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"She don't care about books or school. No, she just wants to rock and roll. Baby, she's no fool. You're so cool" - Will Hoge
"You choose a path in life, and when you do, sprint. Don't stroll down it." - Kevin Lyman

Showing posts with label roll tide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label roll tide. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Tuscaloosa Music: An Insight To Community

Tuscaloosa Music
(I am clickable!)

This is a story about Tuscaloosa's Music Scene. It was originally done for one of my Journalism classes that I was chosen for by department faculty members. Over a semester, we had to produce an in-depth story that would be of community interest. There has not been anything written that has detailed our wonderful city and its music. I made it my mission to change that. Because I only had a semester to produce the story, I realize there are things left out and there is always room for improvement. I did the best with what I had and put my whole heart into this to make it wonderful for those who read it. I have cried more tears over this story than anyone will ever know about. But to me, that is one of the key factors that makes it great. So here is what I came up with. Please be kind. 




At a pizza joint in Montevallo, Alabama, an hour away from the city of Tuscaloosa, the last person Matt Patton expected to encounter was a man named Sweet Dog. Having just met Patton earlier in the day at Vinyl Solutions on the Strip, the interestingly named man asked if Patton was in a band: Model Citizen, they were called. Sweet Dog inquired about their next gig: that night, said Patton.

“OK. I will be there.”

Stories like this are found rooted in music, tucked away in some of the hidden gems of the football-centered city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, based on friendship, progression, community, and growth.

Before the late 90s Rock revival, there was a string of eclectic sounds that were starting to make their way into the ears of those who would listen.

In the conservative, Ronald Reagan/George H.W. Bush-lovin’ eighties, came the Southern, beer drinking, long-haired, football freak band from Alabama called Storm Orphans. Having peaked just before the Grunge infested era of the early nineties, the band shaped their sound earlier than others from the Seattle scene.

Fronted by singer Rusty LuQuire, Storm Orphans were one of the few local bands that had more than just a “social crowd.” They frequently packed out the buildings on The Strip (which have all undergone numerous name changes over the years). The band even hit their stride in new markets - Auburn, Oxford, Athens, Austin, Chapel Hill, Nashville - predominantly sports towns - while recording full length albums, touring, and playing hometown shows with their friends.

“People grouped us within their top five favorites along with bands like REM from Athens,” said LuQuire. “We were one of the few bands of the time who actually toured out of Alabama and even the South. We branded ourselves as ‘Storm Orphans from Tuscaloosa’.”

Storm Orphans and singer/songwriter Marlee MacLeod were included in the handful of bands who actively toured during the time period and took their local sound on the road. Touring opens new markets for bands, growing their fan bases, and bringing people into the area.

One of the aspects that makes Tuscaloosa a unique music town, often overlooked, is the camaraderie between the musicians who play here.

“When you're in a band, it's not a competition,” the famous Sweet Dog once said. “It's part of a community.”

MacLeod and LuQuire formed a rare a side project, one they called Texas Truck, that would make unannounced appearances at Storm Orphans’ shows. The two would play together and pack out the venue by themselves before the rest of the Storm Orphans had a chance to show up for sound-check.

After their final show in 1993, Storm Orphans finally disbanded and the Jam sounds of Widespread Panic, Phish, and Dave Matthews started to fraternize the area and bring in a new crowd to the city venues.

In the midst of all the new sounds, Patton kept pushing forward and tried to play the music he loved. In 1998, his band, The Dexateens, was formed, along with Elliott McPherson and Sweet Dog. When the group started performing and touring, they soon realized how the little music community of Tuscaloosa is not reflected in other cities across the Southeast.

“Tuscaloosa is not like other towns such as Athens,” said McPherson. “[Athens] is a community full of people who tour and take their stuff out on the road. Tuscaloosa is not like that. Bands on the fringe are not given the same opportunity as someone else because they have more resources and networks.”

Having had Sweet Dog in his band, McPherson learned a lot. One of the lessons he remembers fondly is, “When you play a chord, actually PLAY the chord. Do it with authority.”

Mentors like this are just one way in which Tuscaloosa is rooted in history, friendship and community.

Jake Thompson, owner of Druid City Time and Spaceship recording studio, is noted as the first person to ever record the Dexateens, according to Sweet Dog.

"I had the first CD Recorder in Tuscaloosa," said Thompson. “Sweet Dog swears I was the first person to ever record them.”




Here is where we meet Ham Bagby, one of the city’s prominent guitar players and a friend to all. When he first came to Tuscaloosa at 21 years old, he could always be seen sliding numerous bands’ fliers, fresh from Kinko’s, under the huge gap in the door at Vinyl Solutions, which now houses a Pita Pit.

