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Summit Street

The Handshake at Cafe Bourbon St.

Summit Street is a strange road, too, any way you slice it. Mostly a one way, southbound conduit for US Route 23, it’s also mostly residential. But every block or so, it seems, there’s at least one business which has featured predominantly into the landscape for decades, if not our entire lives. It being Route 23, local boy Dwight Yoakam has even technically written a song in part about this.

Considering that Hudson Road is where Summit begins the one way split (turning into more of a sleepy, residential street north of here), it makes sense to begin our journey here, and head steadily south:

2515: Baba’s. Only added dinner hours June 2018.

2507: Rumba Cafe.

2500: the 3rd different home for Used Kids Records. This one is different in that there’s a performance area in one corner, a nifty little section where the brick lined wall is covered by reams of posters, with a sign bearing the familiar black and white Used Kids logo mounted right in the middle. I would be surprised if you found much Dwight Yoakam here, however.

2491: Wild Goose Creative. This is a really interesting space which holds everything from marathon epic novel readings, to screenings of indie films.

2216: Cafe Bourbon Street. The owner had to be talked into hosting live bands circa 1997, though they soon became a staple of this establishment. The exterior still looks basically the same, with that dark blue awning, the name spelled out in white.

Our first visit here will transpire only a few weeks before this development, however, during that summer. Dan rings up the house and talks to Alan, suggests we meet him at this place up the road called Café Bourbon Street. The two of us have never frequented this establishment, though it sits just a few blocks from our house. With its eyesore interior of tacky multicolored tile and walls painted so bright they nearly glow, the horseshoe shaped bar in the center is a point of refuge we scamper for and cling to, more so than usual. The bar stools represent a small chain of islands, ports against the storm of crass interior decoration. Of course we’re still left basking in an eerie hue of orange and green overhead lights, molding our faces into monstrous masks if we catch the wrong angle.

Dan is one of the good guys, among the cooler people I’ve ever met, a stout, dark haired, conscientious Jewish boy who’s loyal to his friends and kind to the casual stranger. When he smiles his face actually seems to shine, somehow. Our core group often remarks that he could and should probably be the fifth member of the inner circle. The only reason he isn’t, really, aside from possibly not having quite the same enthusiasm for our more off the wall stunts, is that his first passion has always been music, and he works relentlessly at it. Hence the instrumental demo cassette he’d played in our kitchen earlier this summer, featuring him and another friend, Travis Tyo, and a drummer we’re not familiar with by the name of Dave Copper. Now Dan tells me they’ve settled on the tentative moniker Superstar Rookie. I think it’s great and suits their sound like a well-oiled kick drum, but he is having second thoughts, at present considers it a mismatch.

The old man who runs this place is pacing around between this bar and the one next to it, Summit Station, a lesbian hangout. He owns both and oversees each through a door connecting these two disparate establishments, though he doesn’t seem to be doing much of anything at either.  Wondering how he’s going to pay the bills this month, maybe, judging from the sharp creases on his brow.

Slinging drinks here, while the owner paces around, is a sharp Asian fox by the name of Seresa.  Seresa, it turns out, graduated from Clearfork, a country school district in the sticks about ten miles southeast of Mansfield. She smiles a lot and flits through each of the conversations taking place at her bar, which at this hour and day doesn’t amount to much. Her shiny silver blouse and tight black slacks accentuate a body I’m already a big fan of, that and everything else I’ve seen from this girl.

“You gotta watch her, though,” Dan cautions, “she’ll start you a tab and keep slapping drinks down in front of you when you’re not paying attention. Last time I was here she hit me with an eighteen dollar tab.”

Aside from the three of us, Dave Kemp’s sitting further down the bar, at one of the corners, next to another face I remember from high school, Tiffany Miller. Tonight Kemp’s already drunk and just as hilarious as ever, though he’s also apparently taken a serious turn with his music, and is now playing in a band called Secret Of Flight. As for Miss Miller she’s wearing a sleeveless black blouse with tattoos up both arms. She’s younger than the rest of us and I never really knew her, but don’t recall that she ever looked this incredible before. Elsewhere, across the bar from us sits a tall, lanky goon who resembles the bass player from Nirvana, with a couple teeth missing and messy black hair. He and the chick sitting next to him, representing the only other people in the bar right now besides Seresa and our Mansfield crew.

