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By: Dennis Cook

The True Spokes kick off their first West Coast tour on Tuesday, March 6th, at Cozmic Pizza in Eugene, Oregon before heading to San Francisco, Hollywood and more. Full schedule here.

The True Spokes

A confession: The first time I saw Flowmotion perform live right in the bosom of their hardcore Pacific Northwest fan base at their wonderful annual Summer Meltdown festival a few hours outside of their Seattle home I was struck by how much they didnt sound like their name, which in the absence of their music had conjured up images of white kids with dreadlocks, endless noodling, New Age self-help courses and the like. What I encountered in 2009 was a rock band of resounding solidity, a modern answer to classics like Supertramp, 70s Journey and the Doobie Brothers, where each and every element musicianship, songwriting, vocals, presentation was on the money. This was a group of pros that deserved a MUCH bigger audience outside of their established flock, which theyd earned with over a decade of steady gigging and recording.

While 2010s Ghost Pepper hinted at the band Id witnessed live, there were still Latin breaks, funk elements and African touches to the rock core. Jump to 2012 and the band that was Flowmotion is now The True Spokes, as together, refined and melodic a rock band as one could want. Everything about this evolutionary step is focused with songs offered up with lean intensity and warmly philosophical reverberations. The True Spokes self-titled debut (released February 4) was captured at San Franciscos Mission Bells Studios with the helping hand of another pro, Tim Bluhm of The Mother Hips, who co-produced the album with the band (with engineering wizardy from the great David Simon-Baker. Invitingly melodic and filled with verses that address the world as it is and still comes out the other side smiling sometimes weary but always a touch wiser – this debut is an exciting first step for some of the most talented West Coast players far too few people outside their converted inner circle know, a rock unit ready to rub shoulders with their obvious influences like Tom Petty and Wilco. With this name change and a kickass new calling card, Josh Clauson (vocals, guitar), RL Heyer (vocals, guitar), Scott Goodwin (drums, backup vocals), Erik Bryson (bass) and Bob Rees (percussion, keyboards) are letting go of the past and living for a brighter today.

The True Spokes Eponymous Debut

We discussed [the name change] before recording Ghost Pepper. We talked about keeping Flowmotion as the party band playing the funk-Latin-reggae stuff that everybody expects when they come to a Flowmotion show, and then creating a new band that was more the direction we were going, which is concise songs, says Heyer. We hadnt talked about changing our name in a long while when we went in to record [what became the True Spokes debut]. We were going around and around trying to pick an album title. But what really brought it around was at last years [Summer] Meltdown, Bob drove Marco Benevento to the airport and they got into a conversation about the name Flowmotion. Marco said he didnt expect us to sound like we did with the name. So, Bob got convinced by Marco that it was no big deal to change our name, and if we wanted to we should.

Theres been a lot of different takes on the decision, says Clauson, the founder and one constant in Flowmotions history. Some people want to empower me on the change, and others are like, How could you give up after all these years? They see it kind of skewed like that, but I know exactly where I sit with it and its perfect. It comes at a time of a lot of transitions within the band and the Meltdown. The band has formed a more equal alliance where everyone is taking on more in the writing, direction and just workload of it. Its a very relieving thing to not have it all on my shoulders. Im surrounded by guys who are ready to step up whatever comes our way.

The True Spokes

As far as the existing fan base, the ones who were dead set on Flowmotion being what it was in say 2002 arent really around anymore after Ghost Pepper. However, when we announced we were changing the name, those people spoke up and called it bullshit, says Heyer. Its not their fault they like what they like but they arent likely to be our fans whether we change our name or not. Were not playing that stuff, and even if we play certain songs, we dont play them like they did in 2000 when the band was comprised of 19-21 year olds. Were in our thirties now and were not going to play the same music. Even when we play the older material, it sounds different it sounds like us [today].

The times in which most of us live are close to the bone, where folks are figuring out how theyre going to keep real basics food, shelter, health care going and still prosper and build on their dreams. The True Spokes actively grapple with this stuff, and what hope they wring from these rough stones is legit and nourishing. While their potent music doesnt offer many solutions, it does engage with core ideas that many people are wrestling with, and in so doing helps one find new holds and stances to help them in the fight.

