Band performing at the "Little Theatre" at our High School, May 1970. The concert was called "Free Rock" and was organized by Roger as a showcase for the band.
Interview:
1. Thank you very much for taking your time for this interview. Let's start with your childhood. Where did you grow up and what were some of the influences on you as a young kid?
Roger: We grew up in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It's a big college town, so there was more than the usual cultural trends. Our father played classical piano when he was younger, and played Mozart and Saint-Saens and Stravinsky records in the evening when we were going to sleep. We'd go to classical concerts some times, so that was a big general influence. I took piano lessons as a kid, and played French Horn in Jr. High, and soon after the Beatles hit (6th grade for me) I picked up guitar.
Our father studied fish that live in the desert: live ones in isolated springs, and fossils also, comparing the species/evolution. So we spent our summer vacations on field trips in the desert. That combined with a great Arboretum in Ann Arbor and a local forest called Grave's Woods gave us a big nature appreciation that affected our outlook.
When psychedelic rock kicked in and Dad heard the sounds we were making, he turned us on to the modern music series at University of Michigan music school called "Contemporary Directions" which we eagerly attended. We'd get stoned seeing the MC5 at a free concert in the afternoon, then toke up again and go hear Stockhausen or Terry Riley in the evening. Pretty good deal, overall.
Ann Arbor's legendary home of revolution, the MC5, John Sinclair and the White Panthers, the Stooges, was very exciting. I saw Jimi Hendrix in a tiny club where there were only about 100 people. Lots of energy in Ann Arbor in those days, ideal for generating new ideas.
BEN: My earliest influences began with my Father’s love of Classical, Romantic and 20th Century Music; Mozart, Brahms, Stravinsky. The British Invasion found me as a pre-teen and it was then that I heard my “calling”. Those bands and as well as The Standels and The Seeds blurred into the Psych movement of 13th Floor Elevators, Jimi Hendrix, Soft Machine and Silver Apples and Cream – too many rock bands and influences to count actually. Blues music did not interest me much even though it was considered to be avant-garde for white folks to play back then. Nor was Jazz an influence. My brothers and I knew nothing of free jazz or free improvisation until well after our own explorations of free-from improvisation– what we called “Space Jams”. As three brothers who were adamantly exploring New Music, we would often go to a local concert series called “Contemporary Directions” where electronic tape music and material by notable avant-garde composers would perform i.e Stockhausen and John Cage. Perhaps Sproton Layer’s biggest influence was Pink Floyd’s Piper at the Gates of Dawn and Saucer Full of Secrets. Alice Cooper’s Pretties for You, Ann Arbor’s SRC (first album only), early Captain Beefheart and early Tyrannosaurus Rex were also heavy on our playlist. It was the fragmented song structure and improvisation component (Interstellar Overdrive in particular), that spurred me into trying to write songs portraying a different world instead of the standard Boy-meets-Girl lyrics - commercial Top 40 music of those times. Nature was also a big part of our creative inspiration. Since our parents were scientists and we had much exposure to “the great outdoors”, it was the spirit of Nature that often found its way into our song-writing.
Laurence: We grew up in a progressive college town, in a supportive family to follow one's dreams. Our Dad was an esteemed Paleo-ichthyologist professor at the university, but had originally wanted to become a concert pianist. He won a large silver trophy as a teenager. I remember this was proudly displayed on the living room mantel for most of our childhood. Dad would take us to classical concerts and modern 20th century performances, regularly. Composers ranging from Stravinsky and Beethoven to Stockhausen and John Cage. Our sister too (who also played piano well) would take us to "electronic music concerts" where analogue magnetic tape was the medium of sound. As musical brothers we were all very impressed and influenced by these experiences. I took piano and clarinet lessons in my youth, later teaching myself how to play the guitar and drums. Playing guitar was not easy because I had to learn how to play left handed (upside down) on a right handed guitar. It was The Beatles and the British Invasion which kicked our ass, soon followed by psychedelic music both American and British. Family summer trips out west, camping under the stars in the desert, also had a profound impact on our psyche. We were taught at an early age to respect "nature" and all living things. As for the local rock scene, my fave bands were The MC5 and SRC. We would see them "live" at the free Sunday concerts all the time.
2. Before Sproton Layer you were called Freak Trio, right? Was this your first band?
Roger: We were in a band called The Sky High Purple Band (forgive the name - we were only 15 and 13 at the time!) where we learned Kinks, 13th Floor Elevators, Love, first Doors album, Mothers of Invention, etc. (1967). It was a really good educational experience. We played a friend's attic and a friend's garage. When I went into High School the band folded - what High School kid wants to be in a band with Jr. High School kids (my brothers being two years younger)? I joined a blues band called Mandrake Fields, and had a power trio called Factory just before Freak Trio/Sproton Layer.
