Mikey
Russell - Vocals, Guitar
Bob Buckstaff - Guitar, Wurlitzer, Tambourine
Dustin Chabert - Bass Guitar, Bells
Sammy Del Real - Drums, Percussion
To the lucky
few who caught the first live shows of new Chicago-based quartet Wax on
Radio, those performances may be remembered as the launch of a strikingly
original new voice in rock music. At club dates in the Windy City and
in New York, the customary buzz of cocktail chatter and the click of Blackberrys
fell to a hush as jaded concert-goers stopped and craned their necks to
see just who was making the riveting, emotionally-captivating music that
was pouring forth from the stage. Wax on Radio brings a fresh, well-developed
sound to rock music at a time when the genre seems to have reached a creative
plateau. Familiar, successful formulas like emo, nu metal, hardcore are
being played out all over the charts but there is an undeniable restlessness
among fans and a sense that rock is overdue for a blast of fresh air.
Enter Wax
on Radio, which mixes catchy songwriting, intelligently evocative lyrics
and an engaging style. The lyrics plunge in to big themes that resonate
with listeners - missed opportunity, preserving your individuality, lifting
your life out of stagnation and living it with passion. The music is sonically
spacious and beautifully composed, in the vein of Pink Floyd or Yes, but
Wax On Radio is also being compared to Coheed & Cambria, Mars Volta, Bright
Eyes, Radiohead, Muse, Jane's Addiction and latter day King Crimson. Wax
on Radio performs the trick of sounding both progressive and nostalgic.
Wax on
Radio was born in 2004 when singer Mikey Russell, bassist Harrison Taylor,
guitarist Bob Buckstaff and drummer Sammy Del Real hooked up in the tiny
suburban Chicago music scene and immediately hit it off. The four band
members were all living in and around the towns of Schaumburg and Lake
Forest when Mikey put out word he was looking to start a new band. The
foursome, who had never before met, came together through the recommendations
of mutual friends. But on their first meeting they quickly realized they
had much in common. Chicago has an illustrious music history, being home
to the likes of the Smashing Pumpkins, Wilco, Kanye West and others, and
that tradition can cast a huge shadow over new acts. But the members of
Wax on Radio found their common ground further back in time and farther
afield. Mikey and Bob collect old vinyl records and share an affection
for rock radio's golden age, the 1960's and 70's. Mikey thinks nothing
of spending an afternoon tracking down now rare copies of Led Zeppelin
or Prince, and in fact, does not own a cd player, only a turntable. Sammy
is a versatile stickman who developed his chops touring the world playing
Latin percussion with his dad, who is a pianist. He developed an appreciation
of a diversity of styles, and it gives his drumming an added spice. Harrison,
a former DePaul University student, is a student of classic rock and the
great rock bassists like Jaco Pastorius and it shows in his nimble, flowing
style. The quartet first jammed in the garage of Mikey's mother's house
and Harrison and Mikey immediately began sharing songwriting duties.
According
to Mikey, who is probably the most literate high school dropout in rock,
his inspiration comes from everything from movies to great books, including
the film 'American Beauty' and novels by Russian writer Dostoevsky and
the existential philosopher Camus --particularly Camus' 'The Stranger'
and 'Notes from the Underground.' "I'm drawn to stories of people who
get up and recapture their own lives," Mikey explains. The band chose
its name, as Mikey says, "as a way of paying homage to the great era of
vinyl. It's our statement on the music we like and the way we like to
write songs."
Wax on
Radio's debut album, Exposition, is an ambitious and successful blend
of the band's talents. Mikey's keening voice is arrestingly heartfelt,
and gives songs like 'Today I Became a Realist' and 'The General of Medicine
City' a persuasive power. Bob Buckstaff's guitar and Harrison Taylor's
bass propel the music forward at a fast pace, making nimble jumps into
unpredictable tempo changes and stops and starts that keep the listener
rapt.
Mikey's
lyrics have an existential edge to them, and touch on all sorts of moods,
from dark to ecstatic, all delivered in searing poetry: "The sad face
of dreamers waking to the life that passed them by," he sings in 'Today
I Became A Realist.' "They march in place straight to their graves." He
continues: "Sail on quick, fly past the world, find me a love." The songs
'Remembering,' 'Dawn Architects' and 'The Devil' are three of the band's
best, blending sharply incisive lyrics with great hooks and masterful
guitar work. Listeners to Exposition will be surprised that so much sound
comes out of such young artists - Sammy is 18, Harrison 19, Bob is 22
and Mikey is the elder statesman at 23. There is a brightly lit road ahead
for this young band. It is music that transcends easy labels.
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