Hootie
and the Blowfish
Live Concert
Date: July, 7, 2005
Location: Avalon Ballroom, Niagara Fallsview Casino
Box Office: 1-888-836-8118
Tickets: Balcony
$59.50
Floor
$79.50
Seating: Avalon
Ballroom
purchase: Ticketmaster.com
And so it was that smack dab in the middle of the ’90s, Hootie & The
Blowfish blew up far bigger than anyone expected—including the band members
themselves. The group had formed at the University of South Carolina in the late ’80s,
naming themselves after the nicknames of two of their college friends. Lead singer
Darius Rucker, guitarist Mark Bryan, bassist Dean Felber,and drummer Jim“Soni”Sonefeld
soon began playing an expanding world of frat parties and dive bars, gradually
building a significant regional buzz. Signed to Atlantic Records prior to having
ever put out an album, Hootie & The Blowfish released their major label debut,
Cracked Rear View, in the summer of 1994. By early 1995 its first single, “Hold
My Hand” (featuring a vocal assist from no less of a harmony singer than
David Crosby), broke into the Top 10. The song stood out as unusual and uplifting—a
warmly rousing slab of pop rock powered by a gospeltinged intensity. It was as
if a massive chain reaction had been set off. Before long, Cracked Rear View
went to #1 as more Hootie singles continued to hit and hit hard: “Let Her
Cry,” which was followed by the sweet-natured Bob Dylan-salute, “Only
Wanna Be With You,” and “Time.” Also included here is fan favorite “Not
Even The Trees,” one of the band’s bleakest and most beautiful songs
from their debut. Hootie & The Blowfish’s instantly accessible guitar-based
sound—captured with the help of producer Don Gehman, who had earlier been
behind the boards for breakthrough works for R.E.M. and John Mellencamp, among
others—was an exceptionally pleasing mix of classic rock hooks, acoustic
folk-rock grace, and Rucker’s powerfully rich lead vocals. Imagine Bill
Withers fronting the Eagles. For all their assorted rock and pop influences,
an underlying soulfulness was at the heart of the group’s winning sound.
As Jim Sonefeld once told Rolling Stone, “Everyone says we’re one
black guy in an all-white band, but that’s not true—we’re actually
three white guys in an all black band.”
Cracked Rear View became a full-blown music biz phenomenon—selling 13
million copies just in the time the band got around to following it up. Suddenly
Hootie & The Blowfish were fixtures of MTV and VH1, magazine cover boys,
and even the subject of some sly fun on Saturday Night Live. In short, the
band had arrived in true high style. All this multimedia commotion made Hootie & The
Blowfish overnight rock stars. Of course, it also set a ludicrously high standard
for subsequent album sales. Predictably, the band’s somewhat harder-edged
sophomore effort, Fairweather Johnson, didn’t yield the same results,
though it still sold a couple million copies and featured such strong songs
as “Be The One,” “Old Man & Me (When I Get To Heaven),” “Tucker’s
Town,” and the gorgeous “Sad Caper.” True to form, the band
didn’t seem all that fazed by the tidal wave of success that had swept
over them. Somehow they simply kept doing what they had always done—entertaining
crowds and writing songs together very much as a team. Their next album, 1998’s
Musical Chairs, was another confident statement of what the band does best,
especially on standout tracks like the feel-good opener “I Will Wait” and
the especially lovely “Only Lonely.” From their clubby beginning,
Hootie & The Blowfish displayed considerable flair, not only for creating
their own material but also for interpreting the music of some of their favorite
artists. The band’s choice of covers provided substantial proof that
they have great musical taste. So it was only fitting that as a sort of bookmark
on the first chapter of their career, the group released Scattered, Smothered & Covered,
a collection that brings together in one place many of their best covers from
over the years. The band’s version of Led Zeppelin’s rarity “Hey
Hey What Can I Do” had already been a highlight of the Zep tribute album
Encomium. Their convincing take on Bill Withers’ endlessly funky “Use
Me” had first appeared on the Japanese pressing of Cracked Rear View
and served as a suitable tribute to a too-often undervalued singer-songwriter.
And “I Go Blind”—a cover of a little-known gem by the fine
Canadian band 54-40—was originally the flip side of “Hold My Hand” and
later featured on the Friends soundtrack album. In 2003 Hootie & The Blowfish
released their collaboration with famed producer Don Was, well known for his
work with such talents as Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan, and The Rolling Stones as
well as his own eccentric supergroup Was (Not Was).
The album represents a new beginning of sorts, thus appropriately titled simply
Hootie & The Blowfish. It’s a collection that builds on past strengths
while adding some new sonic touches. “Innocence” and “Space” are
only two of the set’s highpoints. Most recently, the band once again
showed their way with a familiar tune, covering “Goodbye Girl,” the
theme song to the classic ’70s Neil Simon movie written and originally
sung by David Gates, former leader of the band Bread. The group cut the song
for a new TNT version of the movie, but in or out of that context, “Goodbye
Girl” once again proves that this is a band that’s brought their
own brand of soulful pop to the world of rock.
ENJOY THIS MUSICAL REAR VIEW.
–
DAVID WILD