Post by onlycrayons on Jan 10, 2008 15:04:05 GMT -5
Sorry for the long post, but I couldn't find this online anywhere. The Velour re-release will include Valentines Day Massacre.
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RUSTIC OVERTONES TO RELEASE “LIGHT AT THE END”
March 18th, Velour Music Group
For fans of Rustic Overtones, July 27, 2007, was a day they never thought would come.
The hard-hitting, show-stopping, horn-powered rock band had broken up five years before, going out with a spectacular three-hour performance at the State Theater in their hometown of Portland, Maine. Two thousand fans filed into the night afterwards, exhilarated yet downcast as witnesses to the swan song of one of the best bands ever to emerge from their state.
Then this summer, an even greater crowd of 6,000 assembled in downtown Portland, on Monument Square, as the hiatus ended and Rustic Overtones heralded its return with a dramatic show executed on the rooftop of WCYY Radio. The Portland Press-Herald covered the concert with an appropriate mix of just-the-facts reportage and barely contained excitement: “In perhaps the most highly anticipated event in local rock history,” enthused Patrick Doyle, “Rustic Overtones, Maine’s groundbreaking rock group, has reunited.”
On Light at the End, their electrifying Velour Music Group debut, the group mixes the tight, slamming sound that put them on the map in the late ‘90s with a few twists guaranteed to delight loyal fans as well as new recruits. Produced by the legendary Tony Visconti (T. Rex, Morrissey, David Bowie) with long-time friend Jonathan Wyman (Seekonk, Stars Look Down, The Killing Moon), the band’s fiery rhythm section, ignited by blazing horn riffs, drives Dave Gutter’s soulful vocals on songs such as “Rock Like War,” the funk-singed “Troublesome,” and enigmatic “Black Leather Bag.” But then, on “Dear Mr. President,” the band pares its sound back to a delicate essence, as Gutter covers hot-button issues with a light touch aided by the music’s sing-along innocence.
This is a band that has bucked the odds to come back from a premature demise, with a strength and depth that, frankly, has surprised even its own members.
“Well, first of all, when we got back together, we realized that we had forgotten all of our old songs,” says Gutter, prompting laughter from the rest of the guys. “But it didn’t take long to get them back. It’s like riding a bike – with six of your friends.”
In fact, everyone had stayed in touch after that “final” appearance in 2002. They had been tight ever since they’d formed in 1995, built on a bond of music that Gutter and bassist Jon Roods had created as childhood friends. The lineup was solidified in high school and their sound tightened through a schedule that gradually widened to more than 200 gigs throughout much of America.
Eventually they won major-label attention from no less a figure than Clive Davis, who signed them to a deal at Arista. Rather than represent the culmination of years of work, though, this was to mark the beginning of long spiral into a major label black hole. Clive was forced out at Arista and their first major LP, Viva Nueva!, wasn’t released until 2001 -- on Tommy Boy. Unfortunately, Tommy Boy promptly folded without promoting the release, and as the business hassles and frustrations mounted, the guys finally decided to just call it quits. For the next four years, each pursued his own projects, which included groups that earned critical and fan attention, several albums and tours, and so on.
Life, in other words, went on … but everyone knew that something was missing.
Tony McNaboe was the one who decided to do something about it. “I was at a place where I could take a broad look at my life and assess where we were all at,” he explains. “I realized that nothing I had done, regardless of how successful it was, felt as natural to me as Rustic Overtones. So I started thinking that maybe some things are just meant to be.”
McNaboe used a bit of subterfuge to kick things off – in his initial calls, McNaboe told each band member that all the other members had already agreed to a reunion – but everyone immediately felt that the time was right, practically as well as emotionally, to reform. “Once we got back together, we knew that this thing was growing,” says Spencer Albee. “We were having a lot of fun and doing big shows without the help of management or a label. It just felt great to play together again. So we decided to make the record and do everything else we needed to do by ourselves.”
