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  CHROME COMMUNICATIONS
featuring DAMON EDGE
  interview by Nez Zendik, 1995
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There's this part of me - something deep in my Soul - that longs for
dissonance. Maybe it's some unconscious drive toward the destruction
of harmony and order. I don't know. But, whatever it is, very few
musical groups seem to satisfy the need. Chrome is one of those few.
And Damon Edge is the mastermind behind this unusual, ever changing
arrangement. Edge began altering music (and many-a- listener's mind)
back in 1975, and has been a consistent creative force ever since,
taking almost 180 degree turns at times to explore new realms of aural
adventure.
Chrome evolves in steps, sort of bridging the gap between 60's psycho-delia,
punk and new wave, and introduces elements of music from other places
and planets. _Alien Soundtracks_ and _Half Machine Lip Moves_ (Chrome's
2nd and 3rd releases, circa '78) paved the way for most of today's
"alternative" music. Damon Edge's intense drumming and production
skills mixed with the phase-warped, overloaded guitar sound of Helios
Creed and John Lambdin was the beginning of something that would change
the way rock was played and heard, for good. Chrome's music is intensely
"stoney" - it was a serious dare, amongst my circle of "high" school
friends, to try and handle them on any mind-altering drugs. Some weaker
minds were lost forever. I was happy with the new and improved reality
Chrome brought me and continued use in higher doses, serving as one
of my biggest influences musically.
Chrome's 5th release, _Blood On The Moon_, was the sound of a garage
band turned immortal. Damon Edge and Helios Creed were now gods. Their
synth and guitar sounds, backed by the Stench Brothers on drums and
bass, produced the first, true psychedelic metal - Deep Purple was
left behind in a faded lavender heap. Three more Edge/Creed creations
were released before the inevitable happened. Chrome re-emerged a
new band in 1984 - without Helios Creed, without missing a beat. Damon
hooked up with a new guitarist, Remy Devilla, and put his band in
a time machine, setting the controls for the future.
This next phase was smoother and cleaner - a little easier on the
ears, but just as potent to the mind. Damon, now a god and a legend,
was re-creating the re-creation of rock. _Into the Eyes of the Zombie
King_ was only the lift-off. The next studio release, a solo album
mock-up entitled _Alliance_, was a serious masterpiece which included
new versions of some already awesome songs. Remy Devilla's guitar
work left little room for missing Helios. The tighter-than-humanly-
possible rhythm section left little room for missing the Stench Brothers.
the new sound left _no_ room for missing Chrome. Damon Edge was obviously
the one responsible for their totally original sound. A complete list
of all the musicians he's worked with is too long to include here,
but you should check out his stuff for yourself. Select bits of Edge's
sonic expeditions are availabe on the epic double-discs entitled _Having
A Wonderful Time With The Tripods_ and _Having A Wonderful Time At
The Juicedome_, compiled from his 25 other releases over the last
20 years (see the complete discography at the end of this interview).
Chrome's C.D. releases, which are ususlly two complete albums on one
disk, show completely different sides of Edge's artistry and are some
of the best rock albums ever made.
I have much respect for Damon Edge - as an artist with integrity -
one of the few who dare persist independent of any established "scene"
with which to uphold his own popularity and momentum - one of the
ever fewer who manage to produce art of any appreciable quality. His
unique off-the-wall style as musician and producer have been an inspiration
to my own work, and we're planning to work together on future Zendik
Tribe Band projects. For now, here's excerpts from a conversation/interview
we had one nite on the phone.
Damon: I haven't done an interview in America
for about five years. The last one, the guy doing it called me crazy
after I asked him if he'd heard all 23 albums. I told him to fuck
off. Of course, he probably never ran that one (laughs).
Nez: Probably not (laughs). So you established your own label, Siren
Records, so you could hang on to all of your music legally, right?
Damon: Yeah, that and so I could do what I wanted
to do. I sent _The Visitation_ (his first legit Chrome release) to
Warner Bros. to see if they wanted to release it, and this A&R dork
gave me some shit about it sounding like a fucked-up Doors record.
And I was like, thank you, what better compliment could I get? (laughs)
Nez: Yeah, really. How old were you when you started Chrome?
Damon: Oh, eighteen or nineteen.
Nez: What inspired your off-the-wall sounds?
