Sergeant
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Sergeant

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"Review"

With heavy, cruching rhythm guitar, a healthy dose of lead guitar- angular at times, bluesy at others- and propulsive drumming, San Francisco's Sergeant introduces itself on this self-released demo. No tricks, just straight up emotional (but not emo) rock. Singer Keli Reule- whose art was featured on the cover of a 2004 issue of Mesh- offers affected, expressive vocals over droning guitars. This demo is a promising debut from the quartet. - Mesh Magazine


"Mezzanine Release"

Mezzanine’s California Homegrown Music Series [CAHMS] is pleased to announce its September line-up featuring some of the Bay Area’s hottest local bands, Sergeant, Turn Me On Deadman and Snake Flower II. The San Francisco monthly showcase continues to expose California-based up-and-coming acts to new audiences – all with no cover and cheap drinks!

Sergeant was formed by fearless female vocalist, songwriter, guitarist, and accomplished painter Keli Reule. An array of her musician friend’s, Forrest Allen (bass), Pat Elliot (drums) and Gabe Ryan (guitar) joined the band and pounded out the songs even after their practice space was robbed by another band. Sergeant’s sound is constructed around Keli’s deep penetrating and richly diverse alto voice. She can rock out or sing a sultry ballad like, “Change the guard”. An awesome combination when blended with gritty guitars and melodious rhythms.
- Mezzanine


"Lost At Sea Feature on Keli"

Sometime last year I received a portfolio from a painter in San Francisco who dedicated little room to description. She summarized that she was born in the South, initiated into art academia in Chicago, and realized as a painter on the West Coast. What her presentation lacked in self-aggrandizement it made up for in substance. Deep, murky canvases let just enough life slip through for dream figures to emerge, darkness swirling about as if the viewer were peering out of a glass jar into the fog of the ocean floor. It was that peering out, that notion of something coming into the light, that held my attention.

Intrigued by the images, I Googled Reule's name and browsed the various gallery listings and art profiles, a few new images uncovered with each click. There were glimpses of Reule's more recent work, which is dominated by lighter colors than the images obscured in dark tones that have become her calling card, that is different yet obviously within the reaches of her trademark style.

Reule's paintings have an uncanny ability to both answer questions and ask new ones, and with no obvious answers to some of the most gnawing, it would be up to the painter herself to shed some light on the stories within her canvases. Reule took some time out from her work to discuss the purpose of art, the perspectives of artist and viewer, and the mechanics of process.

--
LAS: A good place to start would be with where you started as a painter - how did you get into it?

Keli Reule: I have essentially painted all my life or my life that I can remember. I just have generally always made things. But I took art class at school and what not, and have always played music as well. I have a very musical family, and I was always allowed to create. So, yeah, I don’t really think I have ever not made things. But I started to paint with intention in high school and then I went to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and then transferred to the San Francisco Art Institute to study and was a painting major. I continue to sort of be surrounded by people who are great innovators and generally brilliant, and that stirs the pot a lot, so to speak.

Reading up about your work, and what other people have said about it, the idea that it is dark, or somehow haunting, seemed to pop up a bit. The pervasive idea was portrayed as one of blackness, of darkness swallowing people. But I seem to look at it in the opposite, that the images represent a lightness, of faces bleeding through the mist, coming out of the darkness. Would either of those approaches be accurate?

Well, I don’t so much view them in either of those regards, although both seem like interesting ideas to me. I am much more interested in the relationship between the figure(s) and the elements external to it/them, There exists only enough information to provide grounds for some sort of narrative or experience. But what that narrative/experience is, in terms of how it is perceived by the viewer, I am not particularly interested in. I mean in these specific paintings, I am very interested in that as a concept, but not so much here, merely because that’s not what their about. But in terms of them being tonally dark in content or color of course is quite intentional, but intentional in an organic way. I take responsibility for what I put in my own paintings but I am aware that some of that process is still mysterious.

A lot of times it seems like a painter includes ambivalence - or at least a lack of a defined agenda - in the perspective of their work in a way that not only facilitates interpretation, but also implies a vagueness. A lot of paintings seem non-committal to me. How much of your work is an avenue of personal expression, of dictating your ideas, and how much of it is centered around the idea of creating dialogue, or at least posing questions for the viewer?

