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Charlie was the first person who really opened me up to more avant-garde stuff like free jazz, and I wasn't the only one influenced by his encyclopedic erudition. "He was the first serious, true jazz musician that I spent any time with," remembers Sun City Girls bassist Alan Bishop in a phone call from his North Seattle home. "He was very knowledgeable about everything to do with American jazz music. I already liked jazz, but he was much more into fringe jazz and free jazz. And he played it."
Gocher was an integral component of the Sun City Girls for more than 25 years, from the time he showed up at a pizza-joint open-mike night Alan was hosting in 1981 until his death on February 19, 2007. During that time, the prolific trio released an insane number of albums, cassettes, 7-inches, videos, side projects, and the like, all of which are equally amazing in their own right. Some of it could be considered "difficult" listening, but SCG were always more interested in challenging people than pleasing them (though they did write a goodly number of amazingly beautiful songs).
The band's daunting discography spans everything imaginable (and unimaginable), from gorgeous pan-cultural love songs to ribald absurdist rants, along with hours of the legendary improvisation that helped earn SCG a reputation as one of the nation's finest and most influential underground bands. Alan and Rick are often pegged as bassist and guitarist; however, they've both played seemingly every instrument conceivable. Gocher's contributions were well represented on most of the band's recordings, though his genius truly shines on 1997's double-disc Dante's Disneyland Inferno. That release is rife with hilariously brilliant, rapid-fire Charlie rants, as well as a heartrending track entitled "Charles Gocher Sr." In essence, it's Charlie eulogizing himself after he dies, through the voice of his long-dead father. The lyrics are so apropos to Charlie's passing that they were printed in their entirety on the cover of a booklet that was handed out at a private memorial at the band's compound in Ballard shortly after he died.
Gocher's only solo album, Pint-Sized Spartacus, was also released in 1997. It has been described as "a concept album loosely based on the film Spartacus but with the added twists of mental problems, Lucky Luciano, and the white slave trade in India." After listening to this brain-blaster straight through, this seems as accurate a representation as any. If you want fucked-up narrative and an unadulterated peek into the mind of Gocher, this is the disc for you. As far as SCG-related releases go, it's not too hard to find in the used bins.
Live, Sun City Girls were notorious for often adding an unhinged dramatic element, due in no small part to Gocher's antics. Even during more straightforward performances, he was a sight to behold. His flailing, maniacal approach gave new meaning to the term "free-form," and more than one drum kit went flying in all directions as a consequence. "I read a pop bio about Harry Houdini," Gocher said in a 1994 Seattle Weekly feature, "and it inspired me to make it seem like I was breaking out of manacles and a straitjacket. So I played the drums like that—and I still do. It's an escapist reality, in a way!"