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Jeff Fuller- guitar, vocals, piano
Mike Nipp- bass
Shawn Stafford- drums
Mike Stephens- guitar, vocals, piano
One of the most frequent ways many of us learn of new
music or bands is typically through our network of friends,
going back the classic word of ear way via the mix tape.
Having friend in bands raises the bar for the frequency
of getting scoop on good music in the scene. This was
the case with Against Tomorrow Sky, who came
highly recommended from my buddies in Laymen Terms.
After Laymens' CD release party was moved from First
Draft Choice to the Boulder Café (lame, last
minute bar manager crap), I almost missed ATS's set
that was going full speed when I made my way into the
little coffee shop, , filled with kids and sonic rock
that shook the full length glass windows. I was instantly
impressed with their melodic vocals that floated and
jolted over adrenaline juiced guitars riffs and rhythms,
grabbing each head in the place, making us all rock
to and fro.
I met Mike Stephens right after the show, got his email
address, then continued to bug him on occasion in vast
anticipation of their new release. The email finally
came, informing me that "Jump the Hedges First"
was all done. So we decided to gather at Shuga's in
Colorado Springs I could get my hands on it and finally
get to know what these guys were all about.
Apparently, they hadn't done an "in person"
interview before, just a few fifteen-minute phoners
with the local press.
MS: We haven't done this before, so please be
gentle.
KB: So you guys are virgins? I haven't had a
virgin in a long time.
MN: Sorry
KB: No worries. I'll take it slow and easy with
you guys.
MS: At least cuddle with us first
KB: Hey I know, it's about your needs
too. Whew! Let's start again from the beginning. So
we're missing the fourth guy, right?
MS: Yea, Jeff Fuller. It's his ten-year anniversary
with his girlfriend tonight.
KB: So! Where the hell are his priorities?
MS: (laughs): That's what I'm sayin' man, "Do
you care about this band or what?"
KB: So what does Jeff do when he's not with
his woman?
MS: He does the same thing I do, lead vocals,
guitar and piano. We switch off pretty much right down
the middle, 50/50.
KB: So you've been together how long?
MS: Two years this summer.
KB: And this new release is your first full-length?
MS: Yes, those are the first eight songs that
we wrote together as a band.
KB: Have you had any member changes in that
time?
MS: No, but we come from different Springs bands
- Girth, The Gadflys and the Confessions, those three
bands.
KB: So from those bands to what your are now,
what kind of stylings did you take from that and how
are you different with ATS?
MS: There's little elements of each band that
are there. But the other bands were underdeveloped and
they weren't focused as much. Right when we started
playing together it felt more like a real band, whereas
the others were more like, "Let's play the Underground
and just mess around." We really clicked, enjoy
writing together, and are a little more serious about
it.
MN: Mike and I were just jamming together one
night and hooked up with Shawn and we knew we had something
going on. Our CD release party will be our two-year
anniversary almost to the day. It's going to be a special
day.
The threesome looked again like they wanted to cuddle
at this point, so I steered them back to business.
KB: So how are you getting the word out?
MS: We're flyering like hell. The Highlife House
is sending out an email to their list. Laymen Terms
are sending one out to theirs. We're getting coverage
in both the Independent and GO! We're really pulling
it all out to publicize it. We're bringing in a band
from New Mexico, Mistletoe. We really want a bunch of
people to see them too.
KB: How did you get to know those guys?
MS: We played a couple gigs with them in New
Mexico last year. The other band that's playing with
us, Woodbine Station, is another band from that tour.
So it's kind of a little reunion. They're a great indie
rock band, one of New Mexico's biggest bands. They're
touring with Superdrag, they're doing really well.
KB: So tell me about the CD, "Jump The
Hedges First." What do we got going on here?
MS: We thought about how we were going to describe
it. We got it down to dynamic, melodic indie rock.
KB: Those are some good marketing buzz words.
MS: We've been compared to so many bands.
MN: Whatever someone seems to hear in our sound
they refer to another band they're familiar with.
KB: That's the thing with the majority of music
listeners. At a music meeting a few weeks back we were
talking about that. Although we as music fans more or
less shun mainstream radio, in order to help someone
identify your sound, you have to refer to some element
of band on the radio. That's the reality of it.
MS: I don't really hate it so much. I'm the
same way. When I first hear a musician I say "they
sound like this or like that." I kind of take it
as a complement because of the wide range of bands we've
been compared to, all kinds of rock music.
MN: A lot of people call us Emo.
KB: But that's cool that you can appeal to a
lot of different people with different tastes.
MN: Our crowd is pretty varied. There's hardcore
kids, metal kids, and snobby emo kids.
KB: The sweater set.
MS: Sweater too small set
SS: With horn rimmed glasses
KB: So take me through [the CD], starting with
"Eager." You start off with some high energy?
MN: Yes, high energy right away. The first two
are the more rockin' ones. Then it mellows out a bit
and gets more catchy on "Poison Tester." Then
it really mellows out on "Pen." Then "Taking
Notes" is more poppy and starts bringing you back
up to speed, right? (Mike says, looking at the other
Mike).
MS: Yea. You're doing a good job, keep going.
MN: So "Stunning Upon" starts rocking
a little harder, "Painted Grenades" going
a little higher energy, then "Samantha, It's Okay"
is like the finale.
KB: The climax to it all?
MS: Yes, the climax. Then it's, "Roll over,
make me a sandwich," and go to sleep.
KB: Wow, that's a bargain for the $10, $12 dollars
you'll charge for the CD.
MS: And it took us a year to put it together.
But it wasn't more than 15 to 20 days in that time.
It was just really spread apart. The engineer we worked
with, Matt Vanleuvan, who was in the Gamits and now
is in Woodbine Station, when we first started working
on it he was on tour a lot.