One of the perks hanging out with some fresh faces delivers, apart from the possibility of catching up on old times, is that it allows you to shake up your conversational game. With Alan, Damon and Paul, the four of us pretty much never talk about anything else but girls, alcohol, and classic rock music. That’s it. Entire weekends have been kept afloat without a single variation in this material. Seated at the bar tonight with Dan, however, we’re venturing into offbeat topics such as Beethoven, jazz, and the films of Kevin Smith, all of which are welcome diversions – although some of the old standbys aren’t necessarily verboten, either.

“You guys try that Pink Floyd/Wizard Of Oz thing?” Bandman asks us at one point.

“No,” I admit, having somehow become the mouthpiece for our party as Alan’s not saying much tonight, “we keep meaning to rent that movie, but I always forget.”

“My roommate Norman tried it,” Dan explains, and by this he means Norman Flores, yet another familiar face from our Mansfield days, “but he said it didn’t work. I don’t really see the connection anyway – The Wall and The Wizard Of Oz?”

“No!” I protest, laughing, “it’s not The Wall you’re supposed to use, it’s Dark Side of the Moon!”

Dark Side?” Dan returns, intrigued, as if he’s just been afforded some amazing revelation. “Well, no wonder it didn’t work…I’m gonna call him right now actually…”

At this, he strolls over to this alcove where a working payphone awaits. I take this opportunity to have a look around at the rest of this fine enterprise. A piano along one wall, a jukebox next to it. A tiny raised platform in one corner utilized exclusively on karaoke night, as they’ve never had live music here in all the years that old man’s owned this tavern.  By the door, this minuscule booth with a window serving a small selection of pub grub, though closed at present and the lights turned off.

Concerning the embargo on live music, Dan addresses this upon returning, when he explains that they’ve just about convinced the wearied owner here to host his first ever rock band. Naturally, that band would be Superstar Rookie. They wouldn’t fit on the stamp sized karaoke stage, obviously, but there’s no reason a handful of tables couldn’t be shoved aside in that vicinity, enough to cram in their gear. They’ve been practicing with a singer of late, Brandon Tuber, and are just about ready to play out. The owner isn’t sold yet on the concept but they’re convinced they can draw enough if persuading him.

A line of mirrors, halfway up the north wall, has always lined the stage. They would string Christmas lights up and leave them well past the season, perhaps even year round. There for a while – I’m not sure if they still do this – musicians would get free Black Label beer on the nights they played.  

2210 Summit Street: Is presently The Summit Music Hall, and there’s also a Crunchwerks eatery inside. The exterior is a sharp looking black with bright red trim, looks great, though I haven’t been inside. For the longest time, however, this was Summit Station, a prominent lesbian bar.

(click arrow to navigate)

-South Of Lane



1990 1/2 Summit Street: disgraced former residence, an address that was quickly abolished as soon as we moved out. Dan Focht of Salthorse fame lived here right before us.

Downstairs and onto the rickety front porch, the winter air reaches our lungs with bracing clarity. The blizzard like conditions raging outside for much of the day and early evening have long since ceased, encasing our neighborhood, as is often the case after these storms, in a seeming stop motion stasis.  Trapped under a sheet of glittering glass, our vehicles and houses, an illusion broken only by the traffic zipping past us on US 23, and the occasional restless human.

Three young children stand on the side of the road, directly across the street from Ruby’s, before the bus stop. With a tape measure stretched out across the slick pavement, each in turn takes a running start and skids across the ice, as the other two comrades measure his distance. Waiting out the occasional burst of cars zooming down the three lane one way route, the boys are admirably patient, they chirp merry gibberish to one another before consummating the next round.

“Isn’t that fuckin awesome?” Alan enthuses, giddy from the spectacle.

In flannel shirts, jeans, and cowboy boots, a trio of rough and tumble older gents drift past, chuckling heartily. By all appearances beer guzzling hicks bound for Ruby’s, they queue without pause and give one running start at this child’s game apiece. Each fares better than I would have expected, stumbling to a fitful rest maybe twelve feet down the line, though none can match the grace or distance of those kids and their tennis shoes. Hooting in the wake of this unseen diversion, or perhaps the fleeting memory of their own distant childhood stunts, our grey haired rustics glance up Summit for cars, they click their boots across the pavement and disappear inside the bar.

“I’ve got a new game!” Alan announces, after the kids have long since departed, as he and I stand alone, mesmerized before the hypnotic swish of tires on icy road.

“What is it?” I beg, jolted awake, enervated, by our spell out here in the cold.

“Throw the Snowball at the Car!” he declares, scampering down the three cement steps from creaking porch to powder crusted lawn.