Luckily, in extricating themselves from the label meltdown five years earlier, the band had retained ownership of their recordings, including unreleased tracks produced by Visconti and enhanced by appearances from David Bowie, Imogen Heap, and other high-profile guests drawn to this young band. And though the band decided to partner with Velour as management and label for the national release of Light At The End, they will shortly release their classic back catalog on their own, DIY-style.
The band’s new music reflects not only the band’s newfound independence, but also their greater maturity. “We’ve always drawn from our experiences while writing our songs,” says Gutter. “It’s great to be back together and do that again. But we’ve also become better musicians and refined our own styles of writing and performing over these past five years, and we’d all heard each other’s work, which raised the bar a little for us all. There was more of a challenge, like, ‘I need to be as good as these guys have been.’ And there was a little more hunger again, going back to the days when we’d put everything in our lives aside and have three dollars a day to eat on, just so we could go on the road and play our music. Getting back to that feeling, with somewhat more developed taste and musicianship, has been really good.”
With broader vision rising from their rekindled groove, Light at the End blends irony, humor, and intensity in framing Gutter’s increasingly thoughtful lyrics. “I’m writing and singing about more important things than before, just because I’m a little bit older now,” Gutter says. “But the cool thing about what we’re doing on songs like ‘Dear Mr. President’ and ‘Happy’ is that even when we approach something serious and heavy, there’s always some mirth underneath it. That’s become a part of our style too.”
On paper and on disc, then, Light at the End delivers what fans had dared to expect and new listeners have sorely needed. But more than that, it spreads the news, from Portland’s Monument Square to anywhere that music for heart, head and body still matters: Rustic Overtones is back, this time to stay.
1. The Calm
2. Rock Like War
3. Letter to the President
4. Troublesome
5. Hardest Way Possible
6. Black Leather Bag
7. Oxygen
8. Carsick
9. Carnival
10. Light At The End
11. Valentine’s Day Massacre
12. Happy
Rustic Overtones publicity contact:
Rob Moore at 60 Cycle Media
ph # 845-358-6026
moore@60cyclemedia.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RUSTIC OVERTONES TO RELEASE “LIGHT AT THE END”
March 18th, Velour Music Group
For fans of Rustic Overtones, July 27, 2007, was a day they never thought would come.
The hard-hitting, show-stopping, horn-powered rock band had broken up five years before, going out with a spectacular three-hour performance at the State Theater in their hometown of Portland, Maine. Two thousand fans filed into the night afterwards, exhilarated yet downcast as witnesses to the swan song of one of the best bands ever to emerge from their state.
Then this summer, an even greater crowd of 6,000 assembled in downtown Portland, on Monument Square, as the hiatus ended and Rustic Overtones heralded its return with a dramatic show executed on the rooftop of WCYY Radio. The Portland Press-Herald covered the concert with an appropriate mix of just-the-facts reportage and barely contained excitement: “In perhaps the most highly anticipated event in local rock history,” enthused Patrick Doyle, “Rustic Overtones, Maine’s groundbreaking rock group, has reunited.”
On Light at the End, their electrifying Velour Music Group debut, the group mixes the tight, slamming sound that put them on the map in the late ‘90s with a few twists guaranteed to delight loyal fans as well as new recruits. Produced by the legendary Tony Visconti (T. Rex, Morrissey, David Bowie) with long-time friend Jonathan Wyman (Seekonk, Stars Look Down, The Killing Moon), the band’s fiery rhythm section, ignited by blazing horn riffs, drives Dave Gutter’s soulful vocals on songs such as “Rock Like War,” the funk-singed “Troublesome,” and enigmatic “Black Leather Bag.” But then, on “Dear Mr. President,” the band pares its sound back to a delicate essence, as Gutter covers hot-button issues with a light touch aided by the music’s sing-along innocence.
This is a band that has bucked the odds to come back from a premature demise, with a strength and depth that, frankly, has surprised even its own members.
