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For most bands, even for those who are on tour for weeks
at a time, the thought of playing two full-length shows
in one evening would seem exhausting. For Born
in the Flood, it’s just what was planned
for their For Fear That We May Not Be
EP release party last month at Hi-Dive in Denver.
Born in the Flood has garnered quite a bit of attention
in the past year, and rightly so. The four members,
including Nathaniel Rateliff (lead
singer/guitarist), Joseph Pope III
(bassist), Matt Fox (guitar), and Mike
Hall (drums) used most of the same songs for
both sets, but they definitely had a deeper sense of
emotion the second time around. Maybe it was the effort
it took to pull it off combined with the way Nathaniel
taps into the darker parts of their life’s experiences,
crafting melodic stories on songs like “To Slowly
Be Undone.”
With an emotive volume that could easily fill the Fillmore
or Red Rocks, skyscraper harmonies emanate straight
from Nathaniel’s heart and soul. The other three
members are connected to him at the hip, going from
jangly, thrashing calisthenics to ballad laden pools
of exhaustion strewn across the stage, pulling the audience
into their world.
Performing the single from the EP, “Fate of the
Underachieved,” many recognized the tune while
others simply stood in admiration. “Motor Powered
Man” could easily be covered by Radiohead as Nathaniel
goes from the poignant whisper that commands all your
senses to stand at attention, and then takes the song
into a crescendo of clashing instrumentation. People
in the crowd either had their eyes closed, rocking to
and fro, or were fixated on the stage, not able to pull
themselves away for a second to take a drink from their
glass.
After the second set was done everyone in the place
was still pumped from the show. Many of us headed over
to an impromptu after party around the corner from the
venue on Broadway, including Joseph P., Matt LeBarge
(who owns and operates Hi-Dive with his wife Alison),
and David Soto, our photographer for the band’s
photo shoot the next day. The house was still full of
people as I said “goodbye” to Joseph around
4:30am.
What seemed to be only a few hours later, I met the
guys from the band and Soto in front of the Denver Library,
and it was apparent that we were all feeling the affects
of staying out until dawn. But the foursome rallied
and it only took a little while to get into the groove
of capturing the band on film.
Our gang moved over to Sputnik, the bar next to Hi-Dive,
afterwards for a reprieve from the heat, to quench our
thirst, and to reminisce about their CD release party,
Part 1, when Matt walked in laughing as he recognized
the boys in the booth.
“I think I’ve gone to an after party a
total of three times since I opened the place, and last
night was one of those times. It was that damn Jameson…”
he says, trailing off and shaking his head.
Born in the Flood had a reason to celebrate that night,
having come a long way from where they were three years
ago. Nathaniel and Joseph had grown up in the same small
town in Hermann, MO, eventually moving to Denver and
meeting Mike and Matt to form the band they are now.
Although the two had physically left the darker, blue
collar parts of their past behind, emotions from life’s
memories never really leave, they just evolve over time.
Those memories had their place in Nathaniel’s
songwriting, but in 2002, it was a brush with death
as Joseph battled cancer that took the band in a different
direction.
With a renewed sense of life Joseph triumphed over
the disease and became a new dad all in one year. Songs
became much more personal then, embracing past experiences
and going deeper into how they had affected them all.
Believing that one can’t appreciate the good and
learn life’s lessons by having things come easy,
the band sees those tribulations as gifts that have
only made them stronger and wiser.
“I almost feel sorry for those kids who got everything
they wanted,” Joseph says, contemplating on his
life back in Hermann. “I just don’t think
you really get to know yourself and what life is all
about if you don’t have to fight for it in some
way.”
A recent coup for Born in the Flood was winning the
Battle of the Bands on ManiaTV.com, the Denver based
live Internet TV company with the tagline “F*ck
Television.” ManiaTV put together a contest for
the indie underground, giving bands like Born in the
Flood an opportunity to stretch their creative muscles
in a DIY way.
The band worked with local filmmakers, including Director
Thomas Chavez and Producer Bill Rowley. Nathaniel and
the band had been drinking champagne a large part of
the day, and when it came to the forth shoot of him
running down the Speer Street bridge, he got a wee bit
tired.
They made it through and finished the video with high
hopes, but without really knowing what to expect. “These
kids were just starting out so we just went for it.
We had a good time doing it. But sometimes when you
stick your neck out there, it pays off,” Joseph
says.
That it did. With hundreds of submissions the ManiaTV
staff pared the list of finalists down to around 20,
which included Born in the Flood. Viewers along with
the band’s friends and family all showed their
support by voting for their favorite, and the foursome
came out on top winning the number one spot.
