The other day as I was driving through Fremont, California,
on my way home from Oakland, I turned on the radio and heard the words “Fremont
California” in a story about Tesla, and then when I got home the words “Fremont
California” jumped out at me in a Facebook post for a house concert there. So I
thought, well, that must mean it was meant to be, and bought a ticket for it.
I wasn’t quite sure who Eric Bachmann was but I did remember
his old band the Archers of Loaf: an early 90s indie band on Merge with a
Pavement vibe and a college radio presence. To be honest, though, I was more
attracted to the idea of a house concert in Fremont.
A house concert is one at a person’s home, where the money
goes directly to the artist. Usually they are in hipster places like city lofts
or craftsman mansions: having a house party in Fremont seems almost
antithetical to the concept. Fremont is a place where art cannot exist. Back
when I was little, my parents used to take us there on Sundays sometimes, in
order to visit the model home open houses that so many of the housing
developments were putting up. My parents didn’t want to buy a model home,
however. My dad was an architect, and I now realize that going to see these
abominable homes was the equivalent of when I go see Def Leppard play an Indian
Bingo Parlor. He went there to mock them.
A half century later those developments are still there, and
if anything, uglier. But when I was a rock critter, I had a mandate to go to
the weirdest shows possible. So come Friday night I crossed the Bay on the
Dumbarton Bridge to experience the full Fremont effect.
Fremont’s geographical setting isn’t naturally ugly – it’s
nestled between the Bay and some golden velvet hills – but once you leave the
freeway, you will only see one of two things: high beige stucco walls
surrounding hideous subdivisions, or industrial parks and strip malls mostly
taken up with storage units. There are so many storage units that its hard not
to think about what awful things must be packed inside them. As I drove towards
the street that house concert was on (appropriately called “Grimmer”) I passed
every possible low-end box store you can name, a bunch of Chipotles, and
something called “Unitek College.” I don’t believe that Unitek College is
really a college, do you?
In short, Fremont still reminds me of those ten story buildings
in Seoul and Beijing that are crammed to the brim with T shirts and handbags
and knockoffs of everything. When capitalism comes to an end, all that stuff
will be the cause of it, but in the meantime, I drove on and on down Grimmer
lane, and presently, I came to the location I sought, which was not a house at
all, but a brew pub in a storage unit called Das Brew.
The concert was not in the brewpub, though, it was in the
back storage unit where the vats where they brew the brew were. A nice woman
named Priscilla, whom I discovered was the owner of the brew pub, ushered me
back there and for a few terrifying minutes, I was alone, sitting on a couch
surrounded by a few beat up folding chairs. Priscilla served me a beer and handed me a
bowl of broken pretzels.
So I sat. For a little while, the only people there were me,
Priscilla, her husband Jan, and Eric Bachmann himself, but presently, we were
joined by exactly 16 other patrons. It was extremely intimate, and also a
little bit spooky. Suffice to say, sitting on a battered old couch surrounded
by beer vats in the back of a storage unit in some industrial park in Fremont –
that isn’t a place I’d envisioned myself being. Ever. But that was also the
beauty of it. And then Eric Bachmann began playing, and the beauty part
intensified.
In case you missed it, Bachmann’s work in the Archers was
jumpy, tuneful, verbose, poppy. Songs like “Web In Front” and “Revenge” are
essentially band driven compositions that beg for drums and bass and remind you
of hopping up and down in a sweaty club in a college town: they are the
embodiment of a sound that suffused the youths of a very, very few of us. By
contrast, his solo work, often recorded under the named Crooked Fingers (and
more recently under his own name), is more contemplative, even folky. It
features intricate fingerings and long drawn out chords, and sometimes is
played on banjo, and the lyrics are more like short stories, rather than the
fleet, sonic emotions that get caught and solidified into a chorus and then
shot back at you the way a great indie rock song does. Bachmann’s solo work
like “Mercy” and “Carolina” are in a wholly different mood than that stuff; a
different key of life. At Das Brew, he played both types, on acoustic guitar
and on banjo, and they all sounded just great.
Of course they sounded great. He was so close to our faces
that we could watch the chord changes, and check out where the capo was, and
see exactly what craft goes into that kind of very intense musicality. And I
was reminded, as he played, of the healing effect that music has: any music,
any notes, any chromatic rendering of sound waves, can actually go into your
heart and mend it. It can mend you, and it can mend places as well. For that
evening, it mended Fremont, and instead of seeming like a wasteland, I was able
to see it as it really is beneath the buildings, as the Costanoan Indians saw
it. Green, warm, charming…a place where the light is very lovely in the
evening. And I saw more than that. I saw into the future, when all the empty
Walmarts and Best Buys that the coming apocalypse will create will become warm
little spaces where small bands of likeminded people will gather to listen to
music, and artists like Bachmann will be paid a living wage.
Because here’s the thing. There were nineteen people in that
room, including myself and the owners, and for ten of them, huge Bachmann fans
already, this was the greatest night of their life. Not only were the songs
beautifully performed (and the sound in storage lockers turns out to be
excellent) but Bachmann took requests, answered questions, exchanged quips,
told everyone how he wrote each song, and even, at one point, left the room to
get his little dog Lupe, who was cooped up in the van.
A long time ago, I wrote a column in which I mused on why
the least expensive concerts are often the best, and this was a case in point.
I know a lot of people who have paid four figures to see Bruce Springsteen play
Broadway this year, and while I definitely get that, it’s hard to compare it to
this concert, which cost $30, but you got to write the set list and pet the
artist’s dog. Surely there is no comparison.
All you had to do was know about it. The two men sitting
next to me were from my neck of the woods. They were on a platonic boy date (ie wives left
home) and I asked them how they got into Eric Bachmann. One said, he’d heard the
song “Rotting Strip” somewhere and had immediately bought all his records. When
Bachmann played that song upon his request, I had to look away so as not to
witness his emotional collapse.
As for the other audience members, for them the whole show
was a revelation. “But…how did you even find out about him?” asked the people
behind me, who were Priscilla and Jan’s next door neighbors. “Why isn’t he
better known?” They bought every one of his CDs. Another concert goer, Don, who
was in his 60s and had to share the couch with me because his back hurt, told
me he listens obsessively to college radio. Remember those days, before the
media got detached from time and space by the internet, when you used to wait
breathlessly for a special time to turn on the TV or radio? Don still lives in
that world. “Listen to KKUP tomorrow from 3 to 6,” he told me. “That’s the very
best show out there!”
As for Priscilla and Jan, they told me they first heard of
Eric Bachmann when their son played a Crooked Fingers record on a cross country
journey they took in their van. I am not sure what the leap between loving that
record and booking him for a house concert at their brew pub in a storage locker
in Fremont was, but I salute the spirit that made that happen, and the forces
at work that are doing it. Watching Eric Bachmann play utterly artisanal music
at an artisanal brew pub made me wonder if we’re all on the wrong tack these
days, with our data mining and our google analytics and our obsession with followers...
Instead of looking for the widest possible audience, from now on I want to look
for the smallest one. I want to look into my reader’s eyes, and write for them
one by one.