Brant Bjork

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Brant Bjork
Brant Bjork performing in Exeter, 2006
Brant Bjork performing in Exeter, 2006
Background information
Origin Palm Springs, CA, USA
Genre(s) Stoner Rock
Desert Rock
Occupation(s) Musician
Record producer
Instrument(s) Drums
Guitar
Vocals
Label(s) Duna Records
Website Official Site

Brant Bjork is an American musician from Palm Desert, California, who is a drummer, producer, guitarist and one of the more notable figures in the Stoner Rock and Desert Rock scenes.

Contents

[edit] Musical career

[edit] Early career

While in high school, Bjork got together with locals Josh Homme, Chris Cockrell, (later Nick Oliveri), and John Garcia resulting in the formation of Kyuss. Kyuss was signed to Elektra Records and became the first desert rock band to achieve international success. Bjork helped issue what has become one of the decade's landmark releases, 1992's Blues for the Red Sun, which helped create the ensuing stoner rock movement. Bjork also showcased his songwriting talents, writing two of the album's highlights, "Green Machine" and "50 Million Year Trip (Downside Up)". In 1993, Bjork left the band following the release of Welcome to Sky Valley citing that it wasn't fun anymore. After Sabbath’s Ward and the Melvins’ Crover, Bjork is the name most often cited as an influence by other drummers in the burgeoning genre, based primarily on his groundbreaking playing on the first few recordings by Kyuss: Wretch, Blues for the Red Sun, and (Welcome to) Sky Valley.

Named for “the sons of Kyuss,” monsters in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, Kyuss first came together around guitarist Josh Homme and vocalist John Garcia in the small Southern California town of Palm Desert in the late ’80s. The band members moved to Los Angeles in 1990 and signed to Chameleon Records after 13 performances in the big city. All of their dreams seemed to be coming true, but after two years of non-stop touring, Bjork abruptly quit and ceded the drum throne to his friend and fellow desert rat, Alfredo Hernandez.

“I just burned out,” Bjork says. “I was drinking too much and smoking too much—I was an 18-year-old kid who was playing in this crazy rock band and I had no idea of what I was doing. I was just lucky that I was smart enough to realize that I had to stop before it killed me.”

The aspect of Bjork’s playing that other drummers love most is the huge wash of a massive ride cymbal that hovers over a heavy riff like an ominous storm cloud. “It probably comes from growing up in the garage,” he says. “It was loud, and I was never the best drummer. I was never technically very good—I taught myself how to play—and I just wanted to be heard and to make noise. I didn’t know what the difference was between a ride and a crash. When you’re playing punk rock and heavy rock as a kid with loud guitars, there were a lot of areas where in between riffs where the music would breathe, and I didn’t want to hear that little ping-y sound. When you ping on the ride, it’s almost like playing a note on the guitar, and when you crash on the ride, it’s like playing a power chord on the guitar. So I just kind of filled up some space.”

Bjork has always filled a bigger role than just playing drums; he also plays guitar and bass, and he wrote some of Kyuss’s most memorable songs, including the anthemic “Green Machine.” He continues to contribute to the songwriting for Fu Manchu; he produced the band’s first album, 1994’s No One Rides for Free, and he joined on drums in time for 1997’s Action Is Go. He has also recorded a psychedelic and soulful solo album, Jalamanta, on Man’s Ruin in 1999.

“I’ve never said, ‘I wanna be the drummer.’ I just loved music and I wanted to make records,” Bjork says. “As a kid, I was almost listening as a producer, before I even knew what that word meant. Punk rock allowed a kid like me with low self-confidence to get involved in music and start performing. I chose drums simply because they looked like the most exciting instrument, but I was equally compelled to play guitar and bass and create music as a whole. It was sort of a challenge, because I was caught in this stereotypical role of being the drummer—the guy with the backbeat who sits in the back and holds the rhythm—but I also wanted to take on some responsibilities as far as creating and art and writing songs. I had things I wanted to express.”

