Slow Gherkin began in the summer of 1993 when A.J., Zack, Phil
and I (James), all Santa Cruz High students, decided to try out a
fresh and exciting style of music played by Skankin' Pickle, Bad
Manners and a few other ska bands that had played in our
hometown of Santa Cruz. Zack dreamed up our nonsensical
name during one of his three ceramics classes. We practiced all
summer in A.J.'s dad's garage and hosted our own debut
performance at Phil's house that August. Our set consisted of
"Skankin' Weasel", "Phil Bluetelle (Working for the Man)",
"Drunken Sailor", and about four other songs through which we
haltingly ground to the amusement of our friends.
During the '93-'94 school year, we added
Brigham Housman on trombone and
pre-med UCSC student Josh "Monty"
Montgomery on trumpet and began to play
bar shows at the Redroom about every six
weeks. These shows and the occasional
party kept us pretty busy considering our
inexperience, and by the summer of '94 our
chops were solid enough to warrant a
recording. We recorded a 4-song EP,
"Death of a Salesman", in two days and
produced and released it ourselves,
ultimately celebrating it's release at a
Palookaville show on December 23. All of the sudden our
audience had changed from our friends and a scattering of old
drunks to six hundred kids, many of whom we didn't know. The
end of '94 also marked the induction of "Polka" Peter Cowan
(initially on accordian, then keyboard), Rob Pratt, member of
local ska bands the Square Roots and the URJ, on tenor sax,
and Matt Porter on trumpet, another Santa Cruz High kid who
A.J. and I had been playing music with since 7th grade.
We started taking "Weekends with Gherkin", two day trips to
Southern California, Reno and Arcata. An upstart label run by
members of a Sacramento ska band called Punch the Clown
asked us to contribute to it's first release, so we recorded
"Thumbs Down to Generation X", "Este Torro", and "Meatdance"
at a fancy studio in San Fransisco. This is Raj... and This is Ska
sold an impressive amount (though nowhere near as much as a
well-produced comp sells these days), inspiring raj records to put
out our first full length album.
We spent most of Summer '95 polishing our
eleven newest songs at A.J.'s mom's house in
Bonny Doon, and then recorded them
slo-o-o-o-wly, section by section, over the next six
months. We came up with the title, Double
Happiness, while eating at a Chinese restaurant in
San Jose called BoTown.
In the Fall I moved to Berkeley to attend school,
and we decided to have me stop playing drums
and just focus on vocals and lead guitar. That led
to the addition of Zack "Ollie" Olsen, a music
student from Cabrillo Community College, on drums. He played
his first show December 1995 at Palookaville opening for Let's
Go Bowling. With Ollie acting as our automotive expert, we
bought an orange and white van, dubbed it "The Creamsicle",
and on January 3, 1996 embarked on our first tour.
Accompanied by the Janitors Against Apartheid, we made our
way through Nevada, Idaho, Arizona, and up through California,
landing back in Santa Cruz two weeks later, dazed but
exhilarated. That May, Double Happiness came out and we spent
the rest of the year supporting it around the Bay Area, plus a
short, passionate summer tour with Punch the Clown that took us
as far as Vancouver, b.c. By January '97 we were ready to go
again, and did another two weeks of western states with the
Janitors.
By that time, we felt ready for a long, coast-to-coast tour. We
united with the Siren 6! from Minneapolis, and collectively booked
6 weeks (July to mid-August) of shows spanning roughly 22
states. This tour helped us to promote the re-issue of Double
Happiness, which we had transferred to Asian Man Records, a
new label from Los Gatos which was run by our friend Mike Park,
formerly of Skankin' Pickle. The tour went well, so we decided to
try playing full-time, unhindered by work and school. We finished
the year playing around California, including a two week mini-tour
supporting the release of Bay Area Ska, a compilation put out by
Tomato Head Records. During the Fall we were also nominated
for a Bay Area Music Award ( Bammie) as an "Outstanding Ska
Band". In November, Rob left the band and we took on
nineteen-year old, Ross Peard, formerly of Mokey.
Our last gig of 1997 took place beneath the Town Clock at the
Santa Cruz First Night Celebration. Then, after a two-week
hiatus, we hit the road once again, playing across the Southern
United States in a six-week endeavor. We came home on March
1, took five days off to rest up and then left again, spending four
more weeks on the road, with this tour covering lots of new
ground through the Mid-West and New England.
With three coast-to-coast tours under our belts, the time
seeemed right for a new album. We rented a rehearsal studio
and practiced six hours a day, five days a week forthe next two
months. It was hard work, and the pressures to be creative day
after day sometimes seemed too much. But we pulled through,
and in June recorded 14 songs, and picked the best twelve to go
on the album.
Now it's August, and we are taking our longest vacation from the
band (one month) since it started five years ago. Most of the
band has left town, resting up for the fall tour in either Mexico or
Hawaii. I'm stuck in summer-school at the university, Ross is
touring as a sub horn player for our label-mates Unsteady, Ollie
is back to playing gigs on the local jazz scene, and the
Creamsicle is in the shop getting prepped for many long driving
days. But we're all excited about the October release of Shed
Some Skin, and a very busy fall and winter on the road.
- James Rickman, August 1998