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Bettie Serveert - Log 22

bettie serveert cover art

Artist: Bettie Serveert
Title: Log 22
Catalog#: AHA!053
Price: $10.00 buy

Tracks on this CD:
Wide Eyed Fools
Smack
Have A Heart
Captain Of Maybe
De Diva
Given
Not Coming Down
Cut 'N Dried
Log 22
White Dogs
Certainlie
The Ocean, My Floor
The Love-In
Rings by Absinthe Blind (Mud Records)

Peter Visser, Carol Van Dyk, Herman Bunskoeke

After a year of relative silence Bettie Serveert re-emerges triumphantly with their 5th studio album to date, and what a scorcher it is!


Pairing the elegant and accomplished beauty of its predecessor Private Suit, with the energy and reckless abandon of their classic debut Palomine, Log 22 is a veritable sonic trip and probably their best album yet!

And here it is, written and produced by Carol van Dyk and Peter Visser and recorded at Weesp’s E-Sound Studios, Log 22 contains a wide variety of shades. The 13 tracks range from the fresh and the playful (the new single ‘Smack’, ‘Love-In’) by way of the happy-sad and melancholy (‘Have A Heart’, ‘Captain Of Maybe’, ‘A Certain Lie’) and the sensually grooving (‘Given’) to all-out sonic blasts (‘Not Coming Down’, ’Log 22’, ‘The Ocean My Floor’). All compositions are laced with tasteful electronics, tapes, strings and horn arrangements, and are delivered with an apparent effortless ease.

Listen to Carol’s singing that sounds more intimately confident and sensual than ever and Peter’s patented ‘no holds barred’ guitar wrestling matches and Log 22 will wriggle it’s way into your skull intending to stay there indefinitely.

See the band's video for "Smack" by visiting: http://www.parasol.com/video/video.asp


Carol Van DykPeter Visser
sweaty Bettie
photos by Jasper Coolidge


The s
tory begins when Canadian-born, Netherlands-reared Carol van Dyk was hired as the live-sound mixer for the celebrated underground band de Artsen (the Doctors). Bunskoeke and Visser were already members, Dubbe was their roadie and the musical side project in which all four friends participated became Bettie Serveert. (Since you ask, the name means “Bettie to serve” after Dutch tennis player Bettie Stove, who lost the Wimbledon Ladies Final in 1977).

After a false start in 1986 when they dissolved after only one gig, the band ‘reformed’ in 1990 and quickly caught the ear of Matador, Brinkman and 4AD’s Guernica label for whom they kindly agreed to record their first album Palomine. Carol van Dyk’s seductive voice, the band’s bittersweet melodies and a cool cover of Sebadoh’s Healthy Sick made for an impressive debut which endeared them immediately to the press:

Of Palomine, US magazine Spins enthused, ‘The band’s warm, engaging musical personality makes you want to be pals o’theirs. No matter how edgy or ‘deep’ the lyrics get, they rarely distract from the whiskey bar of aura of the music.... awe-inspiring, with fantastic guitar sounds and lazy, sprawling leads. When did indie-rock ever sound this mature, this developed?’

With its mournful, desolate feel, and Carol’s typically striking lyrics, Bettie Serveert had (a-hem!) served an ace. A full year later in January 1995 the band recorded their second album Lamprey, which was hailed by Melody Maker as ‘the most tangled, desolate, real life guitar sound of the year’.

After extensive touring with the likes of Belly, Dinosaur Jr, Buffalo Tom, Superchunk, Come and Jeff Buckley, the band soon climbed to the top of the indie underground with their unique and unmistakable heavy sweet guitar sound. In the increasing pile of flattering press coverage that now surrounds them, they have been compared to Neil Young, The Lemonheads, The Throwing Muses, The Sundays, Velvet Underground... the list goes on. Let’s just say they’re the best thing to come out of Holland before and after 2 Unlimited.

1997 sees the return of Bettie Serveert in even finer form with the release of the long awaited third album Dust Bunnies. The product of a year hard work, during which songs were written, books were read, more songs written. It was the first time the Betties benefited from the studio guidance of producer Bryce Goggin, who’s past credits include Pavement, Come, John Zorn, Kim Deal, Lemonheads and Spacehog. It’s also the first Bettie Serveert disc that was recorded entirely within the contiguous United States, specifically at Bearsville studio in scenic Woodstock, New York.

After touring with Counting Crows, Wallflowers and Wilco, Berend Dubbe left the band early 1998 and was replaced by Reinier Veldman, former drummer of De Artsen.

