years ago when we started, it was an eighties metal kinda thing, and we were even different during that period. But, still, there was a lot of different things going on back there. There were bands back there that were really big that people don't want to know ANYTHING about now! [laughs]. So, it's amazing to me that we sustained, hung in there, progressed through it all and haven't just disappeared. To me, yeah, we've just kinda evolved, taken the sound different places but yet we've still remained kinda the essence of what we were which has always just been a hard rock melodic "rock" band. You know, we've always sung things that were more on the pop kind of melody thing, we've always had harmonies, and we've always kinda had an edgy guitar sound. Those elements are still there, so to me it still remains what we were, but we have evolved and tried different things, tried to keep it fresh.

RoR - Also, maybe some of the subject matter changed a lot, like, the youthful outer space themes moved aside for an angrier, cynical side. Maybe it's Obvious...

MC - You mean in the later albums?

RoR - Well, especially with Machine Fish. I kinda followed it on the internet, it was like you guys kinda got turned around. Then, you came out with a really personal album, Alan's (Doss, drummer) producing, it's your artwork on there, and then, instead of being about third person stuff it's more about what you guys were feeling at the time.

MC - Yeah, exactly man, you nailed it. I think that a lot of the stuff that we went through during the Geffen years, and the management that we had, and all that stuff through that period. We just got so screwed around so much, just really taken advantage of. A lot of that stuff is reactions to all of that, and that's probably why Machine Fish is a harder album, and had a lot more aggression to it. Yeah, so, you're right, [laughs].

RoR - I wondered if also if some of the "Astronaut on Earth" theming was a metaphor for alienation or feeling displaced from society, or just feeling different in general. I like the end of "Where are you Now" when you go back and call your old high school classmates.

MC - Yeah, I think you're right, I think a lot of that stuff, I mean even the name itself Galactic Cowboys was just an expression of doing something that we felt was different, off the wall, progressive, or whatever, you know. I don't know, those early years were just real free for us, we were having a blast, we didn't care what anybody thought. We just we basically being as crazy and experimental with the music as we wanted to. We just had fun, and I think along the way we emotionally got torn down a lot from all of it, and a lot of the music since then has been a product of our survival [laughs] of the whole music scene, record companies, lawyers, and all the crap that goes into the whole "business" and fighting through that. That's kinda what the Machine Fish suite on this album is all about. Kind of a history of what we've been through, things like that.

RoR - It feels like you guys have always been progressive, and different than anything else, but it wasn't forced. I Especially see it on the new album, because you just naturally went against the grain. You got signed to Metal Blade a few years ago, and came out with a real heavy album, but now, Metal Blade's recently signed a lot of black metal, and you guys came out with an album that's more reminiscent of The Beatles, with a lot of melody.

MC - Yeah, you know, I guess we'll see how that plays with the rest of the bands that they sell [laughing], butI think, once again, we just write according to how we're feeling and what we want to do. Because I don't think that we really feel a part of any group, and there's times when we kinda wish we were, it'd be a lot easier to sell us, and to tour with people, that kinda stuff. But it's kind of a hard sell when you not a part of a specific...

RoR - Package...

MC - Genre, yeah, package, a neat little easy to swallow pill.

RoR - So, I guess corpsepaint would be out of the question, huh?

MC - [laughing] Yeah...

RoR - You might have lucked out, because if there was like one other band that I could compare you guys to, it would be King's X.

MC - Yeah, and consequently we've always been mentioned in the same breath, and we toured a lot with them...

RoR - And you're touring with them again...

MC - Yeah, and we're doing it again. We are friends with them, and we get along well, and just musically it just seems to be a nice match. Their fans like us and vice-versa.

RoR - I guess for inspiration it would be nice to get out there with some other people doing different things.

MC - Oh yeah, I mean, that's the thing, we would love to do some other kinds of tours too. Expose ourselves to other audiences, but it's hard to do. It's hard to find.

RoR - Do you think it's the industry's fault, I mean, you go into any store, and you see maybe ten new bands, and they all sound say, like what they're calling retro metal now. Or ten new bands that are all cookie cutter black metal. Do you think that there are really that many bands that start right away, or that the companies just start signing what they think is hot?

MC - Yeah, I think that they've got to, I've gotten pretty cynical on the whole thing but it seems like they see that something selling, and they immediately run out and try and find something that sounds just like, and there's lots of people that are MORE than willing to sound just like someone else. That's an easy ticket for a lot of bands.

RoR - They'll go a one record deal and then get dropped when it's not hot anymore.

MC - Yeah, that's the whole shame though, I see so many of these bands, they get their 15 minutes and then it's over, forever, you know?

RoR - But, so you think they're really suprised when that happens?

MC - I don't know man, I even think about a lot of those 80's metal bands that so there were so many of back then. I think about some of those bands, and they're gone, and they were big for like one album, and then they didn't have a career anymore. I kinda in some ways feel sorry for them, but it's also like, if you were more creative, maybe you could stick around.

RoR - Well, I hope that there are enough people that can appreciate the creativity and break out from the norm to keep you guys in business, which is unfortunately what has to happen.

MC - Yeah, I'm hoping, and we're always hoping that we can broaden the audience more with each album. You know you're always one song away from bigger popularity, so... If we ever could get some radio play that would help. I guess you keep hoping to broaden your audience.

RoR - Well, there's something extra there, because there are certain bands, and you guys are one of them, that when you put on one of there albums, you're brought back to "that" time when you got the album. Not many bands do that, but each GC album has a certain time significance to me.