We begin by standing in relatively plain sight, hurling meteors at passing cars as they sail south down our street. A week’s worth of ammunition rests readily all around us, leaving the only real challenge a scientific one, between the intricate arts of packing, timing, and firing. That, and the danger of being spotted, which drives us soon enough behind a pair of giant barren bushes near the sidewalk.

Breezing along at accelerated speeds even under such adverse conditions, we can’t wait for these cars to arrive directly upon us, or they’re gone before we’ve so much as gotten the projectile packed. The trick, then, is to loft our charges out there ahead of time, let them hang midair until the vehicles arrive and impact. Of course this complicates matters in that an occasional wildcard police cruiser peppers the deck, but we can’t discern their identities until it’s too late. We see a pair of headlights coming and the crystal spheres fly, beseeching success.

Stephanie steps out onto the front porch to enjoy a cigarette and let Stella run around. As the dog sniffs our tracks and then our ankles, disappearing around the side of the house for a moment, Stephanie watches our game with a wry smirk crinkling the corners of her mouth. Exhaling this frigid air in the same breath as her smoke filled lungs, but even thus obscured, given even the lack of comprehensive lighting, I can discern a difference between this expression and the one she’s always unfailingly worn up to this point. Just as this surfeit of snow signifies to me winter’s last hurrah, and the incipient arrival of spring, so too is our neighbor beginning to thaw out.

“We’re playing a game called Throw the Snowball at the Car!” I beam up at her.

“You guys are gonna get busted,” she laughs.

Well, that didn’t happen. We got away with so much at this house. Although it does seems really strange now – as it rightly should have at the time, i.e. before we did such a thing – to think that one night Alan, Snoop and I broke out my clubs and blasted golf balls from the front yard, to see who could hit them the furthest down Woodruff. Maybe I shouldn’t be mentioning this. But this is a prime example of how you just can’t win sometimes about your past: mention it and you are glorifying such behavior; omit this and it means you’re whitewashing the incident, attempting to bury it. But it happened, yes, interpret this how you will. Kiddies, just maybe don’t try this at your home – or anybody else’s.

1978: Ruby Tuesday, longstanding live music venue and dive bar of considerable renown.

1866: A gas station has sat here, at the corner of 17th, since at least the late 80’s. Was once a BP, is now a Shell, but more importantly to nearby residents, in whatever incarnation,  it’s been open 24 hours for their cigarette and beer and late night junk food runs. Well, except this brief stretch where we’d find the door locked at weird hours, and it turned out the lone employee was shooting up heroin in the cooler. He didn’t last too long, however.

The Subway shop inside is even more of an institution and used to keep the latest hours on campus (3am Fridays and Saturdays, possibly Thursdays even), though I see they’ve now scaled back to a much more standard midnight.

1041 Summit Street

Has been Auto Transport Service Inc. since at least January ’01. So kind of an impressive run, actually. Damage free towing, 24 hours a day.

Also Reliable Advertising & Distributing Co. as of Jan ‘01

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Superstar Rookie

superhero poster from Superstar Rookie's debut performance, Cafe Bourbon Street

The first ever Superstar Rookie show arrives the same night as a torrential downpour, easily the worst rain seen all summer. Even so, I walk up to Café Bourbon Street from our house, hopping over puddles because Alan’s at work and I’m not sure who else would give me a lift right this minute.

I spotted a couple different flyers of theirs on High Street earlier that same day. The one above, featuring some sweet looking though possibly copyright protected superheroes, is more in keeping with their sound and band name. But this Screech number shown below isn’t without its charms – particularly as I must have picked it up off the sidewalk or something, as shoe prints are visible on my original copy:

poster from Superstar Rookie debut performance, Cafe Bourbon Street
poster from first ever Superstar Rookie show

When I arrive, Dan hands me a pair of official band stickers. They’re black and white, with the band name in lowercase block letters, and an image of two kids pointing up at the sky. Bandman’s got on a 3-piece suit and below that, a Superstar Rookie tee shirt, a little bit of additional advertising. These are available for purchase for the low, low price of $10, and you have to hand it to Bandman and company, they really did their homework promoting every angle of this puppy. Beyond all that, though, Dan’s mania knows no bounds, and this is great to see, someone with this much genuine enthusiasm for playing music.

