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jaded azurites

by Jaded Azurites

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about

I was trying to write poetry and it was the hardest thing I’d ever done. I’d been a writer all my life but this was so different, I felt as if I were trying to learn to build airplanes. None of the skills I’d developed as a writer helped me—in fact, they got in my way. I used to talk to Mike Watt about it because he has the surest artistic instincts of anyone I know. He knows what’s real and never wastes his time with what’s not. I said, “I’m terrible at this, I don’t think I can do it.” He said, “I’m a Karen Schoemer believer.” Our tendency as humans is to discount the good things people say about us but I couldn’t discount that because I had already established absolute faith in him. I couldn’t give up.
Mike was working with Oli Heffernan, who has a project called Detective Instinct where he gives home recordings to friends to write lyrics to. Mike was supposed to write lyrics for a song of Oli’s but he said, “Why don’t you write them?” So I wrote words and Oli liked them enough that he asked me to write another song, and then two more. Oli liked these four songs enough that he gave us six more recordings, and Mike said, “Instead of me doing the vocals, why don’t you do the vocals?” Detective Instinct with Mike Watt on bass released two 7” EPs: Schoemer Songs, with Mike’s vocals, and Falling in Lilacs, with mine, in December 2013 on Third Uncle Records.
At some point we decided to do more songs together. I probably nagged him. I was like, “Come on, I want to do more.” Mike had bass ideas from his time with the Minutemen that for some reason or other never made it into Minutemen songs. He rediscovered and repurposed them, and sent them to me and I wrote words, sometimes adapting poems to their rhythm and structure. People say real poetry doesn’t need music, it has a music all its own. Yeah, maybe if you’re John Keats. Music and words are like water and air and I think they go beautifully together. Writing to music gives me limitations in terms of mood, tempo, length of line/breath, and I enjoy working within those limitations, finding words that complement the music. What can one say about Mike Watt’s bass playing? It is a voice of its own and I like the gentle side that comes out here. He’s one of the fiercest people on the planet but he—I mean, this is pretty obvious—has enormous sensitivity and range, not to mention phenomenal dexterity with the strings. A similar side comes out in his work with Kira Roessler in Dos—a similar poetry and economy. The project name comes from jadeite and azurite vintage glassware. Mike said, “Why don’t we put them together, Jaded Azurites,” and I like the combination—not, like, “oh, we’re jaded, we’ve seen it all,” but in the sense of duality, being two seemingly exclusive things at once: green and blue, loving and hating, present and absent, female and male, music and word.

credits

released January 16, 2018

karen schoemer - vocal
mike watt - bass
all words by karen schoemer
all songs schoemer/watt
recorded during 2016 in new york and california
produced by mike watt
all photos by karen schoemer

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Jaded Azurites

Jaded Azurites is poet Karen Schoemer and bassist Mike Watt.

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