Josh Clauson by Sara Soko

It is a wild time in the world. Theres no escaping that everywhere you go, and at some point you have to deal with these things, says Clauson. Where we find our root in music is in just dealing with these issues. If theres hope its real because were incapable of faking it. We dont discount the true reality we have to deal with, but we take these moments and try to make something hopeful out of them. Its not solutions but it cuts right to it and offers an air of hope. Thats what music is for to cut right to it AND get one through it.

I agree with the term potent. A lot of peoples first take might even be its too much, but over time it just soaks in. It has some real depth to it, says Clauson of the life experience filled pieces on The True Spokes debut. Its been really fun to develop songs in that way really look at them and take each measure and make sure it makes sense. Instead of stretching everything out and making an adventure of it that way, were making an adventure of honing in on things.

While Flowmotion was known as a powerhouse blender of styles, The True Spokes pull off an equally impressive trick playing strong songs with controlled strength and concise execution. Theres no flab or meandering to the new material, which harnesses their group strengths in a really effective, immediately appealing way.

RL Heyer by Sara Soko

Thats part of the reason we brought in an external producer on the album, explains Heyer. Tim had heard [Flowmotion] once at Meltdown and he knew a bit but not much about the band. He offered fresh ears on our sound. It solidified what we were doing. Wed sent him a demo CD with around 25 tracks all over the map. One cut was just me with an acoustic and three vocal tracks, and then other stuff sounded like total prog-rock. He really helped shape all that into a sound by seeing what each person contributes and drawing out their strengths.

Another factor thats come into play with [The True Spokes] is The Beatles. As a band, we performed Rubber Soul last Halloween, and even though this was after the album was recorded, it got us thinking in the mindset that a song doesnt have to be super long to go a lot of places, says Heyer. You can have short sections, especially these days with the short attention spans of many people it serves us better to tighten everything up. You dont have to play something four ways instrumentally before the vocals come in or other things like that which come up when youre jamming. Those things dont need to be on a record. With a lot of art, the more you limit yourself, the cooler your stuff becomes. Even stylistically, if you dont have the option to go into a Latin groove or funk section you have to use other resources to get your point across, and that makes the music more interesting.

For whatever recognition the name Flowmotion gave these guys on the West Coast and elsewhere, the name change (and attitude that comes with it and hums in the new music) offers a clean slate for these gifted musicians. Anything is possible in such a state of newness. One is taking a new trip and yesterdays baggage is left behind.

The True Spokes

It feels like that, especially now that we can play these new tunes live and really dig into them. It just has a whole fresh perspective that makes each show exciting, says Clauson. We had to write these tunes, develop them, record them, and now learn them. Were just really learning now what these songs are capable of.

There is the matter of the Flowmotion back catalog, which the band is still figuring out how to handle in this new era.

Its something Im dealing with maybe more than anyone else, says Clauson. I think were going to have to cherry pick through what we have that resonates with the new material and just let go of the others, which is fine. Im looking forward to this time of transition, where its a little all over the map [laughs]. We cant just stick it to the fan base that has been so loyal over the years and dismiss what they want and like. I notice this transitional thing a lot both live and in my personal life. Its confusing and we dont know everything yet, but its clear something major is happening.

Its a natural evolution the way this has happened, continues Clauson. I really wasnt available due to what I was going through during Ghost Pepper, and thats what really sparked this whole change. Everyone needed to really step up and they did. Im really excited about how this is going. Were writing new material already. Scott, for example, is just writing and writing and ready to sing more on top of his epic drumming. His tunes are just stuck in my head constantly. This change has inspired the entire group and created a sense of friendly competition. I love it, and this band needed that fuel to spread the role of songwriting out. In making that dynamic cohesive, it just naturally led to a new name and a common direction.

