One of the more endearing traits of the bands who regularly play the east side of Los Angeles is that their members often aren’t the complete egomaniacs you normally expect musicians to be. It’s not "The Me Show" with them all the time, they probably don’t wear eyeliner or have haircuts that are smarter than they are, and they seem more concerned about sharing songs than propelling their personalities to superstardom. And rarely is that more apparent than with The Happy Hollows: drummer Chris Meanie is easily one of the nicest guys you’ll ever meet, bass player/vocalist Charlie Mahoney reminds you of that semi-quiet, friendly guy from your advanced history class in high school, and lead singer/guitarist Sarah Negahdari is kind of magic… a grinningly happy median between spiritual and silly. Or as Vonnegut would put it, a "wampeter."
Haven't heard them yet? Imagine if The Pixies were more experimental or Deerhoof attempted to be listenable. The band and I met for brunch a few Sundays back to discuss the state of the things for them right now, where they’re going next, and what it’s like making a home halfway between art and pop.
How do you define your music? What are you trying to do with it?
Charlie: Well, I think the thing about us is that we try to hit a wide range of topics and issues… Basically any topic is up for grabs. "Vietnam" on the last EP was about the US government using fear in different eras to promote wars.
Then on the new album, we have "A Man, A Plan, A Canal" I took a palindrome and tried to imagine a situation of being on a boat with no Panama Canal and having to go all the way around Tierra Del Fuego at the tip of South America. So, it’s kind of a comedic song in a way.
Sarah: I think our band is very playful... I don’t like anything too prettied up. I just like the experience of it in its raw form and just the joy of making music and the joy of being alive.
Every person has a lot of layers and music doesn’t have to just be about woes. Because there’s so much to say. Life is so joyous and sometimes people think that if you’re in a rock band you have to be filled with [sadness or] just talk about your relationships. There’s so much of the human spirit and I just want to address like the silly part and the raw part and the angry part and the complete absurd part.
Charlie: People may say that because we have a lot of different songs and different sounds, it’s not coherent, but I don’t think the human experience is necessarily one of coherence. We have a lot of different sides to us and sometimes we act differently around different people and in different situations, so it’s kind of like whatever comes to mind.
I think even if listeners don’t pick up on the subtext or understand the unconventionality, they latch onto your enthusiasm. Because you’re a very enthusiastic band live.
Charlie: (Laughs.) Yeah, we are.
I don’t think I’ve ever come to one of your shows and not had a lot of fun.
Sarah:
Thank you. I just think I got so bored of going to shows and seeing
people miserable. That’s fine if that’s what you want to express.
Charlie: There’s a place for sadness…
Sarah: Yeah, it’s not that we’re trying to sing happy songs, it’s that (laughs) I have some really sad songs too, but experience is so varied. I just think that the fact that I have fingers and hands … you don’t understand … I’ll be playing and I’m just like oh my god, some people don’t have hands and they don’t have fingers and legs.
Charlie: Don’t write that… (Laughs.)
Sarah: No, write it! Write it! Because it’s a joy. It’s a gift that I can do it. It’s a joy that I can do it. I mean, I’m telling you, I’m filled with gratitude that I can do it.
How did you guys meet?
Charlie:
Chris and I knew each other from DC. And we were playing together and
kind of trying out a bunch of different guitarists and people around
town. We’d been playing with these two guys for about a month or so and
that didn’t work out, so we started again. We put an ad on Craig’s List and Sarah answered the ad. So, it was good ol' Craig’s List.
You’d since moved out to Los Angeles?
Charlie: Yeah, we’d been out here for six or eight months. We moved out from DC, but not together. We knew each other in DC but we moved out here separately by chance.
So the first practice, Sarah walked in with her guitar and knee socks up and we didn’t really know what to make of her. She took forever to set up her gear.
Like most people, when you first meet them, everyone’s kind of nervous and you just plug in and start playing and see how it goes – but Sarah wanted to talk for like an hour before we even started playing. And we were in one of those hourly rehearsal places, so it was costing money. She took forever to set up her pedals… (Laughs.)
Sarah: (Laughs) I basically had auditioned so many bass players and drummers… At that point, it had been a year… I’d been playing under the name The Happy Hollows by myself and so I had a ton of questions – I wanted to make sure that no one was republican. (Laughs.)
So, I set up my guitar and we played through Tambourine, which is a song I’d had already, and I just had said play along and we played through once and I totally knew they were the right guys for me. I totally knew. So, I was like, “Alright! Wanna be in my band or what?!” After an hour of talking and one song, I knew.
Charlie: You were playing a show already that night.
Sarah: Yeah, at Zen Sushi by myself.
Charlie: So, Chris and I thought it was cool that Sarah was already playing shows. That’s why we started playing shows after about two weeks of practice. We didn’t have everything totally perfect. We just went out and started playing.
How long ago was that?
Charlie: Two
years... Around two years now. But since we started playing right away,
it’s been a big transition from where we are today. When we first
started, we hadn’t even written our songs. Sarah had written a few
songs and I’d written a few songs and we were just playing songs we’d
written separately.
Then over the next six or eight months, Sarah wrote new songs, we wrote songs together, so… there’s probably just one song from our first days that we still play. One or two.
Which ones?
Charlie: Tambourine.
The first song you played together.
Charlie: That’s going to be on the new album, too.
Sarah: But, yeah. That’s my just my style… [She puts her hands out.] Here’s us in process. I don’t need everything to be perfect. I think art is about the imperfect a lot of times. [Charlie laughs.] I really mean it. I find it so charming when bands play and they make a little mistake and they all laugh.
How did your first EP come together?
Sarah: Basically, our friend Rob from Death to Anders,
the lead singer, he worked at a recording studio and he was just, like,
“Just come in overnight and I’ll record you.” And we’d been together
two months so we quickly wrote a bunch of songs… Meteors, Trick or Treat… We wrote them all in a couple weeks.
Charlie: They were probably all written within three weeks and recorded.
Sarah: Yeah, we went in overnight one weekend. We did it just to book shows… to have something to send to promoters. So, it was crazy that people ended up liking it. (Laughs.) We got three or four videos from it. It was insane.
Charlie: It probably wasn’t ever intended to be a real EP. It was more like a demo. But Rob did a really great job in the amount of time we had to do it and it’s a credit really to him for bringing the songs together in a pretty good form… and not charging us too much. So, it ended up a lot better than we thought it would.
The songs stand out and the production was good, but it was definitely quickly put together.
So you’re talking to labels?
Charlie:
We’ll have to see what happens. We’re probably not going to put it out
ourselves because it’s hard work. All the promotion… It can be done
these days, but you have to basically make it your full time job.
Yeah... Ohmygod...
The food arrives and we stop talking to eat. It's literally the best French Toast I’ve ever had.
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