Puafua

Last updated

Puafua was an eclectic Minneapolis, Minnesota based progressive rock jam band in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Members included Dylan Nau (guitar), Jake Pool (bass), Steve Olmstead (keyboard), Casey Kashiemer (drums), Eric Bequeaith (trumpet), Aaron Stoehr (trombone), Jeff Siegfried (saxophone), and Scott Holzinger (hand drums). Though short-lived, Puafua's output, scope of songwriting, and live performance feats were unparalleled in the Twin Cities; the mammoth eight-piece group often breaking into spontaneously composed, complete songs as if at will. Puafua was a West Bank staple in Minneapolis, holding a regular slot at the Red Sea Bar and The Cabooze in addition to frequenting the 400 Bar and The 5 Corners Saloon. The Turf Club, The Fine Line, The 7th Street Entry, O'Gara's, The Uptown Bar and Grill, and First Avenue's Main Stage were also frequent stops for the band in addition to clubs in greater Minnesota and Wisconsin towns such as Duluth, Rochester, St. Cloud, Superior, North Branch, Monticello, Rockford, and Eau Claire. Puafua also frequented the band rosters at Harvest Fest in Harmony Park, Farmapalooza in Black Bear, WI, and Cedarfest in Minneapolis.

Contents

Puafua, 1998 Puafua.jpg
Puafua, 1998

Influences

Though a complete list would not be possible, influences mentioned most often by Puafua band members included: Pink Floyd, Phish, The Beatles, The Beach Boys, The Doors, Steely Dan, Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, Jim Henson, Elvis Presley, James Brown, Bob Marley, Frank Zappa, Willie Dixon, Charles Mingus, Wallace Hartley and the Titanics, February, and Gene Adams.

Inception

Puafua began in the early 1990s with two rival bands from bordering towns west of Minneapolis: Rockford and Buffalo. Casey Kashiemer and Eric Bequeath were part of the Rockford Metal band Adopt. Dylan Nau and Jake Pool were part of their own Buffalo metal band, Ritalin (a.k.a. Bone Orchard), which had Pink Floyd undertones: a foreshadowing of the writing to come in Puafua by way of Dylan Nau.

Nau, Puafua's first principal songwriter, grew up a friend of the Zimmerman family (Bob Dylan's family), and spent his formative years making use of Dylan's Minnesota recording studio with the Zimmermans, developing his unique guitar and vocal style during that time.

Dylan Nau and Jeff Siegfried in front of The Cabooze, 1999 PuafuaNauSiegfried.jpg
Dylan Nau and Jeff Siegfried in front of The Cabooze, 1999

By his graduating summer, 1993, Nau's band would join forces with Rockford rivals in a battle of the bands show. Their meeting would create a musical respect among the four core Puafua players (Dylan, Casey, Eric, and Jake) three years before they would form a band together.

Later that summer, Nau would coincidentally meet his soon-to-be college buddy and Puafua's second principal songwriter, Jeff Siegfried, while Siegfried played his saxophone on the street in Downtown Minneapolis. Though the two only spoke briefly, they would soon find themselves together in the classroom at Augsburg College, as well as in their own hybrid Jazz-Fusion band, Ear Train [ permanent dead link ], through the mid-90s. Additionally, the two would be instrumental in co-founding Augsburg Basement Recordings, the campus' yearly showcase of student musician/songwriters.

Siegfried, from Minneapolis-based Alternative band The Uh, melded his lyrics well with Nau's writing style, the two inking several minor college hits during their time at Augsburg. Siegfried is the cousin of No Wave pioneer James Chance (a.k.a. James Siegfried), and, like Chance, would wield both saxophone and keyboards on stage.

Augsburg buddy, Steve Olmstead, and Kashiemer's friend, Aaron Stoehr, would round out the band roster as it grew from a four-piece to a seven-piece from 1996 to 1998. By 2000 the group would have gained and lost multi-instrumentalist Scott Holzinger (who eventually found a home with Minneapolis Jam band Wookiefoot), as well as gaining a sound man in Eric Shosted and two fill-in players in Peter Miller and James Pope.

