REVIEWS/INTERVIEWS
Country
Standard
Salt
Lake City Tribune
Boulder
Weekly
Dose
magazine
1340mag
(2)
Campus
Circle
Bend
Bulletin
The
Register-Guard
Eugene
Weekly
The
News Tribune
Artist
Direct
Deseret
News
The
Stranger
Standard-Examiner
RocknWorld
1340Mag
Daily
Nebraskan
Omaha
Reader
Argus
Leader
Uptown
Lincoln
Journal Star
Calgary
Sun
Antimusic
AllAgesZine
MUSIC
SAMPLES
Tonight
I'll Be Staying Here With You
I
Don't Wanna Know
Supersuckers
Bio
Eddie
Spaghetti Bio
|
SUPERSUCKERS
Upcoming shows
Fri - Nov 11
The Abbey Theatre
128 East College Drive
Durango, Colorado 81302
Sat
- Nov 12
Bluebird Theatre
3317 Est Colfax Ave
Denver, Colorado 80206 Ticket Web
Sun
- Nov 13
Aggie Theatre
204 S. College Ave.
Ft. Collins, Colorado
Buy Tickets
Mon - Nov 14
Belly Up, Aspen
450 South Galena St.
Aspen, Colorado
Tues - Nov 15
Club Ego's 668 S. State St Salt Lake City, UT w/Danko Jones
Wed - Nov 16
The Neurolux 111 N. 11th St.
Boise, ID
Fri - Nov 18
Neumo's 925 East Pike St. Seattle, WA
Sat - Nov 19
Berbatis Pan 231 SW Ankeny Portland, OR
Sun - Nov 20
Apple Store/Pioneer Place
700 SE 5th Ave Suite 1035 Portland, OR *Show at 3PM Flyer
Sat - Nov 26
Eddie Spaghetti Sunset Tavern 5433 Ballard Ave NW Seattle, WA
|
| The
Supersuckers are Podcasting! That's right the Greatest Rock N
Roll Band in the World has officially launched the Supersuckers
PODCAST; http://feeds.feedburner.com/
Supersucker
Video/musicPodcast
We will begin posting new video, mp3's or any other fun multimedia
that will automatically be downloaded to your computer. Be on
the look out for live shows, interviews, rare songs, tasty hard
to find demo's, and perhaps even sneak peaks of songs from future
releases.
www.supersuckers.com |
 |
Photo
credit: Wilbur Boyd
Click image for high res download |
 |
"Devil's
Food" release album artwork.
Click image for high res download. |
|
Supersuckers
front man Eddie Spaghetti ready for second solo effort Old No. 2
Willie
Nelson, Bob Dylan and AC/DC get the classic cover treatment
 |
Photo
credit: Stephanie Neal
Click image for high res download |
Los Angeles, CA –
June 29, 2005 - Eddie Spaghetti, lead singer and bass player
for legendary rock-n-roll renegades, The Supersuckers, has just crapped
out the follow up to his critically acclaimed and surprisingly successful
first solo album, The Sauce. It's called Old No.
2 and it's more of the same for Eddie. Only Better! Recorded
once again at Studio Litho in Seattle with engineer and co-producer
David Fisher, Spaghetti "went all crazy" and indulged himself
with 5 whole days to record and mix Old No. 2.
(one more than The Sauce!) Michael Murderburger returns on
drums and percussion and Spaghetti also up and splurged for a ringer
to help make it sound "more like real music" (as he puts it).
The incredible, multi-talented comic genius, Jordan Shapiro was flown
in all the way from Los Angeleez, California,! Mr. Shapiro lends his
guitar, dobro and pedal steel talents to Old No. 2,
making it bigger and even sweeter than The Sauce. Old
No. 2 once again showcases Spaghetti's impeccable song
selection with covers ranging from Willie Nelson and Bob Dylan to AC/DC
and Tom Waits as well as his ability to make up his own songs that hang
with (and sometimes outshine) the classics. Old No. 2
is a must have for Supersuckers fans and fans of good music in general.
