10B -The Michigan Daily -Waet4 , te. -Thursday, November 30, 1995 - , 0 1 iiifii Yo La Tengo goes to 'Camp' rock'n'roll style By Alexandra Twin Daily-Arts Editor "Wonder if any one will show up," musedYoLaTengofrontman IraKaplan tohiswifeandbandmate,GeorgiaHubley, as they giggled over a misprint in the arts sectionof a local Chicago paper. It had reported their upcoming show as taking place thenight afteritwas actually sched- uled to occur. Despite the inconvenience that this error would no doubt end up causing,theformersmall-press rockcritic was not annoyed, only amused. Much like his wry, alternately cryptic and devastating lyrics, Kaplan himself $eems ready to tackle the everyday with a houghtful blend of humor and skepti- eism, and always with a grain of salt. intentional or not, this approach has done him well overthe band's ten odd-years of existence. To support their eighth release, last April's "Electr-o-pura," the trio has been ouringforagoodsixmonthssolidtouch- ingdownattheirHoboken,N.J,homebase for a mere three weeks between a season of rowded to sold-out club dates, as well as a stint on the second stage of last summer's Lollapalooza festival. In a re- cent interview from his hotel room in Chicggo,the night before the afore-men- tioned, incorrectly publicized Cabaret #Metro show, the singer-guitarist proved to be warm, friendly and admirably self- reflective, despite suffering from an un- derstandable case of fatigue that the long days of touring had no doubt inspired. "Most of what happens happens acci- dentally," he said quietly. "We never forceanything.Wejusttry to allow things to happen." What's happened most recently is a new EP, the aptly-titled "Camp Yo La Tengo," which features a few covers, a fewpreviouslyunreleasedtracksandone new track ("Don Ameche Plays the Stranger")thatwas,reluctantly,leftoffof last April's "Electr-o-pura." Of the song, Kaplan says, "That was the one that we were probably most sorry about it not being on the record, but it got to a point where if it (the record) got much longer, it was going to require two albums and almost two CD's. As we were making different choices about what would make up the body of the record, that one ended up getting outed." The "camp" in the album's title is as much a reference to summer camp as to the band's self-effacing good-humor, which surfaced most recently in the hi- larious 'what-if-we-opened-for-the-re- united-Beatles' video for "Elect-r-o- pura"'sfirstsingle"TomCourtenay." Of thetitle,Kaplansays:"Theideajuststruck me as funny. It (the EP) came out a little later than camp season, but it just struck me as a funny joke, the double meaning ...infact,thejokeprobablylastedlonger than the album does, so it was timely and funny, two good things for us." Inadditiontothenew EP,the bandhas, oflate seenasomewhatlargerresponseat their live shows. "Although we're still playing at the Blind Pig (the band played here two weeks ago), so it's not like the venues have changed so much, maybe a few more people are coming to the show, buttheresponsehasdefinitely beengood. I'dsay that Lollapalooza definitely has brought us more attention, of late, but somewhat intangibly at times. There's the people who saw us or heard of us for the first time there and then there's the people who merely know that we did it and see it as, like, winning some kind of award or something, I guess." While he admitted to having been geekedtomeettheJesusLizardandPoster Children for the first time, and acknowl- edgedthepotentialcommercialrepercus- sions that a high-profile festival like Lollapalooza could create, he found the overall experience to be "never less than strange. But strangeisnot a bad way to be. The concerts have a much different feel- ing aboutthem,the audiences,the time of day that you're playing. There was some- thing kind of energizing about showing up, playing in the middle of the day and moving on with no sound check. They were long days and they were organized in a very unusual way." By contemporary expectations, what's equallyunusual istheband'sapproachto songwriting. "We don't like to rehearse anything too much," he said. Itis for this reason that theband's sixth full-lengthalbum,"MaylSingWithMe?" is to date, their least favorite. "Most of thosesongswerequiteoldbythe timethat we recorded them. I think we felt that we had over-learned the songs by the time that we recorded them. The process be- came too much ofa document of what we already knew so that the record was lack- ing a certain life that it would have had if we had been approaching the songs in a different way." Consistent,butneverstalwart,theband is willing to leam from their misfires. "I thinkthatwithalotofthings,wejustkind of develop theories and stick with them until they're proven wrong. After that record ("May I Sing With Me?"), we made a conscious decision not to write and not to play the songs that we've written live until they're recorded. Gen- erally,we'vestuck tothat.Onthelasttwo records('Electr-o-puraand 1992's"Pain- ful'),by the time we got to the studio,the songshadonly beenplayedonceortwice. They were really new to us." Yet, the songs often change in the playing. "I think that that's another rea- son that we've gotten comfortable not writing new songs as we're touring. In a way,weare writingnewsongs,we'rejust doing it by changing the old ones. When we do start writing new ones, they'll reflectinawayhowtheoldoneswillhave evolved." Atheirrecentsold-out BlindPigshow, the band played a fairly tight and engag- ing set, drawing mostly from their last two albums, but looking back a little farther for the occasional crowd-tester. With bassist James standing as the solid ground between the ethereal and unusu- ally moody Hubley and the always fran- tic,emotionally-wrought(and frequently closed-lidded)Kaplan, the band whirred through asolid90minutes,evenbringing out opening act the Pastels to encore with a shaky, but endearing version of Daniel Johnston's "Speeding Motorcycle." While bands like the Pastels and Stereolabareamonghisfavoritesubjects, one area that sends the usually soft-spo- ken Kaplan into something of a tizzy is "the rock critic thing." Prior to forming Yo La Tengo with Hubley and the first of many bassists to come, Kaplan was a music critic for a small paper in SoHo, New York City. It's a topic that inter- viewersfrequentlybring up. "I thinkthat the band gets a little more attention be- cause of it and gets taken a little less seriously because of it," he said. "It af- fected the band because it was part of my life,buteverybody'slifeaffectstheband. It's no more significant than James and I havingpreviously worked in parkinglots. In fact," he laughed, "that is really the undiscovered influence on the band: It's the parking lot connection." All quips aside, the band has always been recognized as having been deeply influenced by the late, great Velvet Un- derground. Live, and less frequently on record, Kaplan's vocals tend to waver between the melodic, the robust, and oc- casionally the speak-sing mono-drone often affected by the Underground's Lou Reed. Kaplan acknowledges hav- ing always been a big fan of the band and cites this as Yo La Tengo's motiva- tion for choosing to play the Velvet Underground in an upcoming, contro- versial film entitled "I Shot Andy Warhol." While Reed has publicly denounced the film, Kaplan and co. were drawn to the near-surreal possibilities in playing the band whom they've always been held up against; a choice that most bands would probably shy away from. "I think that we were attracted by how perverse it was to play them, what a "mistake" it was; if you're trying to establishyourselfas individualstopick the people whom you're most identi- fied with and play them? It was such a bad idea that we couldn't resist saying 'yes. The band has branded serendipity as their main staple of existence, and as - fortheirnear or distant future,ifKaplan knows, he's certainly not telling. "We a just don't have a plan of what we're doing next. Our big plan rightnow is to be without a plan. That's how we're comfortable. That's how we work best. lan Kaplan leads Yo La Tengo through an amazing set at the Blind I don't like dealing in absolutes." 8 students. 4;Irv -111-17 ch.ante of rememberlng the (-k IT'l h (-I r of y 8 ccllf ,,e t ttjdents surve ,- ed who coul, I w,10,10114 lthe percentave given at the tA'1111110 Of thl") ... Me thf Aa Just a reminder that cramming for fnals will only do so much. Get a good night's sleep. I