The True Spokes Tour Dates :: The True Spokes News



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The String Cheese Incident: Back On The Road Again

By: Dennis Cook

SCI by C. Taylor Crothers

To say theres been a pent-up desire for The String Cheese Incident to return to active duty would be a fairly gross understatement. For the SCI faithful, nothing else fills the hole this singular Colorado institution fits. A great American band in the broad, positive sense, String Cheese throws together elements no other band would put in the same mixing bowl, and then proceeds to make them tasty, sometimes against all expectations.

The sustained appetite for this band is clear based on the swift sell-outs of their special festival appearances since they put SCI on the backburner to focus on individual projects in 2007. Now, the band is ready to enter a new phase, beginning with the Roots Run Deep Tour, which starts Friday, November 25 in Asheville, NC and continues through December 10 in Chicago [find full tour schedule here]. It is the start of SCI 2.0, where the various musical tributaries Michael Kang (acoustic/electric mandolin, electric guitar, violin), Michael Travis (drums, percussion), Bill Nershi (acoustic/electric guitars, lap steel), Kyle Hollingsworth (keyboards), Keith Moseley (bass) and Jason Hann (percussion) have explored in EOTO, Emmitt-Nershi Band, Kyle Hollingsworth Band and elsewhere come together.

It is an exciting time for the band, something we picked up on immediately in this conversation with Billy Nershi conducted on the run as he finished up his current tour with pal Drew Emmitt.

Billy Nershi by Mike Hardaker

JamBase: For a band that started with strong ties to bluegrass, String Cheese has taken that music into some strange places.

Billy Nershi: And its only getting weirder! Weve been practicing and what weve been doing with a lot of the songs lately because there are such extremes of style in the band all the way to full electronica whomp whomp to what EOTO is doing were taking some of that and some of the bluegrass and everything in between and trying to incorporate all these styles into one sound. And some of the songs are really coming out good! Its really cool.

JamBase: Is it exciting to see the catalog is still evolving in unpredictable ways?

Oh yeah! Everyone has a role in the band, and one of my roles is to bring in original music and fresh melodies, some of which are fiddle tunes from Irish fiddle tunes to Celtic fiddle tunes, all kinds of different melodies to build songs around. I bring in some of the raw materials and the band does a lot of arranging with it, and thats a lot of fun. Kyle has been writing a lot of great songs lately, too. Theres a lot of new music coming into the band right now.

How do you feel taking a break from String Cheese being a full-time endeavor impacted the band?

SCI @ Red Rocks 2010 by Todd Radunsky

I think we all needed a break. I didnt know that at the time, where I was thinking, I have to stop this or Ill go crazy. There was a lot of responsibility involved, and it became 20-percent playing music and 80-percent business and meetings and bullshit. Just the fact that wed been playing music together for 14 years meant we needed a break to get a little perspective, stop the machine, take a look at it, and figure out if it needs to be changed at all. So, the break did us good. I have my musical outlet with [the Emmitt-Nershi Band], so theres less pressure on the band and Im not saying, Were not playing enough bluegrass!

The business part of this can become burdensome the longer a band exists. Jerry Garcia once said something to the effect that the Dead were a circus others ran away to for a night but living inside that circus was a very different experience.

It is a traveling circus, and its one where everybody wants you to go ballistic and party every night because theyve saved up for weeks & weeks to see these two shows and theyre going ALL out. Sometimes its hard for me to keep up with those expectations.

You guys throw big parties. Theres even perhaps an expectation youll bring the giant helium balloons and trapeze artists every single time now.

SCI @ Red Rocks 2010 by Brian Spady

Its definitely become a thing thats expected now, and not just at very special shows like New Years or Halloween. Every big show people expect hot chicks hula-hooping on platforms with lights on them while lasers shoot all over the room [laughs]. But thats what people want, a special experience that gets them out of their normal day-to-day routine. So, I feel we provide something that is really valuable to them and us by being the circus leaders of this situation that takes them to a new environment thats a fun and interesting reward for them.

This band provides a space where its safe to put on fairy wings and Wookie costumes and tap into the child within.Its all about being able to express yourself without worrying about what ANYBODY else is thinking. As long as its all done with good intentions and people are cool to each other which is the vibe we try to nurture then its great to express your individuality out there. Its like that [Michael] Franti song [Stay Human (All The Freaky People)] says, All the freaky people make the beauty of the world.