BEN: The first band that I put together as a band leader included 7 guitarists. This was in 1968 at age 14. My composing ability was extremely limited if not nonexistent so the music was mostly in my mind. It was a basically a sequence of simple rock riffs. What I could write down on paper and suggest my friends to play did not translate well. After a couple practices we quit out of frustration.
Laurence: We had a cover band called The Sky High Purple Band, playing some of our favorite pop music of the times. Pretty darn good band considering our age. I played tambourine and sang harmonies. I wrote an awful blues number called LOOK OUT PRETTY MAMA. That was a bit of an embarrassment, actually.
3. When and why did you change your name to Sproton Layer and why the name Sproton Layer?
Roger: We did a lot of drawings while stoned and listening to music. I did a drawing while listening to the first Soft Machine album in Spring 1969, and I looked at it later and saw the phrase "Sproton Layer" written. It seemed like a good name, evocative and non-regular. When we added Harold Kirchen (his brother Bill Kirchen played guitar in Ann Arbor's Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen) we couldn't keep calling ourselves Freak Trio, so Sproton Layer was the next logical phrase. That was late fall 1969.
Here I'd like to point out the meaning of the phrase: With Magnetic Fields Disrupted. In my enthusiasm for weed as the unleasher of creative powers (a charming thought at the time, but in retrospect not 100% correct!), I came up with that phrase. When a person hasn't smoked weed, their magnetic fields are "normal", and songs come out in normal chord progressions. But when they've smoked weed, their magnetic fields get disrupted, and the chords come out in all sorts of unusual ways. This was certainly a manifesto of sorts for our approach to the world of music!
Laurence: I don't recall. All I remember is the meaning of the phrase, later referring (if not unofficially) to the dope mixture in a pipe -- if more than one "type" of marijuana was used. A "sproton layer".
Lar on drums, Big Steele Ballroom, July 1970.
4. How do you remember some of the early sessions you had with your brothers?
Roger: The most important was Freak Trio Electric, March 1969, which was the birth of the band. Our parents went out square-dancing, and for some reason we had a tape recorder, toked up, and recorded our jams as a rock trio in the basement. We were stunned at the results! The biggest reference was Interstellar Overdrive, but our lack of blues-based riffs took these jams pretty far out. The next day we decided to be a band, as this music was so much more interesting than anything else any of us were doing.
Another great session was a week or so later, when again our parents went out for the night. This time we brought all our instruments into the living room where there was a piano, and we also brought in clarinet, sax, cornet, bongoes, etc. It was more "art-song" and referenced the Contemporary Directions concerts a bit more, less overtly "rock". We called the session "At the Playgrounds of Olympus." We were again stunned at what we'd created out of nothing, just by playing together. A really dynamic time.
BEN: As brothers we often got together and recorded not just as a rock band (Freak Trio, Sproton Layer), but as three brothers high on weed playing outside in the woods or in one of our igloos we built in the backyard or in the living room where our spinet piano was located. We would use varied instrumentation that included not just electric guitars and parts of a drum kit, but also an alto saxophone, a cornet, a Bb clarinet and anything else lying around that suited our fancy. I recall a jam that Roger and I did in the kitchen just using silverware and slamming cupboard doors. We felt this was not only a lot of fun, but that it was music too. It was from this profound creative setting that I felt free to do whatever came to mind rather than work with a confined instrumentation or on one particular genre with specific boundaries. I think because of this I felt alien to those around me who saw music in such concise forms as Blues-based Rock, strict Classical or otherwise. That is partly why, as brothers, we worked together so well.
Ben on guitar, final moment of IN THE SUN, Big Steele Ballroom, July 1970.
Laurence: Incredibly euphoric. "Freak Trio Electric" created perhaps the beginning formation of my sense about our original music; Forever Hopeful. A crappy cassette player was placed on the dryer on the other end of the room for that jam session. The playback afterwards revealed a horribly low-fi recording, but successfully melting the music into one fantastic, churning bloom. There was a high-pitched ringing sound between each improvisation too, which we identified at that time as "the Sound of the Ozone". A concept that stuck. From there we got together many times in a variety of traditional and unorthodox instrumentation. "At the Playgrounds of Olympus" was one of my faves. We firmly believed we were on to something very special.
Harold on Trumpet, Big Steele Ballroom, July 1970.
5. In 1970 you recorded an album. I would like to go in details here. Where did you record the album, what label was interested in releasing it, or did you want to release it privately?
