The menacingly randy and obscenely poetic version of Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds that made 2008’s Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! and two albums under the name Grinderman has turned Warren Ellis into the group’s sonic center of gravity. Ellis first came to prominence for his violin and viola work in Melbourne, Australia’s sublime instrumental group Dirty Three, but his roles in Grinderman and The Bad Seeds have branched out to include all manner of stringed instruments—from traditional ones, to hybrids like four-string tenor guitar and mandocaster—and heaps of pedals and amps that he uses to warp his instruments into song-dominating surges of noise, especially on the new Grinderman 2.
Finding that “doing different things just seems to help everything,” Ellis has also collaborated with Nick Cave on several film soundtracks (The Proposition, The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, and last year’s adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road), recorded new songs for a still-in-the-works new Dirty Three album, and talked with inimitable singer-songwriter Jonathan Richman about collaborating one day. In the middle of Grinderman’s recent European tour, Ellis spoke with The A.V. Club about a few different moments from across his career. He defended his work on The Road, recalled comparing equipment with gearheaded My Bloody Valentine guitarist Kevin Shields, and talked about the unreliable bank of gear he’ll be commanding when Grinderman plays tonight at The Riv.
Grinderman, “Bellringer Blues” (2010)
Nick Cave And Warren Ellis, The Road score (2009)
I think Alan mentioned he’d like to try doing a cover of “Down By The River.” Beyond that, it was all sort of written in two days. It was funny because we recorded one day, and in the evening we had to go and play a festival, and they did some overdubs. The next day, they went and played, and we recorded. Half the time, we weren’t even there.
AVC: The liner notes talk about how you were all working at different times.
WE: It was kind of insane. We both played shows at different times in Amsterdam, so we had to leave the studio and go and play the show and then come back. It had a really great spirit about it. It was done in some old barn in a farm with an eight-track recorder.
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, “Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!” (2008)
My favorite situation is having a thing that’s totally uncontrollable, like the violin amplified so loud. There’s no quality control. I've never used a solid-body violin because they look terrible and the sound’s too controlled with them. Acoustic violins just have an unknown property when they’re electrified, particularly when you ram them through a bunch of effects pedals. I like the problems that creates.
AVC: And you try to embrace that when you’re playing live?
WE: Oh, man, my setup is just like a nightmare. Kevin Shields from My Bloody Valentine, he came to the show the other night. He was quizzing me about my stuff, and he’s the guy that’s got more equipment than a bloody guitar-effects shop, and he was after me about it. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing, but I’ve got a bunch of stuff there, and I’m playing through two bass rigs and stuff. It’s a complicated setup and fraught with problems. I’ve blown three amplifiers and four cabinets in two and a half weeks.
AVC: You mean already on this tour?
WE: Yeah. [Laughs.] Seriously. I’m also swapping constantly from violin to mandocaster to tenor, and then regular guitar. And then I also have loops that I’m triggering, and I’m singing as well. Have a look on YouTube. There’s a clip for “Worm Tamer” that we did on Later With Jools Holland; that’s an indication of where it’s gone. It’s just a disaster. I go through guitar techs. Every tour I have a different one. My problem is, my setup is loaded with problems because there’s lots of cables and things, and a lot of my equipment is not particularly reliable. It’s a lot of stuff that my brother soldered together. It’s pretty, kind of—what’s the word?—“low-rent,” I’d say. I have very cheap instruments as well. I just keep blowing things up all the time. I’m having the time of my life at the moment. It’s great for me, actually, to get on to some of these other instruments and bring a different thing to the music that we’re making. I know if I just stuck with the violin all the time, there’s a lot of things I wouldn’t be doing now.