You will play this record to your kid's kids. It's an instantaneously
timeless classic.
 |
| Click
image for high res download |
Look for Old
No. 2 in-stores on October 18, 2005 with a solo tour to
follow. If you can’t wait until October, you can catch Eddie in
a rare solo performance on Thursday, July 28 at Dante’s in Portland,
OR and August 6 at Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort in Snowbird, UT
as well as select Supersuckers dates with Pearl Jam in September. Here’s
the complete track listing for Old No. 2 and
Supersuckers/Pearl Jam shows
1. Tonight I'll Be Staying
Here With You (Bob Dylan)
2. All Along (Eddie Spaghetti)
3. Some People Say (Eddie Spaghetti)
4. Without Love (Nick Lowe)
5. Carry Me Home (AC/DC)
6. Hey Sexy (Coasters)
7. I Don't Wanna Know (Eddie Spaghetti)
8. Here We Go (Eddie Spaghetti)
9. I Don't Wanna Grow Up (Tom Waits)
10. Everywhere I Go (Willie Nelson)
Pearl Jam dates with Supersuckers:
| DATE |
CITY |
VENUE |
| SEPTEMBER |
|
|
| 2 |
Vancouver,
BC |
General Motors
Place |
| 4 |
Calgary, AB |
Pengrowth Saddledome |
| 5 |
Edmonton, AB |
Rexall Place |
| 7 |
Saskatoon,
SK |
Credit Union
Centre |
| 8 |
Winnipeg, MB |
MTS Centre |
| 9 |
Thunder Bay
, ON |
Fort William
Garden |
 |
Photo
credit: Stephanie Neal
Click image for high res download |
BILLBOARD
July 02, 2005
Supersuckers Go With The Marketing Flow
BY ED CHRISTMAN
NEW YORK - Fans of veteran indie band Supersuckers admire the group
for offering tremendous live shows and albums and for living the rock'n'roll
lifestyle to the hilt.
But Supersuckers have at least one more distinguishing characteristic:
They try to incorporate a marketing element into everything they do.
"It's easy to get the records into the stores," frontman/bassist
Eddie Spaghetti says. "It's getting them out of the stores that's
the challenge. We look at all of those unsold records as our little
orphans that are out there waiting to be adopted."
So far, 212,000 of the band's orphans have found new homes, according
to Nielsen SoundScan. The most recent of the band's 12 albums, "Devil's
Food," has scanned some 5,000 units since its April 5 release.
That's well short of the 20,000 mark the band aims for with each album.
In fact, five Supersuckers titles have reached that goal, including
their best seller, "Must've Been High," which has moved 35,000
units.
Like many indie acts, Supersuckers—whose other permanent members
are guitarists Dan "Thunder" Bolton and Ron "Rontrose"
Heathman—are always looking to gain exposure in a cost-effective
way. But for genre-benders like them, that is rarely easy.
Known primarily as a revved-up, double-lead-guitar-powered punk-garage
band, Supersuckers also put out country albums, tour as a country band
and have collaborated on numerous projects with Willie Nelson.
Initially, that country inclination almost cost the band fans, but
Supersuckers figured out how to turn threats into opportunities: They
occasionally have the country Supersuckers open for the rock'n'roll
Supersuckers.
The road is key to all of the band's activities. It performs about
200 shows per year. "There are very few bands who work as hard
as we do," Spaghetti says. The band is booked by Monterey, Calif.-based
Monterey Peninsula Artists in the States and by Nottingham, England's
CNL.Touring in Europe.
Because they spend so much time on the road, Supersuckers sell space
on their van and trailer to advertisers. But instead of going through
the hassle of shopping the space around, they auction it on eBay. Winning
bidders have included apparel company Hot Leathers and Dynamite Distribution,
which distributes tobacco paraphernalia.