Roger: In my12th grade class at Pioneer High School my friend Mark Brahce developed an interest in the band. He decided that he would record us. He had never done any recording before. He just started doing simple research. We did an initial session with him in Dec. 1969 to get things going. By the time we recorded With Magnetic Fields Disrupted (Aug./Sept. 1970), he had learned a lot more. But this was an incredibly simple setup. We recorded it in our parent's basement, hanging blankets on the clothesline for sound dampening. We only had 6 microphones which we used to record the guitar, bass, trumpet, and drums. There were no EQ options at all - whatever the sounds were in the room combined with microphone placement was the end result. Once the instrumental tracks were recorded, we overdubbed vocals and minimal instrument overdubs in the same track. Every track was done in one take, with most vocal tracks done one right after the other. Once the vocals were laid onto the instrumental tracks via the Sound-on-Sound method, that was the mix. There was no remixing. It's pretty amazing that it sounds as good as it does, and it's a testament to Mark's belief in the project and (dare I say it) the band's focus to get these 12 songs that tight and inspired. I was 18 when this was recorded, Lar and Ben were 16, and Harold was 17.
Mark did a bit of recording with me in 1970/71, but nothing like this album. After that, he didn't do any more recording!
As mentioned elsewhere, there was no label in mind - this was to be our calling card. But we got no interest from any bookers or labels. We had no ability to release it ourselves, of course. We were just kids!
Laurence: It was literally a basement recording. We recorded in our basement. The same room where we began, with our 1st spontaneous improv session; "Freak Trio Electric".
6. The album was not released in it's time. Would you like to share some of the strongest memories from producing and recording your album?
Roger: It was focus, really. When we got good takes we knew it. We were definitely on, as often happens when a band records. The collective improvisation in the second half of Pretty Pictures, Now is just about as good as it could possibly have been.
We played croquet in the back yard for relaxation between taking sessions - that's my biggest recollection!
Laurence: I honestly don't have any distinct recollections.
What gear did you guys used?
Roger: I had a Montgomery Wards (Airline) bass - really bad bass, actually, but it had a unique sound. And it didn't look "typical" either. By the time we recorded With Magnetic Fields Disrupted, I had an Ovation bass amp - that company didn't last long for amps, but it had an odd "sinister" look in that the amp head was in the back of the amp, so all you saw was a large black, neo-leather encased cabinet. Again, not a great amp, but combined with the Airline bass, it produced a fairly unique tone, and had an unusual look.
BEN: On “With Magnetic Fields Disrupted” I used a Gibson Epiphone solid body with 1 pickup through an Acoustic 150 guitar amp. Acoustic was a solid state amp and at that time transistor amps were viewed as a benefit over tube amps because they were cleaner. I did like the transistor crunch when the volume was jacked up, but the built-in distortion was awful and the reverb was weak. When we were “Freak Trio” I used a Kay, sometimes a Silvertone, and ran through a Fender Baseman amp; a very different sound.
Ben cutting vocals for the album. Note washing machine - this was recorded in the basement after all.
Laurence: I played a brown-swirl Yamaha drum set with double-rack toms. It was the only set we could afford. Sadly, in those days to be "made in Japan" was not a good thing, and such was the case. I draped rags over the tom-toms, taped to the edge of the heads, in order to create what I thought was a nice dead sound. But, when first starting out in the band I used another guy's drum set, set up in a right-handed formation. I of course didn't know this, hence learned to play the drums as I did the guitar: on a right-handed set. This positioned my ride cymbal where the crash cymbal should have been, and conversely, my crash cymbal where the ride cymbal should have been. Crash cymbals tend to be thin and smaller, while ride cymbals tend to be heavier and larger. Consequently, whenever a hit my crash it truly CRASHED. It was very loud and brash. I intuitively thought of it as the two cymbals commonly used in an orchestra used for important accents in the music. Very dramatic. My ride cymbal on the other hand, being smaller and thinner didn't take much energy to get going, and I liked the sound it produced. It reminded me of Ringo Star's sound. Kind of a quaking "wash" effect. My foot pedal for the bass drum was a Speed King. That thing was breaking down all the time. I guess since I stomped on it so hard. My main objective as a drummer was not to play the square 4/4 back beat which most drummers used. Instead, I tried to create a visual effect with much of my playing -- as much as propelling the music and lyrics forward. Perhaps my drumming influences could be summed up as orchestral in nature with a mix of Ginger Baker and Nick Mason.
Why the LP was never out?