Bagby used to practiced at a place called Tide Mini Storage. Next to his unit housed practice spaces for another local band Pain!, and the Dexateens, his favorite band.

“We never got any practice done,” said Bagby. “We just sat around and listened to those guys tune-up and practice for hours."

Bagby does an annual mini-festival at Egan’s on the Strip every year called Ham Ham Jam Jam, where he personally invites bands to come play and sit in with each other, to establish and encourage friendships.

"The only way to improve is to play with other people,” said Bagby. “We aren't focused on being cool. We are focused on getting loud and playing live.

Local media has always been an active way of promoting local, original music. With student run publications like The Crimson White and WVUA-FM, and local publications like the Tuscaloosa News, bands began to reach wider audiences and were able to gain more exposure in new ways.

“WVUA, or as it was known back then, V-91, played all the local bands, partly because a bunch of us music people either worked there or had worked there,” said MacLeod. “It was very helpful having that outlet.”

One of the popular radio shows of the mid 90s until the early 2000s was the “Lee and Wolf Show”, hosted by Lee Overstreet and Wolfe Kincaid.

Popular local bands at the time such as Mindseye, Model Citizen, and Planet Terry, and even national bands like The Woggles from Birmingham, and Drivin’ n Cryin’ from Athens, made appearances on the show through its run.

“It added another outlet,” said Overstreet. “It shined another light. As our show slowly became better known, it became a ‘thing’ among some Tuscaloosa bands to play ‘Lee &;Wolfe’.”

The show usually featured a live performance and interview from bands who were playing later that in the week at places like the infamous Chukker. The show was a great attribute for direct promotion.

“In any town of Tuscaloosa's size, musicians know a lot of other musicians, and most were familiar with WVUA-FM being the only source of local and independent music for many miles,” said Overstreet. “What I really got a sense of after hundreds of acts is just how musically incestuous a small local scene can be.

Being a smaller town reduced the number of people interested in local, original music. However, those who were into it, are really, really passionate about it, he said.

Tuscaloosa’s scene also would not have thrived without the writings of Mark Hughes Cobb from the Tuscaloosa News, who was huge supporter of local music and even participated in performing.

Since the eighties, Cobb has written hundreds of stories about the bands who called Tuscaloosa home, hoping to convince readers that the music is actually worth listening to.

"People have this idea that if it comes from here, it's not any good,” said Cobb. “[They think] if it's local, it must suck. Someone has to tell them." Cobb is definitely the person to tell them.

Even today, while he does not write as many music stories as he did previously, the ones he does write really elaborate on what an interesting set up we have in this city.

“It's hard for a band to build a crowd,” said Cobb. "There is a lot of support between musicians, for other musicians, partly because there is not a lot of support for original music."




Ronnie Lee Gipson started playing shows in his hometown of Tuscaloosa when he was 13. Now 27, he can be found throughout Tuscaloosa and Birmingham playing with a multitude of different bands. When he is not playing, there is a good chance he can be found at Egan’s on the Strip watching other original artists perform. In these last 14 years, he has been in over 20-something bands between here and Birmingham.

Gipson has a slightly different perspective on Tuscaloosa’s music since he started so young.
"There was time when you couldn't see the same band twice in a two month span. Currently, there are roughly ten solid bands, compared to over 25 a few years ago,” said Gipson. “I think we hit a decline and have been there for awhile. But it's about to turn around. I feel it.

Even though he lives in the downward spiral of the Tuscaloosa music world, one aspect that he believes in is the family he has found with his fellow musicians.

“We are tight knit and everyone likes each other. It’s all about the love, and it's about the family we have."

Gipson is in the wave of the current local bands who are actively writing, recording, and performing all original music, which makes fans of Tuscaloosa music, like Josh Eyer, extremely happy.

Eyer is the one constant in local music that makes bands who play here feel special, like they are doing something right. He is always in the front and talking to artists in between songs, telling them what a great job they are doing. He always encourages audience participation, and without him, the music community would not thrive.

“If Josh Eyer is at a show, and you aren't there, it's a safe assumption that you are fucking up,” Gipson bluntly stated.

"The range of music you can get from our venues is really awesome,” said Eyer. “If you support it, and you show up, it can be good. Tuscaloosa has a really good scene going on now. Tuscaloosa's music now is as good as now as it was in the 90s. You've gotta support what you love, especially in a small town. It's not a very large music scene."

