This is a little history of Albuquerque NM band dimbulb.
We originally began at Wild Wilburs Storage Units where many bands managed to seek refuge and play LOUD!
Mike G and I had been trying to get our bearings after drummer,
Dawson R, left to pursue other avenues.
Luckily, Mike P had just moved to Albuquerque from Madison Wi,
and answered our feeble little newspaper ad touting free beer.
Things were fun, and felt good right off the bat. A few years down the line
we managed to record a 10 song Cassette with Mike W bringing his 8 Track Reel Deck
into my living room. It was recorded quickly and somewhat drunkenly,
but it definitely captured that raw grit characterizing dimbulb.
We continued until mid 1996 when Mike G decided to volume was having
detrimental effects on his ears and sorta fell into a general funk,
not wanting to play. Jeff B, previously in the fine band Splinterfish,
stepped right into the Bass slot with zest and zeal!
Jeffs refined playing sent us in a slightly different direction.
It really was not quite the same furious punk, rarely did my strings
break and even less often did my picking hand get torn to bloody shreds
pounding out the power chords. It is unfortunate that we never got a chance
to record because we had managed to work out a few really good tunes before
career searches and children closed that chapter.
In 1998 Jeff moved to Canada in search of employment as well as getting married.
Soon after, Mike took a job in the mid-west and my second child, Wheeler,
was born. Just before Mike moved away, we did manage to book some studio time
and capture two of the better Jeff era tunes to tape. Dave G and
Linus C were recruited to help with Guitar and Bass duties and studio
time was booked. Dubbed “Justus Traut”, we got BottleRocket and Geologic
worked out in a couple of practices and recorded in one night with Quincy
at the helm.
Early in 1999 I managed to get out on the house one weekend and saw the
Pittsburgh band Don Caballero at a local venue. I was immediately impressed
by their massive complex sound and noticed both Guitar and Bass players were
augmenting their sound with Akai Headrush pedals. While I had previously
listened to a lot of Robert Fripp and Brian Eno and was aware of their use of
loops in music, it was these guys that really drove home the point.
I ordered a Headrush not long after and so began my decent into the world of
looping.
Soon after discovering the Loopers Delight webpage and poking around
following various links, I found some audio clips of David Torn off the
What Means Solid, Traveler album. It would be a understatement to that his
guitar playing blew my head open.
In the years since I began listening to Torn (and others in the Loopers Delight community) I have concentrated on playing improvisational
music with Acids and Basses (duo with Jim C) and Funnel (trio with Michael W and Carl P)