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Fabrizio Moretti Sculpting Rock 'N' Roll Watch
twenty-three-year-old Fabrizio Moretti in action with
The Strokes, and
you'll see an elegant simplicity, an economy of motion, and an almost
machine-like precision. It's
no surprise to learn that in addition to
studying music, he attended art school for sculpture, where he built
elegant
constructions out of discarded pieces of metal, crafting
robotic figures that mimicked basic human movements.
"It
was
all about communications," Moretti says. "I remember one that was a
sort of noisemaking machine, with an arm that
bounced back on a metal
plate." That sounds like exactly the sort of sculpture that a drummer would make. "Yeah, I
guess it does," he says, laughing.
Raised in midtown Manhattan, where neighbors tend to frown upon
aspiring
drummers, Moretti spent his early years banging away in a
soundproofed closet. "I padded the walls, I padded the drums, I
padded everything," he says. "My mom was horrified, and so were the neighbors."
The Strokes are
Moretti's first band. He has known singer Julian
Casablancas and guitarist Nick Valensi since their days together
at
Dwight High School. They knocked the rock world on its ear in 2001 with
their RCA debut, Is This It.
Critics hailed
the group's mix of Velvet Underground drones,
hyper-rhythmic guitars, undeniable hooks - and a killer backbeat.
The
Strokes were branded as the standard bearers of a new scene that
represented the biggest burst of energy in the Big
Apple since the
mid-'70s uprising at C.B.G.B.: Here was "the new wave of new wave."
Now the group (which is
completed by guitarist Albert Hammond Jr. and
bassist Nikolai Fraiture) is back with an equally strong second album, Room
On Fire,
which builds on the basic sound by incorporating diverse influences
ranging from '50s doo-wop to dub
reggae. It stands as another
collection of perfectly crafted rock songs, with every interlocking
part a paradigm of tuneful
minimalism.
Moretti clearly has a
lot to be proud of in his musical career, and his personal life is
going just as well:
He's dating actress Drew Barrymore. MD spoke with him after The Strokes' first American tour in support of
Room On Fire, when the band returned home to New York to perform a monthly residency on The Conan O'Brien
Show.
MD: So you've been performing every Tuesday for a month on The Conan O'Brien
Show. Do you like playing on TV?
Fab: To be honest with you, I've never done anything that's
more
nerve-wracking. It's like a show - you get the same kind of nervousness
that you do when you're about to go
onstage. But the problem is that
it's only one song and you're not able to get into it, plus you know
that it's
going to be projected into millions of people's houses.
There's something very freaky and ghostlike about
it.
MD: It must be hard to come right out of the box and be good.
Fab: Exactly.
That's why there's a whole lot of jumping about backstage and a lot of yelling right before we go
on.
MD: How did you feel the initial US tour went?
Fab: It went really well. It was cool,
because we sort of had to
prove ourselves a little bit, like we did in the beginning. It felt
like we were almost a different band,
coming back on the second record.
MD: When I saw you in Chicago, I thought you played really well. It never
ceases to amaze me how tight the group is.
Fab: I should start out by saying we're all really
close
friends. We don't have any egos to climb over. I've known Julian and
Nick since I was thirteen. We've
built this friendship and learned our
musical tastes from each other. You can't hide anything from a
friendship like that.
You kind of step into the situation showing your
cards. In my case, it's hard to be like a simple drummer who
doesn't
play all over the place. But there's something soothing about having my
friends all around me, egging me
on to do certain parts as we're
arranging the songs.
MD: It seems as if everyone in The Strokes
intensely listens to
one another. Each part is so wonderfully crafted and everything fits
together so meticulously. Do you really
put each song under the
microscope?
Fab: Oh yeah, absolutely, for hours and hours. It's similar to
a
machine in that every cog has its moments of up and down. When one part
of the machine is at its lowest point of rotation,
the other part is at
its highest, and that's the only way that the machine works. It's just
like any other art form, like
when you paint something or build a
sculpture and it finally clicks and you can't put another stroke to
it - no pun
intended! You feel that sense of satisfaction that it's
finally finished. And it might seem finished for the longest time,
but
something might be missing, as small as one crash.
MD: When we're talking about something
specific in the drum
part - like dropping out of a 16th-note ride and going to flams on the
snare - is that something where Julian
says, "I want you to do this?" Or
will you try different things and inject them into a song?
Fab: He's
very specific about how he wants a song to come out.
But what's beautiful about the way Julian works is that he's
open to
anything. I don't know if you were talking about the song "The Way It
Is," when I go from the ride to flams on the
snare, but stuff like that
comes about from playing the part over and over again and trying a
whole bunch of different things.
Sometimes it comes from someone
describing a mood that they want to set, and sometimes it just comes as
a fluke. But a
lot of the times, it's just a certain amount of
discipline, playing the song over and over again - or just playing the part
over and over again - and thinking of as many things as you possibly can.
Jim DeRogatis
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