Return
of a Ramone…
TOMMY RAMONE AND CLAUDIA TIENAN BOW BLUEGRASS
DUO UNCLE MONK WITH SELF-TITLED ALBUM DUE OUT MAY 22
Duo proffers old-timey string band music informed
by the spirit of indie rock
WOODSTOCK, N.Y. — The New York Times preview said it
best: “There is life after the Ramones, but who knew it would
be bluegrass?” The write-up referred to Tommy Ramone’s
new bluegrass duo Uncle Monk, co-fronted by Claudia Tienan. In what
seems an improbable second act for the man who wrote “Blitzkrieg
Bop” and “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend,” Uncle Monk
is rooted in the old-timey and bluegrass traditions. The duo’s
self-titled debut album featuring 14 original songs will be released
to brick and mortar retail on the indie Airday Records label, distributed
by Burnside Distribution, on May 22.
“We are doing what feels natural to us,” says Ramone.
“We are making use of string-band instrumentation along with
alternative rock flavorings. We’re drawn to the classic simplicity
of string-band music, but at the same time we are deeply involved
with the aesthetics of indie music. There is a similarity between
punk and old-time music — both are home-brewed as opposed to
schooled. Both have earthy energy. And there is a certain cool in
old-time music that is found in the best alternative artists.”
The songs of Uncle Monk run the gamut of emotions from exhilaration
to sorrow, focusing on many aspects of modern existence: small-town
life, coming to the big city, urban gentrification, interpersonal
relationships and spiritual longings.
Tommy Ramone began his musical career as Tommy Erdelyi, an engineer
at the Record Plant. Born in Budapest, Hungary, and raised in Forest
Hills, Queens, N.Y., he co-founded the Ramones with Johnny, Joey and
Dee Dee and participated in the birth of punk and indie-rock, working
as the band’s drummer, producer and manager. He has also produced
recordings by the Talking Heads, Redd Kross and the Replacements.
Claudia Tienan hails from Minneapolis, where she was part of the local
music scene and came to New York to study philosophy at Hunter College.
She was later a member of the Simplistics and then formed Uncle Monk
with Ramone — originally as an electric jam band, and later
as an acoustic duo. Her penetrating lyrics and haunting vocals add
facets and dimensions to the songs. There is a yin and yang sensibility
here, a touch of light and dark, of bitter and sweet, as the music
of each artist complements the other’s.
Uncle Monk delivers thoughtful and measured crafting of lyrics and
melodies, and is dedicated to music that inspires the heart and tingles
the spine.
Time Out New York recently wrote of the band: “If we
tell you that Uncle Monk is a bluegrass duo with Tommy Ramone in it,
you’re bound to think of something like punkgrass or
bluepunk. But [they] serve it up pretty straight —
and solid. There is no doubting that Ramone’s protean experience
informs Uncle Monk, but he’s no dilettante. This stuff is real.”
# # #