Damon Fox, Steve Frothingham and Andy Butler Jones of Big Elf !
"Money Machine" is the 2nd release by BIGELF. The band's sound is a throw-back to classic 70s progressive, hard-rock, and art-rock, using plenty of hammond organ, synths, vocal effects, heavy guitar, and unique arrangements that'll appeal to fans of rock n roll's greatest era! Money Machine is a feast of classic rock inspired gems from the King Crimson vocal effects of the title track, to the twisted heavy pop feel of "Side Effects", the John Lennon-like melody of the eerie ballad "The Bitter End", and a classy remake of Atomic Rooster's "Death Walks Behind You".
A band with a lot of appeal to fans of the above mentioned bands, as well as Uriah Heep, Alice Cooper, and Black Sabbath.
BIGELF is :
A.H.M. Butler-Jones : Vocals/ guitar
Steve Frothingham : Drums
Damon Fox : Vocals/ keyboards/ bass
{*See below for New addition to group!! }
Here I swapped notes with Damon Fox, who was happy to answer my questions with the help of Steve Frothingham and Andy Butler Jones, who give us a little history of the band, their influences, ideas, and thoughts on their career so far.
For more info check out www.bigelf.com OR the label www.recordheaven.com
Q: When and how did BIGELF get started?
Damon::: I should start by saying, we have a new addition to the clan........a lefty viking bassist from Helsinki, Finland. His name is Duffy Snowhill. We are getting on quite well. Bigelf's magic carpet landed on the L. A. club scene in early 92' somewhere between left-over Sunset strip metal and soon-to-rule-the-world Seattle grunge, but the swirling form in my mind actually began much earlier maybe 88/89'. My goal was to put together a group that would hybrid musical styles from the past. I wanted to bring back Mellotrons, bellbottoms and beards! What could have been harder in the day of plaid shirts and shoe gazer rock? It was impossible to find musicians that would take a chance playing our kind of music. I met Andy through a
guitarist wanted ad in late 1991, it read: "Charismatic guitarist with a Badfinger requested". We found Steve in Oregon spending ALL his time noodling with analog synthesizers, not drums. He joined in 95'......nothing has changed.
Q: Whereabouts are you based out of ?
Andy: Hollywood, California/ Eugene, Oregon/ Helsinki, Finland. Rehearsals are kinda tough.
Q: How old are you guys ?
Damon: Elf years?......about 300 years old.
Andy: Enough to know better.
Q: What sort of music did you grow up on ? Biggest influences ?
Steve: Had to hear a lot of Moody Blues from age 1, (Mom's favorite y'know). That's probably why I like the Mellotron so much. Brothers played the "White Album" all the time. Lots of Stones, Beatles, Yes, etc. Classic AOR. Later I got into Kiss pretty heavy. Was in a Kiss look-a-like band in'78-'79. In High school there was Sabbath, ELP, Zappa/Mothers, and of course Van Der Graaf Generator, Osanna, etc.
Damon: I grew up on Satan rock! But the Beatles had the biggest impact.
Andy: British invasion, psychedelic, hard rock. Biggest influences: Beatles
Q: Can you give me a few of your favorite singers, guitarists, bassists, keyboardists, drummers ??
Damon: Paul McCartney fills the void for all of those categories. Ozzy is definitely one of my biggest influences for lyrics and melodies. Geezer Butler has a lot of feel. Kerry Minnear from Gentle Giant is who I relate to most on a overall sonic level as a keyboardist. Organ-based faves: Ken Hensley, Vincent Crane, Jon Lord. And how could I leave out the consummate showman.............Keith Emerson!
Steve: My "favorite" drummers list tends to evolve over time. Big influences
early on: Bill Bruford, Neil Peart, Guy Evans(VDGG), Moon. These days: "Move" era Bev Bevan, "Ibis" era Ric Parnell, & all the great Italian drummers.
Andy: Singers: Phil May, Ian Hunter and David Bowie. Guitarists: Mick Ronson, Tony Iommi and David Gilmour.
Q: What can you tell me about each other? [traits, influences .... ]
Damon: Steve is always losing his wallet and Andy collects dictionaries....nice.
Andy: Two of the nicest chaps a fellow could hope to meet.
Steve: Two very different characters that work extremely well off of each other. Like peanut butter & jelly.
Q: 'Money Machine' is your 2nd album [?] What can you tell me about the 1st, and how it was received ?
Damon: Yes, "MM" is the 2nd. Our first album is called "Closer To Doom". For those in tune to that frequency, it was a revelation.....I think people are hungry for something real and untainted. For me, "MM" is a more mature album, more focused. "Doom" was really exciting for us because it's the first thing we released and there was all kinds of energy building up behind it.
Q: What sort of tours have you guys been on ? Biggest and most memorable gigs?
Andy: Typical soul destroying wouldn't-have-it-any-other-way near disasters. We've been closing doors on the West Coast for years and more recently in Scandinavia. I don't remember most of our gigs although I understand we're quite noted for splitting our trousers.
