|
What
does Check Engine sound like? Two vocalists, two guitarists,
a drummer, a bassist and a sax player. Complex little rock songs. Big
Star if Chilton had grown up listening to Tangerine Dream and Drive
Like Jehu? I don't know. Next question?
The
first incarnation of the Engine was started up in the summer of 1993
in the basement of "Da Box", a former HUD house in South Bend,
Illnois (19971 Cleveland Ave.) with plexi-glass windows that don't open.
We had one song, called "Por-San", named after the industrial
strength cleaner that was the only foe our bathroom feared. That Check
Engine lasted long enough to hang out several times with Carlo, and
Rossi, wreck the life and livelihood of one Vincenzo Carrasco and play
one show, a battle of the bands in April '94. That was enough for a
time.
Meanwhile,
Steve Sostak and Chris Daly have played for a number of years in Sweep
The Leg Johnny, a band the original name of which I am forbidden to
divulge on pain of litigation from the Victoria's Secret Corporation.
Jump
ahead six years: January 2000. We find Brian Wnukowski (ex-Big'N) to
play drums. This rumbling beast of a man has been in so many bands it
requires quantum math to sort them all out. After our first bassist,
the immoral Dino Bravo, was called away to military service with the
Greek Cypriots, we were forced to cannibalize the steaming corpse of
the late Lynx and get Paul P. Joyce to play bass.
We
knew the Engine was going to work out just fine when we witnessed the
typhoon that shook the space when Paul and Brian first locked on a rhythm.
Love at first rumble. After that, Chris and Joe could get back to the
business of weaving guitars. Then there's the singing - two singers,
one not quite the lead singer, the other not quite the back-up - twining
together lines in different meters, mirroring each other in a staggered
echo or matching up syllable to syllable while singing slightly different
words.
As for the words themselves, Joe's songwriting is all about hate and
heartbreak, and dead German intellectuals; don't get your hopes up there.
Focus instead on the love-match Brian and Paul orchestrate between their
own elemental force and the goofy trickery of guitars that know each
other far too well. Or the way Steve uses the sax and his voice as extensions
of one another, threading through and threading together everything
else.
Only
one of us is a house painter. That's unfortunate really, but it's made
up for by the doctoral student (who, since he already has a bachelor's
degree in unemployment, is now pursuing the PhD), our floor sander,
our master of the backyard grill and our installer of greeting card
displays at CVS. "Fuck yeah, we put in the end caps", he replies
with menace when pressed on the issue.
Check
Engine: We torque lug nuts.
|