On Monday October 4th I interviewed my good friends
Groundedπs Pam and Allegra.
I felt they were the perfect band to sit down with for my first ever interview. We conducted it down in the dark of the Three Of Cups Lounge, my favorite haunt, also where I deejay on Mondays and Fridays (shameless Plug). I have known the girls from Grounded for at least a decade now and I just love their groovy heaviness and power vocals.
If you want to see some in your face, tattooed, Heavy Metal
women who will Rock you to hell, check this bunch out!!!! Do it!!!!!!!!!!! I
herby decree it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
M: This is DJ Morgan doing my first interview ever for
the New York Waste.
P: Woo!
M: Iπm interviewing Grounded, my Sisters in Metal.
P: We broke your
cherry!
M: Say hi Pam.
P: Hi.
M: Say hi Allegra.
A: Yo.
M: So first of all tell me about how Grounded got
together?
P: We have been
friends for many, many years, we have never played in the same band, but our
bands always played together, so we just decided one day, fuck, we should be
playing together, youπre my sister anyway. We wrote a few songs and it sounded
good, it worked out. We got Amanda after your wedding party, jamming, we jammed
with her and we were like thatπs our girl.
M: Is that really how it happened?
A: Kind of, we saw
her play and we were like, she definitely could play with us and then, she
definitely fits, and then we also felt that the moment that the band became a
band occurred around September 11th, cause it was after the 11th that we really
felt a need to have a band, that artists need to be in music and they need to
be expressing what's going on around them.
M: That was the same for us pretty much, yeah.
A: Yep, not enough
people are singing about what is real and if ever there was a time for them to
start getting together it was around that time.
P: It was right
after that.
M: Cool, so what does the name Grounded mean? Is it
meant to have a double-entendre?
A: Itπs actually a
triple-entendre, primary meaning is electricity, especially large masses of
electricity that are uncontrollable, second would be being rooted to earth,
third and our least favorite would be youπve been bad.
M: Youπre in trouble after school...
P: ...Or your mom and dad saying, ≥youπve
got to get up to your room.≤
M: So who came up with the name?
P: Allegra.
M: What would you say is like the main message of the
band? What are you trying to say or what are you trying to represent yourselves
as?
A: Because weπre
women, although we never want gender to be an issue in being like what weπre
about, but at the same time because we are predominantly women we do hope to be
able to inspire and encourage other women to be strong and to be into Metal.
P: And to kick
ass!!! To have some balls yaw know!
A: The whole thing
is, there is not enough women in heavy Rock, so if we can do anything to
inspire heavy Rocking women to get low and dirty that would be great.
P: That would be the
ultimate goal for us.
M: Since we are on the topic of Metal, what would you say
were the main influences on the band?
P: Black Sabbath
A: Kyuss
M: You guys get called Stoner Rock a lot, would you
consider yourselves that?
P: Yeah we are.
A: No, I consider us
Low Riding Riff Rock and if you wanna call us Stoner Rock thatπs fine.
M: Well thatπs kind of a term that young people came up
with for that shit anyway. I guess the next thing is what do you think about
whatπs going on in the scene In New York City nowadays, especially when it
comes to Metal?
P: There is no
scene.
A: There hasnπt been
a scene in a long time, I donπt know if itπs about a scene.
M: One of the reasons why I started writing this column
for the waste was that I felt they werenπt covering Heavy Metal at all.
A: I think itπs more
about a way of life, like how many people are left that are living the life, if
youπre living the life then you get to be part of the scene, fortunately you
have those people but theyπre not all into the same type of music, although we
all like similar types of music, so itπs kind of a complicated question to ask
about a scene. Metal scene? Nowadays I think Metal is so wide, Iπve never seen
more categories of Metal, Metal used to mean hair and makeup and falsetto
vocals, now ...
P: You could go to a
Stoner Rock show and see Metal dudes there, Nu Metal, Black Metal, all kinds of
Metal.
M: Death Metal.
P: Speed Metal.
M: Power Metal, Thrash Metal.
P: Thereπs not a lot
of people in New York that listen to it, I went to see a band called Earthrise
on Saturday at Trash, there were like 30 people there. Theyπre, you know,
Stoner Rock, but really heavy, theyπre tuned down. Theyπre all playing out of
Orange amps, itπs like a gigantic wall of sound, but there just arenπt enough
people who listen to the heavy, whatever kind of heavy. So thatπs why we all
have to stick together.
M: So you mentioned 9/11 before, how do you feel about the
role of the band and how you relate to New York City?
A: Well we are a New
York City band. We are New Yorkers. Every one of us is from this neighborhood
or from this area which is actually pretty rare. It was very powerful and we
all, including you, we lost a friend and that was very cohesive and really
helped inspire a better way of life.
P: And sing about it
and probably heal ourselves from that loss. It hurt a great deal. Writing songs
is part of the healing process, the fact that I can do it with my best friend
Iπm pretty lucky, I think.
M: Yeah itπs fucking cool, so I guess part of what the
Waste is about is getting wasted, so...
P: Well, we get
wasted.
M: Well, we know that, we have done it together many
times.
A: We have no
problem getting wasted, we have a problem with people who donπt know how to
control their drugs, drugs are great, but you have to know when and where and
you have to know that itπs always in moderation.
M: You got that kiddies?
P: Yeah, in
moderation.
M: So whatπs your favorite ways to get fucked up?
P: Absinthe.
A: Pills, pot and
booze, but not in that order.
P &A: Pot, pills
and booze.
M: Right on, so you guys just got a new drummer, howπs
that working out?
A: Ku is good.
P: Raku!!!
A: Kuster!
M: Heπs got a funky style right, plays his drums all
weird?
A: He is left handed
and barefoot.
P: Like a Stoner
Hippie.
M: So whatπs up for the future, whatπs the next move?
P: Take over the
world, play some more shows and then hopefully ...
M: Any recording coming up?
A: By the summer of
2005 we are going to have a 13-song album.
M: Cool. Thatπs about it except, Pam youπre getting
married in about two weeks?
P: Iπm getting
married in twelve days in Vegas by Elvis, Viva Las Vegas baby!!!
M: Howπs that feel?
P: Um, a little
nervous, but very happy and anxious and um yeah Iπm taking the plunge, woo,
hail Satan!
M: I only have one more question; do you have a
cigarette I can bum?
P: She does not ≠
me, Pam the Metal queen, does not smoke Cigarettes.
M: Is there anything else you wanna address?
P: No, we just want
to thank you for your time and for being our friend and having New York Waste
finally recognizing Heavy Metal.
M: Just one other thing, what did you think about the
experience of the whole New York City Rock and Roll compilation?
P: I think it was
nice that we actually got a single out on a record label thatπs known.
M: Where did you record the last single?
P: That was with
Anthony Esposito, Schoolhouse studios.
A: I think that
Steve Blush went into it with a really good and positive approach, he was
trying to bring the scene together.
P: And we got some
people who would never have heard us before checking it out; since we were on
that c.d. maybe we have broadened our Fan base because of that, thatπs great.
M: Sweet. So fucking Rock and Roll, you guys, fucking
Rock and I love you both!
P &A: all
right!!!