Whats it like to perform inside an environment like SCI conjures? Awful lot of distractions for guys still responsible for making music.

SCI @ Bonnaroo 2011 by Brad Hodge

Its wild! Youre playing music outside at a festival and an aerialist will rise up into the air on a helium balloon to do their act a hundred feet in the air right in front of you. You think, Is this really happening? Its fun from stage to watch whats going on.

Its good to hear theres some magic in it for you, too. Its one thing to plan such events on paper and another to live them out in real time.

Thats what we feed off of. A lot of what gets us off are musical moments where we can feel theres some energy captured, especially when you hold that [energy] and try to stay in that moment. Thats what were all about, and it takes the audience to reach that place where the ships getting off the ground.

Theres a strong sense of community around String Cheese, something that goes beyond the usual fan-band dynamic. It definitely feels like a tribe gathers when you come to town.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, and theres actually a lot of different tribes under one roof.

Coming back to SCI now, what do you find turns you on about making music with these guys?

SCI @ Red Rocks 2007 by Jay Scherer

Its a very good creative outlet because it can go into so many different styles. Any song can go any number of different directions when you work it out with this band. So, its really interesting creatively, and thats a big necessity in my life. Its not the kind of band where we meet at the venue and say, So dudes, what songs do you want to play? A lot of work goes into arranging and setlist construction. Even though I get to the point sometimes where I wish it was simpler [laughs], part of whats interesting about this band to me is how it pushes everybody in the band to keep up. Keeping up with Kang and Kyle, instrumentally, keeps me challenged, and the challenge of the material, quantity of songs, and what were trying to accomplish onstage remains challenging to this day.

Initially, SCI was seen as a rock-bluegrass hybrid, but youve kept on pretty fearlessly exploring almost every style of music there is. How do you think of what you do now? How do you describe it to others?

Its very hard to describe it in musical terms because there are so many styles we play on any given night. I guess I think of it as if each night were a three-day music festival rolled into two sets. It goes all over the map, but we try to have the energy one picks up on at a music festival. We try to capture the audiences attention and take them someplace.

Youre all very good musicians but you dont slant your music in a way that overly fixates on solos and individual celebrity, which one encounters a lot in jazz and even bluegrass players of your stature. With so many really high-end players it becomes about showy technique. You guys play at that level but you dont put the spotlight on it.

SCI @ Red Rocks 2010 by Brian Spady

We try to have good arrangements and hooks because the style of music that throws the technical kitchen sink at the audience all the time can be real tiring. After a while it can make people numb to technical virtuosity. However, as a musician, I love seeing great musicians play, but it doesnt always have to be about that. The focus when were writing songs is not solos that blow people away. Were trying to create songs that have a thread through them thats more than this persons solo and that persons solo.

The title of this new tour is the Roots Run Deep Tour. Its an evocative name and speaks to maybe a more grounded sense of what String Cheese Incident is today.Were excited to get on the bus and play every night, as opposed to working, working, working, then playing two shows over a weekend and were done. Here, we can build night to night and hopefully get that cohesiveness you can only get through a series of shows. Were looking forward to getting in the groove.

Are you going to be playing some of the new material youve been working on?

Well have a good four songs that havent been heard before.

Billy Nershi by Jesse R. Borrell

You guys havent made a studio album since 2005. Is that in the works now?

Were talking about making some recordings from this tour were going to multi-track and do some sort of hybrid release where we bring these recordings into the studio and polish them up. So much of our sound is what happens live, and weve had varying degrees of success in our studio recordings. Trying to capture the energy of what goes down live is what we want to try and do, then utilize some time in the studio to make things sound as good as possible.

One thing I discovered recently is if you do a Google search where you let them suggest what youre looking for as you type in the words that String Cheese Incident comes up automatically before the food string cheese.

[Huge laugh] Well, I think weve hit the big time.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News

JamBase | String Theorizing
Go See Live Music!



Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The String Cheese Incident: Back On The Road Again

By: Dennis Cook

SCI by C. Taylor Crothers

To say theres been a pent-up desire for The String Cheese Incident to return to active duty would be a fairly gross understatement. For the SCI faithful, nothing else fills the hole this singular Colorado institution fits. A great American band in the broad, positive sense, String Cheese throws together elements no other band would put in the same mixing bowl, and then proceeds to make them tasty, sometimes against all expectations.

The sustained appetite for this band is clear based on the swift sell-outs of their special festival appearances since they put SCI on the backburner to focus on individual projects in 2007. Now, the band is ready to enter a new phase, beginning with the Roots Run Deep Tour, which starts Friday, November 25 in Asheville, NC and continues through December 10 in Chicago [find full tour schedule here]. It is the start of SCI 2.0, where the various musical tributaries Michael Kang (acoustic/electric mandolin, electric guitar, violin), Michael Travis (drums, percussion), Bill Nershi (acoustic/electric guitars, lap steel), Kyle Hollingsworth (keyboards), Keith Moseley (bass) and Jason Hann (percussion) have explored in EOTO, Emmitt-Nershi Band, Kyle Hollingsworth Band and elsewhere come together.

It is an exciting time for the band, something we picked up on immediately in this conversation with Billy Nershi conducted on the run as he finished up his current tour with pal Drew Emmitt.

Billy Nershi by Mike Hardaker

JamBase: For a band that started with strong ties to bluegrass, String Cheese has taken that music into some strange places.

Billy Nershi: And its only getting weirder! Weve been practicing and what weve been doing with a lot of the songs lately because there are such extremes of style in the band all the way to full electronica whomp whomp to what EOTO is doing were taking some of that and some of the bluegrass and everything in between and trying to incorporate all these styles into one sound. And some of the songs are really coming out good! Its really cool.

JamBase: Is it exciting to see the catalog is still evolving in unpredictable ways?

Oh yeah! Everyone has a role in the band, and one of my roles is to bring in original music and fresh melodies, some of which are fiddle tunes from Irish fiddle tunes to Celtic fiddle tunes, all kinds of different melodies to build songs around. I bring in some of the raw materials and the band does a lot of arranging with it, and thats a lot of fun. Kyle has been writing a lot of great songs lately, too. Theres a lot of new music coming into the band right now.

How do you feel taking a break from String Cheese being a full-time endeavor impacted the band?

SCI @ Red Rocks 2010 by Todd Radunsky

I think we all needed a break. I didnt know that at the time, where I was thinking, I have to stop this or Ill go crazy. There was a lot of responsibility involved, and it became 20-percent playing music and 80-percent business and meetings and bullshit. Just the fact that wed been playing music together for 14 years meant we needed a break to get a little perspective, stop the machine, take a look at it, and figure out if it needs to be changed at all. So, the break did us good. I have my musical outlet with [the Emmitt-Nershi Band], so theres less pressure on the band and Im not saying, Were not playing enough bluegrass!

The business part of this can become burdensome the longer a band exists. Jerry Garcia once said something to the effect that the Dead were a circus others ran away to for a night but living inside that circus was a very different experience.

It is a traveling circus, and its one where everybody wants you to go ballistic and party every night because theyve saved up for weeks & weeks to see these two shows and theyre going ALL out. Sometimes its hard for me to keep up with those expectations.

You guys throw big parties. Theres even perhaps an expectation youll bring the giant helium balloons and trapeze artists every single time now.

SCI @ Red Rocks 2010 by Brian Spady

Its definitely become a thing thats expected now, and not just at very special shows like New Years or Halloween. Every big show people expect hot chicks hula-hooping on platforms with lights on them while lasers shoot all over the room [laughs]. But thats what people want, a special experience that gets them out of their normal day-to-day routine. So, I feel we provide something that is really valuable to them and us by being the circus leaders of this situation that takes them to a new environment thats a fun and interesting reward for them.

This band provides a space where its safe to put on fairy wings and Wookie costumes and tap into the child within.Its all about being able to express yourself without worrying about what ANYBODY else is thinking. As long as its all done with good intentions and people are cool to each other which is the vibe we try to nurture then its great to express your individuality out there. Its like that [Michael] Franti song [Stay Human (All The Freaky People)] says, All the freaky people make the beauty of the world.

