Down and Dirty with The Black Keys' White Blues
ConcertLivewire's exclusive interview with The Black Keys Aug. 4, 2003
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With The White Stripes, The Ravonettes and Whirlwind Heat
already proving that three's a crowd, does the world really
need another simplistic rock duo? When that bass-less
twosome happens to be The Black Keys - an Akron, Ohio-based
blues-rock duet that spits out some of the nastiest rock,
seasoned with the gut-bucket soul from Northern Mississippi
- the answer is a resounding hell yes!
Formed by guitarist / vocalist Dan Auerbach and drummer
Patrick Carney when they were still in high school, the band
has slowly progressed, over the years, away from some of
their early rural blues influences, incorporating a more
direct, stripped-down form of honest rock 'n' roll, as
proven on their latest album Thickfreakness. But as both
members will attest to, the blues is still a main ingredient
in their recipe, it's just not necessarily the first thing
to hit the palette.
Both Auerbach and Carney spent some time backstage with
Livewire's Tony Bonyata following their recent performance
in Chicago to talk about some of their influences, the state
of rock and...Renaissance Faires?
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Livewire: I just saw your show and you guys deliver an
unbelievable amount of raw, intense energy onstage. I think
that a lot of that energy also comes through on your new
album Thickfreakness as well.
Dan: Thanks.
Livewire: Your music has been described a lot of ways by the
press. How would describe it?
Patrick: Just rock 'n' roll, I think.
Dan: Yeah, just rock 'n' roll.
Livewire: How long have you two been playing together?
Patrick: We've been playing off and on since 1996, when we
were like 16 or 17.
Dan: We've been pretty much doing this full-time for about
two years.
Livewire: And that's when you came out with your first
album?
Dan: Yeah, it was a little over a year ago, last May.
Livewire: What makes Thickfreakness different from your
first album?
Dan: It's a bit more laid-back. I think it's a little bit
more in the groove than the first one.
Patrick: It's a little heavier.
Dan: The last one was our first album and we really didn't
know exactly what we were doing, so it was a little edgier.
Livewire: Has it always just been the two of you. Have you
ever had a bass player or any other musicians?
Patrick: It started out just the two of us, and then about
two years later we had one of our friends practice with us a
few times, but it didn't work out. But he did play on a few
songs on our first record.
Livewire: So what made you decide on going out, just the two
of you?
Dan: Well, it's always pretty much been like that, anyway.
We never really thought about it. There wasn't anybody that
we knew immediately who could fill the roll, so we just
started playing as a two-piece and recorded ourselves over
at Pat's dad's house when we were in high school. We just
become accustomed to hearing ourselves playing together as a
two-piece. When we had that guy come and play organ the
couple times he did, it didn't really feel right. It didn't
click, I guess.
Livewire: You describe your music as simply rock 'n' roll,
but you've also got a big, heavy blues sound as well. When
you first started out did you immediately gravitate towards
the blues?
Dan: I was listening to a lot of blues and I was teaching
myself how to play guitar. I was really getting into early
electric blues. So that's my main influence. That's
definitely become one of our main things.
Livewire: When you say electric blues, are you talking Muddy
Waters or Stevie Ray Vaughn and Clapton?
Dan: I'm talkin' like early '50s - Howlin' Wolf and Sun
Records. It was still country but they just plugged in. It
still had that country feel where they still finger-picked
the guitar, but it was definitely electric.
Livewire: It sounds as though The Black Keys still retains
that soul of the Delta. What was the first thing you heard
as a child that was like a light bulb in your head?
Patrick: My dad used to make weird tapes of stuff from the
'60s like Frank Zappa, The Beatles and Rolling Stones, but I
think the main thing that got me wanting to play music was
when he got Jimi Hendrix' Smash Hits tape when I was in
sixth grade. That's what made me want to play guitar. That
and my friends playing.
Livewire: So you started out as a guitarist and not a
drummer, Patrick?
Patrick: Yeah, I started out playing guitar.
Dan: I grew up listening to my dad's records and my mom has
a big family, and whenever we'd all get together they'd play
bluegrass. I think that had a big influence on me wanting to
play guitar and sing those kind of old songs. It just felt
good to me.
Livewire: You've been getting your fair share of positive
press over the last couple of years. Were you surprised at
being so well received?
Dan: Yeah, we really didn't expect it. We're definitely
working harder than ever.
Patrick: We're pretty fortunate.
Livewire: Were your parents always supportive in your choice
to become musicians?
Patrick: My dad's brother is a musician who has struggled...
not struggled, but has been reaping the benefits and also at
the same time going through the hard times that you
experience when you're a musician. So I think my dad wanted
me to play music, but he also wanted me to have a college
degree as well, because he didn't want me to have to
struggle. That's one of the concerns of being a musician;
you don't really know when your next paycheck will be.
Livewire: Dan, I understand that your father was so
supportive, in fact, that he drove you down South to hear
the rural blues that you love so much.
Dan: Yeah, both my parents have been very supportive. I went
on a trip to Mississippi with my dad. I wanted to go see
Junior Kimbrough. I got his album in '98 when I was in
college my first year. So that summer I went with my dad to
Mississippi and tried to find Junior Kimbrough. He owned
this club he played at every Sunday night. We went there and
even though we never did see Junior Kimbrough, we saw some
music and it was a great time.
Livewire: Junior's club isn't there anymore is it?
Dan: Yeah, it burnt down a few years ago.
Livewire: When you were down there, however, you managed to
hook-up with T-Model Ford.
