Moon
Hooch
@ the Love Supreme Jazz Festival
2 July 2016
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
oon Hooch - saxophonists Mike Wilbur and Wenzl McGowen, and drummer
James Muschler met while all three were students at The New School
for Jazz and Contemporary Music in New York City. They found in
each other a similar drive to work hard, practice, and create new,
unusual sounds with their instruments. They first played in the
summer of 2010, busking in front of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Later that summer, the band set up to play on the L train subway
platform at Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn. Above ground and a few blocks
away, Modest Mouse was playing a concert at the Williamsburg Waterfront,
which was rained out just a few songs in; hundreds of hungry music
fans flooded the subway and stumbled upon Moon Hooch initiating
an impromptu underground rave, along with a habit of having their
platform parties shut down by the police. (They’ve since been
banned from playing in the Bedford station by a weary NYPD. Fortunately,
there are plenty of other, friendlier stations... for now.)
The ‘cave music’ sound developed around an organic
approach to playing electronic dance music. The looping, frenetic
sax melodies and Muschler’s furious drumming are fierce and
trance-like, as Wilbur and McGowen’s rock back and forth,
pushing and pulling each other from across the stage. Sometimes
McGowen switches over to a contrabass clarinet, or inserts a long
cardboard tube into the bell of his sax to create the deep, throbbing
womp of a dubstep bassline. It's manic, and thrilling, and perhaps
a little bit evil.
One time, someone hollered at them between songs, “What are
you called?” The trio didn’t have a name yet, but Mike
blurted out “MOON JUICE!” It seemed like a
good fit, until they Googled the name and found a number of other
bands were already using it, so a few minutes of thesaurus-diving
yielded a suitable synonym for ‘juice,’ and Moon Hooch
was born.
They recorded their self-titled debut album at The Bunker Studio
in Brooklyn in the space of one 24-hour period. Their fanatical
rehearsal regimen and hours-long busking sessions had prepared them
well; most of the 13 songs were recorded in a single take.
After several months of busking on New York City subway platforms,
Moon Hooch was spotted by former Soul Coughing frontman Mike Doughty,
who was so taken with them that he invited them to open his national
tour. That immediacy that served them so well in the underground
translated nicely to rock club stages, as Moon Hooch began building
a fan base across the country. Early in the tour, the band asked
an audience in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, if anyone had a floor they
could crash on; the couple who offered their house joked that the
band’s music would make a great alarm clock. Well, the Hooch
abides: at 9 AM the next morning, Moon Hooch was set up in their
living room, and brought them dancing down the stairs to greet the
day. (Lest you think this apocryphal, the whole thing's on YouTube.)
The band continued to play shows above ground, including gigs supporting
Galactic and a CMJ showcase with the Soul Rebels and Maceo Parker,
and U.S. tours supporting Lotus and They Might Be Giants. In the
summer of 2013, Moon Hooch will graduate from busking at the ferry
dock during New York's Governor’s Ball Music Festival to playing
the festival itself. And their album, heretofore only available
from the hand of a band member at gig, will finally get wider distribution
when it's re-released by Hornblow/Palmetto Records in June, with
a new song added for good measure.
By organifying electronic music, by producing synthetic sounds
with acoustic musical machines, Moon Hooch creates hope that anything
synthetic can be replaced with something organic.
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