Plankeye Peggy hosts an album release carnival

FUN HOUSE: The phrase “orchestrated chaos” is an accurate description of the Plankeye Peggy sound. The local band’s debut album, Let's See What We Have Here, includes elements of Gypsy-jazz, surf-and-spy guitar and even the ambiance of Ennio Morricone's "spaghetti Western” soundtracks. Photo courtesy of the band

“We don’t want people concentrating on how many key changes we go through, the whole prog-rock thing,” says Dave Gilbert, guitarist in Asheville-based Plankeye Peggy. “That’s not really the crowd we’re trying to reach.” Songwriter and keyboardist Danny Tetrault concurs: “Our music is extremely composed and actually really hard to play. But we want to put on a really fun rock show. We want people to come to our shows a second or third time and still be very surprised.” The audience should expect the unexpected at what Plankeye Peggy is billing not as a party, but rather an “album release carnival” on Friday, March 18, at the Mothlight.

The four-piece band — including bassist Brian Grasso and drummer John Lauterer — recently put the finishing touches on its debut album, Let’s See What We Have Here, recorded with Matt Williams at the Eagle Room in Weaverville. The album seeks to capture the swirling, circus energy of a Plankeye Peggy live set. Listeners may detect elements of Gypsy-jazz, surf-and-spy guitar and even the ambiance of Ennio Morricone’s “spaghetti Western” soundtracks. Or they might think Plankeye Peggy sounds a bit like Danny Elfman’s old band. “That’s funny,” says Tetrault. “I never listened to Oingo Boingo when I was growing up. I just recently listened to them, and I was shocked at how much we sound like them.”

But one shouldn’t make too much of the similarity. Plankeye Peggy approaches its music from a very different perspective than did the ’80s band that made “Dead Man’s Party” and “Weird Science.” Gilbert describes Tetrault’s compositional approach as “big, long, song forms and really surprising or shocking changes. It’s all thematically linked and moving somewhere.”

Tetrault says, “My background is really in jazz and free jazz. But we don’t want to be pretentious. We don’t want people to be bored with us, sitting there explaining our time signatures.”

That’s not likely to happen, especially at the album release carnival. Gilbert says the band wants to “break down the separation between band and audience.” To that end, the interactive show promises a wild array of guest performers. In addition to opening act Wasted Wine, the evening will include an appearance by the Discordia Arts dance troupe. “They’ll also be performing with us,” Tetrault says.

Other performers on the roster are burlesque artist Catalina Mystique from Knoxville, master of ceremonies Keith Shubert, a mainstay of Asheville Vaudeville; and juggler clown Luke Eden. The list goes on, explains Tetrault. “Carlos Vera will be doing live, improvised painting. Dan Sinkfowl is a clown belly dancer. And we’ll have [a character called] ‘Power Femme,’ making confusion and putting people in their place.”

Gilbert sums up the evening as “orchestrated chaos.”

That phrase is also an accurate description of the Plankeye Peggy sound. Explaining one of the new album’s 10 songs, Tetrault says, “It goes into a kind of old-school, 12/8 soul section. And then the outro is a kind of spacey, synth thing.”

Let’s See What We Have Here also features an up-front horn section on half of its tracks. Gilbert says, “If we had more time, every song [on the album] would have had horns.” For the carnival, the group will be joined onstage by Chaz Burchill on sax and trumpeter Joseph Dowdy.

One might well ask what the audience is supposed to do amid all the planned activity at the carnival. “We try to get ’em dancing,” says Gilbert. “It’s not always the easiest music to dance to, but we promote the waltzes.” So carnivalgoers can expect music in 12/8, waltzes, clowns and jugglers, and … cross-dressing musicians. “We cross-dress all the time,” Gilbert says. “We like to take the whole male-female thing and smash it together.”

Though they admit they haven’t had much luck so far getting audiences to show up in costume, Gilbert and Tetrault heartily encourage anyone who wants to do so. “We’re into the pirate thing; we’re into the carnival and circus thing. But we’re not defining ourselves by those genres,” says Tetrault. “There’s a kind of carnival scene in Asheville, and we love being part of that. But you can tell by our music: We’re a rock band.”

WHO: Plankeye Peggy with Wasted Wine
WHERE: The Mothlight, themothlight.com
WHEN: Friday, March 18, 9 p.m. $5

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About Bill Kopp
Author, speaker, music journalist, historian, collector, and musician. His first book, "Reinventing Pink Floyd: From Syd Barrett to The Dark Side of the Moon," was published in 2018. His second book, "Disturbing the Peace: 415 Records and the Rise of New Wave," was published in 2021. His next book, "What's the Big Idea: 30 Great Concept Albums" is due in 2025.

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2 thoughts on “Plankeye Peggy hosts an album release carnival

  1. For the record, Dave Gilbert is the man with the jazz and free jazz background. I could never wrap my mind around all that mojo! I know it must have been hard to tell who was saying what on the speakerphone during the phone interview. Thanks for the fantastic article, Bill!!!

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