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Gruntwork - By Marc Savlov, The Austin Chronicle (August 2000)
Russell Crowe is in peak form these days. Not only did the New Zealand-born
actor snare critical acclaim (and a Best Actor nomination) for 1999's
searing Michael Mann feature, The Insider, but this summer's hyper kinetic
sword 'n' sandal smash Gladiator, has proven that the laconically intense
actor can carry an entire studio blockbuster on his own. As he's shown
in Proof, Romper Stomper, and LA Confidential, there's much more to Crowe
than meets the testosterone.
Of course, this is much ado about nada to Crowe, who casually refers
to his fast-track acting career as his 'dayjob' and shuns the limelight
like a seasoned vet. Crowe's driving passion, and the one that's more
or less responsible for keeping his feet on the ground through-out his
meteoric rise, is his music, and more specifically his work with the band
Thirty Odd Foot of Grunts - a name taken from the film Virtuosity.
TOFOG, as they have been known to fans for the better part of a decade,
combine a folksy, vaguely pub-rock sensibility with Crowe's innate gift
for spinning hardscrabble yarns about bad luck and busted hearts; if they
weren't from 'Down Under', the only other place they could hail from would
likely be Austin. The trio of Stubb's shows they're performing while here
in town laying tracks for a new CD should ease a few minds restlessly
recalling the last time Keanu Reeves' Dogstar played here.
Crowe spoke with the Chronicle from London, where he'd just wrapped the
lengthy Proof of Life shoot, about the band, it's music, and the subversive
pros and cons of Napster. This is from a bloke who asked me to make sure
and list his band-mates [see below] and also to insert his name "down
at the back somewhere, and misspell it if you can."
So without further ado: Russell Crowe.
Austin Chronicle: How long has TOFOG been together?
Russell Crowe: I met the guitarist, Dean Cochran in 1984, and we did our
first record together in 1985 with a band called 'Roman Antics', ironically
enough. That band was together for about two and a half, three years,
when Dean and 1 started writing songs together. That's the seed of Thirty
Odd Foot of Grunts.
Around '92, I was feeling the pressure, the weight of the films I was
doing in Australia. I really wanted to get back into what I used to do,
with the music, so we started doing it again regularly. Bassist Garth
Adam has played with us since '87, and drummer Dave Kelly has been with
us for about five years. For the last two and a half years, we've been
playing as a six piece, with Stewart Kirwan, the trumpet player, and Dave
Wilkins, who was the support act for the last tour and would sit in with
same backing vocals, adding the missing thing.
Austin Chronicle: Where do you play when you're on your home turf? I
hesitate to call this a bar band, but I can really see TOFOG in that sort
of Smokey, late-night venue
Russell Crowe: Yeah, we don't do concert halls, we do pubs. In Australia
they're called beer barns, and some of them are pretty big. They take
a couple thousand people. Pretty much like Stubb's, I'd imagine.
Austin Chronicle: What kind of audience do you draw? I imagine there
are plenty of folks who come to the show just to see Russell Crowe the
actor.
Russell Crowe: We still have people that come and see us who were buying
Roman Antix records in New Zealand in the Eighties. It's funny, though,
because it's developed and grown so much. If Dean and me weren't still
fertile as a song writing partnership, then we would have stopped it years
ago, you know? But every time we get together, we just walk past each
other in the studio and another song pops out.
As long as it's healthy, it's a completely credible medium for me to be
creative in as far as I'm concerned. And you know as well as I do, mate,
that there's nothing credible at this point in pop-culture history for
doing both, right? I don't do it for anything other than the fact that
I love doing it. I've been writing songs since I was a little kid, and
it's really just a part of me. And that goes for all the sort of performance-art
things that I do.
They're all lifelong commitments.
Austin Chronicle: Give me some idea of your musical background. Were
you one of those kids who grew up in a musical household with all sorts
of instruments and prodding?
