guerilla toss

Arian Shafiee trips the heavy fantastic with his 1979 Kramer DMZ 2000. That model was built from 1978 to 1981, and was part of the second wave of Kramer guitars with aluminum necks.

Guitarist Arian Shafiee dances on a musical high wire. His partners: a Strat, a Kramer, a trick bag of effects, and radical compositions with no boundaries.

Musical magic tricks that don’t rely solely on flashy production have become increasingly rare. But with the eight sonically surprising art-rock triumphs comprising their latest album, Eraser Stargazer, Guerilla Toss has emerged as something of a musical Ricky Jay. With a style that defies easy comparisons, the Brooklyn-by-way-of-Boston group displays an ability to create dance-worthy, approachable, and abundantly fun songs out of the complex elements that make experimental music challenging. And they make it seem as easy as cutting an orange in half with a flung ace of spades.

Eraser Stargazer, the band’s fourth full-length, is an adventurous, exuberant work that plays like a cartoon soundtrack. Atonality and harmonic quirks effortlessly meld with heady, jazz-informed rhythmic complications and off-kilter funk, but the result is far from the overwrought compositions that mix of ingredients might imply. Think instead of a deliriously joyful Carl Stalling composition—on acid.

The members of Guerilla Toss are a well-educated bunch whose core met at Boston’s New England Conservatory and work hard for their music’s seamlessness. Add in a slew of albums released on notable labels from throughout the experimental and outsider musical spectrum (including 2013’s Guerilla Toss on famed New York City avant-garde lynchpin John Zorn’s Tzadik Records), roots in the punk community, and a frantic, audience-enflaming live show that’s grown its own legend … and Guerilla Toss represents the vanguard of art-rock in 2016.

Arian Shafiee is charged with handling guitar duties for the group. He’s both a lifelong student of the instrument in the traditional sense and an anti-hero of the 6-string in Guerilla Toss. Shafiee is a product of unexpected and disparate influences that range from classic rock to technically challenging Norwegian black metal. To say his approach is unconventional would be a massive understatement. For example, Shafiee claims he didn’t bother tuning his guitars when playing with Guerilla Toss until around 2015—five years into his tenure.

“Get the guitar volume to the right level with just the right amount of gain on your amp, and it always sounds better to me than every pedal I’ve ever messed with.”

Following the release of a new companion album to Eraser Stargazer called Live in Nashville, we recently spoke with Shafiee about his journey as a player, how he pens parts that rise above and support Guerilla Toss’ formidable din, his unconventional approach to creating atonal rhythms, playing chords like a drummer, and his perspective on music education.

What was your path into the guitar? Where do you come from as a player?
I grew up in San Francisco and found my mom’s electric guitar hanging in the basement when I was kid——it was some off-brand—and I just had a magnetic attraction to it and played it all the time. From there, I got into Sabbath and Led Zeppelin, and eventually found myself doing a live performance of Van Halen’s “Eruption” at the 7th grade talent show through a bass cabinet I found in a friend’s closet.

A few years of the typical classic rock shredding many young guitarists are attracted to eventually led me to outside players like Zappa and Sonic Youth—people that broke the rules a lot—and that’s when I started trying out weird, extended technique type stuff. Now I’m back into classic rock, so it’s all a big cycle.

I had friends that wanted to play jazz, which was kind of square to me then, and friends that wanted to play in garage-rock bands, but they were all guitar players, so I defaulted to playing drums. So, as far as guitar went in my formative years, I would play weird, prepared guitar and experimental shit by myself, and I did that for years without really telling anybody.

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