Visual Instincts

| 11 Nov 2014 | 01:42

    People are always asking me about the lyrics,” says John Baldwin Gourley, leader and principal songwriter of Alaskan outfit Portugal The Man. “But to me, they’re really literal.” Though he favors suggestive lyrics, Gourley, a painter since childhood who designs all the band’s visuals (CD covers, T-shirts, etc.), approaches his imagery in clearly defined visual terms. “When I’m writing,” he explains, “I’m writing from the way I see the people in the songs moving about, the way they talk. If you read the lyrics, they come out more visually. They’re not really meant to be words.”

    A jangly mix of post-hardcore, progressive and psychedelic influences, Portugal The Man started as Gourley’s solo brainchild while he was still fronting the hardcore band Anatomy of a Ghost. Gourley set out to find that elusive middle ground between the Beatles and Wu Tang. He quickly veered into other areas, soon pulling fellow Anatomy of a Ghost refugee and childhood friend, Zach Carothers, into the mix.

    Listeners wary of PTM’s unabashed resemblance to the Mars Volta might also find themselves enticed not only by the individual group sound straining to get through the grooves on just-released disc, Church Mouth, but also by the band’s adventurous live show. Not content to merely change up the setlist every night, Gourley and company (who appear as a six-piece this time around) throw out the set list altogether and also invite any musicians who happen to be on tour with them to join in and integrate themselves into the show as recurring special guests.

    “We basically try to throw each other off as much as possible,” Gourley chuckles. “Whatever song starts is the song we’re going to play. We do rehearse those jams before we go out there, though. That’s an awful thing when a jam session just starts out of nowhere. There’s definitely a place for that, and that’s actually what we did when we first went to Germany. It was like, ‘Holy shit, we’ve got to play for an hour and a half,’ instead of the 25 minutes that we brought with us. We were headlining shows we had no idea we were going to headline, so we just started jamming. And that’s actually what developed the band and made it what it is now.”

    “It made us appreciate things like the James Brown, ‘one-time, two-time’ shit,” he adds. “Those bands are sitting in a rehearsal space going over what they’re going to do. It’s not necessarily what’s going to happen live, but they’re prepared.” On Church Mouth, Gourley addresses politics and religion more than he’s ever allowed himself in the past, but you can still expect his signature esoteric touch.

    “I don’t really care to avoid it at this point,” he says. “But it’s also something I’m never going to talk about. There are designated speakers for that. Hopefully, Rage Against The Machine really is getting back together, because people like that don’t come along every year. But I’ve just realized I can say what I want to say. Even if there isn’t an argument about it, I know the outcome, which is: We’re both right.”

    Aug. 13, Knitting Factory, 74 Leonard St. (betw. B’way & Church St.), 212-219-3132; 7, $10/$12 (also Aug. 14 at Maxwell’s).