Accomplishments

In its infancy, Puafua's first honor was being asked to open for Minneapolis band February's final show on the Main Stage at First Avenue. Additionally, Puafua held a frequent place of honor in Vox Medusa's Ricochet Kitchen line-up, a performance-based art coalition which was perfect for a group that, itself, dabbled in performance art. For example, it was not uncommon to see Puafua featuring spectacles such as aliens playing Theremins or the entire band sporting Puafua basketball uniforms and shooting hoops during a performance. In 1998, The Pursuit of Catness, Puafua's first full-length album recorded at Sin Toast Studios and Oar Fin Records, enjoyed airplay on local college radio stations, particularly KVSC in St. Cloud, as well as local community stations KFAI and the Homegrown Show with Mei Young on KQRS. Additionally, before the advent of Napster, the album's joke recording "I'm in Jail" made a run to number three on one of the world's first peer-to-peer music sharing websites, MP3.com. In 1999, Sweet Treats and Baker's Choice were released in limited quantity, together 140 minutes of live recording showcasing to a larger audience the band's collective spur of the moment songwriting ability that often went a step beyond simple jamming to completely improvised songs with melody, lyrics, and harmonized horn and backing vocal parts. Puafua also introduced West Coast Jam Band Wookiefoot to its Minneapolis audience at the 7th Street Entry in 1999. In 2000 Puafua teamed up with the Minnesota branch of the organization NORML, participating in concerts, events, and as a featured band on the Free Weed compilation CD. In August, 2001, Puafua was enlisted to headline for "Hemp Car Appreciation Night" which featured a stop by "A Mercedes-Benz diesel converted to run on hemp oil," en route to "Establish[ing] a world distance record for a hemp powered vehicle, and [proving] the point that automobiles need not depend entirely on fossil fuels." Despite the band's modest accolades in the Twin Cities and beyond, the guys never turned down the chance to play a house, back yard, garage, train, or barn party, sometimes playing for up to five hours without a break for an appreciative crowd of friends, old and new.

Multifaceted

As an additional feature, Puafua managed to delight audiences by stopping during a set to switch its instrumental line-up. The group could transform into one or two completely different bands, sometimes even opening for itself incognito with the utilization of each member's multi-instrumental capabilities. Almost every member could literally change places with two other members, and the group altogether could add most any conceivable texture to its complex sound scape. Almost every band member could also jump to a lead or back-up vocal in any given song: a band with seven possible lead singers and the other six behind him capable of multi-harmony background parts. To exemplify the band's transformational abilities, listed below are the instruments each member utilized on stage and in studio during his time in Puafua. (And don't discount bass player Jake Pool: he has been said to have been the stabilizing force holding the entire circus together.)

Puafua at The 7th Street Entry, 1998 Onstagepuafua.jpg
Puafua at The 7th Street Entry, 1998

2001

2001 marked the release of Boosh, an album whose completion would come during an increasingly troubled time for the band, several members developing separate projects and collective live appearances becoming fewer and farther between. Even so, the 1000 units purchased by the group to promote the album sold out in less than two weeks. The band, however, failed to promote the CD any further and it had been largely lost to the public until its internet re-release in 2010. The dawning of 2002 marked the end of Puafua's live performances and recordings, the band giving up a marquee slot at the famed Cabooze bar, a slot formerly held by The Big Wu for whom Puafua was an opening act in its early days. A standing room only crowd at the Uptown Bar and Grill witnesses the extremely under-publicized farewell show on December 1, 2001. Wrote sound man Eric Shosted after the event: "I have to admit the last refrain of the last performance of Home Cookin' almost brought tears to my eyes, and seeing you guys still play with a real sense of enjoyment even after some of the shittiest gigs in recent memory made me real proud to think of you as compadres. I look forward to seeing what other projects lay ahead of each one of you as your roads diverge." In 2002, Puafua was nominated by the Minnesota Music Academy for Eclectic Band of the Year nine months after its farewell show. Small collections of band members resurfaced in the Minneapolis-based groups Spry and Gold Standard through 2009. In 2010 members of Puafua reunited in performance to celebrate the life of deceased friend Ed Tyler (clip). In 2011, digital audio tapes of shows at the Red Sea Bar featuring 20+ minute multi-song jams were found and released to the public as a two disc set.

Puafua Logo 2 Puafualogo2.jpg
Puafua Logo 2

Albums

In addition to studio and live recordings produced by Puafua, Eric Shosted and Rob Curtis, extensive live bootleg recordings were compiled and made available by Roger Learned, some of which appear in official albums. The official Puafua albums are:

  1. PUAFUAPUAFUAPUAFUA(1997)
  2. The Pursuit of Catness(1998)
  3. Sweet Treats(1999)
  4. Baker's Choice(1999)
  5. Onstage 1(2000)
  6. Boosh(2001)
  7. Onstage 2(2002)
  8. Onstage 3(2003)
  9. Puafua Rediscovered (2011)
  10. Puafua Rediscovered II (2011).

