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SCAVENGER QUARTET-
BIOGRAPHY
They
haven't yet made a genre you can put The Scavenger Quartet into; the
music is sophisticated and challenging, yet often child-like. The band's
setup looks like a yard sale exploded on stage- toy piano, music boxes
and sirens augment what could appear to be a jazz combo: organ,
doublebass, tenor sax and drums. The instrumentation is deceptive,
however; this group has a singular sound that is its own.
Bandleader Frank Pahl scavenged three like-minded musicians from groups
around the Detroit area and set them to the task of learning his latest
batch of material. Joel Peterson, of Immigrant Suns, on bass; Tim
Holmes, of Major Dents, on tenor sax; Pahl's longtime band-mate from
Only a Mother, Doug Gourlay, plays drums. In addition, Pahl and Holmes
build automated musical instruments that sometimes accompany the group.
The instrument parts come from small motors, Erector Sets, Lincoln Logs,
rotisseries and other unlikely places.
The Scavenger Quartet's debut CD, "Whistling For Leftovers" is
out now on Phonetic Records (it's released in Europe by Snowdonia). Its
eleven tracks contain more musical ideas than most bands have in a
career. All the compositions are by Frank Pahl, who has a steady stream
of commissions for theater, dance and art performances. Some of the
tracks on "Whistling For Leftovers" were originally
commissioned works. If that all sounds high-brow, don't worry-this band
doesn't have a stuffy conception of art. It's sometimes funny, sometimes
moody and always full of jittery energy.
Pahl and Gourlay's old group Only a Mother toured Europe, Pahl toured
Japan as a one-man band, Peterson has toured incessantly with Immigrant
Suns and Holmes even did some time with Marvin Gaye's band. Chances are
good the Scavengers will hit the road too. Don't miss them in your town.
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