Boston, Massachusetts wrote a significant chapter in the American rock-'n-roll history books, producing a long, varied and successful cast of rock characters and bands. Think Aerosmith, The Cars, Modern Lovers, J. Giels Band, Extreme and, of course, the multi platinum star-crossed band named for the city itself, BOSTON.
Now think Ernie and the Automatics. (www.ernieandtheautomatics.com)
This six member band is also putting its mark on Boston's musical territories with the release of their first CD, "Low Expectations."
Ernie and the Automatics are already celebrated in Boston because its members are wired directly into the DNA of Boston's rock'n'roll community. They have been through the
city's rock'n'roll wars over the past few decades, good times and bad, big hits and lawsuits. But now they emerge as Ernie and the Automatics, without any apparent Post Traumatic Stress Disorders for their collective experiences.
They are "Boston's rock royalty."
The members of Ernie and the Automatics have sold over 30 Million records for labels, major and minor, all across the world.
Ernie and the Automatics boast two former members of the multiplatinum selling band BOSTON. Barry Goudreau on guitar and Sib Hashian on drums, reunited for the first time in 25 years.
Brian Maes, lead vocals and keyboard, was with Goudreau post-Boston, when he formed RTZ with other Boston-ites, the late Brad Delp and bass player Tim Archibald. Maes and Archibald also toured the world together in Peter Wolf's House Party Five. Saxophonist Michael "Tunes" Antunes arrived in the Automatics line up while still performing with John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band, best known for their hit "On the Dark Side" and music on the cult classic movie "Eddie and the Cruisers".
Together, it all adds up to a lot of history and a great back story.
Now Ernie and the Automatics have released their debut CD, "Low Expectations," all original material written by the band and all stamped with the group's FM radio friendly sound with a relevant and rockin'ly familiar edge. Or is it rock with a blues edge?
Notes Hashian: "I know that if we all got together in a recording studio, we could make something happen. I was right, we went in and the result was 'Low Expectations.' The whole package."
Goudreau says the band now plays about 80 dates a year - clubs and concerts. They have opened for a broad array of rock and blues legends including:Etta James, B.B. King, Chuck Berry, James Cotton, Johnny Winter, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, James Montgomery, Alice Cooper, Ace Frehley, Godsmack, Rick Derringer, J. Geils, America, John Sebastian, Skunk Baxter, Extreme, Joey Kramer, Los lobos, Jim Belushi, Johnny A., Farrenheit, and Tom Hambridge. Goudreau notes: "Ernie and the Automatics have spent a couple of years building up a solid reputation in New England. There's a string of clubs we play regularly - not bad with no radio play"
The Band's debut CD of all original material is especially satisfying to all the band members as it underlines the cooperative spirit, all-for-one and one-for-all tempo of Ernie and the Automatics and allows them to comment on past activity as listeners to the opening track will find out. "The Good Times (Never Last)" is cowriter Goudreau's commentary on life in Boston and his loyalty to the late Brad Delp.
Ernie and the Automatics see "Low Expectations" as the band's calling card, announcing that they are ready for a national audience. "No question we're big in New England but now is the time to make our move," says Goudreau. "We've got a national sound." Rock with a blues edge or blues with a rock edge?
The band pleads guilty to either or both.
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Sounds Like
Elvin Bishop and Stevie Ray Vaughn jammin with Otis Rush and Howlin' Wolf at Eric Clapton's birthday party.
Come Together: A Tribute to the Life and Music of Brad Delp.
Ernie and the Automatics, Farrenheit, Extreme, Godsmack, RTZ, and Beatlejuice are all proud to present this DVD with all of the proceeds going to musical charities. Order your copy
online NOW!!!
Review by Scott Iwasaki
Deseret News
Published: Thursday, March 12, 2009 10:05 p.m. MDT
While Growing up in the '70s and '80s, I played the drums, and I listened to everyone
from Tommy Aldridge (my favorite) to Metallica's Lars Ulrich, Styx's John Panozzo,
Journey's Steve Smith, Jefferson Starship's Aynsley Dunbar, jazzman Billy Cobham,
Rush's Neil Peart and Van Halen's Alex Van Halen.
I also got into Sib Hashian from the band Boston, whom I haven't heard about since
his appearance on Sammy Hagar's 2003 "Live Hallelujah" CD.
I recently received a notice that Sib, born John Hashian, was in a new group called
Ernie & the Automatics.
Needless to say, I was interested.
The band — Hashian, former Boston and RTZ guitarist Barry Goodreau, former
RTZ keyboardist/vocalist Brian Maes, John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown's saxophonist
Michael "Tunes" Antunes and founder Ernie Boch Jr. — released its first full-length
CD, "Low Expectations" on Open E Records a few weeks ago.
The CD hit No. 7 on Billboard Magazine's Top Blues Album charts. It currently sits
at No. 10.