Several have commented on Eyer’s participation and look to him with admiration, but one of the most powerful descriptions comes from Daniel Walker, guitarist for local band, Ferguson and the Copper Dogs.

“I strive to be as good of a musician as Josh Eyer is a music fan,” said Walker.

Sarah Ferguson, also from Ferguson and the Copper Dogs, said that Eyer is proof that music thrives on mutualism. Performance is a two-way exchange, and with good, supportive fans, greatness can happen.

“If we want Tuscaloosa to have a better music scene, we have to do it together,” said Ferguson. “I can say from experience that I am super lucky to have people like [Josh] who support local musicians.”

Eyer appreciates all types and styles of music and is willing to go see his friends play music just for the sake of seeing live music. Having the kind of attitude where you will go listen to a band that you have never heard of is absolutely essential to the growth of a music scene.

Fans are what make the music scene thrive on community. Fans also encourage friendship, which is what makes Tuscaloosa’s scene so unique.




In the early 2000s, there was an anomaly of a jazz group that did not fit within the realms of what most bands from the area sounded like. This band was called the Hypsys.

The Hypsys were comprised of what is now two-fifths of current popular Tuscaloosa and CBDB.

“People were interested in the technicality of the music we were playing,” said David Ray, bass player. “For a trio playing some really out there music in a college town, I'd say we were a smashing success. The scene here hadn't quite developed as much as it has recently. But, for whatever reason, people did like us, and our fans were mostly other musicians or jam band fans.”

Like a lot of bands, the Hypsys faded away, but the sound they created is now a major influence on CBDB, who has put Tuscaloosa on the map as a considerable music town for the first time in almost 30 years.

This is where we meet Cy Simonton, front man of CBDB, who came to Tuscaloosa from Georgia for college.

CBDB has developed their own sound called Joyfunk, which is a blend of Funk, Jam, and Improv, mixed with Jazz, Rock, and Metal, among others.

Simonton is a big supporter and an active member of the Tuscaloosa music scene and how it functions.

"It is a more inclusive and non-judgemental community, unlike Athens or Nashville, who have more credibility,” he said. “It is a great place to come and practice playing in front of people without much pressure because it is not very competitive. There is a close knit group of people who are trying to do this.”

He strongly believes that this scene could be better if fewer people are dismissive about what talents come from this city. “When people think Tuscaloosa, they think football, but part of the sport’s town mentality is what makes here a good place to start,” he said.

“That is something we have had to overcome as a band in other markets,” Simonton said. “There is a ton of an interest in the crowds of people who want to see original music in bigger, more established cities. If more people would continue to pursue that here, it could be great.”

Simonton loves the start he got from this city. He thinks it is “pretty legit” and is proud of the growth in musicians and community he has seen in the last five years of performing here.

Several other local bands have also made their way into the community and have developed friendships with the other in order to prove to outsiders that Tuscaloosa is more than just a sports town, which could better improve our image.

Tyler Cameron, drummer for one of Tuscaloosa's newest bands, Search Party, came from another sports town: Knoxville, Tennessee. The scene here was a pleasant surprise to a newcomer like him.

"The community around here is something I've never seen the likes of,” said Cameron. “Between the open mic nights at Green Bar and the people who are succeeding at different levels, like CBDB and The Doctors and The Lawyers, have been there to provide very sound advice for us. Their help has known no bounds."

Kris Pourchot from local Rock band, Manchino, is always pushing to get more bands to come together for the greater good of the music community.

"There are a lot of bands doing their own music, which is important to have,” said Pourchot. “Everyone is on the same team here. There is no one trying to sabotage the other guy."

That is one aspect that is important to have in a thriving community: people helping instead of bringing down others.

Another local band on their way to hometown hero status is The Doctors and The Lawyers.

After forming in late 2011, the members knew they had a sound and a connection that was special. As an audience member, you can see and hear that in their live performance.

Jordan Kumler, drummer for the group, recalls a story when he knew this city was something special.

“The moment I knew this community was really special was the first time we played at Green Bar a couple months after we released our album, Hear It Again, last year,” said Kumler. “It was the first time I looked out in the crowd and saw most of the people were singing our song, “Trybliss”, lyrics back at us. That was genuinely awesome.”

Kumler knows that the success of his band would not be possible without the support of local outlets and other local musicians.

As a Tuscaloosa musician, he has seen the music community here grow. It has been incredibly encouraging and energizing for him, whether it is spreading the word about local bands or giving energy back to them on stage at shows, he said it has been really nice to see the love for local music grow into a supportive community.

