by Todd E. Jones aka The New Jeru Poet |
Rock and roll was dead but The Red Tyger Church is helping rock and roll be born again. Mike Diaz, A drug counselor at a halfway house who has been in a myriad of bands, formed The Red Tyger Church in San Francisco. Their noisy rock guitar-driven songs have a hippie quality due to the male and female vocal melodies that are shared. Alive Total Energy Records released their debut album “Free Energy” and their fan base has been growing ever since. At first listen, one may think it is just cacophony of loud guitars and drowned out vocals. Keep listening…. Eventually, the songs get into your heart and mind. The songs truly uplift the listener. “Angie Vampyre” is a perfect example. The driving rhythm and crescendo of guitar work is simply marvelous. Diaz sings to the vampire, urging her to accept who she is as a creature of the night: “…Angie Vampyre / Don’t be scared / You’re the queen of the afterlife / Take my hand / You’ll understand / Some things were meant to fly…” Other incredible songs include the 60’s psychedelic “Unicorn”, the classic rock of “Cherry Cola”, and the short and sweet “Tears By The Pound”. While they do have a punk ethic, The Red Tyger Church has strong influences in 60’s psychedelic rock and gospel music. Their music is uplifting. On a hot afternoon in June 2004, I had a conversation with the leader of The Red Tyger Church, Mike Diaz. He’s been in many bands from The Warlocks to The Pretty Girls. The Red Tyger Church is very unique compared to his other projects. So, catch the Holy Spirit and attend mass at The Red Tyger Church.
T.JONES: “What goes
on?"
MIKE DIAZ: “Hi Todd!
We've just put out our first album on Alive Records (www.alive-totalenergy.com)
and finished a 6-city west coast tour. We plan to do a southwest tour around
August and hopefully an east coast tour later in the year!”
T.JONES: “Your new
band is called The Red Tyger Church. What is the meaning behind the name?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Red
for fire, Tyger for wild animals and William Blake. The Church for the
spirituality which is missing from today's rock n roll!”
T.JONES: “Where did
you meet the members? How did you form?”
MIKE DIAZ:
“It was a psychedelic waterfall man! I met Mel Berlin at a hearing aid
center where she worked, Chris Loental through Mel from a band they were
in called the Pat Benatards. I met Josh Gibson, who was in a band called
the Chandeliers, through Chris, and Sean Kehoe, who'd been in the Upsets,
through Steve Coteril, whom I knew from his days with John the Conqueror
and the Hotwire Titans. All great bands!”
T.JONES: “Is there
a philosophy behind The Red Tyger Church?”
MIKE DIAZ: “‘You
are the land and the land is you.' – Merlin talkin' jive to Arthur in Excalibur.”
T.JONES: “What other
bands were you in?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Warlocks,
the Pretty Girls, The Minstrels, The Mean Reds, The New Strange, and The
Steady Ups.”
T.JONES: “How is
The Red Tyger Church different from those other bands you were in?”
MIKE DIAZ:
“We don’t drink as much and we ride polar bears through snow fields of
fire to bring light to the dark lands.”
T.JONES: “Who in
The Red Tyger Church was in The Brian Jonestown Massacre?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Jeff
Davies, who played tambourine in RTC for one show in L.A. before he fell
off his stool.”
T.JONES: “Your new
album is called ‘Free Energy’. What is the meaning behind the title?”
MIKE DIAZ: “This
is our energy - take it, it's yours!”
T.JONES: “Do you
have a favorite song on the album? Why?”
MIKE DIAZ:
“Yes, ‘Unicorn’. I wrote it for my daughter, my little queenie Zara Star.”
T.JONES: “What song
took you the longest? Why?”
MIKE DIAZ: “‘Wolves
Of Sunshine’. It was a long and magic journey through the dark side of
my heart.”
T.JONES: “When making
songs, do you go into the studio with pre-written rhymes, lyrics and themes
or do you hear the beat first and write then and there? What is the creative
process like?”
