by Matt Dembicki
Local comic booker and co-DC Conspiracy founder Evan Keeling is putting the final touches on his new comic DC Punk Presents: Nation of Ulysses: Part 1: ’88-’90. Over the past few years, Keeling has reached out to various members of the defunct D.C. punk band to pull together this book. Below, Keeling answers a few questions about this book—which is premiering at the Small Press Expo in Bethesda, Md., Sept. 19-20—as well as his previous book in the series on the band DC Punk Presents: The Warmers: Part 1.
Local comic booker and co-DC Conspiracy founder Evan Keeling is putting the final touches on his new comic DC Punk Presents: Nation of Ulysses: Part 1: ’88-’90. Over the past few years, Keeling has reached out to various members of the defunct D.C. punk band to pull together this book. Below, Keeling answers a few questions about this book—which is premiering at the Small Press Expo in Bethesda, Md., Sept. 19-20—as well as his previous book in the series on the band DC Punk Presents: The Warmers: Part 1.
What inspired you to
do this series on D.C. punk bands?
I grew up in D.C. and got really into punk music and the
music coming out of D.C. in high school. D.C. has a long history with punk and
a very influential one, but what mostly gets documented is the '80s. While that
was an extremely fertile time and hard a larger impact on punk at a national level,
most of the histories I’ve read or seen stop right before they really get into
the bands that meant a lot to me growing up. Also for some of these bands, I
wasn’t finding a lot of information available on the them so I could either
wait around till someone else maybe wrote something or I could go find it
myself.
Through my research, I did find Brandon Gentry who wrote the
great eBook Capitol Contingency that
is covering some of the same ground. He has been a great help getting me
e-mails. But while his book focuses on individual albums, I wanted to dive a
little further into how the members of the bands lived outside of their musical
accomplishments. I also found some great resources’ for information like the
D.C. Library Punk Archive and the UMD D.C. Zane archive, which is curated by
John Davis (Q and not U, Title Tracks). That I will be utilizing and
contributing to as I continue the project.
What connections did you
have with the bands members in both books? Was it difficult in finding them
after so many years?
Previous to this project, I didn’t know any members of these
bands personally. I had talked to Alec [MacKaye] a couple of times back during the time the
Warmers were active, but not much more than that. But I did know a number of
folks that were in other bands that I am going to cover in the series and I
started with them and it spread out from there.
Basically, I just started going through some of my friends
Facebook friends, and when I recognized a name I would blind e-mail them and ask
if they would let me interview them. Then, as people agreed, I would ask them to
pass the word along or get me in touch with other members of their bands and
get more e-mails and send out queries.
Luckily, a lot of folks are really happy to talk about the
bands that they were in and have been very forthcoming with information. One
of the first people to get back to me was Tim Green from Nation of Ulysses, and he
was really forthcoming and a fountain of information, and Alec has had me over
to his house a couple of times and shown me a lot of great pictures from his
personal stuff. So far I would say for the most part the people I’ve interviewed
have been super helpful.
I especially liked
the endnotes at the end of Nation of
Ulysses; they give deeper context to the events in the book without
breaking the natural flow of the story. How did that idea come about?
It’s been over 20 years since most of these bands were
together so sometimes memories are short and have to fabricate events for the
flow of the story. I wanted to make these comics a narrative not just a string of
facts and I remembered in [the graphic novel] From Hell how Alan Moore had extensive end notes
that told page by page what he made up what lines were taken from different
writings and such. I thought that would be a great way to get the information
out and still have a narrative. There are also a lot of people and places that
are going to appear in the stories. I didn’t want to crowd the pages with informative
text boxes or have awkward introductions like “Hello, Christina Billotte from
Slant 6” or “Let’s go to independent music venue d.c. space.” Nobody talks like
that and I want the conversations to be as natural as possible. This isn’t like
Harry Potter or some such thing where everyone and everything is getting
introduced, these people have known each other for years.
Local label Dischord
Records now carries The Warmers. Can
you tell us how that came about?
When I was tabling this year at the DC Zine Fest, Ian MacKaye [Dischord Records founder] came by my table. I had talked to him before briefly about the project. His
partner Amy Farina was the drummer in the Warmers and I had sent her a copy of
the book. So he knew about the comic and wanted to pick some up for some other
folks. I had a bunch of misprints that I had cut out to make buttons of peoples
faces from the book and Ian had his and Amy’s son with him so they were having
fun digging through the buttons and grabbing ones of people they recognized.
While this was going on Ian asked me if Dischord Direct was distributing it. I
told him that I was having trouble getting in touch with them. So Ian emailed
me and got me in direct touch with Brian who runs Dischord Direct. It’s pretty exciting to be distributed there because if
someone were to go to the Dischord site and look up the Warmers, my comic is
listed right there along with their albums.
What bands are you
eyeing for to cover in future issues?
[Local cartoonist/artist] Eric Gordon of Vinyl Vagabonds is going to draw at least one
issue about Circus Lupus for me once I get him some more info. With a little
more legwork I’m hoping to put together a comic about Corm-Tech. Then I have a
number of other bands like Monorchid, Bratmobile, The Meta-Matics and the
All-Scars where I have some information but need to conduct some more
interviews to develop a narrative. I’d really like to do one on Slant 6 and
Frodus, but I have to get in touch with some folks to get those going.
There are so many bands that it is going to take a while. I
started with Eric but I am still scouting around for collaborators so I can get
more issues out faster.
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