Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, July 06, 2011, Image 15
$ J * ! ! I '♦-I* ‘V ■*. •«■***'■ •*** ***■ .«*•' Jj connoisseurs of the Jt\w «J»U Criterion Collection may recall the ecstatic peroration delivered by tortured TV executive Frank Cross, played by Bill Murr:y, at the close of the film Scrooged. Upon invading a live TV broadcast with the aid of crazed gunman Bobcat Goldthwait, our hero explored the addictive quality of doing good work. Joe Terry is familiar with this feeling. While speaking of the tour that his indie-pop band. The Poison Control Center, is currently on. he strikes a contemplative tone. "It's a shame to think that it might end." he says. "When you do a three- or five-week tour, you start to look forward to the end of it, so you can... get back to your normal rou tine. But when we kinda gave up everything, we didn't have those responsibilities in the back of our minds, filling up into a ball of anxiety. It was just kinda like, 'We're just a freewheeling, carefree band, and all we have to worry about is driving and getting to the next town so we can rock out again.'" The Poison Control Center has been on tour since June of 2010. This excludes some time off for Christmas (natch) and the month the bandmembers took to record, mix and master their forthcoming album. Stranger Ballet. Aside from that, the band has been crisscrossing America repeatedly, playing some places three, four, five or—in the case of Athens—six times. Their magnetic pull, time and again, towards the Classic City is no coincidence. "It's hard to think that we would even be a touring band if it wasn't for Athens." says Terry, speaking to Flagpole from a stop in Austin, TX. "When Mike (Turner] invited us to play that first Popfest [in 2004], that turned us into a touring band. We were like, 'We've gotta get down to Athens. We don't know how. but we're gonna make it happen."' It's been over 10 years since bassist/vocal ist Terry and vocalist/guitarist Patrick Tape Fleming met vocalisl/guitarist Devin Frank at a show in their hometown of Ames. I A; the bill included Masters of the Hemisphere and The Essex Green. Fleming approached Frank and struck up a conversation because the lat ter was wearing an Elf Power t-shirt. "It all kinda started at that show—all the bands that night were great; they were kinda role models for a young impressionable band like us," says Terry. "We were all getting into Elephant Six... so it was pretty exciting for those bands to come to Iowa because a lot of bands like that don't make a stop in an unknown Midwestern state. This show likely made an impression beyond the stylistic: the idea of going to far- flung. rock-starved portions of North America has undoubtedly been an important facet of the unbelievably hard-touring quartet, which also includes original drummer/songwriter Donald E. Curtis (currently an absentee mem ber) and current timekeeper David Olson. The original incarnation of the band was indeed a sort of mistranslated, regionally mutated version of the Elephant Six collective, with ringleader Fleming bringing anyone and everyone into the fold. "Patrick was always sort of the master mind of the band; he was always encouraging people to bring forth their own ideas," says Terry. "He's not the most trained musician by any means, but he knows what he likes, and he encourages other people to do good stuff. A part of the band from the beginning was his openness to invite other people in to play and share their talents, be it singing or playing or producing or whatever. That's why the line-up of the band was fluid for those first few years, because practically everyone Patrick knew played in PCC at one point or another." As a recording project, the band was an all-inclusive wall of sound; live, it was a cha otic noisefest. Functioning as a regional party band, they briefly toyed with the gimmick of wearing all green onstage. In 2004 the band whittled down to what would be its core line up, but for their part, the remaining quartet have retained much of the frenzied exuberance of the band’s early days. The Poison Control Center shows are a spectacle of leg splits, somersault guitar solos, sweaty audience interaction and the occasional swinging guitar fight. "We're a little older, and the bruises don't heal as fast, so we have to be a bit cautious," says Terry. "If you have an equipment failure, you bre k a string or something, you can't keep rockin'— you goita do something to kinda vent." But beyond the horseplay, listeners will discover a diverse palette on documents such as their 2010 double album. Sad Sour Future. This is due, in no small part, to the fact that the bandmembers all contribute equally to the band's staggering output of singles and EPs. Terry, who is responsible for some of the band's more laid-back, CCR-esque material—a respite from their more typical fare of high- spirited power pop—speaks highly of their unconventionally democratic setup. "We just take equal responsibility, or equal blame, for what we do." he says, laughing. "It’s a bonus; it's nice to share in something that we were alt equally invested in." It's easy to see that when you're doing something you believe in. you can get greedy for it; you'll want it every day of your life. And it can hap pen to you. Jelf Tobias ( WHO: The Poison Control Center WHERE. Caledonia Lounge WHEN: Monday, July 11 HOW MUCH: TBA V ) to 4 bedroom furnished CfVDS,J(J(_y 706.543.4400 JULY6.2011-FLAGPOLE.COM 15