The Flying Luttenbachers Explained

The Flying Luttenbachers
Background:group_or_band
Origin:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Associated Acts:Various
Current Members:Weasel Walter
Luke Polipnick
James Paul Nadien
Past Members:Hal Russell
Chad Organ
Ken Vandermark
Jeb Bishop
Dylan Posa
Chuck Falzone
William Pisarri
Aaron Dilloway
Kurt Johnson
Michael Colligan
Julie Pomerleau
Fred Lonberg-Holm
Alex Perkolup
Jonathan Hischke
Ed Rodriguez
Mike Green
Mick Barr
Rob Pumpelly
Tony Dryer
Chris Welcome
Evan Lipson
Brandon Seabrook
Henry Kaiser
Wendy Eisenburg
Tim Dahl
Mattie Nelson
Alex Ward
Katie Battistoni
Sam Ospovat
Charlie Werber

The Flying Luttenbachers are an American instrumental noise rock band led by multi-instrumentalist, composer, improviser and producer Weasel Walter.[1]

The Flying Luttenbachers have created a body of work focused on musical extremity and dissonance. Their music ranges from intense all-acoustic free improvisation to complex and modernistic rock composition, and from electronic noise to punk-inspired jazz.[2] Walter has been quoted as saying he has drawn musical inspiration from the fields of punk, death metal, free jazz, and no wave.[3]

History

The Flying Luttenbachers formed in December 1991 in Chicago, Illinois, as a punk jazz trio, with Hal Russell (tenor and soprano saxes, trumpet, vibraphone, and drums; co founder), Chad Organ (tenor sax, moog synthesizer, and baritone sax) and Weasel Walter (drums, guitar, bass, keyboards, woodwinds, electronics, and main composer). The band derived their moniker from Russell's birth name, Harold Luttenbacher.[4] Russell left the band in June 1992, and was soon replaced by Ken Vandermark for the recording of The Flying Luttenbachers' first 7″ record.

Since its formation, the band's personnel have changed several times under Walter's leadership. The band has featured several free jazz and experimental rock musicians including Fred Lonberg-Holm, Kurt Johnson, Jeb Bishop, Alex Perkolup, Mick Barr, Ed Rodriguez, Mike Green, and Jonathan Hischke. The Flying Luttenbachers have toured Europe and the US extensively with bands including The Locust, Arab On Radar, Lightning Bolt, U.S. Maple, Erase Errata, Bobby Conn, and Wolf Eyes.

Walter moved from Chicago to Oakland, California, in 2003,[5] and then again to the San Francisco Bay Area.[6] He refreshed The Flying Luttenbachers with the addition of bassist Mike Green, guitarist Ed Rodrigues and later Mick Barr. The band played their final concert in November 2006 before officially disbanding in November 2007 with the release of a studio album (recorded solo by Walter).

In 2017, after a 10-year hiatus, The Flying Luttenbachers reformed, accepting an invitation to play at the Sonic Protest festival.[7] Walter (on drums) was joined by guitarist Chris Welcome and bassist Tim Dahl. The group opened three shows for Oh Sees in October 2018[8] before touring Europe in April 2019.[9]

In 2019, a quartet version of the band released Shattered Dimension. Joining Walter (on drums) was saxophonist Matt Nelson, bassist Tim Dahl, and guitarist Brandon Seabrook. Over the next few years, the band's varying lineup included bassist Evan Lipson; guitarists Henry Kaiser, Wendy Eisenberg, Katie Battistoni, and Alex Ward; and drummer Sam Ospovat.[10]

Conceptual continuity

Since 1996’s Revenge album, the Flying Luttenbachers’ musical output has been underlined by a gradually unravelling storyline concerning the self-obliteration of the planet Earth and the resulting aftermath. The 2006 album Cataclysm concerns an interstellar battle between two monolithic entities: The Void (a dark, silent spectre detailed in 2004’s album of the same name) and The Iridescent Behemoth (a massive planetoid being whose tale was told in 2003’s complex Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder album). The music energetically utilizes deliberate harmonic dissonance and the material operates on a principle of intelligent transformation of concise amounts of interrelated themes.

Members

Current Members

Former Members

Discography

Singles

Albums

Compilations

References

  1. Chicago Reader Interview Web site: Archived copy . 2007-03-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927004407/http://www.chicagoreader.com/hitsville/021108.html . 2007-09-27 .
  2. Scene Point Blank interview http://www.scenepointblank.com/features/47
  3. Web site: Music Notes: Flying Luttenbachers take off. Sanchez. John. Chicago Reader. 12 September 1996 . en. 2018-12-18.
  4. Epitonic feature http://www.epitonic.com/index.jsp?refer=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.epitonic.com%2Fartists%2Ftheflyingluttenbachers.html
  5. Web site: Perfect Sound Forever: Weasel Walter, The Flying Luttenbachers, and ugEXPLODE. www.furious.com. 2018-12-18.
  6. Web site: Head-to-head during the holidays . Margasak . Peter . Chicago Reader . 23 December 2007 . 2018-12-18.
  7. Web site: The Flying Luttenbachers reform for first shows in 10 years. Tiny Mix Tapes. en. 2018-12-18.
  8. Web site: Oh Sees began 3-night Brooklyn run w/ Timmy's Organism & Flying Luttenbachers (pics). BrooklynVegan. 19 October 2018 . en-US. 2018-12-18.
  9. Web site: The Flying Luttenbachers . Fortress of The Flying Luttenbachers . 16 August 2023 . fortress.
  10. Hear Flying Luttenbachers' First New Music in 12 Years. Shteamer. Hank. 2019-02-26. Rolling Stone. en-US. 2020-05-13.
  11. Grunnen Rocks Flying Luttenbachers Discography http://www.grunnenrocks.nl/bands/f/flyingluttenbachersthe.htm

External links