As
Indie continues to push forward, more local and regional material
start to become focused on more than the national scene as a whole.
And with the influx of new material from musicians people have never
heard of, some aren't as willing to dive in swimming without knowing
what they're buying first, and have started to rely heavily on
reviews and samples for help. --- The blog “Tome To The Weather
Machine” has been doing its best over the course of the past year,
reviewing material coming out of the Rocky Mountain region from every
genre, in an attempt to both promote and encourage local artists
while still judging fair to the content within. I got a chance to
chat with the man behind the blog, Ryan Hall, about the site as well
as his thoughts on local music.
Ryan
Hall
http://tometotheweathermachine.blogspot.com/
Gavin:
Hey Ryan! First thing, tell us a bit about yourself.
Ryan:
My name is Ryan Hall, and I am originally from Littleton, Colorado. I
moved to Salt Lake City a little over four years ago to attend the
University of Utah. I am studying English and Film, I have one more
semester and I am finished! I got married about eight months ago. I
was living back and forth between SLC and Seattle for the past year
and a half when my wife (then fiancé) was attending the
University of Washington. Now, we are here for the time being and
hopefully will be staying for awhile. I currently write for
InYourSpeakers.com and
SLUG doing album reviews. I work at the University of Utah
Copy Center, which affords me ample time to write while on the
clock.
Gavin:
How did you first take an interest in music, and what were some of
your favorite musicians growing up?
Ryan:
There are two pretty crucial moments in my childhood that made me
take an interest in music. The first was when my parents bought their
first CD player and stereo. That was a pretty new technology back
then and our family was one of the first to get one on our block. I
would sit in front of the speaker with my chubby little legs crossed
and listen to my dad’s CDs. My first memory of really liking music
was hearing Garth Brook’s “In Lonesome Dove”. It is kind of
embarrassing, but that song really drew me in. It has this really
heartbreaking classical western revenge story about this woman
avenging her murdered husband. I was fascinated how a song could tell
a story that was as vivid and real as a book or a movie. The second
was listening to “War of Man” by Neil Young off of Harvest
Moon. That song scared me to
death when I was a kid. The imagery is so surreal and frightening. I
would read the lyrics along with the song and check all the liner
notes to try and figure out this song. It was so mysterious - it is
cool that music doesn’t have to be a straight forward narrative to
draw you into a whole different world. In middle school and high
school I listened to a lot of punk and hardcore just like everyone
else. I eventually made a crucial friendship with a kid named Justin
Couch in my sophomore year of high school when I was looking for
something else to latch onto. He was into bands like Yo La Tengo and
Belle and Sebastian. Those were some formative CD exchanges. My
interest in music kind of blossomed from there. I remember the first
time hearing Sigur Ros, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Arvo Part, and
“Leaf House” by Animal Collective as being pretty crucial moments
as well.
Gavin:
How did the idea come about for you to start up a review
site?
Ryan: I
listen to a lot of music and so it seemed like a natural extension to
find an outlet to make sense of and express all the music I digest.
To be totally honest, I am an unabashed Forest Gospel fan-boy. I was
amazed at the totally awesome, obscure bands their site would pull in
that very few sites were covering. I actually e-mailed FG early on
and asked for some tips and pointers starting out. They graciously
imparted their wisdom and the Tome was born.
Gavin:
Where exactly did the name “Tome To The Weather Machine” come
from, and why did you choose that as the title?
Ryan:
I was listening to this Aloha song called “Trick Spring” off the
album Light Works. It includes the lines “A tome to the
heavens or weather machine.” For some reason, that line really
grabbed me and stuck with me. So, when it was time to choose a name
for the blog, that one was in my mind. It is a little unwieldy
though, it isn’t easy to stumble up on Google or even say. I have
to write it down for people when I tell them about it. But for what
it is I like it and I’m sticking with it.
Gavin:
You started it up in February this past year. What was it like that
first month or so writing reviews?
Ryan:
When I first started the Tome it was even more low-key. I would just
write about albums that I purchased and really liked. It wasn’t
until about April that I was mailed the first album to review from an
artist that sought me out. I was pretty ecstatic. Since then there
has been a pretty solid stream of artists from around the world
sending me their stuff. It blows my mind. Later on I recruited my
friend Crawford from Denver to help write reviews. He is a fantastic
writer and has been a really great help.
Gavin:
How do you pick and choose what albums you're going to
review?
Ryan:
There isn’t too much rhyme or reason. We try to review everything
we get in a timely fashion. This month has been crazy with school and
work so we haven’t gotten around to too many. But, we review them
as they come. I think there have been only a few records that we have
passed on. If I can’t find anything positive to write about I will
move on. I feel like our site, while attempting to be critical,
strives more for exposure and celebration of music we like. I have
only been doing this for under a year. I am not totally jaded yet.
Also, Crawford and I both write for the online publication
InYourSpeakers which allows us to post reviews we write for them on
the Tome.
Gavin:
For you there really isn't a rating system, more of a description
for the audience who might be into it. Why did you choose that way
instead of a standardized form?
Ryan:
I feel like rating systems are meaningless. I mean I am pretty
positive in all my reviews. What is the difference between a 7 or an
8? They are both pretty high. I feel like they can give a false
assumption about how the reviewer feels about a record and can be
incongruous with the critical assessment. But, to each his own. I
just couldn’t do it.
Gavin:
What's been the reaction from the music community of the reviews,
from the artists, labels and fellow reviewers?
Ryan:
It has been super positive! I even had a song named after me by this
musician German Shepherd! It is great to get really positive feedback
from a band or label that appreciates your review. And generally, I
am super excited about the music I am hearing so it is a win-win
situation. It is really cool to have friends in SLC, who I have
written reviews for, tell me that this-or-that website posted my
review or people contact them from reading a review I wrote. That was
the whole point all along.