“I think the thing that is most impressive is the sheer speed at which this has grown,” Kumler said. “I have seen support for live music spread exponentially over the past couple of years: from 90.7 hosting local band interviews, the Crimson White doing pieces on local bands, the growth and success for Green Bar; it adds up. All of this effort by very driven individuals with a passion for music has really made this town a pleasure to perform in.”

Keyboard player for The Doctors and The Lawyers, Taylor Atkinson, is also a big believer in the music community within the city.

“"The music scene has helped the city grow," said Atkinson. “This could be huge.”

Another member of Search Party, Shane Stephens, states that The Doctors and The Lawyers were one of the first groups that helped his band when they started. He is another example of someone who believes in the power of music in Tuscaloosa.

"People who have been here for ten years or more will tell you that now is a great time for Tuscaloosa music,” Stephens said. “There is such a great selection of music, a lot of rock and roll.”

Sarah Ferguson, is proud of the growth she has seen in this scene.

“When I saw CBDB, Callooh, Callay, and We Killed The Dinosaur Stickers, I wanted to be a part of that, and now we are on our way there,” she said.

As a band, they always go see their friends’ bands because they know attendance is a big factor in what makes a scene great. In a conversation with Ferguson and Daniel Walker, they discussed crowd attendance and musician collaboration. Without that, you will get nowhere.

“We have the perfect amount of bands where there is no competition, which is great for growth,” said Ferguson. "We have a good relationship with all the bands here, and we try and support everybody.”

“[Bands] have to support each other or this will go nowhere,” Walker agreed.




Ultimately, the Tuscaloosa music scene is thriving. As a member of this music community, I have striven to be the best audience member I know to be. I support my friends; I take pictures, and I write about them. I interview them. I play their music on the radio station.

Tuscaloosa has the potential to be the next great music town, in addition to being the best sports town. It is all a matter of perception.

Some, like local musician, D.C. Moon, thinks the best moment camaraderie Tuscaloosa has seen came with the closing of the Chukker.

“So many wanted to participate, and they did,” he said. “It was something special and hard to describe. We were the last of six bands to play, and there were hundreds of folks cheering us on, even though we started at 4:30 in the morning and didn't stop until almost 6:30. It was a pretty special night for music and culture here.”

Some bands play to empty rooms because of an audience’s inability to listen. Some bands play to full rooms of their friends. Some bands play in storage units. Some bands are true works of art. To me, that is a community. That is a friendship. That is collaboration. That is Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Mark Hughes Cobb said it best, "People come from somewhere and sometimes, it is Tuscaloosa."

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Interview with Lzzy Hale from Halestorm

It is not every day you get to interview one of your biggest inspirations in music. Today, I got to do just that. I interviewed Lzzy from Halestorm. The interview lasted over 30 minutes and it was 30 of the best minutes of my life. Without further ado, here is my interview with Lzzy Hale.

How is the tour going so far?

It's been fantastic so far. This past tour we've been doing shows with Eric Church and in between we've been doing headlining dates. It's kind of the, no pun intended, calm before the storm because we are about to release a record.

How did the tour come about?

They sought us out, actually. His band mates are all hard rock and metal fans. His guitar player had our records and he said to Eric, "Hey, you need to check these guys out." Eric, being the adventurous guy he is, had his people call our people and he said "Hey, do you wanna do a tour?" and thankfully we have very adventurous booking agents. We'll play with anybody! I like the idea of blurring the lines a little bit because, from what we've seen, from us playing in front of his crowd, there have been a lot of his fans coming to our headlining shows because of our friendship now. I feel like there is no real existence of genre. It's been really cool.

I know you've collaborated with Eric on "That's Damn Rock N Roll."

Yes. That song is actually on his record. The female part of that is actually his back up singer, Joanna Cotton. He called me after the tour was already put in place. He said that the CMT's had asked him to play his single, but he didn't want to do that. He wanted to do That's Damn Rock N Roll but only if I would do it with him. I was like "Sure!" It was so cool. So I go to the CMT's and it was my first real country experience. I'm backstage and I'm like "OK, that guy looks like he is somebody. Who is that? Oh, that's Kenny Chesney." I'm sharing a dressing room with Kasey Musgraves and several other people. It was so strange. I'm leather clad and the country girls are getting their legs rubbed down with makeup because that's a thing.

That is seriously a thing?