Boch, the CEO of Boch Enterprises in Norwood, Mass., who studied music at Boston's
Berklee College of Music, struck up a friendship with Hashian a few years ago.
"A mutual friend introduced us," said Boch during a phone call from his office.
"And when Sibby found out I played guitar, he kept asking me when we were going
to jam
"I finally caved in, and we got to jamming, and it was a lot of fun. And Sibby said,
'I bet my friend would be interested in jamming with us.' "
That friend was Goodreau.
"I thought to myself, 'This is insane!' " said Boch.
The jam sessions continued, and Goodreau recruited his RTZ bandmate Brian Maes to
do vocals and keyboards, and then they all decided they needed a saxophonist and
called up Antunes.
Needless to say, Boch was in awe.
"Even today I look around at the band and know that they have all collectively sold
30 million albums in their lifetime," he said.
After playing gigs around the Boston area — their first show was opening for
Los Lobos and the second gig was opening for B.B. King — the band decided
to talk about recording a CD.
"We had been playing cover tunes through all this," said Boch. "So we decided to
write our own songs and make a CD."
The band walked into the studio on Feb. 17, 2008, and "Low Expectations" was released
nationally a year to the day later.
The album is a solid blues-based rock album that features songs such as the Motown-flavored
"If I'd a Let You," the snakily dark and colorful "Hong Kong Shuffle," the jazz-club
feel of "Fly in the Milk" and a sax-driven explosive number called "Let It Go."
While the band was pieced together with no real goal in mind, Boch said there is
a goal now.
"We want to win a Grammy," he said.
And, after listening to the CD nonstop, I do believe they could.
Review by Steve Morse
music reviewer who was at the Boston Globe for 30 years
and has contributed to Rolling Stone, Billboard, and Musician magazine
The title Low Expectations is immediately ironic, because those expectations
are exceeded quickly with this new release. Welcome to wonderful, highway-traveled
rock 'n' blues that carries a real punch.
The Automatics are a Boston supergroup of sorts, featuring two past members of the
band Boston (guitarist Barry Goudreau and drummer Sib Hashian), along with gritty
singer Brian Maes (who was part of RTZ with Goudreau and Boston singer Brad Delp,
then with Peter Wolf's House Party 5), bassist Tim Archibald (another alum of RTZ
and Wolf's band), saxman Michael "Tunes" Antunes (John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown
Band) and rhythm guitarist Ernie Boch, who pulled it all together. The group's format
is quite democratic, as all members contribute writing credits. The standout is
the crunching rocker, The Good Times (Never Last), a Goudreau/Maes composition
that takes some thinly veiled shots at controversial Boston founder Tom Scholz ("How
you try so hard to keep me down"), before breaking into a tribute to the departed
Delp ("An old friend who is no longer with us"). The groove is nonstop and so is
the hook and message. Goudreau is stellar throughout (his slide guitar on the bluesy
Back Around is a highlight), and Antunes gets down 'n' dirty with his sax
on the title track, where he evokes the piercing horn line from Bob Seger's Turn
the Page. Singer Maes is a coiled spring of raw energy and he powerfully
recalls the edgier side of Bad Company's Paul Rodgers on the ballad I'm Gonna Haunt
You. The music reflects many years on the road ("just another day of paying
some dues," as Maes wails on Blues Town) and there's not a dishonest chord
or lyric here. The songs are all originals and there are even a couple of hot instrumentals
in Hong Kong Shuffle (a Boch/Hashian cowrite) and the climactic Fly in the
Milk, where the Automatics reveal a jazzier side of their personality. This
is music with old-school flair, but with a fresh, never-say-die face.
Review by Robert Silverstein
Formerly of 20th Century Guitar Magazine
Music Web Express 3000
Boston has an illustrious music history as the home town for a number of classic
rock bands such as Aerosmith, The Cars, The J. Geils Band and of course, the band
named after its hometown, Boston. Two musicians involved with the original Boston
band lineup — guitarist Barry Goudreau and drummer Sib Hashian — are
among the featured players in the latest band to emanate from bean town, rockers
Ernie And The Automatics. Kicking off with "The Good Times Never Last" — a
spirited, hook-heavy rocker in the finest Boston pop-rock spirit, the album Low
Expectations is anything but a modern pop-rock album with low expectations! Goudreau's
lead off track is a sonic blast and sets the tone for a rockin' album in the finest
spirit of the original Boston sound. There's even a couple great instrumental rock
tracks that kick some serious butt. Clearly, guitarists Jay Geils and the Cars'
Elliot Easton would dig Goudreau's excellent guitar work in Ernie And The Automatics.
Ernie's vocalist Brian Maes, who was with Goudreau post-Boston in the band RTZ,
sounds supercharged in the six man Ernie And The Automatics lineup. Commenting on
working with this latest Boston-related supergroup, drummer Sib Hashian adds, "I
knew that if we all got together in a recording studio, we could make something
happen. I was right, we went in and the result was Low Expectations. The whole package."
