Sometimes a trip can produce more than a few photos, a good story, and a souvenir t-shirt. Songwriter/vocalist
Carla Bozulich and guitarist
Nels Cline took a two-week trip through the Pacific Northwest and got an album out of it. Scarnella (1998, Smells Like Records), the name of both the group that Bozulich and
Cline formed and the album that resulted from their partnership, was born on a trip that contained the beginnings of their work as a duo, four shows, six days of recording and mixing, and a whole lot of songwriting and improvising.
Bozulich and
Cline had worked together before in
the Geraldine Fibbers and both had stretched themselves in partnerships with other musicians: Bozulich in another band,
Ethyl Meatplow, and
Cline in the
Nels Cline Trio, and in collaborations with
Mike Watt,
Thurston Moore, and
Charlie Haden. However, both the unusual circumstances of the creation of this album and extra roles that each member had to play (Bozulich on bass and sampling keyboard,
Cline on drums) meant that this was a project that existed on the edge of their previous experiences. The result was a sound that alternated between the ethereal space of the open road and the noisy organized chaos of random improvisation. ~ Stacia Proefrock