Roger: We had no label in mind - we just recorded it because Mark really liked us and wanted to do it, and we had the material. We considered it a calling card, and we sent it to the Rainbow Party (used to be the White Panthers) in Ann Arbor. No response - we weren't a party/boogie band, which is what was going on by then. Sent it also to SRC's manager - no positive reaction, which definitely hurt as we were SRC fans. We got zero response. The times were becoming conservative, the expanding days of '60's music were over, and we didn't fit anywhere. Basically, after composing a pretty solid work, I was plunged into depression - I mean, how could no one care about this (remember I was only 18)? It took until 1979 for me, 10 years after Sproton Layer began, that I finally hit my stride when Mission of Burma started. In between, I did all sorts of stuff, without a solid direction. But I did learn a lot about music while I stumbled around!
7. Your sound is pretty unique. It's a kind of mixture of different styles, like acid punk meeting prog rock and the most fun part is, that it sounds amazing!
Roger: We definitely thought of ourselves as psychedelic. Weed and acid figured in a lot of the songs. In some ways we were kind of pre-prog - the term "prog" had not come into common terminology yet, and our use of classical elements was organic, out of our own history. We definitely liked SALTY DOG by Procol Harum, and even the Ann Arbor band SRC had classical influences. And PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN and the first SOFT MACHINE album all used expanded song structures. We definitely were not a prog. band, though. Much too organic and zonked out! Our youthful enthusiasm kept us from going overthetop with exaggerated profundity, a hallmark of prog rock... We never played riffs to prove we were great - we only ever played them because they were what made sense to us.
8. Did you do any touring or shows? If so please share where and with who?
Roger: No touring, just 20 or so local shows from April 1969 to August 1970. We played a show on the U of M campus with Carnal Kitchen, a free-jazz/rock band which featured Steve MacKay who played with the Stooges. We went over pretty well there (at the ages of 17 and 15!). We played a Peace March close to Detroit, but our more cerebral and complex music didn't give them the "party-release" they really wanted, so it wasn't so successful! The only club shows we played were at the Big Steel Ballroom in Ann Arbor, (where the MC5 and SRC also played. Heh, I even saw the John Drake Shakedown there - he had been the lead singer for the Amboy Dukes before Ted fired him). I did some of the posters for the Big Steel Ballroom so I could get in for free, much like I did a few years before at the 5th Dimension (both in Ann Arbor).
Roger on bass, Big Steele Ballroom, July 1970.
9. In 1991 New Alliance released your stuff. I will write down all the songs and I would really appreciate if you could comment each...
Roger: It was great that they released it, but they didn't know how to connect with the '60's collectors types. This new release on World in Sound is much more targeted at that, so it should get more attention this round.
1 Gift
Roger: Immediately after F. T. Electric, we did a lot of drawings - basically a massive creative outburst. I did a series of them based on the "Toke Mythology." We 100% believed that weed was why we were doing what we were doing - an obvious fallacy when viewed in hind-sight, but it certainly affected us that way at the time! The drawing referred to in this song shows the three of us bringing a gift to the Toke God which appears from behind a stylized mountain.
2 Pretty Pictures Now
Roger: The main riff I came up with fall of 1968, but didn't know what to do with it. Very quickly after we recorded F. T. Electric, the song came together and was brought into the new band. I saw the giant leaves on a tree in the Arboretum when I was tripping, and it clearly made an impression on me!
3 In the Sun
Roger: The main riff owes a definite vibe to the first Silver Apples album, which we listened to relentlessly. I wrote it in February 1969, a month before F.T. Electric. I tried this out in my power trio band Factory, but they just couldn't figure out what to do with it. Playing a straight rock beat to it made no sense, and it took Freak Trio, with Lar's unusual approach to beats, to bring this song to life.
Ben: this song was one of my favorites. The Verse riff is amazing.
Laurence: I always liked the bizarre guitar riff on this tune. Twisted, in the correct measure. As a drummer, I tried simply to follow it.
4 Sister Regis
Roger: Our "At the Playgrounds of Olympus" session had produced a "Chant for the Easter Eggs". We chanted "Easter Eggs" over and over and when we came to the end of the chant (of course we did not prepare this ahead of time, it was 100% spontaneous), that phrase had morphed into "Sister Regis." This phrase immediately achieved mythical proportions to us, and I wrote the song the next day. It was only later I realized that "Regis" means "of the King" in Latin, which I had studied a bit in high school. That Sister Regis meant "Sister Regis, sister of the Wizard King of Tokes" was an obvious development in hind-sight.
Laurence: I always enjoyed playing this song. It had an awesome trumpet solo. Very relaxed, and without a doubt the most "pop" sounding.
5 Bush
Roger: Light summer 1969 song, very much in the vein of Syd Barrett's phantasy songs. Lar and I had a duo at that time, while the full Freak Trio was on hiatus. We did this one and others that each of us wrote. This was the only one of those songs that made it onto the album.