Some may carp and say Ernie ATA are merely treading on hallowed ground of the original
Boston sound. To those people...turn on the CD player, crank out "The Good Times
Never Last" and be prepared to rock and roll!
Review by Joseph Tortelli
www.goldminemag.com
GOLDMINE, MAY 8, 2009
There’s nothing automatic about recording a debut that stands out with its potent
blues-rock mix. Despite the self-effacing Low Expectations title, the pressure
was on Ernie And The Automatics to come up with the goods.
That’s because the six-piece band reunites guitarist Barry Goudreau and drummer
Sib Hashian, founding members of BOSTON whose 1976 debut LP achieved multi-platinum
status. Other members have played in RTZ, Orion The Hunter, and John
Cafferty And The Beaver Brown Band, widely known for the soundtrack to the
movie Eddie And The Cruisers. The group’s founder is guitarist Ernie Boch
Jr., whose late father etched the family name into New England’s TV annals by closing
his automobile dealership ads with the enthusiastic tag-line: My name is Ernie Boch.
Come on down!
Instead of cloning the familiar Boston arenarock style, Ernie And The Automatics
develop their own blues-rock identity, highlighting the sweet- ’n-snakey saxophone
of Michael Tunes Antunes and the rough-’n-ready voice of keyboardist Brian
Maes. The sextet forges the bluesy Low Expectations, the swinging Tappin’
On An Empty Head, the hard-driving Blues Town, and the harmonica-laced
Back Around, produced with a gritty backroom vocal sound. Goudreau flashes
his dazzling guitar licks on the heavy Dead Man, the clever The Best Is Up
Ahead, and the pulsating The Good Times (Never Last), whose catchy
hit potential will appeal to fans of BOSTON’s layered, FM radio-friendly
arrangements.
Fueled by undeniable group chemistry, Ernie and The Automatics spotlight their musical
chops on the instrumentals Hong Kong Shuffle and Fly In The Milk,
which completes the 12-track album on an engaging jazz-lounge note.
Review by Jeb Wright
Classic Rock Revisited
Ex-Boston members Barry Goudreau and Sib Hashian have teamed up with former members of Goudreau's band RTZ and a local Bostonian named Ernie and went to work: wracking up blues numbers faster than good used car salesmen can move units off the lot. The result is a fun album that mixes rock with blues and features some damn good boogie soaked guitar playing.
The opening track, "The Good Times (Never Last)" may be seen by fans of Boston as a bit of Barry and Sib slagging their former boss, Tom Scholz. I am sure they won't admit it but one can't help but read between the lines. The rest of the disc is dripping with good time, party music. This album rivals anything RTZ did. The band appears to be having fun.
At the end of the day this is a fun disc. If you want some good, old-fashioned boogie rock, then check it out. The band knows what they are doing and deliver it with a big ol' smile on their face.
Ernie and the Automatics's Friend Space (Randomized)
WHATS UP EARNIE,WE'RE PLAYING AT "BOGART'S" IN BRIDGEWATER,MA. ON DECEMBER 5TH.IT WOULD BE GREAT TO SEE YA AGAIN.HAVE A GREAT HOLIDAY TO YOU AND YOURS.
If you are a friend then thank you for the friendship, if your not yet a friend then please Add Me and come check out some new music at myspace.com/theincognitoone Cheers!
I saw this band a week ago in Manchester, NH, without knowing what was coming. I had heard Ernie Boch Jr. was a pretty cool guy and it seemed pretty far out that this guy who really doesn't have to work is also a hard working musician(as well as a top CEO of a major business).
Needless to say, my mind was blown to smithereens by the show. The whole band was in top form and worked fantastically together as a group. When they did the medly of Boston tunes with Barry on guitar, I don't think my feet were on the ground! I have never been so pleasantly shocked in my whole life. This is a group headed for the history books! Congrats to all!!!
Hey there, I'm a student at Presque Isle High School and I happened to catch you guys playing. I meant to comment a few days ago but I wanted to say you guys sounded great! Thanks a lot for coming, Presque Isle was lucky:). Don't forget about us up here in Maine, make a return someday!
Hi Guys, Thanks for the great show in PI. I love the blues and I thank you for your talents. It certainly was a thrill. Your new cd is awesome. Thanks Again Fellas! JW
Hey Guys!! Wanted to say thanks for the opportunity to open the show for you. It was an honor!! You guys truly are a fantastic band. Tight, soulful and badass! The medleys were an awesome surprise. Thanks for keeping that music alive! Much love and peace....
WOW - You guys really ROCKED Presque Isle Maine !!! Blew us away...best concert in a long time... Your CD's great, and your 100 times better live, Super sound mix too...Super show... You guys nailed it !! Please come back and see us soon !!!