MIKE DIAZ:
“Both. Sometimes it's a spontaneous grin and other times its a slow heartbreak
like ice walls cracking off Antarctica.”
T.JONES: “How long
did it take to write and record the album?”
MIKE DIAZ: “6 months
2 days and 3 rehab centers.”
T.JONES: “Can you
explain the song ‘Angie Vampyre’? (my personal favorite on the album.)?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Thank
you! It's just a song about becoming what you really are, without feeling
ashamed, guilty or repressed about it. In the end Angie drains the whole
godamn town, and she's ok with that. The blood is the fix.”
T.JONES: “How did
you get involved with Alive Total Energy?”
MIKE DIAZ: “I'd
heard of them through The Warlocks and our friends in Big Midnight and
contacted them for a possible 45 but instead they wanted a full length
album. So we said great!”
T.JONES: “Musically,
who are you major influences?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Wow!
Lennon, Supergrass, Dead Moon, Hazel Atkins, The Verve, Spacemen 3, JMC,
Bowie, Velvets, NY Dolls, Iggy, Pixies, Ride, Doors, Oasis, Primal Scream,
Zeppelin, Kinks, Anton LaVey, Nick Cave, Sex Pistols, The Fall, Rod Stewart,
Stones, Ramones, Television, Missy Elliot, Pulp, Skip Spence, Nas, T. Rex,
Alestair Crowley, Syd Barrett, the Meters, MC5, Os Mutantes, Serge Gainsbourg,
Jesus Christ Superstar, Performance, Rocky Horror, Hedwig, Tommy and the
Who!”
T.JONES: “Where did
you grow up? What kind of kid were you?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Hollywood,
Spain, and Germany. I was a military brat, an organizer, the one most likely
to puke and disappear.”
T.JONES: “What is
your favorite part of your live show?”
MIKE DIAZ: “When
me and my gang connect with our brass monkey knuckles of doom against the
chin of The Man!”
T.JONES: “How has
your live show evolved?”
MIKE DIAZ: “We have
grown in our ESP and teleportation abilities. Those in the fake world should
be afraid, their time is done.”
T.JONES: “Who would
you like to collaborate with in the future?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Radio
Werewolf, Pretty Things, and Navajo Medicine Women.”
T.JONES: “What was
your childhood like? What kid of kid were you?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Nomadic
and Judeo Christian. Rebellious yet charming and polite.”
T.JONES: “When did
you first begin to learn to play guitar? What was your first guitar?”
MIKE DIAZ: “At 20,
me pops got me a used acoustic guitar and I played along to the Pixies,
Jesus and Mary Chain, Charlatans UK and Ravi Shankar.”
T.JONES: “What kind
of guitars do you use now? Which one is your favorite?”
MIKE DIAZ: “A Harmony
and an Aspen, which is like a cheap Gibson SG imposter. The Harmony is
my favorite. It's slept on railroad tracks with me when I was homeless
and is painted like Wayne Kramer's American flag guitar on the Teenage
Lust cover.”
T.JONES: “What has
been in your CD player or on your turntable recently?”
MIKE DIAZ: “A bunch
of free CDs from our label, Dead Meadow, the Snakes, Brian Jonestown Massacre's
‘Zero’ EP, Mellow Drunk, Quintron, Acid Mother's Temple, Toilet Boys, the
Boredoms, The Pink Fairies, Black Sabbath, Raw Power, Django Reinhardtand
Nina Simone.”
T.JONES: “Abortion
– pro-choice or pro-life?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Pro-life
and pro choice! Give yourself the right to fight to party! Whatever, we
ain't no spandex politicians...”
T.JONES: “Death Penalty
– For or against?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Against.
Make 'em make amends by making free instruments for every child under the
sun.”
T.JONES "Where were
you on Sept. 11th (The World Trade Center Terrorist Attack)? How did you
deal with it? How do you think it has affected music?"
