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Toadies

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Released: Aug 19, 2008
Label: Fontana South

General Info

  • Genre: Alternative

    Location Please select your region, Un

    Profile Views: 1677353

    Last Login: 4/18/2012

    Member Since 5/9/2004

    Website thetoadies.com

    Record Label Kirtland Records/Fontana

    Type of Label Indie

  • Bio

    .......... .. .. .......... .... ..Toadies "No Deliverance" Live...... .. .. .. .. .. .... ..No Deliverance "Road" Video...... .. .. .. .. ..
  • Members

    .......... ....www.ToadiesSquad.com.... .......... ..Toadies rock with.. .. .. .. .. .. .. Todd Lewis (Vocals, Guitar) .. Mark Reznicek (Drums) .. Clark Vogeler (Guitar) .. Doni Blair (Bass) .... Booking - The Agency Group.. Management - ..Sonar Management.. .“It was a very weird, trying time,” says Toadies singer-guitarist Vaden Todd Lewis of the band’s rearview bummer: the post-Rubberneck rejection of Feeler. After selling a cool million copies of their 1994 debut album, the band proffered demos upon demos of their new joint only to be rebuffed and re-rebuffed. Finally the label green lighted studio time to produce Feeler. “We got approval,” says Lewis, “spent months recording, somewhere in the process of handing over the masters to get mixed, it got unapproved. So we went back to the drawing board.” Such behavior would seem counterintuitive, considering this was a platinum-selling band whose Rubberneck singles, such as the so-wrong-it’s-right “Possum Kingdom,” still ruled alternative rock radio. But remember this is the music business, which the good Dr. Hunter S. Thompson called, “…a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side.” Loosely translated with a Godfather reference, this is the business the Texas-bred Toadies have chosen; musicians know the rules suck, but still they play. While Feeler couldn’t find a champion at Interscope, the Toadies played a few shows, then hunkered down for two years to write “before they finally let us record again,” says guitarist Clark Vogeler. In 2001, five long years after the Rubberneck tour ended, they finally released Hell Below/Stars Above. But five months after the band hit the road, they parted company. Drummer Mark “Rez” Reznicek hooked up with Eleven Hundred Springs, but guitarist Clark Vogeler and Lewis were inclined to ditch music altogether. In fact, Lewis’s first thought was, “Fuck this whole business. I’m gettin' out. I just wanted to do anything else.” He didn’t mean it—in 2002 he formed the Burden Brothers with Taz Bentley (Rev. Horton Heat) and enjoyed four years of music done indie-style. Having seen the sunnier though not altogether different side of the biz, when Toadies fans clamored for a Toadies reunion Lewis and mates obliged. The sold-out 2006 shows birthed more, and when the Burdens went on hiatus in 2007, Lewis began writing new Toadies material and called Rez, Vogeler and bass player Doni Blair (Hagfish) about giving the Toadies another jump. Less than a year later, the Toadies dropped No Deliverance and hit the road. Buoyed by potential renewal, the band was elated to find they’d not only retained their old fan base but, even in their absence, gained more. Over the ensuing 18 months, at nationwide sold-out shows—including gigs at Lollapalooza and the Austin City Limits Music Festival, the Toadies learned younger audiences had been exposed to their music via parents, older siblings, the continuous spins of "Possum Kingdom" on rock radio across the country, Guitar Hero II (“Possum Kingdom” is on the Xbox 360 version of the game,) multiple motion picture soundtracks and television shows like Sons of Anarchy. Yet No Deliverance pulled its weight, too. “My attitude with No Deliverance was that it’s a really good excuse to have fun on the road and that would be it,” says Lewis. The Toadies went for a “bare knuckle” sound, amping up the psychotic stomp heard on Rubberneck and Hell Below… and created a taut, exhilarating listen that is quintessentially Toadies—and the fans responded. “It’s