Rock Away The Clock
New Times, Phoenix, June 5, 1991
by Robert Baird
It's a typical quiet Sun City street. Obsessively neat, almost-sterile
brick homes. Plaster-cast-cherub and Greek-goddess fountains.
White walls. Suddenly, the rumble of tortured electric guitars
and the monotone wail of a Wendy O. Williams-style voice break
the unnatural serenity of Del Webb's desert-in-bloom dream come
true. Can there really be punk-rock in Sun City?
"We call it 'metal pause' or 'antacid rock'" says Gavan
Wieser, and at 48 youngest member of the band One Foot In The
Grave, Sun City's first and last contribution to the Valley's
postpunk scene. An experienced musician who now lives in Glendale
and also performs with the band Homemade Jam. Wieser plays keyboards
and sings back-up vocals for the Sun City group. Fronted by vocalist
Jo Dina (age 51 she prefers just her first name), the band also
includes drummer Gene Costa and guitarist Danny Walters both 74
years old.
What possesses these otherwise mild-mannered folk? What has convinced
them to follow in Sid Vicious footsteps? And more important what
do the neighbors think? "I don't give a shit," says
Gene Costa whose Sun City living room also serves as the band's
practice room, "They turn down their hearing aids at eight
o'clock anyway." After three years of rehearsing, Wieser
and One Foot In the Grave are ready to play in front of people.
The group's confidence was shored up by the stir its demo tape
caused a few weeks ago at a record producers' showcase in Los
Angeles. One Foot's first shy step into the grimy depths of thrash
n' grind will be at the Arizona All-State Jam on Saturday at Phoenix's
hip downtown Silver Dollar Club.
Hearing One Foot on tape and live will not convince anyone the
band will be the Ramones anytime soon. But the members are open-minded
and they have a firm grasp of the essentials of what makes punk-rock
the bruising aggressive form it is. Costa has the rapid-fire drumming
down. Jo Dina's reckless vocals are impassioned, if out of tune
and Danny Walters has relearned how to play the guitar. "Jo
Dina and Gavan put an ad in the paper and found Gene. Gene found
me and I found that there was a distortion button on my amp,"
says Walters looking out over his glasses with a sly grin.
Arguably the most musically distinguished member of the band,
Chicagoan Walters spend twenty years as Lawrence Welk's arranger.
When he left Welk in 1959, he moved on to work with jazz trios
and dance bands. These days, the guitar player who grew up admiring
Barney Kessel laughs at his own Eddie Van Halen jokes.
"Everything I've tried in rock 'n' roll shows some signs
of sense," says Walters, laughing. It's like the conversation
I had recently in L.A. I met this man who said he hated Chicago.
Being a native, I asked how long he was there. He said two hours.
My generation doesn't even know rock 'n' roll and they hate it."
Seeing the band live in its leather jackets and suitably punkish
scowls is the kind of jarring experience that makes you blink.
But like Walters, drummer Gene Costa, another musician who grew
up in the big-band era, says that discovering rock 'n' roll has
been an eye opener.
"Drummers in big bands are very restricted. Straight times.
No room to experiment," he says. "But I feel rock 'n'
roll gives a drummer complete freedom. And it's a hell of a lot
more fun."
Most of the energy behind the band radiates from Jo Dina. An escaped
housewife with a 33-year old ex-boyfriend, Jo Dina bounces around
in front of the band, holding the microphone flush against her
lips and screaming-singing in a Philadelphia-accented howl. She
never sang a note before One Foot In the Grave. "I'm the
kind of person, who, if people tell me I can't, I usually end
up doing it. I listened to a bunch of those punk-rock records
and I realized that I could do that. I mean I love Joe Cocker,
but his voice sounds like a garbage can and he looks like one,
too. I sing in my own style."
Although Wieser writes most of the band's music - its only cover
to date is a trashy version of the Ramones' "Sheena is a
Punk Rocker" - it's Jo Dina's lyrics that give the band's
sound its bite. Sporting titles like "Aches, Pains, Capital
Gains," "Couch Potato," and "Menopause"
(the band's biggest hit-in-waiting), Jo Dina's songs come out
of her own experience. Co-written with her son Joey Scazzola and
his pal Ron Morey, "Menopause" has a chorus that goes,
"Say hello to life's frustration/Say goodbye to my menstruation/I
never had an education like/Menopause, menopause, menopause."
The second verse opens with, "Hit my son during my hot flash/For
pointing out my new mustache/The house is a wreck and I don't
care/I just sit around in men's underwear." For some unknown
reason, men's underwear is a prevalent theme in all of Jo Dina's
lyrical ventures.
In the past few months, the band has gotten serious and put together
a demo tape containing "Menopause" and six other tunes.
A new guitarist in has been added to flesh out the sound for the
Silver Dollar gig. He's Jim Elam who at 27 is nearly a toddler
in this outfit.
The band has even had a little local airplay, courtesy of deejay
Mary McCann of KUKQ-AM. What was once a Mohawk-and-black-leather
lark has become serious. A promoter in L.A. talks about the band
opening for national acts like Dread Zeppelin. The band, however,
is keeping its expectations down.
"I didn't think it was real viable until I went to L.A.,"
says Gavan Wieser "I was blown away that so many people got
so excited about us. The shelf life of what we're doing may not
be too long, but it's fun right now." But if the band becomes
a success and begins to play nightclubs and think about making
records, are septuagenarians Walters and Costa ready for a life
of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll? "Well, I don't know about
all that," says Danny Walters. "My wife won't even allow
me out to play after 8:30 at night."
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