Yeah. Have you ever looked at a country star and thought they had great legs? They have special make-up for legs. It's kinda like what we do to our faces. It was very interesting. But anyway, it was a cool experience to be playing for an audience who had no clue who I was. After the CMT's we actually wrote three songs together and it was really awesome. It was neat. It's also a neat community. I've lived in Nashville for a year and a half and the community there is so accepting of all things music. If you play an instrument, it's like "Hey, come over to my house and let's write a song! If something happens, great. If not, oh well. Let's do it!" They are all very supportive.

I'm going to transition into the new album. How is it coming along?

It's done! It's actually being mastered this week. We are going to be releasing a single very soon. And then we are pushing this record out into the world. We actually recorded it in Nashville. It's funny how all this stuff came together. We didn't plan on everything being so incestuous. but we ended up using Eric's producer. He is also Cage The Elephant, Little Big Town, and a lot of strange band's music guy. He is a mad scientist. We used to call him Batman because he would be there standing with us and then all of a sudden he would disappear and then he would come back with a cool idea like "Hey!" And we would be like "Where did Batman go?" His name is Jay Joyce and he is very cool. We did this album so differently than the last two records. It was very grassroots. We did every track live into tape. It was the first time we recorded the entire song all at the same time: in a circle, recorded it in a church. Jay Joyce bought this old church and turned it into a studio. It's so beautiful and we are in the congregation room in a circle playing through the songs. The nerve-wracking thing about doing it live into tape is if one of us royal screws up all of us have to do the entire song over again. It was a lot of fun. The last two records we recorded very differently. We did them more assembly line. My brother would go into the studio and record all of the drums first to like a scratch track vocal guitar. Then we would do all of the guitars the next day. All the bass for the next two days and then I would start singing. So we were never actually playing the whole song front to back recording it all at the same time. It was so refreshing to listen back to these songs and try to capture that we were all in the same wave together and we all peaked together. It's kinda how it used to be because everyone keeps telling me that's how they did it in the 70s when people actually had to be good.

Before technology.

Exactly! It's interesting because Jay Joyce and his engineer, Jason, ended up keeping us to that standard. We went into the studio with this precedent and Jay was the one person who had the balls to do it with us. I would be doing vocals and it would be beginning to end. It wasn't "Hey we are going to go in and punch this." or "Hey, we're going to go in and tune this." You have to actually hit that note. Like really? we can't just use a little bit of tuning. NOPE! You actually have to do it.

No pressure.

[Laughs] I know I said this how I wanted to do it, but... But really it was really cool and I am so proud of it. I don't know what the rest of the world is going to think but either way, we are freaking stoked.

I'm excited. I try to keep professionalism whenever I do this but it is hard sometime because I am a fan, but I feel like you get better stories when you love the bands you talk to.

It's totally real. I get it. I got to meet and perform with my all-time favorite person in the world. He is the guy that got me into guitar. I grew up on a lot of 70s and 80s Rock because of my parents, so I kind of skipped a generation, or more so reverted back, so to speak. Tom Keifer from Cinderella has always been "the dude" since I was like 11 and I just got to perform and I was like "I gotta be cool. I'm a professional, but inside my 14 year old self was like AHH!! and I was freaking out. So I know how that is.

Oh yeah. But, back to the recording process, you've touched on how it's different than previous albums, but whenever you recorded the last two albums and the cover albums, what did you want to be different on this album?

The bottom line was that we wanted to bridge the gap between what people see in our live shows and what they hear on the record because the way we've done our past two records with Atlantic has been based on perfection and we would go in and do everything until we get it perfect. We would go in and gloss it up and add fucking weird stuff to it, not saying we didn't add weird things to this record, but it was based on perfection, whereas our live show is based on imperfection. That's Rock N Roll. We go out on stage and we have a great time and no matter what happens, because ultimately, there is someone who screws up, and there is always going to be someone saying "Haha! That was you!" and there are times when the guys will come over and start screwing with my stuff and start throwing out my picks and I'm like "God-damnit, guys!" So we wanted to capture more of that on the record. Not necessarily making a live record but kinda like what I touched on before. That's the reason we did all the basic tracks live to tape - we actually played everything front to back. All the vocals were based on performance, not on perfection because, no matter what, it's not going to be live because it's not in front of an audience. It's not going to be the same, so it's not going to be a live record but we wanted to make sure there was some kind of moment. Some moments that you could not have created. They just had to happen. There are a couple of songs on the record where you won't hear it until you listen to it like three times, but there is something where Arejay is yelling, or someone is yelling at someone and we are yelling at each other in one of the tracks we ended up keeping and you can hear it through the mic. I think they are yelling at me like "Sing it, Lzzy!" or something. I can't quite understand it. But the guys are goofing off and it's such a neat feeling in the song because it adds some type of personality to it, regardless of it being like "Oh, this is the chorus, this is the verse." Everything isn't shiny.