I’ve always told him he should put together an act called Dan Bandman’s One Man Band, but based upon that instrumental demo he played for us a few weeks ago, these Superstar Rookies will rise above the novelty status of my tongue in cheek suggestion. Since the night we met for drinks at Café Bourbon Street they’ve formally agreed upon Brandon Tuber as their singer, have crafted lyrics and vocal melodies for their songs. Brandon never sang in any capacity before this but Dan always felt Tuber was the right person for the job, and eventually convinced him to accept it.

So they also manage to convince the old man who owns this place to host his first ever rock show. Though initially unsure it would pan out financially, as he paces around tonight behind the bar, I swear I can spot dollar signs floating around in the pupils of his eyes. The bar is wall to wall people, all of them having paid three bucks apiece for admission, most dropping untold wads of cash for drinks.

He’s jacked the house lights up to a more sensible level for the show, subduing the creepy, murky green and orange glow his tavern usually bathes in. The piano’s gone, too, making room for more tables, never to return. Though no live music has ever saturated these walls before it’s clear there will be plenty of it in the near future, as many nights a week as the old man thinks he can turn a buck. It must seem like a grand epiphany to him, this occasion, the registers overflowing with cash.

Customarily almost a middle aged dive bar, the clientele has reconfigured itself as a hip, happening hot spot. A sea of eighteen to twenty five year olds flying from one table to the next, everyone knows everyone here, we’re all friends from back home coming to root our local boys on. Though alive with activity, I somehow manage to pin down one booth unoccupied in the center of the room and slide my body into it. A perfect vantage point to track the who’s who of everyone in attendance, as I kick back and take a look around the room.

Ben Kick, now a hardcore heroin addict, nods off at a table in the corner. Despite his troubles he’s doing better than many of us are in some respects, for somehow the seedier fringe of any society attracts a certain element of gorgeous females. This explains how he’s landed Tiffany Miller as his girlfriend, a megawatt babe these days, tattooed and streetwise sexy. She sits beside her man, kicking him underneath the table whenever he drifts asleep, though each time his eyes snap open for only a moment before he nods off again.

Dan’s roommate Norman and his brother Jose Flores are here, pleasant Filipino kids I worked with at a fast food restaurant in Mansfield about five years ago. Ron Fry and Jeremy Wendling, two more casual acquaintances from my high school days, are among the paid attendance as well. Steve Simmers is accounted for, too, another chum from back home. He is also covered in tattoos, and sports a wild mane of shaggy black hair, but despite his appearance and occasional zany comments, he’s the most genuine and harmless character you could ever hope to meet.

Superstar-Rookie-business-card
Superstar Rookie business card

Dan’s making his rounds, glad-handling his constituency, and in so doing slides into my booth. This is the point at which he slides me the stickers, in fact. I mention having spotted a couple of their flyers earlier today while goofing around on High Street.

“Yeah, we made up four different kinds,” he says, nodding his head.

“Hey, I dig the three piece,” I tell him, when he stands to move on to the next party, kiss some babies or something. He flashes me the patented Dan Bandman smile, all squinty eyes and white teeth, laughs and tells me thanks.

My eyes drift repeatedly to Seresa, behind the bar tonight and assuredly netting a small fortune in tips. Looking just as lovely as the first time I met her, attired in tight, sparkling clothing that accentuates her impressive frame. She floats through the room with a deftness bordering on astounding, cataloging each drink order and delivering it without flaw, never mind the oceans of bodies she’s squeezing through.

“Why aren’t you drinking?” she asks in passing my table.

“Running low on funds,” I tell her with a grin.

Minutes later, she wordlessly sets a beer down in front of me and walks away without breaking stride.

“Thanks!” I call out behind her.

“No problem,” she turns around and smiles.

Secret Of Flight are the opening act, another – you guessed – group of former cronies from the Mansfield region. Some of them I think still live up there and have driven down just for the show. Dave Kemp, on bass, I know recently made the move to Columbus, but I’m not sure about Chris Hostetler and Jamie Ferguson, the vocalist and guitarist respectively, whereas I don’t even know the drummer at all.

Running into all these familiar faces is cool and everything, but it feels like a frantic dash in some respects, strained attempts to make meaningful contact with everyone in the space of a couple hours, all the while taking in a rock show. Really it just highlights for me that I’m not the only tight lipped character, for most of these guys don’t have much to say, either. Despite having gone to high school with Ferguson and Kemp and meeting Hostetler through some of the other dudes, like many of our friends they’re mellow, laid back fellows who guard their words and as such it’s difficult even for a marginal friend such as I to describe them in any more detail. They’re like Fry and Wendling, or for that matter Kick before the lurid details of his drug problems, meaning they’ve always just been around but I don’t know anything about any of them.

