"Styroculture,"
according to the website of guitarist Ronnie Neuhauser's No Cheez Records,
is a term referring to "manufacturing the false dogma of cheap,
meaningless, mindless things."
Cheap, meaningless, and mindless
- sorta like way too much mainstream music. Neuhauser's "Antidote"
to all that mediocrity is an electric instrumental trio featuring himself,
Fred Melillo on bass, and Jim Townsend on drums. He describes their
sound as "experimental fusion" with both written and improvised
elements.
"It's kind of very eclectic
rock/funk/Latin/avant-garde," says Neuhauser of the trio. "We
do a mix of some very orchestrated ideas but we also have a lot of improvisation
- it's about half and half, and we'll often go into wide open improvs...
a lot of our compositions are even written that way, where one section
is orchestrated and the rest is open, so you get a good blend. I have
some of my own musical theories I've been working on and we're kind
of incorporating those sound textures into the stuff we're doing."
In addition to Styrocultural
Antidote, the prolific Neuhauser also heads up a five-piece band with
vocals, performs spoken word pieces, and is putting together an groove-rock/spoken
word opera called Gangr'ear - and for an artist as multifaceted as he
is, Ideat Village is an unbeatable performance venue.
"I love the fact that
Ideat Village leans more toward avant-garde and progressive ideas -
that's the kind of thing we're into," he says. "All of the
art will be great to see, and all the other bands... I'm open to everything,
I'm very open to eclectic things and I think that's what's so awesome
about the festival.
"I don't think there's
enough of that out there, I think too many events are very commercial
and they shut people out - and a fest like this really opens things
up for people."