Damon: We played our biggest show to date at the Swedish Rock Festival w/ Alice Cooper, Dio, and King's X, ...among others. It was very gratifying to play live for fans who have had the "Doom" album for years.
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Q: What countries have you been most successful in thus far ?
Damon: Tattoine.
Q: You guys definitely border on the 70s heavy-prog stylings. I notice some King Crimson vocal effects, arrangements, heavy hammond ala Deep Purple, Uriah Heep, Atomic Rooster, etc... What sort of bands have you been compared to ??
Damon: Mostly it's always been Beatles meets Black Sabbath but more often we are getting the Pink Floyd/King Crimson thing. I think the best one so far is POST NUCLEAR BEATLES! I'm fine with that one. It sums us up pretty well.
Q: Cool cover of the Atomic Rooster classic "Death Walks Behind You" ! Who's idea [and why] was that ?
Damon: That was my idea, I think? It has to be one of the darkest songs ever written.....It's simply classic. I thought it would be appropriate to do at the time. We were a trio with no bassist, I would play bass on a mini-moog with my left hand. Atomic Rooster is the only band (trio) I know of, that had that kind of line-up. We were also thinking about Vincent Crane, he died that year.
Q: What inspires your lyrics ?
Andy: The valley below the hill I'm falling down. And Henry James.
Damon: Madness and little voices in my head.
Q: What tracks stand out for you on the new album ? Any stories ?
Andy: "Money Machine" and "The Bitter End" pretty much say it all. Any stories? Yes, and they're all true.
Steve: All the tracks have something for me. Andy's valve melting guitar on "Bitter End" (I pity anyone who wasn't there when THAT went down) as an example. "Money Machine" still scares me. When we did that, Damon used the Moog Modular. There was a point when he was laying down the solo, I was turning knobs, and the Moog keyboard was volunteering it's own ideas to the performance due to it's ill-health at the time. Magic. The keyboard has since been treated. We expect a full recovery.
Damon: "Sellout" has always been one of my faves of Andy's. The recording has two endings. The first, is the one we planned. The second, was the end of another take that was partially erased. During the mix it just jumped out and we decided to keep it as a reprise.
Q: Can you give me a top 10 list of favorite all-time albums?
Damon::
1. Abbey Road/White Album (TIE) - The Beatles
2. In the Court of the Crimson King - King Crimson
3. Master of Reality - Black Sabbath
4. Wish You Were Here - Pink Floyd
5. SF Sorrow/Parachute (TIE)- The Pretty Things
6. Looking On - The Move
7. Straight Up - Badfinger
8. Night at the Opera - Queen
9. Acquiring the Taste - Gentle Giant
10. Gracious! - Gracious!
Andy:
1. Parachute - Pretty Things
2. Something Else - Kinks
3. Revolver - Beatles
4. Wish You Were Here - Badfinger
5. Wildlife - Wings
6. Highway to Hell - AC/DC
7. Brain Capers - Mott the Hoople
8. Master of Reality - Black Sabbath
9. The Man Who Sold the World - Bowie
10. Wish You Were Here - Pink Floyd
Steve:
1. Pawn Hearts - Van Der Graaf Generator
2. Sun Supreme - Ibis
3. Ys - Il Balleto di Bronzo
4. Ogdens Nut Gone Flake - Small Faces
5. McDonald and Giles - McDonald and Giles
6. Shazam! - The Move
7. 666 - Aphrodite's Child
8. Low - David Bowie
9. Milano Calibro 9 - Osanna
The tenth being any of about 50 other genius records I can't choose
between...
Q:Damon, are you a keyboard player, bassist, or singer first and foremost ??
Damon:: Before Duffy joined the group, I used to do all of those things at the same time on stage. I started on keys and guitar but I always thought it was more important to be a great songwriter. Anybody can wank off on some guitar.
Q: What sort of plans are in the immediate future for Bigelf ?
Damon: Mellotron repairs.
Andy: Touring in Europe for Money Machine in November-December. Recording a new album in Feb/2001. Having all my friends over for a Nice Cup Of Tea.
Q: Where did the name come from ?
Damon: Well, I always wanted to have one of those "classic" oxymoronic band names that people remember, like Led Zeppelin, Gentle Giant, Iron Butterfly, etc. I think our name fits the music. As far as the genesis of the name.... One day a big flaming pie swooped down out of the sky and shouted........ BIGELF! Ooops...that story is already taken....isn't it. (!?)
Andy: We made it up.
Q: Your bio mentions you guys being influenced by Uriah Heep [whom I'm a Huge fan of!], which of you guys are Heep fans or site them as an influence? any favorite Heep albums or songs ??
Damon: - I'd say we are all Heep fans. The thing that influenced us the most would be the way they blended the Hammond organ and Gibson guitar. Hensley and Box together have the most insane sound...more evil and twisted than anybody! My favorite line-up is "Demons And Wizards" of course, but their best album is
"Look At Yourself". My favorite songs are "Gypsy" and "Bird Of Prey".
Interview written & conducted by Kevin J. Julie
Copyright KJJ - Sept. 2000
Interview by Kevin J. Julie, 2000
Copyright 2000
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