Secret of Flight begins their set, and the words pleasant surprise fail to serve them justice. Kemp’s bass lines are incredible, fluid and unique and melodic as hell, made all the more amazing in considering that he’s almost too wasted to walk. Meanwhile Ferguson’s got this fantastic guitar sound, flowing smooth as water and bright as a hundred watt light bulb. Hostetler doesn’t have the most dynamic range in the universe maybe but does make the most of it, wavering between the familiar speak-to-shout-to-speak dynamic made famous by a number of other independent bands. Still, it fits the music well, and though neither he nor the drummer are particularly jaw-dropping tonight, they provide a steady backdrop for the instrumental heroics of Kemp and Ferguson.

Earlier this summer, Dan played had played their demo for us at a house party, at a time when the band was still an instrumental trio. I liked it, but at the time ruffled some feathers by suggesting it was kind of power poppy, a little heavier but in the vein of early Cheap Trick.

“Cheap Trick,” Bandman had scoffed, shooting me a dark glance as he ejected the cassette.

I suppose at least one band member is bound to be offended, or at least find it ridiculous, whatever comparisons you make or genre you suggest. It’s best to say you dig it and move on. A week or so after that, a bunch of us are sitting at this very bar when Dan tells me they’ve settled on the tentative moniker Superstar Rookie. I think it’s great and suits their sound like a well-oiled kick drum, but on that day, at least, he was having second thoughts, worried that it might not fit their aesthetic.

As Superstar Rookie launch into their opening song, I recognize that Dan had been correct in scoffing at my power pop label for their music. They’re a little too loud and a tad bit loose for that designation. And as such, he might have been correct in suffering second thoughts and considering the band’s name a mismatch for their sound – but I don’t know, I still kind of like it anyway. Besides, it isn’t as if their direction is even etched in stone as of yet.

“The whole half time breakdown thing we learned from Copper,” Dan will tell me later, and cites, when I ask, the chorus of A-Ha’s Take On Me as an example, the way the music briefly slows down to half speed before revving up again. “That’s a trick he taught us.”

And aside from this conscious signpost, they lace in covers from multiple eras alongside their still relatively new originals. Beyond Dan and his three piece suit on guitar, my good friend Travis Tyo functions as bassist, with this burly redheaded guy Dave Copper manning the drums and the new recruit Brandon singing, by every indication a ball of nerves, terrified. The stage is adequate in size but not much beyond that, yet to their credit both Dan and Brandon make the most of it, canvassing both ends, jumping around, infused with as much animation as this limited arena will around.

In sound they are sloppy and unprofessional as hell, yet somehow make it work, winning you over in much the same manner as the neighborhood mutt. Call it the old Bandman charm – he and Travis have been at this together stretching clear back to our scholastic days, both in Mansfield and Columbus, and their seamless unison combined with Dan’s obvious enthusiasm make for a compelling combination. Travis smiles and rides his bass lines but even he can’t take his eyes off the guitarist, by all rights it’s the main attraction here.

Copper’s a powerhouse phenom with more chops than any other drummer I’ve seen around town, yet appears bored behind the kit, his face expressionless and detached from everything else happening on stage. As for Tuber’s vocals, he’s somewhat shaky and not nearly loud enough, and also displays this amusing trait of turning red in the cheeks when he sings, face and vocal inflection both reminiscent of a teenage kid arguing with his mom. But the lyrics and in fact the band’s song structures in general suggest something unheard of before, a new composite sound, a resolute avoidance of cliches.

Alan shows up halfway through their set, munching on a submarine sandwich he’s purchased at an undisclosed gas station. The more fast paced our lives become the worse the quality of our food gets, it seems, and this vile creation I’m watching him inhale represents the latest link in his diet’s de-evolutionary chain. After putting in a two to ten shift at the airport he’s stopped home only long enough to change, and now we stand in the back of the bar because he’s still too wound up to sit down.

Excuse me, Steve Simmer says, stumbling up to Alan and me as if we’re complete strangers, my eyesight’s not very good. Is that Dan “Three Fingers” Bandman playing guitar?

This question is so bizarre on so many levels that it’s best to not even attempt thinking about it. We mumble a response in the affirmative and he thanks us while shuffling away, though not before Alan hands Steve the remains of the noxious sub. We share a laugh over the whole peculiar encounter, my roommate and I do, from his acceptance of the sandwich to his efforts across the bar of pawning the sub off onto Ben Kick and Ron Fry. Ron in fact punches Steve in the arm at last as if telling him to piss off, at which point Simmers finally gives up the ghost and tosses the offending sandwich aside.