Y'all have been playing new songs live. How has the response been to those? I know you're not technically on a headlining tour, but how has the response been?

On our headlining shows, everyone is stoked and trying to figure out what I'm saying through Youtube videos, which is so funny. There are these two super fans in Germany and they have been trying to take the Youtube video and put it into some program so they can slow it down so they can hear what I'm saying. And it's not even close and I'm not going to give it away yet. They were like "can you just give us one hint?" Well, you got the first line right. Then they were like, REALLY? But the rest of it is wrong?" Yep. There's been a lot of speculation of what is on the record, or what isn't on the record. Like "is she singing the right lyrics? Is she singing all of the song? There was actually one girl last night, we are kind of hinting at two songs. Tonight, I am going to be starting the set a cappela, and singing a piece of something we put on the record and then we start in with a new song called "I Like It Heavy" because it's kinda old school, and has this 70s groove to it and it's a little easier to digest than me just coming out screaming everyone's heads off and then easing into it. But, it was weird. Last night for the first time, there was this girl in the front row that was singing to my a cappela part. Somebody must have gotten it on Youtube and she was singing along to it and she was pretty good and I was like "Oh my God, that's awesome!" But yeah, it's strange because the people at the Eric Church shows, some of them are aware and, depending on the region, some of them don't know who we are. So, it's kinda hard to gauge. But it's about when we get to the third song, we're like "Yeah! We got 'em!" and some are like "What is this?" for a little bit.

I get that. Switching gears again, for personal reasons, I want to ask about the cover albums because my radio show is called Crimson Covers with Kinsey. So every week, I always do a Halestorm cover, except for the week I did bad cover songs, I didn't play a Halestorm song. But it was like the Brady Bunch doing American Pie and then Big & Rich doing the Beastie Boys song "Fight For Your Right To Party."

Oh, God bless them. Now, I have to hear this. Jesus. They did that song?!

Yes! I wanted to ask why you picked the song you did to cover. I played "Out Ta Get Me" and forgot to censor it.

OOOps. [Laughs] Hopefully, no one was listening when that happened. We actually do those covers very selfishly. For two reasons: number one, if we like the song and we've never played it or even if it's a different genre, we're like "Let's try this" but for the second reason besides just loving the song, it's a simple and safe way to try some new stuff, new genres, or take a different approach to a song that we've never tried before in our own original songs. For example, our first cover album we did "Bad Romance" and "Slave to the Grind" which were two songs that the tempos and the type of attitude in each song we had never really delved into before. So, technically if we hadn't done, after we did Slave to the Grind, we decided we needed a song with this tempo because we had never done that before and it was so crazy and the attitude made me feel like a dude singing it. It's kinda hard to see yourself from the outside, so we are always kinda trying to take the out door in sometimes, eww, that sounded horrible. [Laughs] Sorry, I live with a bunch of boys so everything I say is like a sexual innuendo. But anyway, we try to reach outside of what we think is cool and go with it. Technically, we wouldn't have "Love Bites" if it weren't for covering those songs. We wanted to try and write a song kinda of like those. With the last one, we did Gold Dust Woman.

I play that on my show every week. It's my favorite.

That's funny because it got such a huge response. I have a problem with not doing anything less than 110% so by showing out, we have a song on our new record called "New Modern Love" that was inspired by that type of groove and idea. It's different when you have to cover and breakdown somebody else's song that you love and build it up as your own. You learn so much as a song writer and it's different when you have to sing it rather than just listening to it and being inspired. When you sing it and perform it, you're like "Wow, this feels good. We need to have a song that feels like this." If that makes any sense. So we do those covers selfishly for that reason.

I noticed that Out Ta Get Me is not a very popular GNR song because on my show I always do other people that have covered the song and no one else has covered that.

That song in particular, I always envisioned like, Pat Benetar would have done that song. Axl isn't really doing those crazy acrobatics in that song that he usually does [Imitates Axl Rose]. It's just a down and dirty punk rock song. It's always overlooked because it's not really flashy but man, it's fun to play live too.

