Name | Rustic Overtones |
---|
Landscape | yes |
---|
Background | group_or_band |
---|
Origin | Portland, Maine, USA |
---|
Instruments | Guitar, Bass Guitar, Keyboards, Drums, Baritone Sax, Trombone, Alto Sax, Tenor Sax |
---|
Genre | Rock Jazz Soul Funk Ska |
---|
Years active | 1993–2002, 2007–present |
---|
Label | Ripcord Records, Arista, Tommy Boy, Velour |
---|
Associated acts | As Fast As, Paranoid Social Club, Lettuce, Tony McNaboe, and Groove Disciples |
---|
Url | Official Website |
---|
Current members | Dave Gutter Tony McNaboe Jon Roods Dave Noyes Jason Ward Ryan Zoidis |
---|
Past members | Spencer Albee Nigel Hall Sean Morin Matthew Esty Dennis Gallant Marc Boisvert Alex Wild}} |
---|
Rustic Overtones is a rock/jazz/funk band from Maine active from 1993–2002 and 2007–present. They were the first group to perform live on XM Satellite Radio, and their 2007 album Light At The End was the fastest-selling local disc ever in the state of Maine .
History
Early Years: 1993-2002
Rustic Overtones started out in the early 1990s as a three-piece cover band known as Aces Wild with Dave Gutter, Jon Roods, and then-drummer and close friend Matthew Esty, playing small bars. This lineup produced the very rare "Smile" album. The Rustic Overtones gained popularity during the mid to late 1990s in the Portland, Maine music scene, although they had many self-financed tours throughout the country, mostly the northeastern states. After the release of their 1998 album
Rooms by the Hour, major record label
Arista signed the band spurred on by then president
Clive Davis. The signing lead to "Hardest Way Possible," a song from "Rooms By The Hour" being featured on the soundtrack to the
Rob Schneider film
The Animal. Arista hired legendary producer
Tony Visconti to produce what became the 2001 release, Viva Nueva!. However, after disagreements with the label, and a shakeup at Arista that saw their primary supporter, Clive Davis, depart, the record deal fell through. They were shortly picked up afterward by
Tommy Boy, and released
Viva Nueva! in 2001. The album featured guest appearances by
Funkmaster Flex,
Imogen Heap and
David Bowie. However, Tommy Boy dissolved shortly after the release of the album, once again leaving the Overtones without a record label. The disappointment of two major record deals falling through proved too much for the band members, and they went their separate ways in
2002. Their "final" performance was a three-hour show at the State Theatre on May 11, 2002.
Break-up and Solo Careers: 2002-2007
During the five years that the Rustic Overtones went their separate ways, most of the band members pursued a side-project. Dave Gutter and Jon Roods met up with one-time Overtones drummer Marc Boisvert, and formed
Paranoid Social Club, another band that enjoyed success, with its single "Wasted" appearing in the soundtrack to the movie
Beerfest. Spencer Albee joined with other local musicians including guitarist Zach Jones, drummer Brian Higgins, and bassist Haché and formed Rocktopus (later "
As Fast As" replacing Higgins with drummer Andrew Hodgkins), whose album "
Open Letter to the Damned received a 4.5/5 rating from music critic giant
Allmusic. Tony McNaboe served as a touring drummer for
Ray LaMontagne, and released a R&B; solo album in 2003 titled "Destination," which was warmly received by both former Rustic Overtones fans and music critics and had two songs entered into local station
WCLZ's regular circulation. In addition, saxophonist Ryan Zoidis split his time between Lettuce and
Soulive, baritone saxophonist Jason Ward pursued a music education degree at the
University of Southern Maine and played with several local bands including
Groove Disciples, and The
Apocalypse Brass Band. Trombonist Dave Noyes joined local group
Seekonk.
Reunion and Light at the End: 2007-2008
In early spring of 2007, drummer Tony McNaboe took the initiative to begin the process of reuniting the band, calling each former member separately, and telling them that everyone else had already agreed to a reunion. In May 2007, Tony McNaboe, Spencer Albee, and Jon Roods made a surprise announcement on Portland's
WCYY that the entire band did indeed plan to reunite, and were in the process of scheduling local reunion shows. On May 29, they announced that they would play two reunion shows at Portland club "The Asylum," one on July 28, 2007 and another on July 29. In addition, after a month of rumors and gossip, the band also announced that they had been working on a new album of previously unreleased material and newly written music, eventually titled
Light at the End, which was released independently in late July 2007 coinciding with the two reunion shows.