I have an entirely different paradigm about process than that. So inherently I am probably going to approach those very notions differently, beause I do not think - and I'm talking about paintings at large that I have in my sphere of reference be it historical awareness or just that I have seen - but I don’t think that dictating ones ideas directly, art being solely an avenue of personal expression, and creating dialogue with or posing a question to the viewer aren’t all entirely capable of existing within the same context/painting/blahblahblah. Those ideas are unavoidable if you make things, whether you like it or not. I think work that is compelling and, for lack of a better word, "works" - as in so much as it functions - almost always, whether it is very clear message or rests in a more conceptual complex environment, must have room for the viewer. There has to be some kind of brevity. Whether the work is chaotic, big, small, street, fine art, conceptual, demure, pedantic- whatever... if there is no room for me in it as a viewer, I don’t necessarily dislike it. But I am not going to sp - Lost At Sea


"Lost At Sea Review of Midnight To Midnight"

Rating: 7 out of 10

Neon signs crackle and pop, sputtering, half lit, advertising such fine
establishments as Ra\'s. Glancing inside through grimy windows, it\'s
possible to make out a few mummies hunched despondently over
dust-covered bottles of cheap beer. Farther down the street, sordid characters
nonchalantly request some change or a cigarette while leaning aimlessly
against cracked and crooked walls. This neighborhood would never be
accused of humming with life as its inhabitant long ago decided to slowly
extinguish whatever remains of theirs.

It\'s these shady alleyways and shifty streets that Sergeant haunts,
exploring a darker and harder side of the musical spectrum. Sergeant
bring a serious brand of rock that is only slightly tempered by Keli
Reule\'s striking vocals. Penetrating and direct, Reule\'s voice sets a tone
that the band flawlessly matches. I imagine piercing guitars and
rumbling drums suffocating a room while the singer stalks the stage like a
vampiric denizen of the night. Together, band and singer create a
powerful and incendiary mood that is carried throughout the album.

It\'s easy to see Reule\'s art background influence in Sergeant\'s
music. Like the beautiful grotesqueness of a Goya painting, Sergeant has an
extra depth that most bands don\'t have. Neither playing up the angst
or slipping into parody, Sergeant are instead the real deal; a product
of their surroundings. - lostatsea.net


"The Soup Review"

AMAZING !!!!
5 Stars


Let me just say, this album is unbelievable. There is so much texture and layers to these songs that although I liked them on first listen, I simply became obsessed after 5 or 6. If you appreciate good rock, you must have this album. - Itunes


"Pacific Noise Feature"

pacificnoise.com
episode 40. - pacificnoise.com


"Foggy Grizzly/Italian Zine Interview"

Q) So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)My name is Keli Elizabeth Reule. I'm 25. I grew up in North Carolina, in the southeast US. I used to live in Chicago and went to school there and then transferred schools and finished in CA, and have lived in San Francisco for a little over 5 years. I have one older brother. I love rock and roll more than most things in life and I love Italian food and beer and live in the tenderloin district of SF.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)I have always made things. So I am not sure how "I started". It's just always been there. But I have a very musical family and we always played music and sang a lot growing up. And I took art class and things like that as a child and always made drawings and paintings. My dad's house is like one big embarrassing art gallery of Keli. But I started painting w/ some intention in high school I suppose and then went I to art school. And dabbled in photo and film in college and eventually went back to painting.

Q)How would you describe your art?

A)Awesome. Kidding. It gets hard to describe to people because i'm so close to it, so I try and whittle it down to something like- large-scale oil paintings. Limited palette. Some figurative elements. Blah blah blah.