I know you said selfish reasons, but I also wanted to ask why you covered that cheesy Heart song. [Laughs]

I know it's cheesy. I never actually listened to the radio version. It was very Pop radio at the time they put that out. The first Heart CD that I ever got from my mother was On The Road Home. It was this live CD of theirs and they do that song very much like what we did on the record, but it was slower paced with piano and guitar and more soulful. Back-story: the reason we did that song was because I struck a deal with the guys. I would always cover that song in karaoke. But the first time I covered it, or maybe the second, way before we were signed to anything, we would go to bars, sometimes when we were underage, and the guys would get free beers because I was singing it well. People would be like "That girl can sing! You guys get a round of beers!" So they would make me sing that song because it was only ever if I did that song. So they would make me do that song all the time. Our first time in Nashville, we broke down and we ended up going to a karaoke bar and they made me sing it again and they got free drinks because of that. I was like "I'm getting you fuckers free drinks." And so they were like, "Lzzy! We are doing a cover CD. You have to do this!" I was like "No! I am NOT doing that song!" They were like, "We'll make you a deal: you do it on here and we won't ask you to sing it in karaoke again." So, sweet. They have yet to ask me, but I feel like it's going to happen.

It totally will, eventually. I meant to ask this question earlier, so it is sort of out of place, but how has the band evolved over the last few years. I remember the first time I heard "I Get Off" on Octane. I was like "Ooohhh I like this."

Aww! Thank you! We live life kinda fast. Mentally, I don't think we've evolved at all. We are perpetually 14 inside. We are very immature. Even last night, sorry guys I'm going to embarrass you, but there was this huge fart in the freaking bunk hall and everyone just busted out laughing and I thought everyone was asleep and all of a sudden I was like "Ahh!" Like, Jesus, guys!" We still have the same fire that we did when we were teenagers and coming onto the scene. Truth be told, I've been in this band for 17 years with my little brother. None of that has changed. The view hasn't changed. The goal hasn't changed. The maturity hasn't changed. I think musically, because we are just out here all the time, I gauge how many years have gone by our fans bringing their kids. All of a sudden, the kid that was this tall is now this tall [shows height difference with her hands] and I think "Oh my God, it's been four years!" I think because we travel a lot and meet so many different people, there is always something to write about because of that. There is always music to be heard. And no matter what genre, we do a lot of this stuff. We're listening to Country all the time now on this tour and a lot of stuff seeps in. We keep chasing after what gets us excited and that leads you down the rabbit hole. I think we have definitely evolved musically and for the better. I think we have a very wide view of what our future could and could not be. It's kind of freeing right now. I am feeling the same type of freedom right now that I did as a teenager. You go through a phase. I was writing about mythical people and stupid stuff that no one could ever relate to and then you get signed to a label. And even though our label and management have been incredibly supportive but, just by having that type of responsibility as a writer to think "Oh, this has to be good for radio. Is the label going to approve this record? Will it even make it past management? Are they going to like it? Is everyone going to be digging this song? Are the guys going to be ok with me actually saying this in a song?" You go through a phase where you aren't thinking "Do I love this song?" Some of that stuff starts seeping in and it becomes less about you and more about everybody else. I feel like we are finally over that hump. Especially from making this last record. We were just like "Fuck it. Let's do what we want." So we did. We did everything we wanted to do. Right now, I would say with the upcoming record, we didn't stray from who we are. It's just a lot more of who we are. So, I warned you. [Laughs]

Anything else you want to add?

Just a big "Thank You" to you, obviously, not just for talking to me, but actually listening to our music and enabling us to do what we love every single day. It's crazy to think about. It really is. I was talking to my mom about this the other day and I was like "Mom, do you remember when we were in grocery stores or restaurants and I used to remember saying to my little brother, we would leave picks or little things that said our name, in the napkin holders just in case somebody would check out our band. And now, more times than not, people know who we are and it's just so weird to think about. It's strange and very humbling. And the whole reason for that is it takes a village, man. A lot of people talk and we are spiraling outward and I get to say I do this for a living now and that's thanks to everybody.

[We bantered about college football and the phrase "Roll Tide." Then, she did a stinger for our station which leads into the next bit of content]

I was writing this song with Eric [Church] and it's funny because when you listen to the song that we wrote, it didn't make it on the record because it was a little too country, but it was awesome. It was like this stomp song. I still think we should put it on an EP or something, but you can tell what lines are mine and what lines are his because I remember asking him something like "What's jump and rally? Like what is that?" It was me being schooled in the language.

[I talked to her about Will Hoge, and my journalistic dreams and she was extremely understanding. We talked about freelancing and traveling for our lines of work and Hanson.]

The only pictures my dad has in office are a picture of me with Hanson and of you and him. Hanson is my favorite band.

Oh my gosh! That is so funny! I can honestly say that, by them coming out at that point in time, in '97, that is when we started our band. Because we saw them, my brother and I were like "We can totally do that" and that's when we started playing in our living room and in talent shows and we were like, "MOM! They're doing it!"

