| As the hottest
band to break out of Seattle in more than a decade, Maktub walks
a high road of expectations. To come out on top in that market,
to be voted Best Band in the Seattle Weekly over hometown heavies
like Pearl Jam, to more than hold their own while opening for
headliners like the Dave Matthews Band Earth, Wind & Fire
and Coldplay, Maktub has to be that good.
More than that: They've got to be different
even as they draw from artists like Prince, Led Zeppelin, and
Sly Stone -- those who also channeled multiple influences into
a sound unlike anything played in their time.
Maktub's new CD, Say What You Mean,
compresses the diversity of their first two releases, Subtle Ways
and Khronos, into an exhilarating, high-impact style. Locked into
a taut groove behind singer Reggie Watts (known throughout the
Northwest for his passionate vocals, riveting presence, live onstage
sampling, and spectacular Afro) the band digs down to its essence
and comes up with a sound that's original yet accessible to the
widest range of listeners.
Think of it as a Soul sprinkled with psychedelia
and a high-octane, pop/rock blend. Better yet, don't think at
all until you give Say What You Mean a spin. The thundering
drum lick that kicks off "Promise Me," the Memphis heat
and teasing beat of "Say What You Mean," the crescendos
that whip the choruses of "20 Years" into explosions
of emotion -- whatever you want to call this music, it's impossible
to ignore and even harder to forget.
Producer Bob Power had something to do with
this. His work with A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, India.Arie,
Ozomatli, and The Roots is all about getting to the heart of the
artist. But, bottom line, Say What You Mean captures
a great band at a critical moment. Everything that comes before
is preparation; from this point, Maktub starts making some serious
history.
Rewind to 1996 … Seattle teems with musicians
who fall in and out of bands, all of them wondering how to make
their imprint in a city known for its homegrown musical giants.
Kevin Goldman, just off the bus from Phoenix with bass in hand,
meets Davis Martin. They play together the next day; it feels
right.
Davis calls on Reggie Watts, a young singer
and student at Cornish College of the Arts. Born in Germany, Watts
grew up in Great Falls, Montana, the son of an African-American
Air Force officer and his French wife. Hoping to study jazz vocals
and see what lies beyond the flat Montana horizon, he moves to
Seattle, spends a few months at the Art Institute of Seattle,
drops out, and begins performing with -- in his word -- "gazillions"
of local bands. After just a few minutes with Martin, Goldman,
and original keyboardist Alex Veley, Watts realizes that this
combination is unique. Before the end of the day they write their
first song.
"The balance just felt right," Watts
remembers. “Kevin and Davis are a deep-pocket symbiotic
rhythm section. Kevin came from a dub background. Davis had played
a lot of in-the-pocket, trip-hop stuff. And I've always been into
pretty much everything."
They hatch a plan: commit to each other. Cut
down on other gigs. Hold down day jobs to buy time as they develop
the band. Don't record or perform until they're ready. And call
the group Maktub, an Arabic word that Watts lifts from Paul Coelho's
novel The Alchemist. Translated as "it is written"
or "destiny," it has a ring of inevitability that keeps
everyone motivated as they settle into the wilderness of rehearsal.
Time goes by, bringing changes. They finish
their first CD, Subtle Ways, as a quartet, with the talented
Alex Veley on keyboards. Response is immediate: The album hits
number one on KCMU and later on the soul and urban charts at MP3.com
and earns them Best R&B Album at the Northwest Music Awards.
They start picking up fans as far away as England, though Subtle
Ways isn't available there.
Then they expand again, this time recruiting
Thaddeus Turner on guitar and Daniel Spils on keys. Thaddeus'
scorching guitar work and Americana roots along with Daniel's
signature keyboard work add precisely the sweetening they all
want. The circle is complete.
"Daniel is really solid -- for lack of
a better word, German," Watts explains. "He learns everything
perfectly and plays it perfectly. He's added cool sounds, a good
aesthetic, and is a great songwriter. Now he's playing guitar
too, which gives us even more to work with. And Thaddeus adds
the chaos that we need within that order: He plays beautiful solos,
he's really great at textures and soundscapes, and as a rhythm
player he adds that extra juice. He makes us rock hard."
Khronos, recorded during one two-week stretch,
follows in 2001. As more than 20,000 copies sell, Velour Music
in New York takes notice and, a year later, re-releases Khronos
nationally. They take off on the road for six months at a time,
touring obsessively until they blow the trailer spindle on their
Chevy van -- for the third time. Taking this as an omen, they
head back home to write songs and demo most of them with their
minidisc recorder and a single button microphone. Winter sets
in; wrapped now in long johns and scarves, they start tracking
Say What You Mean, with Bob Power out from New York to
produce. It's summer by the time they're done, with the band's
basement studio now a hotbox of creative fever.
From the heat of a Seattle summer comes Say
What You Mean, the perfect distillation of Maktub, the herald
of their breakthrough as a vital new force. "When I look
back," Watts says, "I can say that we came out of the
trip-hop scene -- Portishead and all that. Now we've come to understand
that this is just part of what we do. There's still something
trippy in what we do, but the songs have become starker. There's
always been a rock element in what we've done, but on the new
album that's our foundation. The next record will be even more
rock -- more stripped down and straight up."
“I guess this makes it easier to reach
more people," he muses, "but I've never thought of that
as a conscious goal. I don't worry about my image or feeling pressure
from the industry to be this way or that. It's more important
that I never lose my connection to people on the darker side,
who like to experiment with all the parts of their lives, musical
or otherwise. That's where I get my inspiration. Really, all we
want to do is rock."
|