Damon: Part of it was experiencing certain things
at Cal Arts, studying under some of the best teachers in the world,
including Alan Capra, who was a student of John Cage. But I think
it really began during my first trip to Europe. I was going nuts living
in Los Angeles, you know, so I just told my father, look my brain
is gonna blow up and explode blood all over this room if I don't get
outta here. So, he got me a flight to Europe. I remember the first
sight of Europe I had, we flew into a rainbow over Portugal, on my
way to Madrid - that was really fantastic. And these little boats
and little houses, you know, along the coast. It just looked like
a fun place. I've always liked it there. Anyway, I flew to Madrid
because this friend of mine was there. I bought a bike, a Bultaco
Dirt Scrambler, and he had a bike, so we cruised down to Morroco and
went into Fez. When we were first in Morroco, we're driving down these
mountain roads and there's no lights at all, they're not paved, you're
driving through _rocks_ in the middle of the night! My friend had
the brightest headlight on his BSA, so he would lead the way. And
I remember him yelling back to me, "ROCK!" and it just missed me by
like four inches when he said it. It wasn't a rock, it was a goddam
_boulder_ in the middle of the road (laughs)! So, I yelled back to
this other guy behind us, and I hear this crashing sound, you know
- he went over the cliffs (laughs). I mean he was okay but it kinda
freaked us out. So, then we went back to Valencia, Spain and we were
indulging in some refreshments in our room. I'd been hearing all this
Arabic music while I was in Morroco, you know. And suddenly, that
night I started hearing it in my head with this really solid 4/4 beat
behind it. And these songs were just coming to me. I was listening
to this music in my head. And that's when I conceived of the idea.
Nez: I see. So, you were mainly just being exposed to exotic music
back then?
Damon: Yeah. I'm sure you've noticed that there's
alot of atmosphere in the sound and production of Chrome, and a lot
of 3 and 8 note melodies and this atonal drone, driven by some real
hot rhythm sections. That experience pretty much gave it the atmospheric
quality that I needed, the inspiration.
Nez: Yeah, the first time I heard Chrome I was immediately hooked
by the sound. How long after you started hearing this music in your
head were you able to get a band together to start expressing it?
Damon: Oh, probably 6 months. That's when I
started making these movie soundtracks. I used to work for MGM - I'd
bring in some pretty spaced out cats. They needed something besides
some stupid B-melody, you know, so I'd grab a bunch of people and
put together music to this movie scene playing on this gigantic screen
in this huge room with a forty foot ceiling. It was wild. And we'd
just jam to the vibe of whatever was showing.
Nez: That's interesting because your music does have a very movie
sound-track feel to it a lot of the time.
Damon: Yeah, I wouldn't mind doing that for
the rest of my life if I had to. I mean, when I watch a movie I listen
to it at least as much as I watch it. All those sounds going on in
the background are very cool. Anyways, after I got back from Europe
I started Chrome, finished college with a four-year bachelor of fine
arts degree - I did a sort of farewell concert on campus called _The
Death of Cal Arts_ (laughs) - then I moved to San Francisco.
Nez: I see. So, is Chrome mainly a studio band, or do you play live
alot?
Damon: I don't play live a lot, but I'm looking
into it after my next CD.
Nez: Are you going to tour America?
Damon: No, I don't think so.
Nez: You seem pretty turned off by America. Why is that?
Damon: I'm just too far out, you know. I mean,
when I released _Alien Soundtracks_ and _Half Machine Lip Moves_,
no one in America knew how to book us, or how I should deal with selling
it, yet it was selling like hell in Europe. My music really doesn't
fit into any "scene". As a matter of fact, I've _created_ a few scenes
out of particular Chrome phases. I mean, Chrome keeps moving along,
so I'm not even a part of the scenes _I_ created - such as new wave,
cyborg punk, atmospheric rock, probably a few I'm not aware of, you
know.
Nez: Yeah, I've noticed alot of different things happening in all
types of music that hadn't been attempted before Chrome charted the
territory. Ok, let's get down to the essence of Damon Edge. You said
you dug the Zappa interview that we did in our last mag - that you'd
never heard anyone speak so closely to how you felt about things.
I mean, he was pretty much a cynic...
Damon: Yeah, that seemed to come out a lot in
his work. But, I'm not a cynic. It doesn't come out in my work becuase
that's not where I'm at, you know. I mean, sometimes I have very cynical
thoughts and some paradoxical themes in my songs, tongue in cheek
stuff, like "I'm A Gentleman", you know. But I'm more down to primal
stuff. I found with the Zappa interview that I was reading a lot of
things that I felt but hadn't ever expressed.
Nez: Like what?
Damon: I appreciated him calling the human species
a "genetic design flaw". I remember telling people 10 or 15 years
ago that humans are a cancer on the planet.
Nez: Do you think we can evolve out of that?
Damon: Oh, I guess we should all set an hour
when everyone on the planet drinks cyanide (laughs). No, I'm just
joking. It's a sick joke.
Nez: (Laughs) Do you have any idealistic view of a sane future on
earth, I mean do you think there's any hope for humanity?
Damon: Before all this ozone shit started happening
I had some hope. I remember seeing this guy on T.V. who was traveling
around the planet, taking photos and writing a book about all these
toxic waste sites and stuff. They asked him a similar question - he
just looked really depressed (laughs). I mean, I saw this NASA report
where they showed photos of huge areas where the ozone had been destroyed,
especially over Northern Europe.
Nez: Yeah, apparently that's where there's a huge hole.
Damon: Well, there's a south hole and there's
a north hole.
Nez: They used to be poles - now they're holes.
Damon: (Laughter) Yeah, what a sadistic conversation.
