Spinoff
BA look at the latest releases
by John O'Neill
The long road of rock and roll that Luke John and Another Society have
traveled has been anything but an easy ride. Formed five years ago in Memphis,
Another Society have gone through the transformation of cover band to original
band, local act to touring act, small potato to up-and-comers, gigging
everywhere from small, piss-soaked dives in front of the bartender and a
handful of regulars to playing alongside Faith No More, Testament, and the
Bogmen. Sometimes on the same tour.
But today when Luke John calls from his hotel room outside of Springfield, he
has to face a challenge that makes all the long, cramped rides in the tour van
and crashing on people's apartment floors minor by comparison. With two
well-received albums under his arm, major radio airplay in three different
markets (including Worcester's own WAAF), and a formidable touring schedule on
the horizon, John is Another Society. The rest of the band didn't make
the trip.
"We're going through a line-up change right now," John says in understatement.
"It happened a couple of weeks ago right before we were going out on tour. The
guys from Method 51 (PC Music labelmates and tour openers) are backing me up
right now. We only had six practices, but it sounds good. It's definitely a
change for the better."
Currently on the road in support of Blood Wrong (PC Music), John is no
stranger to adversity as the band have played the part of underdog since the
day they started out on the hometown club scene. While finally popular
throughout the country in various pockets, this is not the case for Another
Society in their local zip code.
"The unity bands have up here is something," explains John. "Four or five on a
bill playing to five hundred people. The bands like Rawhead Rex and Eastcide
work well together and all stick together. In Memphis, that doesn't happen. I'm
here to play music that I wanna play and not worry about playing a lick better
than the guy in the band next to me. [In Memphis], they worry about what
everyone else is playing, and everyone's got an opinion."
Critics are also divided over Blood Wrong. The album's been praised,
but some have cited a striking similarity to Metallica or Pantera, another
subject that makes the usually easygoing John bristle.
"Oh God, I don't think that's there," he says of the above comparisons. "We
write what we write. And if it sounds like that . . . it just comes
from where it comes from. If people like it, cool. If not, I won't get down on
them 'cause their [music] probably sucks, too!"
While there is some obvious Metallica influence on the album, there's also
enough of Another Society's interpretation of what makes a good song go crunch
to dispel most cynicism after the first couple of listens. Loaded with
rock-bottom low-end, tight, sledgehammer rhythms, enough primal angst to fill a
waiting room, and the top-notch production of Don Gilmore (who also twisted the
knobs for the Pearl Jam/Soundgarden one-off, Temple of the Dog), Blood Wrong
may owe a debt to Hetfield and Co., but certainly no more so than any pop
band owe the Beatles. There's no shame in a good post-hardcore metal band
knowingly or unknowingly absorbing a trick or two from the greatest of the
post-hardcore metal bands.
As for the future of Another Society, John has already been hard at work
lining up new personnel after this leg of the tour is over.
"I've already got some players in mind, so we'll go back home, hang out a
while, and go back out on the road. The number one priority is not having any
downtime. I want as many people to hear us as I can. I love being out on the
road -- it's a great job, and I'm not broke."
Another Society, Method 51, Tremble, and Flambookey play the Espresso Bar
on April 3.
Best Music Poll update
Well, the Worcester Phoenix Best Music Poll is barreling
along like a hootched-up Duke boy headed down the back roads of Hazard County.
And things are shaping up quite interestingly. Keep on sending those ballots in
right up till deadline, which is Wednesday, April 16, or fill out a ballot in
person at a Phoenix sponsored event. It's also a chance to rub elbows/tell off
one of our fine, important, music scribes. This week Mark Edmonds will be on
hand at Slattery's, in Fitchburg, on April 4 when Mighty Sam McClain takes the
stage.