Stream and/or download zip file with all 84 sound files at https://archive.org/details/PuafuaCatalogIntroByJeffSiegfried.

After Puafua

Since Puafua, Dylan Nau has had songwriting/performing/arranging roles with Nicholas David of The Voice, Willamena, Gold Standard, Sputik Viper, The Feelin' Band, In Formation, !!!, and Apollo Cobra, much of which has been with the participation of Puafua bandmate Aaron Stoehr. Nau's Puafua collaborator, Jeff Siegfried, has since worked arranging horns for and performing with former Wailer Devon Evans, in Spry with Puafua bandmate Aaron Stoehr, briefly in Gold Standard, and with one of the last surviving beat poets, Stephen Morse. He currently produces The Siegfrieds as well as heading up the role of director of music under the name Roar of the Buffalo Horn for the Rainbow Warriors in San Francisco. Drummer Casey Kashiemer moved to Madison, WI to play with award-winning hip-hop group The Figureheads.

  1. http://www.pulsetc.com/articlef25f.html?op=Print&sid=2876
  2. http://www.angelfire.com/mn2/homecookin/oldies/inhousearticle1.html
  3. http://www.angelfire.com/mn2/homecookin/oldies/alist.html
  4. http://www.myspace.com/devon.evans
  5. http://www.iamasundance.org/
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20110715183759/http://www.ricochetkitchen.com/
  7. http://www.wookiefoot.com
  8. http://www.onmilwaukee.com/music/articles/figureheads.html
  9. http://www.angelfire.com/mn2/homecookin/puafuaemail.html
  10. http://www.angelfire.com/mn2/homecookin/mma.html
  11. http://www.waste.org/feb/shows.html
  12. http://www.myspace.com/sprycc/blog/242978413
  13. http://www.linkedin.com/pub/rob-curtis/7/3a6/920
  14. http://www.myspace.com/apollocobra
  15. http://www.getacd.es/album_various_augsburg_college_basement_recordings_vol_2-1303238.html
  16. http://www.angelfire.com/mn2/homecookin/yourstory.html
  17. http://thesiegfrieds.webstarts.com
  18. https://archive.org/details/KfaiInterview
  19. https://groups.yahoo.com/group/MN-Prog-Cal/message/51
  20. http://www.soundunwound.com/music/puafua/136426
  21. http://207-171-168-157.amazon.com/music/puafua/136426?ref=GP%5B%5D

Related Research Articles

<i>Jericho</i> (The Band album) 1993 studio album by The Band

Jericho is the eighth studio album by Canadian-American rock group the Band. Coming seventeen years after their "farewell concert", it was released in 1993 and was the first album to feature the latter-day configuration of the group, as well as their first release for the Rhino subsidiary Pyramid Records.

<i>High on the Hog</i> (The Band album) 1996 studio album by The Band

High on the Hog is the ninth studio album by Canadian-American rock group the Band, released in 1996. As with its predecessor, 1993's Jericho, it relies heavily on cover versions; only two tracks are original. Songs include Bob Dylan's "Forever Young", a live recording of Richard Manuel performing "She Knows", and the closer "Ramble Jungle".

Heiruspecs is a live hip hop band based in the Midway neighborhood of Saint Paul, Minnesota. Their name is a deliberate misspelling of the word haruspex, which is a Roman term for a person trained to practice divination from the inspection of entrails.

<i>Pool It!</i> 1987 studio album by the Monkees

Pool It! is the tenth studio album by the Monkees, issued by Rhino Records in 1987. It was the first Monkees studio album of new material since Changes in 1970 and the first Monkees album to feature Peter Tork since the 1968 Head soundtrack.

Whatever Gets You thru the Night 1974 single by John Lennon

"Whatever Gets You thru the Night" is a song written by John Lennon, released as a single in 1974 on Apple Records, catalogue number Apple 1874 in the United States and Apple R5998 in the United Kingdom. It peaked at No. 1 on all three record charts, Billboard Hot 100, Cashbox and Record World Top 100, and at No. 36 in the British singles chart. In the US, it was the lead single for Lennon's album Walls and Bridges; in the UK the single was released on the same day as the album. In Canada, the single spent two weeks at No. 2, and became the 30th biggest hit of 1974.

