Paul Horn

Di Dollari

Di Dollari Downloads:

Di Dollari began as a collaboration between Paul Horn (Ousia, Shapeshifter) and Glen Jones (Grow Like Topsy) in 1996. It slowly evolved over the years adding the musicianship and creativity of Mike Croswell (Metaphor). Over the years, a number of notable musicians have made contributions to this group on the road and in the studio including Matt Zaun (Skyeklad) and Dave Onnen (Ousia, Skyeklad).

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Di Dollari’s instrumental sound combines elements of Americana, jazz, soundtrack, surf, and western sounds. Di Dollari is influenced by guitar-based music with a dusty edge such as the Ennio Morricone western compositions but also is influenced by the ambient, space rock, and post-punk histories of its members.

Over the years Di Dollari has played a number of live shows at notable Twin Cities venues and the greater Midwest. The group was a regular feature in the avant-garde Future Perfect series and performed closing nights at both Sursumcorda and Duluth’s Norshore Theater.

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Past Performances

  • Wednesday March 9th 2011 – Dusty’s Bar and Grill in Nordeast MPLS (Bosso).
  • Wednesday August 31st 2005 10:00 PM – Di Dollari will be playing the Turf Club with Jim Crego and the Greg Schaefer Trio. Wednesday evening no cover!
  • Friday July 15th 2005 After Midnight – Green Man Festival – Di Dollari will be performing a score to the silent movie “Trip to the Moon” following live performances from the Violent Femmes, The Owls, Olympic Hopefuls, Mark Mallman, Trampled by Turtles, Erik Koskinen and Little Black Books.
  • Saturday May 7th 2005 7:00 PM – “The Beautiful Surreal: Fabrications On Old Foundations” by Artist: Allen Brewer with music by Di Dollari. Gallery 13, 302 13th Ave. North East, Minneapolis, MN 55413
  • Friday April 1st 2005 10:00 PM – The Kitty Cat Klub, 315 14th Av. SE., Minneapolis, MN 55414, Salamander, Di Dollari, Sean Connaughty (that one guy from Salamander)
  • Saturday February 26th 2005 9:30 PM – Big Surf, Ronnie Lake and the Men of Iioto and Di Dollari. Saturday, February 26th at the Terminal Bar, 409 E. Hennepin Ave, MPLS. Music starts at 9:30 Age 21+, $5 cover.
  • Saturday December 11th 2004 8:00 PM – DIORAMA-RAMA – A collective art show featuring dioramas and music. Playing will be Charlie Parr, Di Dollari, Every Bell and Whistle, and Blitzen. At the M.A.C., 22 N. 1st Ave W. By the way, a diorama is some sort of box with a scene in it. You might have made one in elementary school.
  • Friday October 24th 2003 10:00 PM – Art Opening for Micheal Thomsen (Painter)Langworks Studios (on the same block as the Modern Cafe), 357 13th Ave NE Mpls MN 55413. Starts around 8/9ish. Di Dollari plays around 10.

A fistful of spaghetti
Moon Dawg unloads a surf-rock salute to Ennio Morricone

BY GREGORY NICOLL

When Clint Eastwood’s Hand reached toward his rawhide holster during the climactic gunfight of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966), audiences heard something never before included on a Western movie soundtrack: the echoing crash of a surf guitar’s spring-loaded reverb tank.

This unusual creative flourish earned “spaghetti western” film music composer Ennio Morricone a perpetual place in the hearts of surf music fans. More than a dozen surf bands now pay long-overdue tribute to the Italian maestro on a new CD, For a Few Guitars More, organized by a former University of Georgia teacher.

“Spaghetti westerns are pure escapism, the distilled essence of bad-ass cool,” observes professor Larry “Moon Dawg” White, who taught economics at UGA for more than 10 years before transferring to the University of Missouri. “Once you’ve seen the movies, the music evokes that mood. It puts you in the middle of a gunfight.

“The main appeal of Morricone’s great spaghetti western themes is their incredible melodic hooks — perfect for whistling. But the arrangements are also remarkable. Going from traditional surf music to Morricone Westerns,” says White, “is like graduating from high school to college. There’s so much more going on, a greater variety of instruments and moods.”