Russell Crowe: Funnily enough, my parents had a really limited music collection
even though they were great music lovers. They used to go out quite a
bit and socialize at dine-and-dance restaurants, which were a big thing
when I was a little kid. My mom had an Elvis Presley bootleg called Elvis
Sings Go1den Hits that she got off some American sailor who was in town,
and the title was the only thing in English - the rest was in Cantonese
or whatever.
When you're a little kid, you get obsessed about certain albums so you
don't really get to know music in general - you specifically get to know
a bunch of songs. Then you move on to the next discovery, applying the
same sort of thing. You play these albums to death and then get more and
more of them. It was a musical household from that point of view, but
not from the fact that they played instruments or anything. They would
both sing a little bit, but only in the shower variety.
Austin Chronicle: How did you decide on Austin as a place to record your
new album?
Russell Crowe: The whole seed of this idea started the last time I met
you [during the LA. Confidential press tour in 1998]. I was just walking
up and down the main road there -
Austin Chronicle: Sixth Street.
Russell Crowe: - Right. Taking in all the sounds and thinking this is
the ideal place to record. You can just walkout of the studio, walk along,
get a bit of inspiration, get some Shiner Bock - cracker! - and then wander
back into the studio and have another go, right? It's small enough in
terms of being a containable town- transport's easy, all that sort of
stuff - but it's really about the way people focus on live music.
I went and saw the Asylum Street Spankers and a few other things when
I was there, and it was really a very inspirational place. I'd rather
the band be city like that than lost in a sort of jungle in New York or
something and plus, our songs, they need a bit of space, you know?
They need an audience that likes to listen to more than their own voice.
Which is what you tend to find in Los Angeles and New York, in my opinion.
Austin Chronicle: You have a pretty unique idea of distribution for the
band, in that you rely almost exclusively on the Website to get the music
out there, right?
Russell Crowe: I have a cottage-industry attitude toward it. A number
of years ago, the band decided that we wouldn't bother with contracts
anymore; we'd just have the Web site [www.gruntland.com] and do our own
thing. We get about 12,000-15,000 hits a week on the site, and the cool
thing about it is that people just discover it for themselves. They don't
get it forced down their throat by advertising budgets set up to get the
high-rotation, FM radio-friendly sort of thing. When people find it, they
take it to heart, and they really commit to it. A lot of fans of the music
are really annoyed that I'm even a movie actor.
Austin Chronicle: So what's your take on the big controversy surrounding
Napster?
Russell Crowe: I totally understand it from the band's point of view,
because the audience that's downloading that music are the core music
fans, the ones that normally would be paying for the band's music. On
the other hand, I can still see it from Napster's point of view, too.
I used to do the same thing off the radio with a cassette, you know?
Austin Chronicle: Has your increasing celebrity impacted the band in
a positive or negative way? Obviously the bands draw has been increasing
exponentially.
Russell Crowe: Yeah, but see, we've been selling out shows - live shows
- for the past four or five years. I'm not sure, because of the places
we play and the style of venue we play, that there's much more headroom
for an increased audience that we want to be comfortable with, you know?
We just turned down a stadium tour, with all these big bands because that's
just not our thing.
I think the type of music we play really has to have a sort of personal
venue, and I think about 2,000 people is where we top it off. That many
people can still be a very personal experience. We just take it as it
comes along, and sure, the Web site did get a petty massive increase in
attention just recently, but I think the cool thing about it is that people
don't come back unless they discover something cool that they like.
Austin Chronicle: One last question for you: How does Russell Crowe describe
TOFOG's music?
Russell Crowe: Well, instead of going though some elaborate kind of description,
I just tell people its folk music. You know? In most people's heads, that
makes them think of some kind of dusty, acoustic setting, which obviously
isn't really what the band is about. But I don't think there's any more
accurate description of what we do. It's folk music, with true stories,
and every piece of music has a narrative. Some of them are a little oblique
and maybe you can't necessarily follow the story A to Zed, but that's
not a bad thing either. It just makes you think.
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