Whats it like to perform inside an environment like SCI conjures? Awful lot of distractions for guys still responsible for making music.

SCI @ Bonnaroo 2011 by Brad Hodge

Its wild! Youre playing music outside at a festival and an aerialist will rise up into the air on a helium balloon to do their act a hundred feet in the air right in front of you. You think, Is this really happening? Its fun from stage to watch whats going on.

Its good to hear theres some magic in it for you, too. Its one thing to plan such events on paper and another to live them out in real time.

Thats what we feed off of. A lot of what gets us off are musical moments where we can feel theres some energy captured, especially when you hold that [energy] and try to stay in that moment. Thats what were all about, and it takes the audience to reach that place where the ships getting off the ground.

Theres a strong sense of community around String Cheese, something that goes beyond the usual fan-band dynamic. It definitely feels like a tribe gathers when you come to town.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, and theres actually a lot of different tribes under one roof.

Coming back to SCI now, what do you find turns you on about making music with these guys?

SCI @ Red Rocks 2007 by Jay Scherer

Its a very good creative outlet because it can go into so many different styles. Any song can go any number of different directions when you work it out with this band. So, its really interesting creatively, and thats a big necessity in my life. Its not the kind of band where we meet at the venue and say, So dudes, what songs do you want to play? A lot of work goes into arranging and setlist construction. Even though I get to the point sometimes where I wish it was simpler [laughs], part of whats interesting about this band to me is how it pushes everybody in the band to keep up. Keeping up with Kang and Kyle, instrumentally, keeps me challenged, and the challenge of the material, quantity of songs, and what were trying to accomplish onstage remains challenging to this day.

Initially, SCI was seen as a rock-bluegrass hybrid, but youve kept on pretty fearlessly exploring almost every style of music there is. How do you think of what you do now? How do you describe it to others?

Its very hard to describe it in musical terms because there are so many styles we play on any given night. I guess I think of it as if each night were a three-day music festival rolled into two sets. It goes all over the map, but we try to have the energy one picks up on at a music festival. We try to capture the audiences attention and take them someplace.

Youre all very good musicians but you dont slant your music in a way that overly fixates on solos and individual celebrity, which one encounters a lot in jazz and even bluegrass players of your stature. With so many really high-end players it becomes about showy technique. You guys play at that level but you dont put the spotlight on it.

SCI @ Red Rocks 2010 by Brian Spady

We try to have good arrangements and hooks because the style of music that throws the technical kitchen sink at the audience all the time can be real tiring. After a while it can make people numb to technical virtuosity. However, as a musician, I love seeing great musicians play, but it doesnt always have to be about that. The focus when were writing songs is not solos that blow people away. Were trying to create songs that have a thread through them thats more than this persons solo and that persons solo.

The title of this new tour is the Roots Run Deep Tour. Its an evocative name and speaks to maybe a more grounded sense of what String Cheese Incident is today.Were excited to get on the bus and play every night, as opposed to working, working, working, then playing two shows over a weekend and were done. Here, we can build night to night and hopefully get that cohesiveness you can only get through a series of shows. Were looking forward to getting in the groove.

Are you going to be playing some of the new material youve been working on?

Well have a good four songs that havent been heard before.

Billy Nershi by Jesse R. Borrell

You guys havent made a studio album since 2005. Is that in the works now?

Were talking about making some recordings from this tour were going to multi-track and do some sort of hybrid release where we bring these recordings into the studio and polish them up. So much of our sound is what happens live, and weve had varying degrees of success in our studio recordings. Trying to capture the energy of what goes down live is what we want to try and do, then utilize some time in the studio to make things sound as good as possible.

One thing I discovered recently is if you do a Google search where you let them suggest what youre looking for as you type in the words that String Cheese Incident comes up automatically before the food string cheese.

[Huge laugh] Well, I think weve hit the big time.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News

JamBase | String Theorizing
Go See Live Music!



Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

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