Dan: Yeah, that was actually a different time. I've gone
down a few times and dragged different people along with me
just to go listen to music.
Livewire: That's definitely the place to hear some great
music. My wife and I took a trip down ourselves last year.
Dan: Where did you go?
Livewire: We actually did the whole Highway 61 thing - from
Memphis down to New Orleans. Of course we stopped off at
Clarksdale and Greenville [MS] and stopped off at Dockery
Farms and Charlie Patton's gravesite.
Dan: Cool. It's a different world down there.
Livewire: You actually played with Ford down there, correct?
Dan: Yeah.
Livewire: How much of an influence did that experience have
on the music that you're playing now?
Dan: It's really just the whole idea of how he played - with
just drum and guitar and the simplicity of his music. That
definitely influenced me. But as Pat and I progress, I think
the influence has become less and less. But it's still
there.
Livewire: Have you made the pilgrimage down South, Patrick?
Patrick: Yeah, we've been down there, but just for a day.
Dan: We played this horrible college bar in Oxford. Because
before we signed with Fat Possum [Records] we went to Oxford
to play a show.
Livewire: Don't they have a scene down there for music?
Dan: Oh god, it's so bad. But the cool thing was that all
these college dudes with Polo shirts and sandals on are
walking straight out of the club while we're playing. We
knew that the guys from Fat Possum were also there, and we
were so depressed. But later they said that's how they test
their bands - if everybody from Oxford walks out then they
sign 'em (laughs).
Livewire: So the thumbs up from the Oxford Polo shirts isn't
a good thing.
Dan: Exactly.
Livewire: Do you keep in contact at all with Ford?
Dan: Yeah, I've seen him a couple of times at shows.
Livewire: Does he remember you?
Dan: Yeah, I had to remind him. He doesn't have a great
memory. He drinks a lot too.
Livewire: I recently saw him open for Johnny Winter.
Dan: Really? That's right. I heard they had to carry Johnny
Winter on stage.
Livewire: It was real sad.
Dan: Heroin, man.
Livewire: Well, he also broke his hip not too long ago. Of
course, maybe that's why he broke his hip. He had a pretty
hot band that picked up the slack, but it was still sad to
see an old legend like that in that kind of shape.
Dan: But, T-Model's great. Great soul.
Livewire: It sounds as though you've got the soul of black
man in your voice.
Dan: Pfffft (laughs).
Livewire: You do, though. I mean, how old are you, in your
early twenties?
Dan: I just turned 24 in May.
Livewire: Well, you certainly don't sound like a 24-year old
white kid.
Dan: Thank you...I dunno.
Livewire: Has that sound always come naturally, or was it
something that you've tried to emulate?
Dan: Kind of. When I first started playing when I was like
17 I had those tapes and my voice is higher. But it's the
same kind of thing, I just tried to sing naturally.
Livewire: Do you have a single favorite blues artist or
artists?
Dan: So many different people.
Patrick: Devo's my favorite band.
Dan: Yeah, Devo's from Akron.
Livewire: When are we going to hear that influence on your
music?
Patrick: I think it's there.
Dan: You just have to listen for it.
Livewire: You've just recently signed with Fat Possum
Records. It must feel nice to be sharing the same label with
artists that you admire, such as Junior Kimbrough and Fred
McDowell.
Dan: It's cool. It feels really good. Fat Possum's been
great to us, and Epitaph, especially, has been really
supportive of us. We try and stay away from the whole blues
thing though. We try and play rock 'n' roll clubs and that
was our only question when we signed with Fat Possum, "Are
we gonna be placed in the blues bin at the record stores??It
would be easy for them to put us in the blues category and
have us play blues festivals. People want to hear someone
play like Stevie Ray Vaughn at a blues festival. We don't
want to hear that and we don't want to play like that, so we
stay away.
Livewire: I go to the Chicago Blues Fest every year to catch
one performer, [David] Honeyboy Edwards.
Dan: I love Honeyboy Edwards! I read his book [an
autobiography entitled The World Don't Owe Me Nothing]. It's
fucking great! His memory is so intact.
Livewire: It still is. I recently interviewed him at his
Southside home and he was telling his tales of Robert
Johnson and what life was like in the South early last
century like it was yesterday.
Dan: He's like T-Model. He's got those rosy cheeks and that
gold-capped smile.
Livewire: As a bass-less duo playing blues-rock, do the
comparisons to The White Stripes bother you?
Patrick: We can't control what we get compared to. We don't
mind it so much. There's definitely worse bands to be
compared to. I'm a fan of those guys, but I don't think that
we sound anything like them. I think that any band gets a
little frustrated when they get compared to other bands
constantly. I think every band wants to stand on their own.
You never hear Radiohead getting compared to anybody.
Dan: Coldplay (laughs).
Livewire: Do you feel that the heavy blues / rock sound
you're doing fits into this whole rock renaissance thing.
Dan: No, I don't like it, really. It's gonna be gone in
about a year, I think. It sucks to be lumped in with
anybody. Hopefully we can stand on our own.
Patrick: We do play Renaissance Faires.
Dan: (laughs)
Livewire: With the chain-mail suits and the swords?
Dan: Yeah, and a guitar with the family shield on it.
Patrick: So, if you'd like, you can lump us into that
Rock-Renaissance Faire thing.
Livewire: Do you see a long-term future for blues-rock?
Patrick: Well, it's been going on now for like 40 years and
rock 'n' roll's been around for 50 years, so yeah.
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