The band also uses auctions to promote itself and its shows. Supersuckers
have held auctions for trips to see them live, for a guitar lesson from
Heathman and for a seat on the stage during one of their concerts.
"Bands ask us all the time, 'How
 |
Photo
credit: Wilbur Boyd
Click image for high res download |
do you do it?' " manager Chris Neal says. "And the answer
is, 'We just do it.' This band is open to so many ideas that a lot of
bands will turn down."
The band and Neal started their own label, Mid-Fi Recordings, which
goes through Redeye Distribution. Not only does that allow them a greater
portion of revenue per album, it also allows them to release product
more than once every year or two. In the last six months, Mid-Fi has
issued two Supersuckers live albums, "Live at the Magic Bag"
and "Live at the Tractor."
Supersuckers' do-it-yourself marketing weapons include an e-mail list
15,000 strong and a fan club with 1,000 members. For annual dues of
$15, fan club members get a few free singles a year and a chance to
buy exclusive Supersuckers recordings. They also turn up on the band's
guest list at shows and receive e-mail updates from Spaghetti at least
once a month.
The fan club lets the band "know exactly who our customers are,"
Neal notes. It also serves as a distribution channel. Despite that direct
connection, Neal says, "We know that retail is really important
for our fans because they tell us. People like to go out and shop."
And there is plenty to peruse. Supersuckers' Web site and merchandise
tables at their shows offer albums, fan club recordings, T-shirts, branded
lighters, pint glasses, shot glasses, mugs, patches, rings, dog tags,
belt buckles and guitar-pick necklaces.
"We are a guerrilla warfare band," Spaghetti says. "This
is a great job to have. In order to keep on doing it, if we want something
done right we have to do it ourselves. It certainly is a lot of work,
but the goal is to have no boss."
|
Eddie
Spaghetti Bio
Eddie
Spaghetti grew up in Tucson, Arizona trying desperately to ignore
the country music that floated all around him. Seems like every
pick-up truck and storefront speaker was cranking out the syrupy
wails of some heartbroken hick and he just wasn't having it. So,
as a kid, he turned to Heavy Metal, then Punk Rock, to block out
the noise and that's how his band, The Supersuckers, was born.
Formed
in late '88, The Supersuckers aim was to strip away some of the
pretense of late '80's Heavy Metal and put a little showmanship
into the Punk scene. It was a tightrope act few bands could achieve
but, by the beginning of '89, not only had the band done it, they
were ready to make a move away from the dirt roads, dead ends
and dust of their hometown.
Heads
was New Orleans, tails Seattle.
Tails.
And,
in May of 1989, off they went.
Having
no clue that Seattle was about to become "Rock City, U.S.A."
for a few great years, Eddie and his grimy gang jumped blindly
into a scene that had been thriving unrecognized for years. It
didn't take long however for them to find Seattle to be the perfect
place to "not fit in". "We didn't sound like the
bulk of the Seattle bands and we never really felt the need to
change, either," says Spaghetti from his hotel room somewhere
on the road (the band does over 200 dates a year!), "It seemed
like they needed a band like us. Sure, maybe we could've fared
better financially if we'd tuned our guitars down and I tried
to sing like Axl Merman but, check it out - how many bands from
back then are still together, still making great, valid rock music?
Very few, my friend, VERY few."
The
Supersuckers put out a few singles, then signed to Sub-Pop and
began what has been over a decade of ass kicking, ground pounding
hemi-hogging punk-n-roll.
It
didn't take too long, however, for the country music that he tried
so hard to avoid in his youth to start surfacing in the music
Eddie was making as a young man. The foray back to the country
began in 1993 with the Supersuckers side project, The Junkyard
Dogs and the rare, hard to find and out of print recording, "Good
Livin' Platter" (Sympathy For The Record Industry). It wasn't
county per-se, but it was close and the seed was planted.
