Jug Band Bass, Buke & Gase's Final Show, and the Dad Band Backlog Nobody Warned Us About | We Came From Celluloid 013
Welcome back to We Came From Celluloid. I'm Nicky P, here with Brian Pritchard, and this week's episode was supposed to be a casual check-in. Instead it turned into a full-on rabbit hole about how instruments actually work, why two of the weirdest bassists in rock history happened to be roommates, and the ongoing soap opera that is trying to finish a Puma Thurman record while also, you know, being alive.
We open with some genuine excitement, Brian sent over tracks, things are starting to sound like something, and there is a light at the end of a tunnel we have been walking through for a very long time. We're talking about the process of recording music when you're a working band with jobs and kids and other obligations, and how the backlog of material just kind of accumulates until one day you look up and realize you've got multiple EPs in various states of done-ness and zero of them are out. Classic dad band problem.
The emotional center of the episode, though, is New Soul, a Puma Thurman track with a history. The whole EP it lives on was recorded once, destroyed when Nicky P's daughter poured a soda on his laptop, and then recorded again entirely from scratch. The version they have now is getting closer to where it needs to be, and hearing Brian break down the actual guitar discovery behind those opening chords, fingers on the fifth fret sliding to the first, stumbling into something that reminded him of the Neverending Story score, is the kind of moment that reminds you why these guys started making music in the first place.
From there, the conversation goes exactly where you'd expect from two guys who grew up on this stuff: Jack White's two-by-four pickup stunt in It Might Get Loud, cigar box guitars, jug band bass (which is exactly what it sounds like, one string, a broom handle, a wash basin, and your whole soul), and somehow, inevitably, the banjo. Brian's discovery of Buke & Gase, a two-piece that built their own instruments and whose final-ever show was this past weekend in Hudson, New York, is genuinely moving in the way only music people talking about music can be. He bought tickets. He couldn't justify the drive. The show sold out anyway and he gave his spots away to someone who needed them more.
And then the roommate thing. Mark Sandman of Morphine, the guy who took the frets off his bass, set it up for a slide and decided a saxophone was a better rhythm section than a guitarist happened to live with Chris Ballew of The Presidents of the United States of America, who was also pulling strings off guitars and playing with the physics of the instrument. Two people, in the same apartment, separately deciding that the rules were optional. Make of that what you will.
This one ends with tour news and the kind of cautious optimism that comes with having six dates on a shirt that looks like it belongs on a shirt. Midwest, summer, Puma Thurman is coming. Stay tuned.
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