That is the best thing I have ever heard. They are my all time favorite and I want to interview them so bad.

Yeah, them and their 20 something kids!

Yes! They have 11 between the three of them. But now we are just rambling. Thank you so much for allowing me to do this.

Of course, darling!




Sunday, October 5, 2014

Bayfest Mobile, AL 10/3-4/14

Bayfest weekend is upon us once again and I was even more excited than I have been in a while. AFI and Chester Bennington were both making appearances this year and to me, that is one of the best lineups I could ask for.

The first band of the night for me was Pop Evil.

I have seen them so many times in the last two years and I hope I get to see them more.

They played

Flawed
Hero
100 in a 55
Behind Closed Doors
Divide
Monster You Made
Boss's Daughter
Last Man Standing
Goodbye My Friend
Sick Sense
Torn To Pieces
Deal With The Devil
Trenches

During their set, I had an opportunity to meet Stone Temple Pilots with Chester Bennington. Chester's other band, Linkin Park, has been one of my favorite bands forever. All of the guys were really nice and I made it back just in time for AFI to start.

This was the first out of two times I would see AFI that week, and it was their first time in Alabama. I was too excited.

They played

The Leaving Song Pt. II
Girl's Not Grey
I Hope You Suffer
Synesthesia
Medicate
Love Like Winter
Beautiful Thieves
17 Crimes
Heart Stops
The Days of the Phoenix
Dancing Through Sunday
Miss Murder
Silver and Cold

Then it was time for Stone Temple Pilots with Chester Bennington.

They were amazing and Chester absolutely rocked.

They played

Sex Type Thing
Sin (First Time with Chester)
Vasoline
Wicked Garden
Big Bang Baby
Crackerman
Out of Time
Big Empty
Plush (First Time with Chester)
Interstate Love Song
Black Heart
Hollywood Bitch
Heaven and Hot Rods (First Time with Chester)
Silvergun Superman
Down
Dead & Bloated
Meatplow
Piece of Pie
Trippin' on a Hole in a Paper Heart

And with that performance, the first day of the festival was over. Onward to Day two!














































Day two did not last very long, but it was still fun.

My first band of the day was All That Remains.

I saw them last year in Atlanta and they were wonderful.

They played

Now Let Them Tremble
For We Are Many
Stand Up
The Air That I Breathe
Some of the People, All of the Time
What If I Was Nothing? (They talked about how Metal bands do not write power ballads. Then they gave the finger to society about how more bands should take risks.)
Asking Too Much
Six
The Last Time
This Darkened Heart
Hold On
This Calling
Two Weeks

Following them, I ran to a different stage to see Joan Jett.

I was supposed to see Joan Jett in 2006, but her set was rained out thus causing me to miss three other bands. I was happy I finally got to see her.

She played

Bad Reputation
Cherry Bomb (The Runaways)
Do You Wanna Touch Me? (Gary Glitter Cover)
TMI
You Drive Me Wild (The Runaways)
Fragile
Love Is Pain
The French Song
Any Weather
I Love Rock N Roll (The Arrows Cover)
Crimson & Clover (Tommy James & The Shondells Cover)
I Hate Myself For Loving You
Real Wild Child (Wild One) (Johnny O'Keefe & The Dee Jays Cover)

Childhood was finally fulfilled and it was wonderful.

The last band of my Bayfest weekend was Jane's Addiction. I have wanted to see them since I was young. I have fond memories of my mother and I driving around listening to Been Caught Stealing.

Let's just say, Jane's Addiction was one clown short of the circus.

Perry Farrell is one of those people who comes off as weird, but I would not be surprised if he was a freaking genius.

In addition to the weird stage antics, they played their album Nothing's Wrong in it's entirety with some additional

They played

Up the Beach
Ocean Size
Had a Dad
Ted, Just Admit It...
Standing in the Shower... Thinking
Summertime Rolls
Mountain Song
Idiots Rule
Jane Says
Pigs in Zen

Encore:

Been Caught Stealing
Just Because
Whores
Stop! (There were flying women on harnesses)

The crowd screamed the entire end of Stop! that says "Give Go. Gimmie that, get back down automobile. You turn off that smokestack. Get That goddamn radio. Hmm along with me along with TV" and it was awesome.

Perry Farrell made several weird comments, some I am not comfortable talking about in this post, but he said Roll Tide even though we lost to Ole Miss and he ended the show saying he loved everyone that loves him.

What a way to end my yearly Bayfest run on a weird note.


Roll Tide, Mr. Farrell. Roll Tide.