Biography
Rustic Overtones formed in Portland, ME, hometown to each of
them. Members of this seven-piece outfit are guitarist and
lead vocalist Dave Gutter, drummer Tony McNaboe, trombonist
Dave Noyes, baritone saxophonist Jason Ward, bassist Jon
Roods, alto saxophonist Ryan Zoidis, and Spencer Albee on
keyboards and piano. Roods and Gutter began performing
together first, in a family basement. They later added the
rest of the group, all friends from high school, and became
what is Rustic Overtones. Local gigs earned them a fan base
that expanded as the band began to travel, appearing at
close to 200 shows some years.
Rustic Overtones' "The New Way Out" is the first album of
entirely brand new music from the band in over eight years.
Recorded in their own makeshift studio between November of
2007 and September of 2009 it's the bands fifth full length
studio LP and first without longtime keyboard player Spencer
Albee who left the group shortly after production began to
form Spencer and the School Spirit Mafia. He was replaced
during the writing and recording of the record by Nigel Hall
(Soulive, Lettuce, Robert Randolph) who handles the keyboard
duties on TNWO.
The one time property of Clive Davis' Arista Records, Rustic
Overtones were caught in the middle of one of the biggest
industry shake-ups in music history when Davis was asked to
step down from his own label of 25+ years. The band then
managed to get out of their deal with Arista Records while
retaining the rights to their Master recordings, which were
released a year later by classic indie label Tommy Boy
Records. After two years of more than 260 shows a year, a
widely successful radio campaign and a hit on Canada's "Much
Music", Tommy Boy Records were bought out by Warner Bros.
Music and the Overtones again found themselves without a
home.
The band took a knee, a deep breath and a much needed hiatus
between 2002 and 2006 while individual members formed new
bands (Paranoid Social Club, Seekonk) and others took
touring gigs with the likes of Soulive and Ray Lamontagne
before returning in 2007 with a triumphant concert in
Portland Maine's Monument square in front of over 6,000
fans. Three months after that, Rustic Overtones began work
on a new record.. Two years later "The New Way Out" is
finally complete and standing behind it is a smarter,
stronger and, in every way, more refined band than the one
who carried the same name in 2001.
On TNWO there are many departures from the traditional
approaches the band and it's fans are accustomed to. With
the absence of Albee, a four and a half year hiatus and a
maturing musical climate within the band, there was a very
strong sense that Rustic Overtones needed to be destroyed in
order to rebuild. After not having approached the task of a
new record in almost seven years, and with bassist Jon Roods
serving as resident engineer, the band worked without
creative limitation or time constraints for the first time
in their career. This can often be a curse but The Overtones
worked feverishly and with focus. What was once an auto
mechanic garage became a remodeled and soundproofed retreat
where no labels were waiting for a "hit" or a "single" and
seven creative minds were able to make their music in it's
most honest and pure form. Essentially, Rustic Overtones was
for the first time making a record which was motivated by
nothing but a love for creation, expression and each other.
In addition to the six remaining original members, the band
called upon 15-20 of their peers from Portland, Maine's
widely slept on and prolific music community to play
anything from additional horns and strings to timpanis,
steel drums and back-up vocals, giving the the record a
strong sense of the community and character of the very
scene that they've worn on their sleeve for 15 years.
Day in and day out, Gutter wrote lyrics to his guitar
changes in the driveway, Jon recorded his own bass between
drum takes, and trombonist Dave Noyes took the rhythm bed's
and scored them masterfully into rich orchestral backdrops
for Zoidis, Ward and oftentimes half the city of Portland's
musicians to record with the band. Over and over, an idea
was born and was patiently brought to fruition. One by one,
with careful deliberation, and called finished no sooner and
no later than it was meant to be. For the first time there
were no high stakes, no "big chance". No pressures or
distractions, Nothing. Absolutely nothing to lose... It had
all been destroyed in the fire..
What stands in its place is the sound of a band who after 15
years are still finding that their best work lies ahead of
them. In September of 2009 a new record, a new era, and a
new way out had all dawned on the same day.
Rustic Overtones is Currently Touring in North America
promoting the Release of "The New Way Out". Check out our
Tour Page for more info.
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