“Three Fingers Bandman?” Alan finally gets around to wondering aloud, “what the fuck’s that supposed to mean?”

“I have no idea,” I admit.

The only possible explanation I can divine is something to do with the three piece suit Dan was wearing at the beginning of the show. But the suit’s long since history, as Dan strips down to just the dress slacks and a white Superstar Rookie tee shirt. Now he’s sliding across the stage on his back as he reels off a guitar solo, grinning at this obvious homage to a cheesy rock era gone by.

He laughs at my comparisons to Cheap Trick but there’s definitely an element of the overblown 70s here, and the glorious 1980s, too, but just a touch. Handclaps and singalong choruses colliding against a crunchy guitar tone familiar from eras past. An indie rock pedigree buffered against Copper’s dexterous drum patterns with a dash of Replacements-esque sloppiness thrown in the mix, manifesting itself in the way they’ll start a song over if anyone hits a bum note. One selection features Brandon reading a favorite book passage through this megaphone, thus flipping over the last stone they might have left unturned in their quest for the perfect show.

After a short break, the band returns for an encore. Whereas their main set features strictly original material, here they veer into the familiar land of time tested covers, beginning with Just What I Needed by the Cars. For this one Brandon enlists the audience, coaxing them into shouting out each chorus by holding his microphone above the crowd, a move met with thunderous, roaring approval. But now that we’ve heard the thunder here comes the lightning, knocking out the bar’s power supply just as the band kicks into Just Like Heaven by the Cure.

We fidget in snickering silence for a few moments, waiting for the juice to return and end this evening proper. When it does some five minutes later the Superstars eschew wrapping up their Cure tribute and instead opt for a much more modern one, closing out the night with a Built To Spill song I fail to recognize. Then the show’s over and they’re putting away their equipment and as we congratulate the four members on a job well done, Ron Fry and some of the other fringe characters are hamming it up on the microphone, eager for a portion of the spotlight. Amusing as this is Alan and I wave to everyone else and disappear down the road, off to a keg party across town.

Superstar Rookie have lurched out of the gates with an impressive debut, though they’ve understandably still got some kinks to iron out. Truth be told, while I wouldn’t have admitted this to anyone, the secret in the opening band’s name might be that I unexpectedly liked them a little better. Secret Of Flight launched into the stratosphere tonight, but then again this was Bandman and the guys’ first time out, and much better things are forthcoming from them.

By the time their second gig arrives about a month later, held at the Northberg Tavern on High Street, they’ve augmented the lineup with a lead guitarist, Tony Bair. Thus begins a schizophrenic patch of sorts, in which they’re attempting to decide whether this fifth member belongs or not – although in my mind, the answer is a resounding yes.

Superstar-Rookie-sticker
Superstar Rookie sticker

II.

Superstar Rookie will release their debut album, The Problem With Words, in 2000. By this point Tony Bair is already out of the band, and they are back to the fourpiece which kicked things off during this first show. It’s a solid, high energy release, and the music mostly explodes out of your speakers. If I have one complaint, it’s that vocalist Brandon Tuber sounds different on here than he did during their live shows. He doesn’t sound bad, just exactly that: different. On this disc his vocals come across as clipped, whereas during their gigs his voice was somewhat more expansive. I’m not sure if this was a conscious decision, or accidental, or something that just happened at the control board while recording. One exception is Pulling Oliver’s Wings, which might be the best song on the album and is a good example of what I’m talking about. Here he really gets to belt it out, giving you a good indication of what their shows were like:

The album truly hits its stride from this point forward, actually, as songs #5 through 10 are probably the high point. Some guitar solos might have been nice, sure, but you don’t really miss Bair’s absence a ton, as great as he is. I think there’s enough variety here to make up for that extra piece – particularly on Pete’s Dragon, where Bandman submits a nice little shredding interlude, as well as a cool acoustic breakdown. And you even get to hear Dan sing lead on Expost Facto, an added bonus. I’ve always liked bands that shake things up with more than one vocalist, so this is a terrific change of pace.

Though initially released on local label Diaphragm Records, a product of Workbook Studios, this album is sadly now out of print. And to date they’ve not yet made it available for streaming, either. Here’s to hoping The Problem With Words will see a proper reissue one day. And who knows, maybe a reunion will be in the cards, too. For now you can jam on this classic cut here, and if you like what you hear, pick up a used copy of the album online.