Laurence: Yes, I recall playing songs like this with Roger throughout the summer of 1969 using acoustic guitars. I can't recall how and why that came about, but I understand now it was largely due to the fact that we didn't have any rock equipment to continue as Freak Trio. ( Roger's friends apparently took their gear back.) I wrote a few songs then, too. "The Ozone Came Alive", and "On My Hill" for example. Roger and I sung together very well.
6 Tidal Wave
Roger: Like "Nocturnal Mission", this has a "warp theme" as an introduction, before the main body of the song begins. One of the riffs in this section came from the F.T. Electric session, transcribed to fit the song.
The lyrics to this one are amongst my favorites in Sproton Layer. There is a double-death here which is quite curious, very dream-like. The situation is that a king has died, and a solemn procession is carrying the casket down a canyon to the seashore for burial. But they cannot see that in the distance there is a tidal wave coming, which will destroy the entire mourning party as well as the dead king. The narrator sees this from his position on top of the canyon, but can't warn them in time.
Laurence: Roger's songwriting was expanding. The beginning of this tune runs at a frenetic pace with interesting harmonic movement, though very short. And, while the bulk of the song borderlines tedious in my humble opinion, it is none the less powerful with a great lyric.
7 Up
Roger: Rather straight-forward positive song. The melodic middle instrumental section really achieved a "lift-off" emotionally, especially live. It would carry us away.
Laurence: Another one of my faves, full of hope. By the end of the song all I'm doing is pounding out the downbeat -- kick, snare, cymbal. What else was there left for me to do, I ask?
8 The Blessing of the Dawn Source
Roger: A bit pompous, but hell, I was not even 18 when I wrote this. Teenage angst combined with psychedelic-induced search for greater meaning. Ben wrote the last section, the chord progression that gets more complex each round. The opening is a direct quote from Dvorak's "New World Symphony" which I always liked.
Laurence: Again, I shied away from playing traditional back beats whenever I could. So, it was always a bit unnerving for me on this song as I broke into the typical treatment there, where the guitar solo takes off. A typical type of rock groove. Great song, though.
9 Nocturnal Mission
Roger: Kind of a hypothetical acid experience, about getting off on acid, somewhat mythologized. What balances the slightly over-wrought acid ideal is the brief "chorus" just before the great guitar solo by Ben. The lyrics "I can tell you why but please don't ask!" add a nice ironic levity to the proceedings in my opinion!
The brief introduction is also classic Sproton Layer - zero blues-based chord progressions, these riffs are chromatic and whole-tone based. We called them "Warp Themes" in those days - we were not aware of the actual harmonic content, just that it sounded great to us.
This non-rock harmonic content is obviously influenced by the U of M Contemporary Directions concerts that we were attending.
10 Point of View
Roger: Me trying to figure life out (I was a late bloomer). Fond of the structure on this one: all sorts of unexpected ins and outs, with the trumpet pretty integrated. But it all adds up and makes its point. Everything might be Real.
Ben: I much enjoy the 20th Century Music ethic of this piece.
Laurence: This is one of my faves. Truly advanced song writing.
11 New Air
Roger: Lyrics were from two different stoned experiences, with a bit of "hope for the future" thrown in for good measure! Similar structural complexity as Point of View (written a couple months apart), with a rather devastating "destruction solo" by Ben and truly superb free-form drumming by Lar in the introduction section.
Ben: I much enjoy the 20th Century Music ethic of this piece.
Laurence: And, yet another. Remarkable.
12 The Wonderful Rise
Roger: Another late teenage angst song. The waltz at the end is pretty weak melodically, but the sound of it could be construed as rather charming. I doubled the piano as an overdub during the vocal take. The "magic pets" were weed and the psychedelic experience.
There is also a single out with this three songs:
A Lost Behind Words
Roger: Written May 1969, when the band had only been together a couple of months. The title and lyrics were from a brief internal acid vision. I was walking w/some friends and was having trouble communicating. In my mind flashed a 3-dimensional "WORD", sort of Yellow Submarine style, and behind it was a shadow of a person. "I can see a human shadow there - lost behind a word." One of the middle parts was from the early Freak Trio Electric session that started the band: I transcribed it and organized it a bit. It helps give the piece an organic flow rather than typical "song structure".
Ben: My favorite released song thus far. Great lyrics on severe alienation.
Laurence: A well described psychedelic experience where thoughts and feelings rise far beyond the spoken word.
