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Page 1 of 7 This interview is reprinted in its entirety from MOME Vol. 6.
Tim Hensley was born in 1966 in Bloomington,
Indiana. Besides a familiarity with his comics, this is
everything I knew about him before I spoke to him on
September 2. He filled in the details:
He moved to LA (where he still lives) at age 3. His father
was a successful musician who had a psychedelic
rock band in Indiana called Masters of Deceit. In LA
he did session work for such unpromising acts as Pia
Zadora and Pink Lady, but went on to become Neil
Diamond's piano player — which he still is. Since
there was always recording equipment and keyboards
lying around, young Tim taught himself how to use
a 4-track recorder, play piano and guitar, and write
songs, which, with the encouragement of his dad, he
proceeded to do. He even had his own band with the
Hensleyesque name Victor Banana, and wrote the
"soundtrack" to Daniel Clowes' graphic novel Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron.
 From Dirty Stories Vol. 3
Tim was doubly blessed because his dad was also a
comic book collector, so he read his dad's EC collection,
and took a weekly trip to the local comics store
where he and his dad would load up on Marvel, DC,
Warren magazines, underground comix, and Heavy
Metal — a fine, catholic education for a youngster
with an inclination to draw. He became less interested
in comics in college, but by around 1989 he'd
discovered alternative comics and it was all downhill
from there.
Hensley's approach to comics has to be among
the most distinctive of any living cartoonist —
more a throwback to the eccentric individuality of
cartoonists from the '20s and '30s where madcap
Dadaesque dialogue merrily coexisted with an anarchic
drawing style, in this case, a purposefully flat,
clean-line technique with faint echoes of the Harvey
children's comics circa 1960s. For those dim readers
like myself who reveled in but don't quite get terms like
"sandbag googleplexes," this short interview should be
a revelation.
—Gary Groth
gary groth: Your work is so highly
stylized, I'm curious as to how you
arrived at it, what artists inspired
you, or what you may have copied
early on, and so forth.
tim hensley: I don't know that
I necessarily started copying different
styles of artists. I kind of
had my own style, and I think as
I became more crushed by life, I
started to rely on more of a crutch
of associations — and also, just
that I enjoyed reading comics and
thinking about them. Like, when
you end up working in a different
style, you have to think differently.
[Laughs.] I'm not being real articulate
about it.
I can't really think of any genesis
of that.
gg: Maybe that's why your work is so
sui generis. You said that you started
getting into what I guess we could
call alternative comics in 1989? You
discovered them, rediscovered them?
th: Yeah. I think the real thing
that happened was that I had a
band going at the time, and Daniel Clowes did the cover for the album
I had done. I had just seen Lloyd
Llewellyn, and I had ended up becoming
friends with him through
the mail. And as a result of that, I
ended up discovering all the other
comics that were around then too,
like Love and Rockets, American
Splendor, and everything, which I
was sort of aware of already.
 Omen by a young Hensley
gg: What was the name of your
band?
th: It was Victor Banana.
gg: Now, how did Dan come to do
the jacket?
th: Well, I just sent him a tape of
it, and it paid a little, but I think he
liked it too.
gg: How did you come to correspond
with Dan?
th: Well, I had the issues of Lloyd
Llewellyn and I saw his address in
there, and I thought there was a
correspondence between the music
I was making and his drawing,
so we just corresponded back and
forth for a while. I can't remember
exactly how I fell into doing the
soundtrack for the Velvet Glove
thing. It was pretty weird, because
he was not finished with the story
when I was writing songs for it,
and I remember that he sent me
this kind of top-secret letter, saying,
"This is where I think the story
is going."
And right when he was doing the
first album cover for the record I
did, that was right when the first
issue of Eightball came out. I remember
going to the comic store
and getting Eightball and being
like, "Oh my God!" because it was
just such a step forward from what
he had done previously.
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