Although the band originally made it clear that the reunion will only last for the summer, and the members would turn their attention back to their post-Overtones projects after the completion of the two shows and the release of the album, Gutter confirmed in an article for the Portland Press Herald that "reunions will become a regular thing" and that the band is "here to stay." Furthermore, during one of the bands reunion shows, Spencer Albee proclaimed, "we're never going to leave you again, we're sorry". Also, during an interview on a local news station on July 18, 2007 with Gutter and Albee, the two were asked what the future plans are with the band. Gutter responded with "we've got a couple more huge endeavors planned for Rustic Overtones" and Albee stated that "theres no reason to not be together".
On September 8, 2007, the band announced on their MySpace that they were in the process of filming a "feature film documentary," though they did not announce a release date or filming timetable. On November 24, 2007, Spencer Albee announced to the crowd at an Asylum concert that the band would soon re-release the albums Long Division and Light At The End on a national record label to get the albums out to the masses. Two days later, the band announced on their MySpace that the label they had signed with was Velour Music, and hinted that their entire back catalog of albums would soon be released.
Spencer Albee's Departure and New Way Out: 2008-2009
On September 17, 2008, the band unexpectedly announced on their Myspace that Spencer Albee, their keyboardist since 1995's Long Division had left the band. Drummer Tony McNaboe explained that Spencer was parting ways on good terms, and that work on a new album would continue as planned with multi-instrumentalist Nigel Hall from Lettuce filling in on keyboards. Hall began to tour as a normal member of the band until he became too busy with other projects to continue as a full-fledged member, still contributing to the recording of the album. On tour the band began to alternate between Hall and Tyler Quist as keyboardists, playing some shows without a keyboardist at all, or having Ryan Zoidis and Dave Noyes take over keyboardist duties on certain songs. The Band continued work on their album in their self-built studio "Limited Productions Limited" throughout
2008 and
2009, and on November 11, 2009,
The New Way Out was released.
Styles and influences
In the earliest days of the Rustic Overtones, the band was mostly classified as a rock and soul band, citing their heaviest influences as artists such as
Earth, Wind, and Fire and
Tom Waits, and playing with a raw sound. However, by
Rooms by the Hour, the band's sound had become much more refined and diversified, with much more of a jazz influence on songs such as "Pink Belly" and "Machine Maker," and an alternative rock feel on songs such as "The Heist" and "Kicking and Screaming". By the late '90s and into the early 2000s, the band had become heavily influenced by hip-hop music, leading to the heavy production of the entire album, a collaboration with hip-hop veterans
Naughty by Nature that appeared on the rap group's 1999 album, and the Viva Nueva! song "Smoke", which when played sometimes featured a guest rapper friend of the band who rapped over an extended outtro to the song. Many believe that this radical switch of style is what contributed to the band's fallout with their Arista record deal, as the company apparently believed that the band's sound on the album would be similar to that of their older material. The band's most recent album,
Light at the End, sounds most similar to the production and style of Rooms by the Hour, although the album draws from various other phases of the band's musical evolution as well.
Members
Dave Gutter - vocals, guitar
Jon Roods - bass
Tony McNaboe - drums
Ryan Zoidis - alto saxophone, tenor saxophone
Jason Ward - baritone saxophone
Dave Noyes - trombone
Discography
Albums
Shish Boom Bam (1994)
Long Division (1995)
Rooms by the Hour (1997)
Viva Nueva! (2001)
Light At The End (2007)
The New Way Out (2009)
EPs
My Dirt (1996)
Check/Girl Germs (1997)
Volume Up (1999)
Singles
"Check" (1997)
"Combustible" (2001)
"C'Mon" (2001)
"Light at the End" (2008)
"Downside of Looking Up" (2009)
Promotional recordings
(This is only a partial listing)
This Is Rock N' Roll (Promo Tape) (2000)
Viva Nueva! Album Advance (2001)
Live on XM Satellite Radio (2001)
Promotional Pre Release Viva Nueva! (Date Unknown - boilerplate Tommy Boy inserts are labeled 1997 and 1998, although they were with another label in '97/'98)
Selections from the Album Viva Nueva! (2001)
External links
Official website of The Rustic Overtones
MySpace page
Rustic Overtones reunite to release album - Portland Press Herald article chronicling the reunion of the band.
Fan sites
www.rocklikewar.com
www.rustic-overtones.com
Live recordings
Rustic Overtones collection at the Internet Archive's live music archive
References
Category:American indie rock groups
Category:Musical groups from Maine
Category:Third-wave ska groups
Category:American ska musical groups