B1 Space Red
Ben: This is a song I wrote myself where I tuned the A string down to be unison to the low E string. After the solo area when the non-vocal verse begins again, the guitar slides up at the very end of the riff and the bass guitar slides down simultaneously. Sonically speaking, there is a “ripping” affect. I wrote a couple other songs for Sproton Layer with lyrics which were rehearsed, but were never quite up to snuff to record or perform.
Laurence: Great and fun piece to play. It was nice as a departure to be purely instrumental ~ no lyrics.
Roger: Ben's first piece in the band. Not complex, but it a ripper live.
B2 Jam From Outer Space
Roger: This was a collective improvisation, Dec. 1969. Ben and I doing the rather funny vocals at the top. This element was mostly dropped by 1970 - crazy vocals influenced by early Pink Floyd's Power Toche. We often decided on a mood or title before an improv. that would help steer the improv.
Ben: This is an example of our Space Jam approach. Like free-Jazz; this was free-Rock. Sometimes we had specific mind sets to work from or set up paintings in front of us to get ideas much like Romantic Music would use Nature to express musical ideas, but more often we would simply start playing and see what came up. Our general frame of mind was to produce ideas quickly and follow them without expectations and without concern for chord progressions or any of the usual techniques that most rock bands used.
Laurence: Perhaps not the best example of our free-form mayhem, but certainly classic.
10. World in Sound re-released your material. Are you satisfied?
Roger: The 20-page color booklet was an amazing gift from Wolf - we could not have asked for more. And the mastering job they did in Germany from the master tape I had is a vast improvement over the New Alliance release. So the answer is a resounding YES.
Ben: Very satisfied. Their superb production value of this reissue and mastering finesse is far superior to the original SST release. Good job, Wolf! The overall sound seems well-mixed perhaps for the first time. Somehow the vocals sit better in the mix and I really dig the bass sound.
Laurence: Three words. YES AND YES.
We will be doing a second album with World in Sound. There are 6 or 7 unreleased songs from earlier recording sessions (1969), and some defining improvisational sessions (1969 and 1971). The album is tentatively titled "Press Your Hand and the Whole Room Fluctuates." Not sure of the release date, as we have just drawn up the basic plan, but probably within a year or two? We are quite excited about it, as the material, while less slick, covers some different territory than With Magnetic Fields Disrupted.
11. I'm sure you have some crazy stories to share as Sproton Layer...
Roger: It wasn't super crazy or anything. Mostly it was Lar and Ben and I just being hyper-creative, following whatever ideas came up, and, being teenagers, a little bit confused!
Our best shows were ones where we played two sets of originals, then toked up and played a 3rd set of free-form Space Jams/improvisations. At one of these gigs on the U of M campus, we took time off and learned our song "Yellow Balloon" backwards! It took us 15 minutes or so to work it out (whilst smoking a joint, I suspect). I sang the vocals in a faux backwards delivery, following inversions of the melodies as closely as I could, and when we got to the end of the song - in reality the beginning of the song - we all exploded into laughter! It was quite an accomplishment. We had a tape of it, but unfortunately that tape got lost.
Another memorable one of those events was our 3rd Space Jam set at the Milan Community Center. We planned the opening jam out this time. We started with a straight boogie/blues jam, and gradually, hopefully imperceptibly, morphed into totally atonal Space Jam warps. I recall people being generally confused/bemused by it.
The ideal gig that we fantasized about was us opening, Capt. Beefheart and His Magic Band in the middle slot (Strictly Personal era), and Pink Floyd (Piper-era) as headliners. Those were the type of sounds we thought ourselves related to.
Ben: we were too young to have crazy band stories.
Laurence: As fairly respectable youngsters, we weren't into the "fucking in the streets party scene". We kept to ourselves mostly, simply getting high with our best friends. The early part of 1970 was rough for me though. I was suffering from depression and flights of fancy and had to seek psychiatric evaluation. It was later deduced that both Roger and Ben could have well become qualifying candidates. But yeah, outside of a couple incredibly imaginative experiences together (employing our inner children the size of Texas), and yes, a few bad acid trips, I'd say the wildest trouble we ever got into would be setting up a croquet game in a church yard with friends, about midnight. Cops show up to tell us to stop. That's about the size of it.
12. What happened to the band?
Roger: The times were getting conservative, and "partying" was over-riding "ideas" in music. We just didn't fit. We got no interest from booking agents, or people we thought would be sympathetic. Nothing whatsoever. We folded in the fall after no response. We got back together sporadically into 1971 as an all-instrumental band which actually produced some interesting Space Jams, but it was very haphazard and we only played a couple shows for friend's events.