MC - I know, some of my favorite bands put out what I feel is the best stuff out there, and then they break up, and they can't do it anymore, because they don't get heard, they don't get pushed by their label. There's a lot of bands out there that have done a lot of creative stuff that just doesn't make it because it's not the same old thing.

RoR - Have you heard the band Voivod at all?

MC - Yeah!

RoR - That's another band I think of in this regard.

MC - Yeah, I've always really dug them.

RoR - Every album is completely different.

MC - It really is.

RoR - They've just never seemed to find what marketers would call their "target" audience.

MC - Yeah, I don't know, sometimes they kinda stretch the envelope, they've pushed the boundaries of creativity sometimes.

RoR - A little too out for people, maybe?

MC - Yeah, but I think that's great.

RoR - I gotten pretty cynical too, Iguess. I can't listen to the radio anymore, because it reminds me of the 80's when it was all top 40, but now it's it's the alternative 20.

MC - Right [laughs]

RoR - To me, there's no difference. But when you try to explain this to people that ARE halfway intelligent, they still can't accept it. Here in Hawaii there's only about 3 stations, and they keep changing formats to please an audience. There are a couple of independents, but you have to tune in after midnight to hear anything... Essentially, what you are listening to is dictated by some central office somewhere based on what people think should sell. That's what made me wonder about Geffen, since I believe they owned MTV at the time that Nirvana came out, and that was just SO pushed.

MC - Yeah, I know they were close there. It's hard man, I truly believe labels, radio, they can make whoever they want, big. So if you've got the money, if you've got the push... I don't have any problem believing that if the money was there, and they decided that the Galactic Cowboys were going to be huge, they could probably make them that way. Just by doing it. If you tell people enough that "this is cool", after a while they'll believe it [laughs]. It's kinda sad, it seems like the suits always end up taking over and ruining it, no matter what it is. Whether it's movies or TV.

RoR - Yeah, it's like I was floored that they started selling Starbucks in the supermarket, and I remember telling someone and they were like, "Isn't that a good thing?". No, it's not. I don't know if it's always been this way, but it seems that when something gets popular, and people can profit off of it, they exploit it. It's like economic vampirism.

MC - That's the thing with music too, it's not enough anymore to have a really cool band, that may sell 60 to 100 thousand albums, it's like, if they're not "huge", then they're not worth keeping around.

RoR - Do you think some of it is the venues? Because it seems as though a lot of local mid-sized places are closing down. Is that just because they're just booking major acts? It feels like either you fill a stadium or you play a bar.

MC - Yeah, there's no room for the little anymore, everybody wants the biggest thing. It's even that way in movies, everything is a big explosion. Everything is a big adventure-thriller, Armageddon... Those movies are OK, but how about the little comedies, the small movies? I know they're out there, but it just seems like it's more and more dominated by the SAME THING.

RoR - How many different movies do we need to see with the same story?

MC - Yeah, how many times can you blow up a building or a car? But it's gonna happen every movie because everybody's got surround sound now. [laughs]

RoR - Yeah, god forbid you get to think in a movie.

MC - Right! Me, I just like to go laugh once in a while. I think they see that the big bucks are in big explosions, and that's what you're gonna get.

RoR - It's like a fear of taking chances. They know what they have to make. Somebody is always afraid that they'll lose their job if they sign this band or OK this movie and they don't make 150% profit. So, they just go with something they know is safe.

MC - I know man, it just gets frustrating, I mean, for everybody. I just think people are getting bored with music.

RoR - One of the cool things was that I liked that you started putting your artwork on the albums. To me that was another personal factor to the band.

MC - Alright! Of course, I totally enjoy doing that. It's been a really cool thing, I've got the degree from college to paint and stuff. Everyone's always going, you need to have a show, and with the CDs and everything you feel like hey, I've got the biggest gallery in the world. So, a lot of people get to see it, it's been a lot of fun.

RoR - Machine Fish was the first one that you did the cover for. Was that a coincidence that is was also the first one on Metal Blade, or was there maybe more artistic freedom?

MC - Yeah, it kinda was a little more freedom. Because at Geffen they were always wanting to figure out how to sell us, which was fine, but it was like: "You need to look like this more" or "No, that wouldn't be good". Because I really cool painting for Space in Your Face, and I'm fine with the cover that we picked for it, but I did painting of the four of us, and I thought that it would have been a really cool thing to have on the album. The guy at the time at the label (Geffen) was a little afraid that we would come off like comic book characters, or that it wouldn't be quite the right image. So I was like whatever. But once we left Geffen we had more freedom. I take stuff into Brian (Slagel, founder of Metal Blade Records) and he's like "yeah, cool". So it's been fun in that way, a lot more freedom.

RoR - So, are you guys getting psyched up to tour again?

MC - Yeah, I've been working out, trying to get in shape. Ready to exert some energy. Yeah, we're looking forward to it. Hope people get there early and check us out.

RoR - So I guess there's no chance of a Hawaii tour in the future?

MC - Yeah, I don't know man, we've never played there, never even been to Hawaii. Sure like to though. Wish you could get up to one of these shows. That'd be awesome man. If you do, make sure you say hi, because we're not rock stars or nothing, we hang out, walk around.

RoR - Alright then, any last requests???

MC - Well thanks so much Evan, I appreciate the intereview. It's been fun, it's just been like chattin' with somebody, maybe you'll get to catch us on this tour!

Check out the Galactic Cowboys at: http://www.galacticcowboys.com

       
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