On its Myspace page (which it hasn’t check in over a year), under the “Sounds like” section, Hella’s description reads: “If crack was music, thrown into a blender with fruits. yeah.” And, honestly, that’s not too ridiculous of a way to characterize its frenetic, musically dense, freeform sound. Your first few encounters with Hella are invariably puzzling. The music sounds random and insane, even if you’re well versed in math rock or experimental jazz or even Japanese noise. Discordant guitar runs peppered with spastic, frantic, over the top drumming can suddenly shift into a bare bones break-beat overlain with hand claps and within seconds explode back into another tangential discordant guitar run. Hella isn’t improvising, either, even though it may sound that way at first. Every song is carefully composed, and they’re not just incongruous parts glommed together without any concern for form or structure. These guys know what the hell they’re doing.
Guitarist Spencer Seim and drummer Zach Hill have been playing
together since high school before hooking up with Kill Rock Stars’
boutique imprint, 5 Rue Christine. Both can play multiple instruments,
but Spencer’s forte is guitar and Zach’s is obviously drumming. He is
a complete bad ass behind the kit. “Virtuoso” is such a hackneyed
word. I immediately think of annoying guitar wankers like Steve Vai
when I hear it, but it applies to both of these guys because, quite
simply, they can tear shit up. And to make matters even more confusing
or awesome, depending on your perspective, you never know what to
expect from one Hella record to the next. In Fact, Hella’s latest
album, There’s No 666 in Outer Space, on Ipecac records, marks
the first time vocals can be found on every song.
The band’s sound evolved out of a mathematical fusion of instrumental
post-rock, jazzy, acrobatic drum fills, and avant-garde noise. Its
line-up morphs from one release to the next, expanding into a
five-piece for its latest, yet always retaining both Seim and Hill at
the core. Unsurprisingly, 666 also showcases a shift in
compositional style. Seim and Hill make room for the vocals with
slightly more traditional arrangements. Thus, the instrumental bits
are less free and showy, allowing for Aaron Ross’ untamed, versatile
voice. The result is a little prog-rock-ish, but you won’t confuse any
of it with Genesis’ The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway. It’s more
Beefheart-ian and experimental and twice as fast with plenty of stops
and starts (imagine trying to sing over What Burns Never
Returns-era Don Caballero). If it reminds you of The Mars Volta,
too, that’s because Ross’ voice can make runs up into registers that
aren’t seemingly human, much akin to Cedric Bixler’s nasally
histrionics.
Hella’s prior sound was often lumped into the Lightning
Bolt/Ahleuchatistas camp, which has its limits in terms of dynamics
and growth. So, after five years making records, it’s not too
far-fetched for a band as off the cuff as Hella to re-invent itself so
drastically. It’s a pretty big leap, though, and it could easily
alienate long-time fans. I honestly doubt either Seim or Hill cares
too much about that, seeing as how their whole schtick seems to feed
off answering to no one. And when the music is of this caliber, new
fans are bound to be lured in. One could hardly lob anything as
ludicrous as “sell-out” at Hella, either, as this music makes no
effort whatsoever to be commercial.
The dimension that voice adds, though, instantly casts a wider net.
And despite a reputation for consistently bizarre records, Hella’s
selling point has always been its live show. The tension and energy
are inextricably bound to the complexity of the music. 666 takes
the band’s signature complexity and matches it with an emotional
layer. Ross’ delivery is cryptic, almost evil and is exacerbated by
inexplicably arcane lyrics. As dark and strange as Ross tries to be,
though, he can’t help but make the music easier to connect with.