- Lucid Nation
Lucid Nation is an L.A. based
experimental rock band started in 1994. The band has morphed and transformed itself over the years, reinventing itself and the sound Lucid Nation produces. Lucid Nation is on the independentrecord label Brain Floss Records .History
The band started in L.A. in
1994 , when founding drummer, Debbie Haliday, met Tamra Spivey and Ronnie Pontiac. Tamra and Ronnie were already playing in a band calledCat Cult , which was short lived. The three soon formed Lucid Nation and in no time they had their first live gig, a fundraiser for ariot grrrl art collective known asRevolution Rising . The show was at a club called "Cell 63", and they were opening for two local riot grrrl bands.Their next show was in a downtown LA art gallery opening for
Team Dresch , next a show opening forBikini Kill inMontebello . Lucid Nation toured the West Coast next, playing seven riot grrrl conventions in one summer.Unfortunately, Debbie Haliday, after her apartment was ransacked and a gang member was shot dead in the doorway to her apartment building, decided to move back to Florida for college. Tamra soon compiled the band's work thus far and put out an
album titled "The Stillness of Over" (1997 ). The album reached #11 most added on the CMJ charts.Tamra Spivey on "The Stillness of Over":"'The Stillness of Over' has a triple meaning. Obviously it refers to the exit of Debbie, and also to the end of the
golden age of riot grrrl. But 'The Stillness of Over' is also the instant when a hurdle is cleared."The last track of the
CD featured a guest drummer, Nick Romero (ofThe Limeys ), who joined the band right after Debbie left and Lucid Nation pushed on. [http://www.lucidnation.com/100songmarch/archive_01.html source 1]After Debbie left the band, Nick became a temporary drummer for the band. They were most often playing
Impala inLittle Tokyo ,Los Angeles . They focused onimprovisation , including lyrics. When Nick left, Erin McCarley took over on drums. Tamra had met Erin in an online riot grrrlnewsgroup . Erin was also in charge of the first riot grrrl chapter in theO.C. . At this point, Erin introduced the band to thepeace punk scene, and the band thrived on the diverse and more peaceful environment (as opposed to the rather charged riot grrrl scene). It was1998 , and they released their second album, "American Stonehenge". [http://www.lucidnation.com/100songmarch/archive_02.html source 2]While on their national tour though, Erin had to fly home, and the band had to replace her. They turned to Tia Sproket, formerly of
Sexpod , who was on a break from touring withLuscious Jackson . After the tour, the band (Tamra and Ronnie) decided to invite Tia to write and record with them back in L.A. Also, Tamra's old bassist teacher, Margaret "Grit" Maldonado (bassist fromGirl Jesus ), began playing with them. Guitarist Danette Lee (formerly ofButt Trumpet ) was also added and once Tia arrived Christmas 1998, the group of musicians known as Lucid Nation began to record. They shortly began to record and were close to signing with Danny Goldberg'sArtemis Records , but faced with a decision between mixes made byNeil Perry (who had worked withNine Inch Nails andSmashing Pumpkins ) or Nitebob (who has worked withIggy and the Stooges ,New York Dolls ,Aerosmith andAlice Cooper ) and Mike Barile (who works withCandiria ), they decided to go with the latter two and began mixing inUnique Studios onTime Square , where Tupac was shot. The studios are gone now.Unfortunately, before this group of musicians could perform their first gig together in
Olympia, Washington at the "Capital Theatre" as Lucid Nation, the band imploded and did not sign with Artemis Records. However, the band put out a CD in1999 of those recordings titled "DNA". The band name after that was often displayed with a capitalized "DNA" in the middle: "luciDNAtion". Alternative Press singled out the song "Las Vegas the Instrumental" when Lucid nation was included in their 100 Bands You Need to Know: 2002. [http://www.lucidnation.com/100songmarch/archive_03.html source 3]In
2000 they put out another collection of recordings from the same sessions called "Suburban Legends", a totally improvisational album. The band proved uncommonly in tune with each other, notably on the track "Bad Seed/Yellow Light". The album was the least popular Lucid Nation album oncollege radio stations. However, the album got the attention ofRandy Roark (assistant toAllen Ginsberg for sixteen years) who was interested in Tamra's writing. [http://www.lucidnation.com/100songmarch/archive_04.html source 4]In February
2001 the band recorded a live show at the famous college radio station KXLU, in L.A. during one of the worst stormsSouthern California had ever seen. The gig would become their fourth album. The only members of Lucid Nation left over from the previous group of musicians were Tamra and Ronnie (two of the three original members). The rest of the band at this time consisted of the following:*John Sellers on bass.
*Troy Taroy on guitar.
*Liam Philpot on saxophone.
