A sharp-dressing, fast-talking, Marxist soul brother, Ian
Svenonius is one of the few outsized personas left in rock ‘n’ roll. Or
so it seemed. The truth, as always, is a bit more complicated.
The frontman of the near-mythological Nation of Ulysses from the
certifiably mythological Dischord Records/Washington, DC, hardcore
scene, Svenonius has often appeared larger than life. Adding a haunted
funk revival to radical politics he moved on to the Make-Up, a band
that, with a few brilliant moments, often appeared better on the
proverbial other side. Outside of performing with other (less notable)
acts since 2001, Svenonius has earned a controversial and outspoken
image. In 2006, he released a collection of essays, The Psychic
Soviet, a pink-jacketed, pocket-sized wink toward Mao’s The
Little Red Book full of strange, nuanced looks at rock through
politics. Svenonius also hosts Soft Focus on VBS.tv; there, in ornate locations like the
Guggenheim, he interviews noted, often profound, reluctant, and/or
canonical artists like Will Oldham, Cat Power, Penny Rimbaud, and Kevin
Shields.
So when it came time for our interview I felt a stinging
nervousnessโbe on your toes or he’ll nail you to the wall. But it
wasn’t to be. Svenonius, the high-stepping radical, was a more subdued,
affable person than I’d been led to believe. Over my short course in
this business I’ve met a few far-out, eccentric musiciansโthose
who fully exist inside the wildness of their art. Scorching soul
brothers and sisters, the possible and probable kin of Sun Ra. Bad
Brains’ Darryl Jenifer, Sharon Jones, and our very own Arrington de
Dionyso (who appears on Down with Liberty… Up with Chains!,
Svenonius’ new album under the moniker Chain and the Gang) come to
mind. These types are beyond cultivating personasโthey simply
are.
On the topic of his own persona, Svenonius could not, or would not,
speak to its creation or existence. We covered issues that seemed to be
extensions of themes in his book, and while engaged, Svenonius was
rarely forceful. He wavered, mulled ideas, and occasionally
contradicted himself (enjoying struggle and feeling as an outsider, yet
digging being part of the in-crowd, someone who Calvin Johnson calls up
to make an album on a whim).
What it all suggests, to me at least, is that rather than just
spouting off loud, radical-sounding ideas, Svenonius works diligently
to get there. Strangely enough, deflating that
socio-political-intellectual bubble somewhat made him easier to like.
It is perhaps Svenonius’ own off-hand self-description that best fits:
“I’m like a tramp, you know. I just try to keep busy.”
Which finally brings us to his newest album: Chain and the Gang’s
Down with Liberty… indeed spearheaded by a Calvin Johnson
phone call and crafted with the loose, collaborative K Records stable.
It’s somewhat familiar territory for Svenoniusโdark soul-garage
vamps with paranoid, criminal, and political preach-speak leading the
marchโand it’s his best work since the Make-Up. Raw, shambolic,
and tuned up from a long tour, Chain and the Gang figure to pack a
visceral stomp and crack. After all, one of the few pointed opinions
Svenonius shared was that strong, engaging live performances have
diminished over the years. Expect him to address the issue tonight.
