If somebody made a Saturday-morning cartoon series about eight sassy kids
who took a time warp back to the 1970s and started a rock band, it would still
be nowhere near as animated as The Suburban Sound.
The Suburban Sound look like the Allman Brothers, sing like Skynyrd and rock
out with all of the arena theatrics of The Who. They’re ’70s rock
incarnate, complete with a rolling horn section and a frontman who could take
Mick Jagger on strut for strut in a sass-off.
With members ranging in age from 20 to 25, The Suburban Sound are old enough
to understand the whos, whats and whys of rock’s greatest era, but young
enough to still sound dangerous, to inject their music with the kind of devil-may-care
rebelliousness that made it impossible to take your eyes off of bands like
the MC5. As Joe Perry once put it, “You can have the rock, but you need
the roll.” And that’s what The Suburban Sound have got going for
them: a monstrous amount of roll.
The band’s members, most of whom have been playing together since high
school, stumbled upon classic rock in the early 2000s after growing tired of
getting lost in the region’s bottomless pit of hardcore and punk bands.
“Through the natural course of looking for something different, we kind
of rediscovered what’s already been done 30 years ago,” explains
saxophonist Andy Styer.
“You don’t appreciate your parents’ music when you’re,
you know, 18,” he laughs. “But we started looking into all these
bands, and we were like, ‘Man, this stuff is really good. It rocks hard,
but it’s not obnoxious.’ It’s something different. It’s
kind of a timeless sound.”
But The Suburban Sound is not a classic rock jukebox. This isn’t just
regurgitated chord patterns buzzing through a vintage amp. What the band’s
done is mined the music of everyone from Led Zeppelin to Lynyrd Skynyrd to
Chicago, stolen what was necessary – the over-the-top arena rock guitars,
the fierce horns, the madman vocals – and given it a facelift.
“Those [bands] are definitely our roots, but we’re also trying
to do something new,” Styer says. “It’s not 1970 anymore.
There’s a lot of other stuff over the past 30 or 40 years that we can
pull from. I consider us to be fairly creative people as well. It’s not
just some vintage, novelty throwback band like Jet or The Hives.
“Part of our attitude and swagger definitely comes from punk rock, because
that’s the kind of music we were into in high school, and we definitely
carried that with us.”
As you might guess, an eight-member band wearing girl jeans, butterfly collars
and silk scarves can make for quite the spectacle. It’s worth the cover
charge just to witness guitarist Scott Rehnberg’s fashion sense in person.
Styer admits that a lot of times people don’t really know what to make
of The Suburban Sound, especially in a bar setting. “Hey, that boy’s
wearing the shirt I wore to the prom in 1972!”
And the fact that the members all go apeshit onstage doesn’t help either. “It
just comes out. [Our singer] is a very dramatic person. He’s an actor.
He’s an artist that way,” Styer says. “It’s his stage
and his limelight, and he’s going to steal it. He’s going to give
people what they paid for.”
A Suburban Sound show is a black and white experience: either you get it or
you don’t. Find out if you’re one of the cool kids.
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