For a Few Guitars’ cover art perfectly illustrates its concept. The Don Vigeant cartoon depicts the headstock of a Mosrite guitar — a key surf-rock tool — with its M reassigned to “Morricone” and protruding from a lawman’s gun holster. The disc opens with Atlanta’s Penetrators performing “Guns Don’t Argue” in a witty arrangement that begins with a cocking pistol and ends with gunfire killing each musician, until only the drummer continues playing.

Other remarkable tracks include Pollo del Mar’s tongue-in-cheek “Navajo Joe,” slyly sneaking a lick from the Shadows’ “Apache” into the mix. Bernard Yin (the MiGs) and Dave Arnson (Insect Surfers) engage in a two-man guitar duel as they re-enact background music from the final showdown in Once Upon a Time in the West. And fuzz-guitar legend Davie Allan, who created scores for many ’60s cult-classic teen/biker films, contributes a Morricone-influenced scorcher called “The Loud, the Loose and the Savage.”

White notes that although he invited mostly traditional surf artists to participate, he was pleasantly surprised by the variety of submissions. Dave Wronski, best known for playing electric guitar with Slacktone and Jon & the Nightriders, switches to acoustic instrumentation. Canadian Brent Cooper plays the gunfight music from For a Few Dollars More on a six-string bass. The trio 3 Balls of Fire employs exotic percussion and tastefully subdued backing vocals, while the Irreversible Slacks bring a musical saw to “The Big Gundown.”

The CD also contains voluminous liner notes signed by “Moon Dawg,” a nickname White picked up at UGA while helping members of the Athens band Man or Astro-Man? locate space-themed surf tunes to perform.

“They all went by stage names,” he recalls, “and ‘Moon Dawg’ seemed appropriate for mine because it was the title of a classic 1960 surf tune, with ‘Moon’ providing an outer-space connection and ‘Dawg’ a link to UGA.”

White collaborated on For a Few Guitars with Dalibor Pavicic of the Bambi Molesters, a Croatian surf band. Pavicic located a record label, Dancing Bear, and arranged for the mastering and production in Europe, while White began contacting musicians and sorting out which band would cover which tune. One might expect that, as an economics professor, he would’ve prepared a business plan to ensure the project would be profitable. But he’s quick to assert that For a Few Guitars is a labor of love.

“My only investment has been time,” White says. “And except for having to nag the bands who were late with their tracks, it’s all been fun. So my investment already paid for itself. The record label has a monetary stake in the project, but — wisely — they haven’t asked me for any financial advice.”

Di Dollari – Self Titled
By Jeff Penczak

A one-off Minneapolis supergroup including the Skye Klad/Salamander rhythm section of bassist (and head Mutant) Dave Onnen and drummer Matt Zaun, along with Ousia guitarist Paul Horn (Onnen’s also Ousia’s bassist), this is a groovy, jazzy, finger-poppin’ collection of instrumentals with obvious signposts pointing at Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti western soundtracks (his 1970 theme from “�Vamos A Matar, Compa�eros!” is covered to good effect here), Tarentel and other instrumental post rockers such as Paul Newman, Tortoise and Calexico.

Funky jazz licks intersect with Mike Croswell’s bluesy harmonica wail on “Dusty’s Gift,” and the sound opens up considerably on the languid, expansive, perfectly titled “Montana,” driven by Croswell’s snakecharming accordian. Horn’s s-wah-wah-mpadelic, “big” guitar sound on “Tolex Remnants” could have been titled “DE2″ (i.e., Dave Edmunds plays Duane Eddy) and the shuffling, slight-of-foot “North Star,” again featuring snappy fills from Zaun (who’s brilliant throughout) will have those Lake Michigan surfers waxing their sticks and heading out in their woodies. Cowabunga!

You won’t have to strap on your chaps and gunbelts to enjoy “Almagordo Snake,” which would make a cool theme to a 21st century remakeof “Bonanza,” but it sure wouldn’t hurt. The songs tend to wander off the beaten path a bit towards the end, but for the most part, there’s over a 101 uses for great instrumental music such as this, from DJ “beds” and cinematic soundtracks, to roaming with buffalo and playing with deer and antelope, to bailing hay and digging into those chores down on the farm. So pick yourself up a copy, sprinkle liberally with prairie dust and invent one of your own.

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