*Craig Waters on drums.The album was named "Nonpoetic Rain:Live on KXLU" and distributed in alimited edition of just one hundred home made signed CDs. [http://www.lucidnation.com/100songmarch/main.html source 5]In
2002 the band came out with a double CD named "Tacoma Ballet".Patty Schemel (of Hole) played drums and Greta Brinkman (ofMoby 's backing band) was on bass. Larry Schemel of "The Flesh-eaters" and "Midnight Movies" played guitar. Diane Naegel was recruited on keyboards and Lucid Nation recorded the whole album up inTacoma, Washington atUptone Studio . There were no rehearsals, and Diane had never played with a band before. The band recorded forty-eight tracks, thirty-two of which ended up on the album. Recording ended on September 10, 2001. After some rearrangement, the songs were revealed to depict a story about a girl who realized she was living a lie. [http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/2002_mar/interview_tamra_spivey.html source 6] [http://web.archive.org/web/20030218234735/http://gurl.com/stop/music/artists/lucid_nation.html source 7] "Tacoma Ballet" was broken into two discs of sixteen songs each. The first was labeled "What is the Answer?" and the second one was named "What is the Question?" (inspired by the final words ofGertrude Stein ). The album gained critical praise from Rolling Stone, Magnet Magazine, Randy Roark and more ("see Reviews"). "Tacoma Ballet" hit #8 most added on the CMJ charts in July 2002.Lucid Nation has purposely avoided mainstream success and expressed a desire to stay out of the mainstream, but "Tacoma Ballet" did bring them somewhat into the spotlight of small
college and commercial stations, known as thesecondary market in themusic business . There was a chart to measure those stations, called theNew Music Weekly Combined College Radio and Secondary Chart (aka "NMW Chart"). By November, Lucid Nation had broke through to the top five on the "NMW Chart" and reached #1 by December 2002, after six months of slowly climbing. An example of a local radio station chart with Lucid Nation on its charts can be found here: [http://www.kcpr.org/music/archive/charts_08_05_02.html KCPR] , but this is not the "NMW Chart", only an example of Lucid Nation on a chart in 2002.2004 saw the recording of "Mung Jung Bushi" with Jean Smith on guitar and David Lester ofMecca Normal on guitar. Also on "MJB" was LaFrae Olivia Sci on drums and keyboard. There was no vocals on this album. The album name 'mung jung bushi' was thought up by Jean, and is a rough combination of Chinese and Japanese meaning "grumpy dance".In
2005 Lucid Nation put out a 'best of' album named "Public Domain: The Best of Lucid Nation". This compilation featured songs spanning the entire career of Lucid Nation. Also on the CD Was a song titled "FUBAR", which Lucid Nation collaborated with Jody Bleyle ofTeam Dresch and Hazel on. This song was originally created for theP.E.T.A. compilation calledFat Wreck , but rejected because it was too "raw". Denise Saffren signed on to play drums on "FUBAR" as well.Throughout the band's career, the only two members of Lucid Nation who have stayed with the band since 1994 are Tamra Spivey and Ronnie Pontiac. Tamra Spivey continues to be the
band leader , operating the band's officialMySpace and Lucid Nation's official web page (see "Related Sites and Sources" below).In January of
2006 , Tamra Spivey also began a process she named "The Hundred Song March". With the help of [http://www.atomicpopmonkey.com Jonathan Krop] forprogramming , Tamra began to post one song every day for about one hundred and fifty days, starting in January. The songs are being posted chronologically, from least recent to most recent. They are all available for freedownload byMP3 , RSS andpodcast . The "HSM" was created for kids who could not gain access to Lucid Nation music. Since Lucid Nation's music is mainly sold online, a vast amount of potential listeners were missing out, and Tamra wanted to open her band up to them. Along with posting the songs to download, Tamra also writes a paragraph or two for each song about the song's meaning, the process of creating the track and the musicians featured. The songs are broken up into 'Episodes' which consist of the albums and a brief history of that particular time in Lucid Nation's life. [http://www.lucidnation.com/100songmarch/whatisit.html source 8]Reviews
Rolling Stone wrote "If Spivey sounds spacey, she's not. Her songs range from aggressive, screaming punk to beautifully melodic rhythm andblues , the very definition ofgarage rock . LikeSleater-Kinney andBikini Kill -- Lucid Nation has opened for both -- her band's music is raw, poetic, sloppy and infectious...simply bare-bones, kick-assrock and roll ." [http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5933601/lucid_nation_make_improvised_misery?rnd=1145734361750&has-player=true&version=6.0.12.1483 Rolling Stones article]Magnet Magazine wrote "apunk rock Exile on Main Street with shades ofThe Stooges ,riot grrrl , Pere Ubu, and evenThe Doors ." [http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/2002_mar/interview_tamra_spivey.html Magnet Magazine article]Mario Mesquita Borges ofAllmusic.com wrote "Lucid Nation's creations expose fierce streams of experimentalism within the rock genre by captioning a singular set ofconceptual alternative pop/rock style, somehow following a similar trail as the one unclosed bySonic Youth ... " [http://music.yahoo.com/ar-275418---Lucid-Nation All Music article via Yahoo Music]Band members
*
Tamra Spivey , vocals,guitar , bass,Korg MS-20
*Ronnie Pontiac , guitar, bass, vocals, keyboard
*Justin Citron , guitarPast members
*Jody Bleyle, bass
*Greta Brinkman, bass
*Debbie Haliday, drums, guitar, vocals
*Danette Lee, guitar
*Grit Maldonado, bass
*Erin McCarley, drums, guitar, bass, vocals
*Diane Naegal, keyboard
*Liam Philpot,saxophone
*Nick Romero, drums
*Denise Saffren, drums
*Larry Schemel, guitar
*Patty Schemel , drums
*John Sellers, bass
*Tia Sprocket, drums
*Troy Taroy, guitar
*Craig Waters, drumsDiscography
Albums
*"The Stillness of Over", 1997.
*"American Stonehenge", 1998.
*"DNA", 1999.
*"Suburban Legends", 2000.
*"Nonpoetic Rain: Live on KXLU", 2001.
*"Tacoma Ballet", 2002.Compilations
*"Public Domain: The Best of Lucid Nation", 2005.
**"FUBAR", single, 2005, included in this compilation.ee also
*
List of queercore musicians External links
"sources specific to article information posted with the information pertaining to the source"
* [http://www.lucidnation.com Official band site]
* [http://www.myspace.com/lucidnation Lucid Nation Myspace] , run by Tamra Spivey
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll allmusic.com article on Lucid Nation]
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