<i>Chimes of Freedom</i> (EP) 1988 EP by Bruce Springsteen

Chimes of Freedom is a live EP by American singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen. It was released in 1988 to support the multi-artist Human Rights Now! Tour in benefit of Amnesty International. This tour was announced near the end of a first-set radio broadcast during Springsteen's July 3, 1988 show in Stockholm, Sweden, after which Bob Dylan's "Chimes of Freedom" was performed. The performance of "Chimes of Freedom" on this EP peaked at number 16 on the Mainstream Rock charts in mid-late 1988.

<i>Boats Against the Current</i> 1977 studio album by Eric Carmen

Boats Against the Current is a 1977 album by Eric Carmen. The title is taken from a line in the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne ceaselessly into the past.” It was Carmen's second solo LP, after the Raspberries disbanded. It peaked at #45 on the Billboard album chart for the week ending October 8, 1977.

Dropping Daylight is an American rock band from Minneapolis, Minnesota. They have performed with Jason Mraz, The Pixies, Plain White T's, Jonas Brothers, Paramore, Papa Roach, Cypress Hill, Green Day, Phantom Planet, The Misfits, Blue October, Breaking Benjamin, and more recently with Army of Anyone and Sick Puppies.

White Flag is an American punk rock band currently based in Los Angeles. Their current lineup consists of frontman Mike Mess (guitar), Jello B. Afro (bass), and Trace Element (drums). These members have been in the band since 1982, though many have rotated in and out. White Flag has a discography that ranges from their 1982 debut R is for Rocket to 2010's Benefit For Cats.

<i>Missing Links</i> (album) 1987 compilation album by the Monkees

Missing Links is a compilation album of rare and previously unreleased songs by the Monkees, issued by Rhino Records in 1987. It is the first volume of a three-volume set, followed by Missing Links Volume Two in 1990 and Missing Links Volume Three in 1996.

<i>Keeping the Legend Alive</i> 2004 live album by Poco

Keeping the Legend Alive is the 22nd album and 4th live album by the country rock band Poco. It was re-released in 2006 under the title "Alive In The Heart Of The Night." It includes original members Richie Furay, *George Grantham and Rusty Young, Paul Cotton who replaced Jim Messina in 1970 and Jack Sundrud a member since the 1990s.

<i>Another Time, Another Place</i> (Bryan Ferry album) 1974 studio album by Bryan Ferry

Another Time, Another Place was Bryan Ferry's second studio album as a solo artist. The album reached #4 in the UK charts in 1974.

<i>Ray Charles in Person</i> 1960 live album by Ray Charles

In Person is a live album recorded by Ray Charles on May 28, 1959 on a rainy night in Atlanta, Georgia at Morris Brown College's Herndon Stadium. All tracks from this album together with those from Ray Charles at Newport were also released on the 1987 Atlantic compilation CD, Ray Charles Live.

The Smoke Ring was a rock band from Norfolk, Nebraska active in the 1960s. It was formed from two previous regionally popular rock and roll groups, Little Joe & the Ramrods and The Strollers. They had strong regional success but charted only one national hit, 1969's "No, Not Much".

The Louisville Sluggers, also known as The Sluggers, were an Australian swing revival band from Sydney formed in the late 1990s by Glenn "Nugget" Scott and his sister, "The Boss".

<i>Late Again</i> 1968 studio album by Peter, Paul & Mary

Late Again is the nіnth studio album by folk-pop trio, Peter, Paul and Mary and reached #14 on Billboard's Top 200 Albums Chart.

Your Choice Records

Your Choice Records was a German independent record label that was founded in 1988 by producer Tobby Holzinger. The label specialized in independent punk music, including live releases of German and other international acts. Holzinger provided a share of the record sale profit to various animal rights organisations.

New Medicine American rock band

New Medicine is an American rock band from Minneapolis, Minnesota, formed in 2009.

<i>Apollo Theater 3/09/12</i> 2014 live album by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band

Apollo Theater 03/09/12 is a live album by Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, released in November 2014 and was the first official release through the Bruce Springsteen Archives. The concert is available on CD and digital download at http://live.brucespringsteen.net.

<i>All Is as All Should Be</i> 2017 EP by The Dear Hunter

All Is as All Should Be is an EP by American progressive rock band The Dear Hunter, released on December 1, 2017 via Cave and Canary Goods.