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Articles: They're In This Together (2000) |
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They're in this together |
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OK, time to drop this pretentious rock journalist crap and go first person. I cried when Blind Melon singer Shannon Hoon died. His band’s self-titled debut album was the soundtrack of my life in late-1993 and beyond, a continuous presence on my Chevrolet Caprice’s tape deck as I made the eight-hour trips between college and home. “No Rain,” Blind Melon’s biggest hit, while fine, wasn’t my favorite cut on the record. Rather, dreamy, melodic gems like “Soak the Sin” and dirty rockers like “Dear Ol’ Dad” had greater appeal. Listening to Hoon work his singular pipes with his talented mates was like hearing to Jane’s Addiction’s Perry Farrell — or perhaps Hoon’s cousin Axl Rose — fronting Lynyrd Skynyrd. But Blind Melon, strangely cosmic and earthbound at the same time, provided far more than cool driving music. Like the best groups, they got under your skin and infiltrated your spirit. Though their second outing, 1995’s Soup, failed commercially and critically, and was followed by the 28-year-old Hoon’s untimely death by cocaine overdose that year, it was still an excellent effort — a soaring, often heartbreaking chronicle of a singer and a band hurtling helplessly toward an uncertain fate. What does this have to do with Unified Theory? Well, along with boasting founding Pearl Jam drummer Dave Krusen (who recorded all the drums on Ten but was later replaced by Dave Abbruzzese) and singer/six-stringer Chris Shinn (formerly of L.A. band Celia Green), the band includes two ex-members of Blind Melon, guitarist Christopher Thorn and bassist Brad Smith. Thorn and Smith, the prime movers in Unified Theory, have done the impossible with their quartet’s eponymous debut: They’ve both continued and evolved the transcendent and layered rock sound of Blind Melon. In other words, this Theory has proven that rock is far from dead. It helps Unified Theory’s case that the mighty-throated Shinn, at first listen, sounds like a dead ringer for Hoon (though further spins of the CD reveal him in possession of a vocal style different and more fluid than the late frontman). But certainly, this foursome isn’t just Blind Melon with a new guy at the mic — they’re a superb combo that, while encompassing the finer qualities of that prior band, rock-and-glide into lush new sonic territories on songs like “Instead of Running,” “The Sun Will Come,” and their latest single “Wither,” whose lyrics deal with watching someone suffer through drug addiction. The Mississippi-born Smith, an easy-going guy as well as a great conversationalist, chatted via phone about Unified Theory (who play the Troubadour Feb. 28), Blind Melon and what it’s like working with a new voice. |
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Entertainment Today: What qualities were you and Christopher Thorn looking for in a singer? |
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Entertainment Today: What has the experience of working with Chris Shinn been like? Entertainment Today: Was it intimidating for you to go in the studio and record with a new band after everything that happened with Blind Melon? Entertainment Today: The songs on the album flow together really well — they’re quite consistent. Was that a goal you were aiming for? Entertainment Today: It seems like you guys could pull off a concept album — I mean, the band is named after an Einstein concept. Entertainment Today: How
did it work out that it was only you and Christopher Thorn that ended
up in Unified Theory, and no other members of Blind Melon? Entertainment Today: Someone
once wrote that the reason Guns N’ Roses were so good was that they had
five completely different personalities working together. Was that the
case with Blind Melon? Entertainment Today: That can make for great music, though. Entertainment Today: Yeah, like “Skinned” — you don’t hear many songs featuring a kazoo anymore. Entertainment Today: Would you say that the members of Unified Theory are a bit more on the same page? Unified Theory plays at the Troubadour Wednesday, Feb. 28. You can check out the band on the Web at www.unifiedtheorymusic.com. |
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Theme Coded by Vince Bertin | Designed for BeeMelon.com |
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