Nez: (Laughs) I don't know how much of our magzeen you had a chance
to read, but we're pretty environmentally focused, you know. I mean,
our philosophy is called Ecolibrium, meaning ecological balance. Our
farm is a prototype Ecolony.
Damon: Yeah, that's great, here on Earth. I
don't dig this space station crap, you know, what are you gonna do
- house 10,000 people in space? You know, the highest bidder gets
in? I mean, it's ridiculous. Who wants to hang out in a space station
with a bunch of old fart millionaires that made their money being
sneaky and cagey?
Nez: (Laughs) Yeah, you get to fly around the cosmos with the head
of Exxon and Dow Chemical, the same people that destroyed the planet...
thanks a lot guys.
Damon: (Laughs) Yeah, thanks a lot! You could
put a big Dow Chemical neon light on it or something, and hope it
gets an oxygen leak or blows up like the Hindenburg (laughter).
Nez: So, you told me that you're into psychic healing. We believe
in the Psychic Realm and we're pretty active using it...
Damon: Yeah, that's the thing - everybody's
got it. You've got to recognize the fact that you do have it and it
does exist, and use it. Most people are ignorant of their own ability,
they don't take advantage of what they've actually got.
Nez: How did you come to recognize it yourself?
Damon: I came across it at a very young age.
I was about six when I recognized what was going on. I had petite
mal when I was a kid, which is a type of epilepsy. Grand mal is major
epilepsy - you start flipping around on the floor and they have to
stop you from swallowing your tongue.
Nez: So, that form of epilepsy sort of opened a door to your psychic
self?
Damon: Yes. As a matter of fact, I think I owe
a lot of my originality to having had that. I mean, I don't have it
anymore, otherwise I wouldn't be able to drive (laughs). I haven't
blanked out since I was like 12 or something. When I was a kid the
teachers used to call my parents and say "hey, he just sits there
staring out the window. I call his name but he's not there." I don't
know how long I'd be out for, you know, and no one ever told me about
it, so... I guess now I just have extreme hi and low emotional and
creative periods. But, I enjoy what I do, you know.
Nez: Well, you're good at it. You describe the clairaudient syndrome
on your new album. Could you elaborate...
Damon: Yeah, that's a psychic thing where you
hear something before it happens. These songs just come to me know
and I have several tape decks set up around my house so I can channel
this music at any time and get it down on tape. I just sing the melodies
and then put music behind them later on. The songs on the new album
turned out just like I heard them before they were actually recorded.
Nez: That's wild! Could you interpret some of your lyrix?
Damon: I'll do my best.
Nez: "The Wind Is Talking"...
Damon: I was on the desert with some friends,
I was around 16 or so. And I had a friend who had an electric 12-string.
We were hanging around with a couple of chicks in these sand dunes
one afternoon and the wind was hitting the strings of his guitar just
right, and if you put your ear up to the body of the guitar - you
know, it was playing a whole symphony. It was pretty far out. Ever
since then I hear things in the wind and some of them sound like voices,
you know.
Nez: "And Then The Red Sun"...
Damon: That's a comedy, actually a take-off
on an old 50's Sci-Fi movie, you know.
Nez: What interests you about Sci-Fi movies?
Damon: Not much since Spielberg started making
them (laughter). The old ones are funny and you don't have to take
them literally - they're just fun. I don't like going into a movie
theatre and having to walk out because everybody's shooting each other
full of holes.
Nez: OK. How about "We Are Not Dying"...
Damon: That's an interesting question. I don't
know if that's a cynical one or not, but it's about the planet. I
think it's pretty much a prayer for the planet, 'cause it's pretty
scary, what's going on, especially since those holes opened up in
the ozone.
Nez: Yeah, scary shit man. Ouch! What type of effect do you want your
music to have on people?
Damon: I want them to _feel_ something, I mean,
if I can't feel a song it's not worth a shit to me, and I'm not going
to release it. So, I want them to feel it. And I'd say I want to take
them on a trip, take them somewhere else. Chrome in a sense is like
getting a hit of a natural drug or something.
Nez: Chrome is some of the most stoned out music around...
Damon: Well, to me it sounds quite normal, I
mean, I understand the effect it has on other people, that's what
it's supposed to do. You know, you go to the market for your milk
and bread, and when you want to go someplace else, you can stick on
your headphones and put on a Chrome CD, you know. I've got over 15
hours of music out now on CD, 200 something songs, plus another 25
songs or so in the can... I'm kind of ahead of myself.
Nez: Well, I'm anxious to hear what you come up with next. OK, man,
that's great, thanx alot for your time.
Damon: Thank you - have a good night.
Published by:
Zendik Tribe zeen, Ecolibrium Arts Foundation
www.zendik.org
Contact Nez Zendik:
kidnez@yahoo.com
or visit EleMentalMuzik.cjb.net
* NOTE: With the interview
a Chrome/Damon Edge discography is featured. Interesting is the fact
that never-released albums are listed: "Days of Beauty" & "Vermillion
Sands"
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