In
'95, while working on Sacrilicious in Austin, TX the band met
and recorded with Willie Nelson and a friendship was born. The
experience profoundly affected Spaghetti. "I had long stopped
pretending to hate country music," says Spaghetti, "but
hanging with Willie really got me thinking. Why put an age limit
or a time limit on the validity of making music?. Why does this
have to be a young man's game? It doesn't. Music is music, it's
either good or it's bad and rock-n-roll is a very new art form.
It's barely fifty years old! It's going to be a lot more common,
as time goes on, to hear great rock from older guys. I got plenty
of time!"
In
1997 Eddie was balls deep into country music again and what was
initially planned as the first Eddie Spaghetti solo record became
The Supersuckers now legendary recording, Must've Been High. "I
had a bunch of these weird songs and I was just gonna do a little
country record on the side but, after doing some demos down in
Texas, I came back up to Seattle and there we were - The Supersuckers
were making a country record! I had no idea what our fans would
think and they did freak out at first. But now it's our best selling
record. Ha!", says Spaghetti.
After
the success of "Must've Been High" the band tried (and
failed) to work their way up the corporate record label ladder.
Spaghetti: "That was a confusing time and it really slowed
us down. I felt like we were making some of our best rock ever,"
(true enough, 2000's "The Evil Powers Of Rock-N-Roll"
(Koch) is widely considered one of the groups best records) "but
the labels just kept jerkin' us around. I learned a lot about
the business and about myself and what truly makes me happy about
making music. And that happiness has nothing to do with what some
fat-cat sitting behind a desk spending some young kid's hopes
and dreams on a recoupable expense account thinks about my art"
Enter
Mid-Fi Recordings. "This fella named Chris Neal came scouting
us for RCA. But after talking to each other after the show we
both realized that we wanted something else, something outside
the system. No bosses! So now Chris is The Mid-Fi Guy and The
Supersuckers are more successful than ever!"
Mid-Fi
has enabled Eddie and the band to finally take matters into their
own hands and get the music to the people. Starting with a live
country record, Must've Been Live, Mid-Fi has been cranking out
the product including (but not limited to) 2003's Motherfuckers
Be Trippin' and Eddie's first solo record, The Sauce.
The
Sauce was such a happy accident. There were a few days open at
this studio here in town and I just grabbed them and knocked it
out. I can't believe how happy I am with something that took so
little time to create!" A stripped down acoustified collection
of some of Eddie's favorite covers ("And two originals!")
featuring Eddie on guitar, bass and vocals with Mike Murderburger
on drums and few guests sprinkled in, The Sauce has become a fan
favorite.
Now
Eddie has returned with Old No. 2, his second solo record and
by far his best effort to date. Still simple and basic, Old No.
2 sees the return of Murderburger and the addition of Mr. Jordan
Shapiro (from Ray Price and Bob Dylan's touring bands) on "just
about anything with strings". Old No. 2 showcases Spaghetti's
original songs as well as his impeccable selection of covers spanning
five decades (Bob Dylan, The Coasters, AC/DC, Tom Waits and Nick
Lowe all sit nicely together on this record!). But it's Spaghetti's
songs that steal the show. "All Along", "Some People
Say", "I Don't Wanna Know" and "Here We Go"
are some of his best, most confident works ever. It has a bigger,
slightly more produced sound that can be largely attributed to
the fact that "We spent a whole four days - instead of three
- in the studio", claims Eddie.
"I
don't look at these records as something born of 'creative frustrations'
or whatever typical reasons singers do these things. I see them
as extensions of the story of the Supersuckers. I am and always
will be a Supersucker, no matter what I do with the rest of my
life, you know? That said, this record is ridiculous. It's so
good. I've never been more proud of anything I've ever done. Toot-toot!
Is that my own horn I'm blowing? I guess it is. Well, somebody's
gotta do it!"
Well
said Mr Spaghetti.
Old
No. 2 will be out October 18th on Mid-Fi Recordings. Don't miss
your chance to get in on the legend of Eddie Spaghetti and the
Supersuckers.
|
|
|