pretty cool and gratifying,” Rez says, especially because “we weren’t just trottin’ out the oldies for nostalgia.” While gobbling up new music, fans demanded more—including renewing calls for an official release of Feeler. Of course by now Feeler had found its way onto the Internet. Fans already knew its manifold charms, and were as puzzled as the band at the label’s reticence. No single? No hits? Huh? “These were the songs we played live,” says Rez. It might’ve been an eclectic mix, encompassing “different styles of heavy rock music—some fast, heavy punk rock songs and some slower, kinda mid-tempo stuff, but I’ve never really been able to figure out what the beef was.” Listen to the demos of Feeler and you’ll be just as confused. Songs like “City of Hate” are classic Toadies—crunchy-tense and catchy-weird, darkly warm and impossible to resist. Maybe none of them match the disturbed passion of “Possum Kingdom,” but they all fit alt-rock radio like a glove, whether it’s 1998 or 2010. The Toadies, however, wanted the songs to reflect their dozen-year improvement as musicians. To that end, they took the songs back into studio, planning a stopgap EP to tide over fans until the next full-length, but the project “mutated into a bigger plan,” according to Rez. “We wrote down all the songs that we had recorded in the original session minus the ones that appeared on Hell Below/Stars Above, and then we added some other old songs we never actually recorded.” The original EP became a nine-track LP, and the Toadies pumped these up sonically until Feeler felt right. Let’s define right. “We used a lot of experimentation on “Pink,” “Mine” and “City of Hate,” says Lewis, “and you’ve never heard anything like that from Toadies.” The songs aren’t drastically different from the Toadies canon, just rawer and more resolute. Lewis’s favorite, “City of Hate,” is more fuzzed-out, allowing the rhythmic stop to punctuate its misanthropic message. “It never grabbed me as a finished song,” he says, “but it really took on a new life.” Another, “Dead Boy,” is a blistering “fun, big, dumb rock song.” Of the new tracks, “ATF,” Lewis’s “super-spy” instrumental walks the line between cult crime drama theme and summer blockbuster ass-kicking scene music, and the spooky loud-quiet-loud “Trust Game” is perhaps a prequel of sorts, a first-date invitation from “Possum Kingdom’s” anti-hero. As with No Deliverance, the Toadies sound more focused and confident in their musicianship—“The playing sounds more immediate and better than on the original demos,” says Vogeler. And everyone is absolutely stoked that Feeler is finally realized. “I just got the mastered, sequenced mix a couple days ago,” Rez says, “and I’ve listened to it several times. I’m real happy… Clark said in the studio he was hopin’ we’d at least be able to live up to the original recordings—we had no idea we’d make ‘em so much better. The recordings have a real immediacy and a tightness that sounds like full-on Toadies. We’re just really proud of it; it came out awesome.” Says Lewis, “No Deliverance was, in my mind, a return to form, to the essence of what the Toadies do. I think the next thing I write will be more oddball, more of a growth [laughs], not same record over again. I don’t want to get stuck in that trap.” Lewis does, however, feel transported back to the positive mindset he had coming off of Rubberneck. “I think I’m back to where I was in 1996-1998, when I was really trying not to be the guy that wrote that song, whatever “Possum Kingdom” is supposed to be about—but I don’t feel pressure to write that song again.” Now the Toadies are free to be the band they were supposed to be the first time out. Unencumbered by someone else’s vision, they’re able to look positively at the future. “After the success of Rubberneck,” recalls Vogeler, “we were glued to the ground, struggling against all these forces. It was a miserable time. But now we’ve put out two albums in two years as opposed to two in seven years. We’re free to be as creative as we wanna be, and that’s a good spot for the band to be in.”
  • Influences