“Well, first of all, when we got back together, we realized that we had forgotten all of our old songs,” says Gutter, prompting laughter from the rest of the guys. “But it didn’t take long to get them back. It’s like riding a bike – with six of your friends.”
In fact, everyone had stayed in touch after that “final” appearance in 2002. They had been tight ever since they’d formed in 1995, built on a bond of music that Gutter and bassist Jon Roods had created as childhood friends. The lineup was solidified in high school and their sound tightened through a schedule that gradually widened to more than 200 gigs throughout much of America.
Eventually they won major-label attention from no less a figure than Clive Davis, who signed them to a deal at Arista. Rather than represent the culmination of years of work, though, this was to mark the beginning of long spiral into a major label black hole. Clive was forced out at Arista and their first major LP, Viva Nueva!, wasn’t released until 2001 -- on Tommy Boy. Unfortunately, Tommy Boy promptly folded without promoting the release, and as the business hassles and frustrations mounted, the guys finally decided to just call it quits. For the next four years, each pursued his own projects, which included groups that earned critical and fan attention, several albums and tours, and so on.
Life, in other words, went on … but everyone knew that something was missing.
Tony McNaboe was the one who decided to do something about it. “I was at a place where I could take a broad look at my life and assess where we were all at,” he explains. “I realized that nothing I had done, regardless of how successful it was, felt as natural to me as Rustic Overtones. So I started thinking that maybe some things are just meant to be.”
McNaboe used a bit of subterfuge to kick things off – in his initial calls, McNaboe told each band member that all the other members had already agreed to a reunion – but everyone immediately felt that the time was right, practically as well as emotionally, to reform. “Once we got back together, we knew that this thing was growing,” says Spencer Albee. “We were having a lot of fun and doing big shows without the help of management or a label. It just felt great to play together again. So we decided to make the record and do everything else we needed to do by ourselves.”
Luckily, in extricating themselves from the label meltdown five years earlier, the band had retained ownership of their recordings, including unreleased tracks produced by Visconti and enhanced by appearances from David Bowie, Imogen Heap, and other high-profile guests drawn to this young band. And though the band decided to partner with Velour as management and label for the national release of Light At The End, they will shortly release their classic back catalog on their own, DIY-style.
The band’s new music reflects not only the band’s newfound independence, but also their greater maturity. “We’ve always drawn from our experiences while writing our songs,” says Gutter. “It’s great to be back together and do that again. But we’ve also become better musicians and refined our own styles of writing and performing over these past five years, and we’d all heard each other’s work, which raised the bar a little for us all. There was more of a challenge, like, ‘I need to be as good as these guys have been.’ And there was a little more hunger again, going back to the days when we’d put everything in our lives aside and have three dollars a day to eat on, just so we could go on the road and play our music. Getting back to that feeling, with somewhat more developed taste and musicianship, has been really good.”
With broader vision rising from their rekindled groove, Light at the End blends irony, humor, and intensity in framing Gutter’s increasingly thoughtful lyrics. “I’m writing and singing about more important things than before, just because I’m a little bit older now,” Gutter says. “But the cool thing about what we’re doing on songs like ‘Dear Mr. President’ and ‘Happy’ is that even when we approach something serious and heavy, there’s always some mirth underneath it. That’s become a part of our style too.”
On paper and on disc, then, Light at the End delivers what fans had dared to expect and new listeners have sorely needed. But more than that, it spreads the news, from Portland’s Monument Square to anywhere that music for heart, head and body still matters: Rustic Overtones is back, this time to stay.
1. The Calm
2. Rock Like War
3. Letter to the President
4. Troublesome
5. Hardest Way Possible
6. Black Leather Bag
7. Oxygen
8. Carsick
9. Carnival
10. Light At The End
11. Valentine’s Day Massacre
12. Happy
Rustic Overtones publicity contact:
Rob Moore at 60 Cycle Media
ph # 845-358-6026
moore@60cyclemedia.com