There was one very odd good thing that came out of the recording at that time, though. Later fall 1970, a friend of mine had been contacted by a woman who had an anthropological grant and was studying rock music. Her name was Gertrude Kurath, and she was in her 60's. My friend referred me to her, and I loaned her our tape to hear fuzz tones, wah-wahs, etc. Literally an hour after I loaned her the tape, she called up completely worked up - she was blown away by With Magnetic Fields Disrupted. She had a Wenner-Gren Anthropological grant to write a book about rock and roll, but she said then and there that she wanted the book to be the complete scores for WMFD. I was rather stunned, because I'd already given up on this! She paid me $200.00 to type out the lyrics, notes on each song, and to hand-scribe the complete score to every song. So....... for quite some time I sat and listened to the recording, writing out each guitar chord and strum, bass part, trumpet part, drum parts - snare, kick, tomtoms, high-hat, etc. - and vocals in "full-score" form. Kind of insane. I believe this may be one of the very few examples of entire rock scores having been written out.
The book came out in 1972 on the Ann Arbor Publishers imprint - I have no idea how many were printed, and neither Gertrude Kurath nor I made a single royalty from it. AA Publishers has long since defunct. But the book did come out, with my notes and scores for every song, plus some photos and related drawings, and an introduction by Gertrude Kurath. And one could order a copy of the tape from instructions in the book - I guess a few copies were sold, I don't really know. So..... despite the Ann Arbor hippies not giving a shit about us, this eccentric elderly woman gave us some support via an anthropological grant A rather odd situation, I must say!
It wasn't until I was on the New Alliance label (affiliated with SST) and I suggested that they release it (1991) that anyone other than a very very few friends had heard the album.
Ben: Sproton Layer folded shortly after the recording of “With Magenetic Fields Disrupted”. We tried to return to our original energy in 1971. Since we had sold our PA System, it was only an instrumental band without Harold on trumpet. This version of Sproton Layer played a couple parties and fizzled out with no recordings of material other than some space jams. I did write a few more songs in 1972 with the hope that we would reform. If by some extreme quirk, Sproton Layer returns to action in 2012, I would surely include those in our 21st Century repertoire!
Laurence: I moved to live with my older brother, Gifford Miller, in Colorado for the first part of 1971. I went to high school there. I moved back that summer and soon began experimenting with drugs again, this time using LSD more frequently. The 3 of us did get together again for a short stint that year. Very interesting results with improvisation, but nothing very concrete came of it. That was it.
13. Later you were in a band called Mission of Burma and you released an amazing album called Vs. I would like if you could share a story about it. It's really one of the best post punk albums in my opinion.
Roger: Glad you like it. I find the following comparison of Sproton Layer and Mission of Burma very interesting. A trio is the ideal ensemble (to me, anyways!) for freedom and fullness of sound, and this was the basis for both Sproton Layer and Mission of Burma. But "a little more variety" was needed - in the case of Sproton Layer, a trumpet that didn't play on all the songs. In the case of Mission of Burma, tape loops that weren't on all the songs.
And, for my part anyways, there are many similar directives in the songs I wrote for both bands. Unorthodox structures, lyrics that were more related to dreams, or "poetic" rather than "rock and roll", a confusing of avant-garde techniques and form, etc.
In many ways, the ideal/archtypal model in Sproton Layer is the same model that ended up as Mission of Burma. The primary difference is that Sproton Layer was in the psychedlic period, and Mission of Burma was in the post-punk period. At least, that's what I think at the moment!
14. I know you were in many other bands like Birdsongs of the Mesozoic, which is more an experiment, but I really dig it a lot! What can you say about it?
Roger: Birdsongs of the Mesozoic started off as a one-off gig/band that I put together for a benefit, after Erik (Lindgren) had offered me his studio to record some of my piano pieces (the proto-type of the band). I have always had a push-pull things between guitar and piano (I play both), and this band vs. Burma is that manifestation at the time. Ultimately, the rhythm machine was a flaw in Mesozoic, but it helped keep the volume down which allowed the band to continue after Burma folded. We played rock clubs often, and in that sense, certainly broke down a lot of barriers!
15. Later you were part of The Space Negros, No Man, Moving Parts, M3, Alloy Orchestra, Binary System…Tell me more about this projects..
Roger: M3 of course is Lar and Ben and I many years later! Some of it is quite interesting, but since we live in different cities, and are more of a recording project than anything else, we haven't produced anything as fully developed as Sproton Layer. However, I like both the albums we released quite a bit. 1. M3:M3, on New Alliance (same label as first Sproton Layer release) is quite deconstructed, but has "songs" as well as sonic experiments; 2. Unearthing, on Sublingual Records, is extremely deconstructed - all very experimental instrumentals, with some occasional reference to rock music.