MN: So it we only got stuff done whenever we
could in there [with him].
MS: It would be like two days here, then wait
three months, and then I went on a three month vacation.
KB: That must have been nice. Screw you man
[only because I was damn jealous].
MS (laughs): Yea well, it was very frustrating.
Not to pull the 'tortured artist' thing, but to take
a year to record 8 songs that really only took a couple
weeks to record, to finally get it done is just a huge
weight off our backs. We're really proud of it. For
the money we had and the time we spent
MN: And just thinking about all the times we
had to go up there to redo stuff.
MS: We had to remix things a lot, and then the
label wanted us to bring the vocals up. But now everyone's
happy.
KB: What's the label?
MS: Universal Warning Records out of Pennsylvania.
They're a really small label that's just starting out.
KB: How did you guys get hooked up with them?
MS: They had a guy that moved out to Denver
to open up shop in Denver and check things out. He caught
one of our shows at the 15th Street Tavern and he was
talking to another guy simultaneously who had been going
to bat for us, Ross Lilebo that used to work KTCL. He
had been helping us to make connections. So when they
met up [Ross] hooked the deal up through them. And now
he's a partner of the label.
KB: So he's kind of your A&R guy?
MS: Yea. He's trying to work on getting us up
to tour with some bigger bands, taking some baby steps.
The labels only been around a year, and they gave us
a sampler of what bands they had. It sounded like they
were signing everyone. Now they're trying to streamline
and have 4 or 5 quality bands, support them, rather
than trying to spread themselves too thin.
MN: Plus, when we first met them it was a 'scratch
my back I'll scratch yours' type of thing. They wanted
to have someone like us and we wanted to have someone
to support what we did.
MS: They've been really cool and given us complete
control of the artwork, the music
KB: Probably out of necessity. If they're that
small they don't have anyone else to do that for you.
MS: We have gotten to trust them and know them
as people, and that's huge. They're not some faceless
thing to us. For our first release it was important
we had that.
KB: So they supported you funding wise then?
MS: Yes, they paid for all the pressing. Fortunately
for them, we had already done the recording. Matt did
such a good job sonically, it sounds pro. Nothing had
to be re-recorded. They're giving us a great royalty
rate, we're getting like 80%.
KB: Wow. That's unheard of.
MS: It's a lucky situation for us because they
are so new.
KB: So how did you come up with the name of
the CD?
MS: The name of the CD and the name of the band is
all tied together from the song, "Sweet Thing,"
by Van Morrison, we took a line from that song, against
tomorrow sky. When it came time to do the album, there's
another line that goes 'jump the hedges first.' Listen
to the song and it might make a little sense, maybe
not a whole lot.
SS: Yea, with subtitles.
KB: So how did that song become such an inspiration
for you?
MN: Well, it's a pretty inspiration song anyway.
MS: I hate to use this term, but it's really
spiritual and has a lot of feeling to it.
MN: It was kind of cool because we knew that's
what it was and so we went with it.
MS: Plus, it was cool to hear another band singing
our name. [everyone cracks up with that one]. We just
wanted something that was poetic in a way.
MN: Something that actually stood for something
and had a little meaning to it.
KB: So you've been doing some gigs.
MS: Yea, we've been playing almost every month.
KB: What was your favorite show so far.
[the three in unison]: Opening up for Pedro
the Lion.
MS: It was at the Fox, and we've never heard
ourselves sound like that on stage. It made us play
a lot better. We've played with a lot of cool bands.
We've been pretty lucky, playing with Cursive, The Patter,
Spoon, Good Life, and Planes Mistaken for Stars.
KB: So was the crowd receptive?
MS: We were a little nervous because were a
little more upbeat band compared to Pedro.
MN: But a bunch of kids were up front getting
into it and jam.
MS: If you take a couple that comes to a show,
what we want to be is that high energy rock for the
guy and the emotional lyrical thing for the girl.
With that we were pretty much finished and depleted.
KB: Well, I think we're all done.
MS: That wasn't as painful as I expected.
KB: I tried to be gentle.
SS: Thanks for doing this.
MN: Yea, thanks for doing us.
After all four of us headed out for that cigarette,
I got back on the road again and popped in the burned
copy of "Jump the Hedges First" in lieu of
the finished product that will come straight from the
boxes at Monday and Tuesday's show - Monday at Jack
Quinn's in Colorado Springs, and Tuesday at the Bluebird.
They did nail it - dynamic indie rock. But that's just
the beginning.
To follow the path of genre and band references, ATS
has a myriad of styles - from Red House Painter speed
of low-fi on "Pen," to bubbling energetic
indie rock of Knapsack or early, pre-MTV Jimmy Eat World.
Their own brand of emo comes out not so much in a Valium
infused fashion, but through the depth of passion that
comes through on the vocals, meshed tightly with guitars
that ride up screaming and flow down to sparkling drums,
with a periodic backdrop of crystallized piano that
adds that subtle taste of honey. Listen to "Poison
Tester" or "Stunning Upon" and you'll
know what I mean. ATS is out to create their own genre
description and crumble any others in existence.
After their shows here in Colorado, they're faced with
the challenge of getting gigs set up for a Midwest tour
through Kansas, Wisconsin, Nebraska and South Dakota.
But they do have the help of their label who has started
getting the new release out to college radio listening
audience to spread the buzz.
Be a part of the buzz by coming out to their show on
Monday or Tuesday (or both) and pick up the CD. Then
you tell two friends, and they'll tell two friends,
and so on, and so on.
They don't have their web site up yet, but you can reach
them and get on their mailing list - AgainstTomorrowSky@hotmail.com.
-Kim Owens, kim@kaffeinebuzz.com
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