MIKE DIAZ: “Graveyard
shift at a halfway house where I was a drug counselor. I watched it all
day on no sleep then wrote a song for my friends who were trapped in the
subways below. How I think it has affected music - two words: Toby Keith
and Brobots.”
T.JONES: “Word association
time. I’m going to say a name of a group/artist and you say the first word
that pops in your head. So, if I say ‘The Beatles, you may say ‘Revolution’
or ‘Let It Be’. Okay?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Ok.”
T.JONES: “Led Zeppelin.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Loch
Ness monster.”
T.JONES: “The Beatles.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Charles
Manson.”
T.JONES: “Spiritualized.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Kate
Radley floating in space.”
T.JONES: “Violent
Femmes.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Folk
whiners.”
T.JONES: “The Grateful
Dead.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Drivin'
that train...”
T.JONES: “The Brian
Jonestown Massacre.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Who?”
T.JONES: “The Dandy
Warhols.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Bohemian
rhapsody.”
T.JONES: “Boyskout.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Cookies.”
T.JONES: “The Warlocks.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Song
4 Nico.”
T.JONES: “Opal.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Bardo
Pond.”
T.JONES: “My Bloody
Valentine.”
MIKE DIAZ: “MC 900
Ft. Jesus.”
T.JONES: “Galaxie
500.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Molasses.”
T.JONES: “Close Lobsters.”
MIKE DIAZ: “B-52's.”
T.JONES: “The Stone
Roses.”
MIKE DIAZ: “10 Storey
Love Song.”
T.JONES: “Happy Mondays.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Bez.”
T.JONES: “Felt.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Up.”
T.JONES: “The Verve.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Stormy
Clouds.”
T.JONES: “Gil-Scott
Heron.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Heroin.”
T.JONES: “George
Bush.”
MIKE DIAZ: “Dope.”
T.JONES: “Can you
explain the song ‘Unicorn’?
MIKE DIAZ: “I'm
waiting for the one-horned man, 26 telephone numbers in my hand.”
T.JONES: “What do
you think music (in general) needs these days?”
MIKE DIAZ: “For
the Dark Crystal to be fixed.”
T.JONES: “Red Tyger
Church is located and from San Francisco, right? What about San Francisco
do you like?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Hot
muppets and cool nights.”
T.JONES: “What is
the biggest mistake that you made in your career?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Letting
others write the songs of my life.”
T.JONES: “How are
European audiences different from U.S. audiences?”
MIKE DIAZ: “We just
don’t care about US superpowers. We'll be communist if we damn well feel
like it!”
T.JONES: “What are
some major misconceptions that people have of you?”
MIKE DIAZ: “That
we're a cult of lazy fashion slaves. We're not lazy!”
T.JONES: “You play
sitar on the album too. Is the sitar a difficult instrument to play? How
did you learn it? How is it different from other string instruments?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Yes,
but I'm just a baby Sitar player. It's very complex and difficult to sit
with on a toilet when I compose.”
T.JONES: “If you
could re-make any song, what would it be?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Now
I wanna sniff some glue.”
T.JONES: “Do you
want to be cremated or buried?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Cremated
and planted so I can be a tree and give shade and sap.”
T.JONES: “What do
you want on your epitaph?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Welcome.”
T.JONES: “What is
next in the future for The Red Tyger Church?”
MIKE DIAZ: “More
touring, festivals, trans-love energies, punk operas and another album.”
T.JONES: “What collaborations
should we look out for?”
MIKE DIAZ: “When
punk cats collide! Junior Panthers vs. Red Tyger
Church.”
T.JONES: “Any final
words for the people who are reading this?”
MIKE DIAZ: “Yes.
Get yer nails done get yer hair did and keep your eyes on this badunka
dunk dunk. The drugs don’t work!”
Thank you Mike Diaz of The Red Tyger Church! ! !
|
My interviews and reviews can also be seen
on the print and web publication PIXEL SURGEON and MUSICREMEDY
Goto: http://www.pixelsurgeon.com
and
http://www.musicremedy.com
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