Jim "Largebeat" Gertz
Jim
"Largebeat" Gertz had already been recording original music for many
years before coming to Flying Turtle Records. In addition to writing songs,
Jim plays drums and percussion and the exotic Theremin, an electronic instrument
which produces the eerie sounds found on many of his recordings.
Photo #1 : Jim with theremin
Photo #2 : Jim's Crib
Ann Arbor Observer 2007 Moped Man
From "Motor City Cribs" in the Metro Times (1/31/2007) by Doug Coombe. Largebeat talks about himself:
Trains, rock n roll, and UFOs are what my lifes about, says shaggy-headed rocker Mr. Largebeat. By day, the longtime Ann Arbor resident (aka James Gertz) is caretaker at Arbor Brewing Company. Off the clock, the Thereminplaying bandleader has released four albums of space-surf-prog-train rock. His 1999 release Mystery of the OVNIs: A Tale of UFOs is a full-on extraterrestrial rock opera.
Largebeats love of electric trains comes from his Marine
dad he began building trainboards when he was 10. (About that time, his
folks also gave their pots-and-pans-banging kid his first drumkit). Now, he
has more than 50 primarily high-speed electric train models.
Futureville, MI 2050 is the trainboard magnum opus that has taken
over his living room. Stemming from a vivid dream he had in 1986, Largebeat
put the setup together in 2001 and has shown the futuristic city at many model-train
conventions.
Largebeats also a part-time UFOlogist. No kidding. His first extraterrestrial
encounter, he says, happened when he was 8 in Happy Valley, Ore. He saw what
he describes as a twigman. Since then, aliens have been recurring
themes in his music and his life. (He says he has seen aliens and their spaceships
more than 10 times.) Largebeats passions all collide wonderfully in his
music the aliens, the UFOs, the futuristic high-speed train travel and
the Theremins otherworldly drone. Who knows what came first, the
music or the trains, Largebeat says. My parents created the rock
n roll train monster.