Retribution Gospel Choir's Alan Sparhawk unleashes his inner classic-rock beast
Plenty of musicians get mellower with age, but Alan Sparhawk's been doing the exact opposite. For the past couple of albums, his main band, Low, has been progressively increasing the noise level on its minimalist (and originally very quiet) rock, and he pushes that envelope even further with side project Retribution Gospel Choir. Where Low is about doing more with less, RGC is a place where Sparhawk can cut loose. Rounded out by bassist (and Sparhawk's Low bandmate) Steve Garrington and drummer Eric Pollard, the band has just released its sophomore disc, simply titled 2. Although it still shares a lot in common sonically with Low, the album gives free rein to a fuller, almost classic-rock sound, and it has a sense of freewheeling fun not usually associated with Sparhawk's main band. Before playing at the Larimer Lounge this Saturday, Sparhawk talked to The A.V. Club about Huey Lewis harmonies and his toughest critic.
The A.V. Club: What does Retribution Gospel Choir offer you creatively that you can't do in Low?
Alan Sparhawk: Well, I definitely allow myself a lot more freedom on the guitar and the volume and sort of the histrionics. Surrendering to that juvenile pride—calling it what it is and seeing if you can make something meaningful out of it. Letting go and letting out this chaos that the guitar can have. Really, to me, what mostly triggers it is people that are in the band, and how we attack things. With Low, Mimi [Parker, Sparhawk's wife and Low's drummer] very much sets the tone for that. When I play with Low, after all these years it's really just natural. But with these guys, it's just a different dynamic. We allow ourselves to play louder and harder. Definitely Low, from moment one, we were making music using premises that had never been used and were having to carve our own language. Whereas with Retribution Gospel Choir, we're coming to a language that's already been well established and well worn-out, and trying to figure out a way to make something alive and exciting using those same tools. You give yourself different parameters and surprise yourself sometimes.
AVC: Where do you draw the boundaries between bands? The first RGC record shared a couple of songs with Low, and there are a couple on 2 that seem like they could easily fit on a Low record. But then there's a song like "White Wolf" or "Working Hard," which sounds like your version of Foreigner or Journey.
AS: Oh, yeah. It's got those jumping harmonies—someone called them "Huey Lewis harmonies," which I thought was pretty funny. Those two songs definitely right away felt like this was something RGC would play. I don't mind blurring, I don't mind having stuff that can go either way. With Low, we've been playing with our own boundaries on the last few records anyway, and we're probably a lot more scattered off of what someone would say is "our sound" than you'd think.
AVC: It seems like it's not a coincidence that Low's changing sound happened around the same time you started doing these louder side projects.