I made three records - two on Ace of Hearts, one on SST, released 1986 to 1990 - of what I called "Maximum Electric Piano." This activity started in 1983 when I got an early looping device - the Electro-Harmonix 16 second Digital Delay (different from the current one they make). I applied it to a Yamaha Electric Babygrand Piano that had strings. I did prepared piano and ran the piano through fuzz tones, etc., like a guitar. I played directly on the strings at times. First I'd set up prepared piano loop grooves, then play compositions/songs over that, often changing things up considerably as I went along. Basically, I invented an instrument/ensemble. Many people now are engaged in maximizing one instrument via loops - I was actually doing this in 1983. I consider it to be one of my more interesting behaviors.
The Binary System was me on piano/prepared piano with a rather exceptional drummer, Larry Dersch. We recorded an album on SST, and 2 albums on Atavistic. The second album, FROM THE EPICENTER, I really think is quite a good album. You can still buy it from them on their web site. Very much a dynamic duo, all instrumental blend of improvisation, rock beats, modern classical structures, and prepared piano. A bit like what I was working on in the Mesozoic, but much less of the Terry Riley/Phillip Glass minimalist thing. Because Larry's drumming is so great, I actually feel this band accomplished its goals in a better fashion than my work in the Mesozoic.
16. What are you doing these days?
Roger: I am still active in Mission of Burma - we will complete a new album early in 2012, and we are at the moment deciding which of two labels we will go with. It's pretty dynamic, we think.
I am also active in the Alloy Orchestra, a trio that accompanies silent movies live. I have been in this band for nearly 15 years, and we tour all over the US and sometimes Europe, playing film festivals and theaters. Roger Ebert says "Alloy Orchestra is the best in the world at accompanying silent film."
I do various improvisation stuff, most recently with Ben in M2. He (multiphonic guitar) and I (prepared piano) recorded an album recently and are looking for a label to release it. Very experimental/ambient. I think it is one of the best sounding records I've ever been involved with.
I have also picked up where I left off as a composition major at California Institute of the Arts (1976), and had one of my new compositions performed at the New England Conservatory (for viola, piano, percussion and music concrete). I am working on other compositions for this type of music - the second one is for 2 string trios, electric organ and 3 percussionists. I am also working on music based on frequency analysis of creeks in California and Vermont.
Here is my web site: www.RogerClarkMiller.com
Ben: I am composer and conductor for The Sensorium Saxophone Orchestra, NYC’s first full-on saxophone orchestra. We have 20+ members ranging from bass to soprano sax with 2 drummers. Most of our material is fully notated using a unique method of my own based on interval sequences. We will be releasing Terry Riley’s IN C and a recording of my first symphony in 2012. "http://www.benmiller.info/SSO.html"
I’ve been playing solo shows since 2000 using a deconstructed multiphonic guitar "http://www.benmiller.info/Dgen.html" I also explore alto saxophone through various treatments "http://www.benmiller.info/Others.html" in a similar vein of theoretical cacophony. Several releases of this type are out on the following labels; Living, Gulcher, Tigerasylum, Obsolete Units and Feeding Tube.
I had a rock band in NYC with drummer Jarrod Ruby and x-Phantom Tollbooth bassist Jerry Smith from 2003 to 2010. THIRD BORDER’s 1st (Living Records) and 2nd release (Radial Records) had a psychedelic tinge to it. Our 3rd and final release was more angst.
Laurence: As with Ben, I have continued over the years in original music bands ever since Sproton Layer broke up. From "unplugged" folky stuff to avant-garde classical/jazz to Noise Bands before such a term was coined. One of my favorite bands was a fringe group I called Empool. Psychedelic noise improv and almost all instrumental. Empool melted into Destroy All Monsters in 1977 and the rest is history. As for my current work; I reinvented myself 12 years ago as Mister Laurence, a children's performer. I've since released a handful of solo CD's and produced award winning music videos. 2 years ago my wife came on board playing keyboards and singing. She helped expand the whole idea by bringing in an animatronic bear she built, to play the drums. True entertainment for kids of all ages. We call ourselves, with tongue in cheek: The Mister Laurence Experience.
17. Thanks a lot! Would you like to send a message to the readers of It’s Psychedelic Baby Magazine?
Roger: Psychedelic isn't a time-zone, it's a state of mind.
Ben: Get Sproton Layer a Record Contract and Touring Agent! If I had my way, I’d drop everything I’m doing musically right now and return to what was possibly my first passion; Psych Rock songwriting and Space Jams.
Laurence: Yesterday, plus tomorrow, equals today.
Interview made by Klemen Breznikar / 2011
© Copyright http://psychedelicbaby.blogspot.com/ 2011
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