Part of the prize included a chance to play live in
the ManiaTV studios, where they performed “Fate
of the Underachieved” and “Motor Powerman.”
Joseph finished the second song in a very “Who”
like fashion, smashing a television on stage and then
going for his guitar, which crumbled to pieces as it
met the floor.
The band relished the experience, which resulted in
invaluable publicity and exposure to untold thousands,
along with rotation on 99.5 The Mountain and a year’s
free subscription to CD Baby that enables them to distribute
their new EP online.
The band also feels very fortunate to get booked on
New Belgium Brewery’s summer tour called Tour
de Fat, a take off of Tour de France that will also
include other local bands DeVotchKa and Cabaret Diosa
on the bill. Now in its third year, the tour is a unique
blend of carnival-esqe entertainment geared for bicycle
enthusiasts and those intrigued by off-the-wall sights
and sounds.
“People come out for the bike ride, but they
encourage them to dress up and get crazy,” Joseph
explains. The tour goes through Seattle, San Francisco
and a number of other cities, and in Boise the band
jumps on the bill, going into Mazula, MT and Durango,
CO, but they are not yet confirmed for the Ft. Collins
show on September 24.
After taking a few bites of his late lunch, Joseph
elaborates on what they considered to be the “luck
and timing” factor that’s contributed to
where they are today. “That [CD release] show
was really a test of whether or not press is as valuable
as we thought it was, and it obviously is. There were
so many people there that probably had never been to
the Hi-Dive, and had definitely never heard of us, that
came out and were just so enthusiastic. It’s one
little opportunity that leads to another.”
The band, like our city, has grown and blossomed through
the good times and bad. As the Denver Art Museum evolves
with modern, silver angles that point to the sky, the
bands, artists, and fans continue to turn Denver into
a collective of creative individuals with something
more to offer than sports bars.
“A couple of years ago I didn’t even know
there was a scene,” comments Nathaniel. “I
think more and more, we just want to develop here. There’s
probably 60 good bands and everybody’s kind of
doing their own thing. It encourages everyone to continue
to grow and raise the bar without feeling like it’s
a competition.”
This was evident at the previous night’s shows,
from the people mingling in the crowd to the bands that
took the stage with Born in the Flood, including Red
Yellow Orange (a side project for Alan, lead singer/guitarist
in Atlas), Joshua Novak, D. Biddle, and Kissinger –
all friends of the band.
Kissinger is an act from Austin that had previously
played with Born in the Flood in Denver, and who then
housed them when the band ventured to SXSW this past
year. Reflecting on the Texas band, Joseph contemplates
the future of his own group, “They’re in
the same place as us in terms of getting really good
exposure. They were picked as one of the top three bands
in Austin by The Chronicle, along with Spoon.”
Looking down at his 2 ½ year-old daughter who
had accompanied us in the booth, he continues. “I
know we’re going to have to make some decisions
real soon about what our next steps are going to be.”
For Nathaniel, his aspirations seem to lead him back
from where he began, but on his own terms. “I
would like to just make a decent living making and playing
music that would enable me to move back to the country
and raise a family. I just want to be a good man, one
that has virtues, that is morally good and true. I know
it doesn’t sound very ‘rock star,’
but that’s what I want to have some day.”
The four guys have plans to tour, but are also consumed
with songwriting. They currently have another 17 tracks
picked out for their full length along with additional
songs and their side project, The Wheel. So far the
acoustic duo, made up of Nathaniel and Joseph, has played
three gigs and is planning to record an eight song release
some time before October.
“It’s similar to what we’re doing
because I’m writing the material for this too;
you can still tell that it’s me. But it has a
different quality,” Nathaniel explains.
Although he’s only been around for a quarter
of a century, Joseph has endured more than most people
have in twice the time, but with good friends at his
side. With a sense of conviction he says, “There
were enough bands here for Matt and Alison to open this
club and make it viable. The relationships between most
of the local bands and the clubs, they just work together
so well. If one band does good, if one club does good,
it’s good for everybody. I think a lot of people
in the country have their eye on this area right now.”
People have their eyes and ears on Born in the Flood
as well, and for once, this is a good bandwagon to jump
on. You’ll get your chance again when they play
with Bright Channel, another Denver star, at the Hi-Dive
on Saturday, August 20.
www.bornintheflood.com
http://cdbaby.com/cd/bornintheflood
www.myspace.com/bornintheflood
-Kim Owens, August 19, 2005
Photography by David Soto
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