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FAIR
TO MIDLAND
Darroh Sudderth: Vocals
Cliff Campbell: Guitar
Jon Dicken: Bass
Brett Stowers: Drums
Matt Langley: Keys/Electronics
Photo credit: Frank W. Ockenfels III
Click image for high res download
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Depending on who’s
counting, there are anywhere from 100 to n-frigging-thousand
subgenres of rock music a band can slide into for easy categorization.
And depending on where you drop the laser on Fair to Midland’s
Serjical Strike debut, The Drawn and Quartered E.P., at least
half of those subgenres are being reinvented at once. But to call this
Dallas quintet (who, ironically, get their name from an old Texan play
on the term “fair to middling”) merely “eclectic”
is to sell them way short. No, Fair to Midland are masters
of fusing those subgenres into something that’s cohesive, intensely
focused, and in a bold new category all its own.
The Drawn and Quartered
E.P. finds Fair to Midland proving why Serjical Strike owner and
System of a Down frontman Serj Tankian personally chose them for his
already boundary-challenging label’s roster. The EP’s studio
tracks—“Orphan Anthem ’86” and “Kyla Cries
Cologne”—showcase FTM’s flair for combining progged-out
virtuosity with lead-heavy riffs, impassioned vocals, and dynamic tidal
waves. And the live songs that accompany these—the soaring, atmospheric
“Seafarer’s Knot” and “Abigail”—confirm
FTM’s onstage virtuosity while showcasing their ability to capture
a crowd’s attention. "It's not often that one comes across
bands that are truly original, poetic, progressive, artsy and memorable,
compounded by a killer live performance,” Tankian says. “FTM
is such a band."
Founded in 1998 in the quiet
farm town of Sulphur Springs, Texas—“Where people still
say ‘please’ and ‘thank you,’” as its
chamber of commerce notes—Fair to Midland have become one of the
most idiosyncratic musical forces in the Lone Star State. But as singer
Darroh Sudderth—who rounds out FTM’s current lineup with
guitarist Cliff Campbell, drummer Brett Stowers, bassist Jon Dicken,
and keyboardist/electronics manipulator Matt Langley—explains,
idiosyncrasy also helps give the band its internal power. “For
the most part, our musical tastes are completely different,” Sudderth
begins, laughing. “We’ve just gotten better at listening
to each other over the years. All of our songs are just us trying to
find a happy medium between what everyone in the band listens to—and
I think that actually being able to do that is what makes us
so different from a lot of other ‘prog rock’ bands today.”
Although it’s the band’s
first official recording for any label, The Drawn and Quartered
E.P. follows two independent releases—2001’s The Carbon
Copy Silver Lining EP and the 2004 album inter.funda.stifle—both
of which earned major critical acclaim despite being completely under-the-radar.
Music Connection named FTM one of the planet’s 100 best
unsigned bands in 2005; Filter scribe Christopher Fudurich
put them on his personal top 10 that same year; and The Indie Scoop
chimed in with similar kudos, writing, "It was though I was listening
to the mutant offspring of Rush, Pink Floyd, Dream Theater, The Mars
Volta, Gary Numan and Pantera; grown up and having run off to start
their own volcano-worshipping doomsday cult in the desert."
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Photo
credit: Frank W. Ockenfels III
Click image for high res download |
And so, with a growing buzz
and a trail of blown minds behind them, FTM naturally found themselves
looking for a label that could respect their DIY roots while giving
them the means to take their sound to the grand new level it demands.
Ironically, it was only after going the typical DIY route that
the band found a proper home. “We must’ve shopped demos
to every indie label imaginable, because we figured we were too weird
for a major,” Sudderth explains. And so, after being blown away
by two of the band’s performances in Los Angeles, Serj Tankian
signed Fair to Midland to his label in April of 2006.
“It’s definitely
been a strange ride, going from being this completely DIY, underground
thing to having someone at Serj’s level, someone you respect,
who’s had this huge impact on music, sort of step up and validate
what you’re doing by actually showing you he ‘gets’
it,” Sudderth explains. “Even more than that, though, it’s
freed us up so much creatively to be part of a bigger label. It’s
like we can finally step back and evaluate where we’re going with
this music without having to worry about, ‘How are we gonna get
people to hear it?’ or ‘Can we even afford to tour once
this stuff gets released?’”
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Photo
credit: Frank W. Ockenfels III
Click image for high res download |
Creatively speaking, the
salad days are indeed behind them: With mega-producer David Bottrill
(Tool, King Crimson) behind the boards for their forthcoming Serjical
Strike debut album, Fair to Midland are poised to turn rock music on
its ear in 2007. And when you take a look across the major-label landscape—from
the postmodern prog rock of the Mars Volta and Tool to the chart-topping
success of Serj Tankian’s own boundary-smashing art-metal powerhouse—it’s
not hard to imagine Fair to Midland carving out their own plot of land
amid these giants.
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