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Mister Love

02:56 | 956 plays | Oct 2 2009

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10 of 4838More

Member Since:

May 09, 2004

Members:

Toadies Squad Street Team

www.ToadiesSquad.com

Get exclusive Toadies text updates, special offers and more!

Toadies rock with

The Toadies rock with Ernie Ball strings

Dekline

Todd Lewis (Vocals, Guitar)
Mark Reznicek (Drums)
Clark Vogeler (Guitar)
Doni Blair (Bass)

Booking - The Agency Group
Management - Sonar Management

“There’s a certain uneasiness to the Toadies,” says Vaden Todd Lewis, succinctly and accurately describing his band—quite a trick. The Texas band is, at its core, just a raw, commanding rock band. Imagine an ebony sphere with a corona that radiates impossibly darker, and a brilliant circular sliver of light around that. It’s nebulous, but strangely distinct—and, shall we say incorrect. Or, as Lewis says, “wrong.”

“Things are done a little askew [in the Toadies],” he says, searching for the right words. “There’s just something wrong with it that’s just really cool… and unique in a slightly uncomfortable way.”

This sick, twisted essence was first exemplified on the band’s 1994 debut, Rubberneck (Interscope). An intense, swirling vortex of guitar rock built around Lewis’s “wrong” songs and abstract lyrics—like the smash single “Possum Kingdom,” subject to as much speculation as what’s in the Pulp Fiction briefcase, it rocketed to platinum status on the strength of that and two other singles, “Tyler” and “Away.”

Perhaps in keeping with the uneasy vibe, that success didn’t translate to label support when the Toadies submitted their second album, Feeler. Perhaps aptly, things in general just went wrong. “We got approval for a record,” says Lewis, “and somewhere in the process of handing over the masters to get mixed, it got unapproved. So we went back to the drawing board.”

Eventually some of the Feeler tracks made it onto Hell Below/Stars Above—a sophomore offering that came seven years after Rubberneck. “It was a very weird, trying time,” says Lewis, who didn’t see the next blow—the sudden departure of bassist Lisa Umbarger—coming. “We went out on tour, and immediately the band split up,” he laughs sardonically. “We kinda shot ourselves in the foot.” They released a live album, Best of Toadies: Live from Paradise, and it was over.

Coming out of the Toadies, Lewis, guitarist Clark Vogeler and drummer Mark Reznicek were disillusioned. Vogeler went to work as a film editor, Rez hooked up with the country-western band Eleven Hundred Springs. Lewis initially thought, “Fuck this whole business. I’m gettin' out. I just wanted to do anything else.”

Toadies fans, though accepting, stuck with them, often inquiring as to the band’s activities. Says Lewis, “People just asked me “So, what are you doin’ now?” Although he’d been “foolin’ around” with Rev. Horton Heat drummer Taz Bentley, he answered, “I don’t know. Nothin’. This, that and the other. Workin’ around the house, workin’ in the garage, just toolin’ around.” Soon it occurred to him that music was all he wanted to do. “I’m a musician. That’s what I do, and I’m not happy not doing it.” Eventually Lewis and Bentley formed the Burden Brothers in 2002 and released a slew of EPs, two albums and a DVD while touring profusely.

Meanwhile, “Possum Kingdom” never left the airwaves, enjoying constant rotation at major modern rock stations. Fans clamored for a Toadies reunion. “The band never went all the way away;” says Lewis. They regrouped in 2006 for a couple of sold-out shows around St. Patrick’s Day, and again the next year for the same thing. In August 2007, when personnel changes with the Burden Brothers resulted in that band going on hiatus, Lewis began writing.

“I was pissed off again and wanted to keep goin’,” he says. “I didn’t know what I was writing, right out of the gate, but… it was just coming out very “Toadies.”

Lewis called Rez and Vogeler and asked if they were interested in making another record. They were—and the Toadies officially reconvened, signing with Kirtland and recording No Deliverance with David Castell (Burden Brothers, Blue October) at Fort Worth Sound in Fort Worth and Music Lane in Austin. Lewis says the band has gone for a “bare knuckle” sound, amping up the psychotic stomp heard on Rubberneck and Hell Below… on the grinding, relentless title track as well as the seething, death-of-a-romance gem “So Long Lovey Eyes” and the towering, sludgy “Man of Stone.” The upshot is a taut, exhilarating listen that is quintessentially Toadies.

Lewis is stoked on “the freshness of this new record. Getting back into this, back into the feel of the Toadies, is cool. Lewis, Rez, Vogeler and new bass player Doni Blair (Hagfish, Only Crime) are optimistic that their indie incarnation will succeed, thanks to the support of their devout fans—and equally supportive label. “The music industry has changed so much,” says Vogeler. “A band like us can be on an independent label and still get the music out to the people who want to hear it.”

“Getting back to the bare knuckles element of the Toadies,” continues Lewis, “is what I really enjoy, after being away from it for so long.” Vogeler and Rez concur. “I’m here and still doin’ it,” furthers Vogeler, “because the music’s good.” And Rez proclaims in his thick Texas drawl, “The Toadies are back in business.”

And suddenly, everything wrong is right.

Influences:

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Record Label:

Kirtland Records/Fontana

Label Type:

Indie

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