Friday, April 06, 2007

Hand of a government man and the holy ghost

Thermals make music from a dark place

By Chris Nixon

San Diego Union-Tribune

April 5, 2007

God reached his hand down from the sky / He flooded the land then he set it afire, sings The Thermals lead singer Hutch Harris over the opening notes of the band's 2006 album “The Body, the Blood, the Machine.”

The Thermals rail against the church, the state and the status quo. The band, whose latest CD is "The Body, the Blood, the Machine," is at the Casbah tonight.Rife with religious imagery and apocalyptic visions, Harris and his partner, Kathy Foster (bass and drums), envision a future controlled by a government with no distinction between church and state.

“(The album is) about a government totally controlled by religion,” said Harris, speaking from his home in Portland, Ore. “I feel we're moving toward it more and more. (The album told) a fantastical tale that took it way into the future to a way-crazy paranoid place.”

With titles like “Pillar of Salt,” “St. Rosa and the Swallows” and “I Might Need You to Kill,” Harris paints a dark future through his lyrics. Under all the religious rhetoric, the band's trademark din of populist punk and Harris' accessible croon bring the message to the masses.

DATEBOOK
The Thermals

8:30 tonight;

The Casbah, 2501 Kettner Blvd., Middletown;

$8-$10; (619) 232-4355

The Thermals certainly aren't the first punk band to rail against the church, the state and the status quo. Yet Harris admits on “Returning to the Fold”: But I still have faith.

“As a punk band, it's natural to write political songs,” said the singer-guitarist. “I was trying to write about what's controlling politics right now, what's pushing things in these directions and why are we focusing on these kinds of laws. Things like anti-abortion or anti-gay rights. It's because of religion, or Christianity specifically. It's kind of ridiculous when we're supposed to separate church and state in this country.”

“The Body, the Blood, the Machine” is The Thermals third album on SubPop Records, home to grunge bands Nirvana and lo-fi bands like Sebadoh in the 1990s. Along with The Shins, Band of Horses and San Diego's The Album Leaf, The Thermals are leading a new generation of bands on SubPop shaping popular alternative and indie music.

“We were raised on SubPop bands, from the grunge bands to the lo-fi bands,” recalled Harris. “The Shins had just put out their first album when we were signed, so SubPop had already started its rebirth. In our press kit, we described ourselves as 'Nirvana and Mudhoney meets Sebadoh and Eric's Trip.' We were really stoked to be on SubPop. All the inspiration for our band came from SubPop bands from the past.”

Harris and Foster also achieved another dream on the latest disc. Brendan Canty, drummer of the seminal post-punk band Fugazi, worked with the duo in producing the album's 10 thundering tracks.

“(Canty) was pumped and stoked to work on the record. He had a real good time,” said Harris. “He would turn the sound all the way up when we were mixing, to the point where I really couldn't stand in the room. I would stand in the door way and he'd just be jumping up and down laughing. It was a dream come true to work with him and have him get along with us so well.”

Chris Nixon is a San Diego music writer.