Q)Who is your biggest influence, both art and non-art related

A)Influence in and of itself is a wildly complicated thing and difficult to nail down just due to the vast mysteries of our minds, hearts, and souls and their relationships to things like skill, tools, resources, work ethic, ect. But in essence I am really influenced by other art, music, books/writers, my relationships, surroundings, and experience. But really its just life, as it were. Anyhow some of them are:Edward Ruscha, Goya, Francis Bacon, Keifer, Elizabeth Peyton, Richard prince, Lucien Freud, William Kentridge, Kiki Smith, Robert Rauschenberg, Banksy. Ha. Super influenced by photography done before 1950. Film noir, and black and white aesthetics in general. i.e. any photo or film stuff done w/ limited access to contemporary tools.Blonde Redhead, Zeppelin, Radio head, Sonic Youth, Nina Simone, Tom Waits, Miles Davis, Mingus, SabbathFlannery O'Conner, Faulkner, Joan Didion, Pablo Neruda, Chekhov, Saul Bellow. James Joyce. Good friends and artists- Karin Olsson, Henry Lewis, Shawn Barber. Everyone I love. Friends and Enemies.

Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)There is a process but there is no FORMULA here, and the moment it starts to feel mechanical I try and rethink. But- Its starts (usually) with a photograph as an idea. Or w/ an idea for a photograph, which I subsequently shoot. Then I get a sketch going on a small scale and start to hash some things out conceptually. Then It moves to the canvas w/ a sketch and then I start painting. Once there is paint involved it becomes a completely different animal. I try and leave the paintings up to their own devices- if something is not working well, not serving the painting as a whole, then it goes. Even if it took me a considerable amount of time and effort (or luck) to get something to look a certain way technically. If it doesn't work it doesn't work. The moment it becomes too precious you're in danger of letting it control everything, which is to say that the painting would now be about technicality. Or if certain facets seem to be creating a different idea than I had initially intended then I'll (usually) go with it. Depends on how egomaniacal I'm feeling. Although sometimes I just have to really work work work to get an effect or something of that nature. Sometimes its just blood and sweat.

Q) What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)o-o-o-oil paintttttttttttttttt. It's just the way it comes out. And I just love the paint as a thing. I like to work in a lot of other mediums and most certainly love other mediums in regards to my taste and aesthetic as a viewer/consumer. But I work in oil due to the technical ramifications mostly.
Q) What is your favorite art related web site?
A)There are a lot. But here are some of my favorite-
Rvcaanp.com
Fecalface.com
Musicphotographer.co.uk
Magnuminmotion.com
cnn.com
wikipedia.com

Q) Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)Yeah. Its all just pencil, canvas and paint. But I am by no means, ideologically speaking- a purist. Some of my favorite pieces of art are done using a great deal of tools. And I will occasionally use a transfer or something if I need to get something done quickly. But 95 percent of the time, at least up until this point, its "hand done".

Q) What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)This is a really hard question because that is going to depend entirely on what it is that you are showing. Paintings, specifically, seem to be best suited to a place where they are the focus. But - Foggy Grizzly


Discography

Midnight To Midnight- LP Released May 2007.

Photos

Bio

In the fall of 2003 in San Francisco, singer/songwriter/guitarist Keli Reule (Leather and the Suedes) approached her friend drummer Pat Elliott (The Impossibles, Leather and the Suedes, Lessick) to help her flesh out some her songs. They soon brought in Forrest Allen (Leather and The Suedes, Lessick), friend and bandmate of Elliott’s from Austin, to fill things out on bass. They were promptly stopped short in early 2004 when their practice space was robbed by another band, putting them without gear for more than six months. Aside from the setback, they continued to work on songs in the guys living room in the lower haight ashbury district of SF. Soon thereafter, Reule had to return to North Carolina (were she hails from originally) for a considerable amount of time after severe tragedy struck her family, and she returned to the west coast with new perspective. After having gone through multiple guitar players, they brought in long standing member of the SF music community, their friend Gabe Ryan (Spark and Decay) to round things out on guitar. Solidifying their line up helped shape the dynamic genre bending sound they have now. Built around Reule’s distinctive alto, which ranges from haunting and languid to a full on growling howl, Elliott’s pounding driving rhythms, Allen’s gritty stealthy bass lines and Ryan’s crashing and careening guitar lines their artistic and chaotic sound grits its collective teeth and rocks out. Their debut full length was recorded by Aaron Prellwitz at Tiny Telephone Studio's in San Francisco, January 2007 and has been released to great reviews.