As for how his drumming has developed, Bjork is self-deprecating to a fault. “I was never a studious drummer; I was interested in playing great songs,” he says. “Let’s face it: It begins and ends with songs. If you don’t write great songs, big deal. In Kyuss, I never even thought like, ‘I’m the beat guy and I’m gonna lock in with the bassist to play a tight rhythm.’ I was like, ‘I’m gonna lock in with Josh and watch the way he strums and the way we move from chord to chord and the progressions and I’m just gonna roll with him.’ It was just kind of a natural thing.” Proudest recorded moments: “There’s a song on Welcome to Sky Valley (Elektra Records) called ‘Demon Cleaner’; it was a first take, and there was a roll that was kind of my version of Ginger Baker. It probably sounds nothing like Ginger Baker, but that’s kind of where my head was at at the time—this rhythmic roll thing on the toms. And I really liked the drumming on the first track of the last Fu Manchu record [King of the Road, Mammoth Records], ‘Hell On Wheels.’ I thought that was a good one; it just had a lot of energy and it kind of flowed nicely. I always like to hear flow.”

His gear: “I don’t really have any endorsements; I’m not real good in that department. I’ve played Ludwig drums my whole life. Ironically, I’ve just ordered and received today a new kit that I’m gonna try out for the new Fu Manchu record, and if I like it, I’ll tour with it. It’s a clear Fibes. I bought some Ludwig Vistalites a few years ago, and I used them on the Brant Bjork and the Operators record. They’re beautiful, and I love the Vistalite sound. But my Ludwigs are ’75, and I didn’t want to take them on the road.”

[edit] Brant Bjork and the Bros

Brant Bjork and the Bros
Brant Bjork and the Bros

In 2004, Brant Bjork toured Europe and the US under the title "Brant Bjork and the Bros." He was backed by the talents of Dylan Roche on bass guitar, Michael Peffer on drums, and Cortez on guitar. In 2005, the Bros went into the studio and recorded Bjork's fifth album Saved by Magic. It was released on August 1, 2005 and features 2 full discs. The music style is a mix of Jalamanta, and The Sounds of Liberation. Brant Bjork and the Bros. have opened for bands such as Danko Jones and surf rock pioneer Dick Dale.

Make no mistake...we’re a real band. Musically speaking The Bros bring it. Organic Rock. It grooves. It Flows. It’s psychedelic. It’s tough. It’s beautiful. It’s Classic. The future is now and Brant Bjork and The Bros are here. - Brant Bjork

2006 saw the release of Sabbia, a stoned-out "visual soundtrack" by film maker Kate McCabe. Sabbia brings the low desert and landscapes of California onto film with a full soundtrack by Bjork. Brant cites that the motivation of Sabbia was to bring the desert scene to a lot of people who haven't experienced it for themselves.

In 2007, Bjork has plans to tour in Latin America; Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico. Something Bjork has never done. A new live DVD and 3 new records are on the shelf; one with the Bros and a couple of solo efforts.[1] The first solo album is entitled Tres Dias and is tentatively scheduled for release on February 27, 2007.

[edit] Discography

[edit] The Bro's Equipment

On a gig on April 18th 2005 at the Mudd Club in Berlin-Mitte, Brant Bjork was playing a Fender guitar and used a Marshall JCM 900 amplifier.

Addendum: Normally Brant Bjork plays a Fender Stratocaster (Sunburst, post CBS, small headstock) through a Marshall Plexi (also known as Superlead) 100 Watt Amplifier. However, the Sunburst was smashed at a recent (July 2005) Italian gig, so now he's been seen using a white Fender Stratocaster (with a Muhammed Ali picture near the jack). On July 19th 2006 in Exeter Brant was using a sunburst Stratocaster with a Squier neck and a sticker of the Virgin Mary by the bridge pickup. This went into a fuzz, then a wah, then a Boss Blues Driver, with the Marshall Plexi and a Marshall 410 cabinet the amplifier used.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ridley, James. "Brant Bjork chats to PBS writer, James Ridley.", PBS 106.7FM. Retrieved on 2007-03-01.

[edit] External link

Kyuss
John Garcia | Josh Homme
Bass: Chris Cockrell | Nick Oliveri | Scott Reeder
Drums: Alfredo Hernandez | Brant Bjork
Discography
Studio albums: Sons of Kyuss (1990) | Wretch (1991) | Blues for the Red Sun (1992) | Welcome to Sky Valley (1994) | ...And the Circus Leaves Town (1995)
Split EPs: Shine! (1996) | Kyuss/Queens of the Stone Age (1997)
Compilations: Muchas Gracias: The Best of Kyuss (2000)
Related articles
Stoner rock | Desert rock | Queens of the Stone Age | Hermano | Fu Manchu | Unida | Slo Burn
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