In 1998 the group releases a live album of Velvet Underground cover versions ‘Bettie Serveert Plays Venus In Furs’

Then, after a period of relative radio silence, Bettie Serveert proudly enters the new millennium with their first studio album in two years. To the amazement of friends and foes alike Private Suit turns out to be their most accomplished effort yet. Produced by John Parish of PJ Harvey fame they manage to deliver an intriguing album of almost majestic beauty. Private Suit was well received resulting in extensive touring in Europe (Crossing Border, Lowlands festivals) and the US (headlining and supporting Counting Crows and Live).

Then in 2001, the band decides to take a break…

The sabbatical is spent meditating, re-fuelling, studying and writing. Peter Visser is a hired gun for a while, Herman Bunskoeke learns a trade and Carol releases a record of inspired country songs under the guise of Chitlin’ Fooks (a collaboration with talented Antwerp based songwriter Pascal Deweze). Chitlin’ Fooks tour the US as a duo in the summer of 2001, an extensive club and festival tour through Holland and Belgium follows highlighted by successful gigs at the Crossing Border and Pukkelpop festivals.

Then, by the summer of 2002 Carol van Dyk and Peter Visser are ready to go into the studio to record Log 22.

and the rest, as they say, is history.


"the look"Bettie, not Blondie
photos by Jasper Coolidge


from Rolling Stone:

Bettie Serveert guitarist Peter Visser is quick to list the advantages of recording at his home in Holland. "You have plenty of time and you can work at night, with headphones on, a bottle of wine next to you, you can smoke cigarettes and just record," says Visser of the sessions for the band's latest album, Log 22, which it will support with a fourteen-date tour that starts tonight. "Carol [singer/guitarist van Dyk] could sing whenever she felt like it, which is mostly not in the morning. So it was way more relaxed and exciting like a kindergarten type setting. You have a lot of toys you play with."

The kindergarten atmosphere made space for incidental bits of conversation -- recorded on tours, off the top of the Bettie's heads and in the case of "Wide Eyed Fools," off the TV -- to creep into the fabric of the album. "I have this little dictaphone machine I carry with me all the time, whenever I'm in the streets or on the subway," says Visser. "The woman from the Handsome Family came on the television and it was a coincidence that I was working on the song. I thought it sounded great and it stayed on that song."

With much of the album recorded in Visser's living room, the guitarist found plenty of time to explore left field ideas, including a foray on a synthesizer that wound up supplying a portion of the horn section for the song "Have a Heart."

"I started playing trumpet and saxophone parts on it, but in this totally different key because I don't know how to play keyboards," Visser says. "Carol almost threw the headphones on the floor in disgust. She loathed it, but she said the idea was good. We figured out what keys I could hit on the keyboard and we put a little pieces of tape on it and Carol said, 'You can use those keys and not the others.' It almost worked. At the end of the song you only hear the plastic horns and in the middle it's the real ones mixed with what we did at home."

Log 22's songs began as demos with just vocals and guitar, with some undergoing minimal alterations and others gradually growing into fully realized arrangements with strings.

"What I wanted to do is get away from the drums, bass guitars, then guitars, then vocal routine," Visser says. "That's why we changed it around. I wanted to experiment a little bit. It also helped that I quit smoking. That freaked me out, so I was kind of fucked up and it helped to give it that edge. But then after a couple months we needed some quiet songs on the record so I started smoking again.


Herman, sexy beast

“...One of the finest rock records of the new decade...” - Washington Post

“...With Log 22, the group delivers their most adventurous and sophisticated set to date...” - Billboard

“... A real emotional rollercoaster ride... “ - Mojo

“...In recent years, indie pop has rarely been more ambitious or effective...” - Chicago Sun Times

“...Brawnier, brainier, sweeter, more direct...” - Village Voice


”...Everyone is talking about the White Stripes’ “Elephant” as the early frontrunner for album of the year. But, to my ears, nothing has sounded better so far than Log 22...” - Oakland Tribune

“...That they can still be bothered to show up for work is impressive; that this, their fifth studio album, is another beauty seems almost miraculous...” - Sunday Times

“...Ten years after Palomine the happy-sad meander of the band’s fifth release is warmer and sweeter still...” - Bang

“...If you don’t understand the crackling potency of belligerent rock dipped in liquid mercury, that’s your problem...” - Logo Magazine

“...From the very start of Log 22, singer/guitarist Carol van Dyk sounds on top of her game...” - Junkmedia Magazine

“...Bettie Serveert’s Log 22 is what is supposed to happen when a pop band grows up - they get better than you could ever imagine...” - FM Sound

“...Bettie Serveert are not the same band they were in 1992. They are, in fact a much, much better one...” - Seattle Weekly

“...A tuneful, jammy return...” - Rolling Stone

“... a very pleasant surprise...” - Basement Galaxy

“...Bettie serves up an ace...” - PopMatters

“...Log 22 is some of the best pop music you’re likely to hear all year...” - Daily Tar Heel

“...This is sexy..” - Fufkin.com

the divathe diva


image from Smack video
See the video for "Smack"
 
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