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Spin '94
by Rebecca Odes
The members of Superchunk agree that probably the best thing about their
perch atop the shitpile of indie rock is that they eat better. They used
to have five dollars a day to spend on Taco bell while touring. Now when
they ask locals for a good restaurant, "Some kid goes, 'Well, there's
a really cheap taco place·'" says singer-guitarist Mac McCaughan. "And
we say no, no, no-where's a goood restaurant?"
But they work hard for the money. Superchunk has spent the past five
years sending whole rock clubs into pogoing frenzies with anthemic but
altogether unhokey songs. Its raucous punk-pop is infused with an energy
that feel authentically preteen, like kids on their first free day after
being grounded for the weekend. The band tours incessantly, and will be
on the road again soon, riding the waves sure to be caused by their new
album, "Foolish". "Like pirates out on the high seas!" says drummer Jon
Wurster. "People who enjoy touring deserve it," retorts guitarist Jim
Wilbur. They still complain, even though they have less to complain about.
"Foolish" isn't as speedy as previous releases, it's denser. There's
a certain resignation to the way the songs build and ride plateaus, then
resolve.
As Laura Ballance (who everybody knows is the superfoxy bassplayer)
says, "It's got a good mood." That mood might have something to do with
Ballance and McCaughan's personal relationship going from romantic to
platonic in the last year. Ballance confesses to feeling "a little more
vulnerable now" onstage, but both she and McCaughan agree that the mood
change has more to do with the fans, not the band's performance. "No one's
really thinking, 'Too bad she's got a boyfriend,'" says McCaughan. "They're
thinking, 'Wow, look at Laura rock out'".
In these times of major-label co-option, "Foolish" comes out on McCaughan
and Ballance's Merge Records-evidence that despite their ascent to indie-rock
royalty status, they maintain proletarian taste in the face of the spoon-feeding
major-label buffet. They don't feel obligated to stay indie for philosophical
reasons, but they do have a vested interest in preserving the structure.
McCaughan explains: "It's important that there's some kind of network
not involved with the larger network, regardless if, at this point, we
could sign to Geffen records and make the same record we'd make anyway.
There might be a point when we couldn't, and we'd wish there was another
system to fall back on." Still Superchunk won't shoulder the indie rock
burden. "People send us letters that say, 'Whatever you do, don't sign
to a major,'" says McCaughan. "We're not doing that, but that's not the
point." "It's a band," adds Wurster. "It doesn't have anything to do with
the scene."
© 1994 Spin

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