Gavin:
Have you given any thought to expanding your content, or possibly
reviewing on a professional level?
Ryan:
Well, exciting things are happening at the Tome. First, we are
looking to buy a domain name and become a legit website. This will
include expanding our coverage, recruiting more writers and including
interviews and other features. I have always toyed around with the
idea of adding a film review component to the site. I have a backlog
of reviews of films sitting on my computer. Those might see the light
of day. As for pursuing this on a professional level, I have been
really thinking about going to grad school for journalism. I don’t
have any plans on the Tome becoming anything more than it is. An
outlet to help me digest all the music I am listening to and in the
process help expose bands and small run labels to people who read the
site.
Gavin:
A little state-wide, what are your thoughts on the local music scene,
both good and bad?
Ryan:
Salt Lake City has some incredible musicians and bands living and
playing in it right now. I am constantly blown away by what I hear
coming out of this city. In terms of most cities, Salt Lake City is
pretty close knit. Everyone plays in everyone else's projects and the
atmosphere is generally pretty amicable. With that said I wish there
was a venue that was more suitable to showcase some of Salt Lake’s
more experimental drone-based musicians. There is some incredible
stuff happening just under our noses, especially within the
experimental music community. Being married, however, I really
haven’t made it out to too many shows in the past couple months. It
kind of changes your priorities. Sorry friends!
Gavin:
What do you think of other local labels and the work they do for the
scene?
Ryan:
I think the DIY ethic still holds very true for musicians working in
SLC. We simply don’t have the infrastructure to support a prominent
label in SLC. I think, for now, this adds to the variety and
innovation that exists in SLC. Even some of the bigger bands are
still doing things by themselves out of choice and necessity. I
totally understand the need for a record label and respect a lot of
the labels trying their best to make the lives of musicians easier
and expand the exposure of SLC bands. One cool thing I have witnessed
is the rise of the Hot Congress collective in Denver. Crawford is a
founding member. The idea was to simply get a bunch of cool Denver
bands together to put out a compilation as a sort of cohesive
statement of the what is happening in Denver. From there it really
blew up to be this artist run quasi-label, quasi-promotional tool,
art collective. I think it would be cool if SLC bands could form
something similar. We are seeing it a little bit with the awesome
small run tape label Mooondial and Killer Buds.
Gavin:
Branching more national, what are you thoughts of the Indie scene,
and how its comparing to more mainstream material?
Ryan:
It would be easy to pass off the rapid mainstreaming of indie rock
to the proliferation of the internet. But I think more than that,
there is this insidious, capitalistic element to it all. The whole
idea of an image defining a subculture. Once a subculture has an
image, a sound, a fashion it enters the marketplace where there is no
distinction between something produced “independently” or by the
mainstream conglomerates. So, I don’t think you can really
differentiate the “indie” scene and the mainstream because it has
become an inseparable part of our consumer society. But whatever, it
isn’t the bands fault for being so awesome, and this whole argument
sounds elitist. Well, because it is. It is the whole “yeah, but I
heard it first” mentality which is totally counter-productive.
Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective, etc. Are obviously talented enough
to get noticed on their own merits, I just kind of balk at what
drives the whole thing. But, with that said there will always be
incredible music happening well below the current of the hype
machines that blurs genre-distinctions and things like that.
Gavin:
With the state of music as it is, where do you see things going over
say... the next five years?
Ryan:
There have been a few things that have been on my mind on this
subject that have been teased out recently by a conversation with
friends. With whatever the “mainstream” or “indie” categories
and subcategories are or aren’t I can say this about our
generation. A couple things: 1. I don’t think we will ever see pop
music reach a point that it did in the sixties or seventies where
rock and roll created a social catalyst for change. Due to the means
we get music and the complete access to styles across the board there
will never be an artist everyone can rally around to be a voice of
the generation. There are just too many out there. 2. With that said,
I don’t think the past ten years have a discernible sound. The
proliferation of the internet has made it difficult to pigeonhole
both music and music listeners into a genre or subgenre. I suppose
the only thing we can really say about the 00’s was that nothing
was sacred. Genre’s mutated, mashed together, and outright stole to
create indefinable pastiches that define post-modern thought. I am
not saying this is a bad thing. 3. Again, with the ease to download
anything you want and just about everyone's musical tastes dipping
into so many genres, pop music is able to get away with as little
substance as possible. No one is looking to Lady Gaga or Kanye West
to fulfill an existential void in their life. Just to be entertained,
and they do just that. ...So will the late 00’s indie become the
new “punk” or “goth” of the nineties? Time will tell.
Gavin:
What can we expect from you and the blog going into this
year?
Ryan:
Well, I hope the scope is going to be a lot bigger with more writers,
more subjects, and more music. I am going to continue trying to keep
up three writing gigs on top of work and school. We will see how it
goes!
Gavin:
Aside the obvious, is there anything you'd like the plug or
promote?
Ryan:
SLC bands! Send me your stuff. I would like to expand the local
coverage on the Tome. I know there is a lot of cool stuff that I have
never heard happening in this great state. Another thing. 2009 was
awesome for SLC musicians, Silver Antlers “Black Blood of the
Earth”, Chaz Prymek’s “Lake Mary” project, Navigator and
Birthquake were some of my favorites. 2010 is going to be even better
with new releases from Aye Aye (now High Country), Silver Antlers,
Stag Hare, and a EP/DVD release by Chaz Prymek. 2010 is going to be
a watershed year. Thanks for letting me get on a soapbox back there.