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Bio
Switching Gears with Derailleur
by Newt Gingrich, R-GA

Meeting the members of the apres-garde art rock troupe
Derailleur in a south Minneapolis speakeasy, I was shocked by many things:
the respect, bordering on fear, accorded to these youngsters by the gentlemen
who ran the establishment; by singer/bassist Mark Kalar's insatiable appetite
for burgundy with a squirt of lighter fluid; by singer/guitarist/keyboardist
Grant Weeks' penchant for staring at a tiny, portable DVD player upon
which he appeared to be viewing Thundercats without sound; by the size
of the Bowie knife guitarist Jay Bauer-Clapp obsessively sharpened throughout
the interview; and by the untroubled ease with which the quintet wore
their kilts, despite the bitter Minnesota cold outside.
This lackadaisical kilt-wearing stood in stark contrast
to the fiery Derailleur I'd seen on stage several times before. In my
years in academia and the US House of Representatives, I have seen some
truly fucked-up shit. I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack
ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. C-beams glittering in the dark
near the Tannhauser gate. Tom DeLay doing coke off of the ass of a dead
hooker while Rick Santorum rubbed oil onto a hypnotized boa constrictor.
But none of that, repeat, none of that compares to the fury of Derailleur
live and in concert. Singer/drummer Bob Brown kicks his drums with such
fury you'd think he'd grown a couple of extra legs (this is not true;
his extra legs were surgically attached in the Netherlands). Singer/guitarist/keyboardist
Keith Pille howls with the sort of fury usually only seen in a back-alley
chain fight. The five of them make a godawful, glorious, sweeping, pulsing,
rhythmic noise that makes you feel like the Almighty himself just hit
you up with a straight-into-the-spinal-column shot of oxycontin and cialis.
"You know what really gets me jazzed?" Weeks
has told me several times. "When I get to rocking really hard, I
can stare down from the stage, pick out a woman in the crowd, lock eyes
with her, and make 'er spontaneously combust. No lie, man. If my rock
mojo's working hard enough, I can make chicks burst into flames."
You can see, then, why I was surprised to find the
five of them sitting so calmly in man-skirts. What I discovered rather
quickly, though, was that the calm was not as pharmaceutically-derived
as I expected. It turns out that, in addition to taking rock music to
strange new places that might cripple the human psyche, the band are advanced
masters of Nin Jah, a little-known offshoot of Zen Buddhism. They were,
in fact, experiencing a group moment of enlightenment while they spoke
to me.
"Sorry if we seem sort of out of it," Kalar
said. "We're actually wide awake, but it's mostly on the ethereal
plane. We're having a hell of a conversation thereBob's only got
one more constant to work out before he can unite the electroweak force
with quantum gravity. You should join us there."
"We're also sorta tired from saving those orphans
last night," Pille added.
In retrospect, I shouldn't have been surprised. Back
when I was in Washington, Derailleur would routinely dump large buckets
of absurdity into my life. The band, then struggling under the name "Grumpy
Alice" (they switched to Derailleur upon learning that "Grumpy
Alice" is the nom de guerre of Toronto's leading madame) was barely
eking out a living doing van tours of the southern US. At the time, they
pursued a sort of jangly guitar-pop with a roots-rock feel, and the people
of Dixie didn't really go for it, nor did they go for the jazz-inflected
stylings of singer/guitarist/keyboardist Joe "Joeklahoma" Plummer.
Down on their luck, Grumpy Alice developed a habit of crashing on the
floor of my Washington office, often showing up bloody and vomit-encrusted
right before I was scheduled to speak to a church group or some tourists
from back home. They were not above paging me on the House floor and asking
me to get the Senator Bill Frist to prescribe them some Vico-tussin to
help with the persistent coughs they all suffered after picking up tuberculosis
while imprisoned in Turkey.
Strange days, my friends, strange days.
Things picked up for Derailleur after the year 2000.
Citing creative differences, Plummer left the band to become a killer
for hire (I don't want to say more than I need to, but the word on the
street is that Billy Crystal had better look under his car the next time
he goes to start it). The band muddled on for a few months (which included
a disastrous week in Toronto that led directly to the name switch) before
hooking up with Weeks, an accomplished wizard. Bauer-Clapp was hired by
a rival band to kill them; but after an epic battle, he was welcomed into
the fold. Since then, it's been nothing but up, up, up for the five of
them. As of this writing, they're finishing up studio work on an album
that, Kalar claims, "would make Lenny Bruce blush. Really. This thing's
filthier than Bob Saget's standup act."
When asked what comes next, the members of Derailleur
demur even on the ethereal plane. "I don't know," Brown says
finally. "We'd like to tour, but it's tough. People get so worked
up when we take the stage that the National Guard has asked us to take
it easy because they're sick of getting called out all the time. We'll
work something out. There's always BET."
Indeed. There's always BET. Thank god for that.
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