My Memories of Hootie & The Blowfish

Okay, since I spent yesterday listing all the bands whose legacies matter more to the local Columbia, SC music scene than Hootie & the Blowfish, today I’ll fall headfirst into nostalgia and tell some personal stories about Hootie, from my own perspective as someone who was there from the start and enjoyed every minute of it.

Upon arrival at the University of South Carolina in 1985, one of the first people I ran into was my former high school classmate Darius Rucker, who lived one dorm away from me in the infamous Towers/Honeycombs. We had only one class together at USC, for the show choir Carolina Alive, and it was there that he invited me (and the rest of the choir) to hear him sing on Friday nights at Pappy’s, a local burger joint across South Main Street from the Towers. Darius had joined up with a guy in his dorm, Mark Bryan, to form an acoustic duo playing cover songs, and they drew a crowd from the start, it seemed. I remember them playing songs such as “Homeward Bound” from Simon & Garfunkel, “Family Tradition” from Hank Williams, Jr., and more recent stuff like Violent Femmes and R.E.M. Mark threw in at least one original tune even then, “Summer Girl,” which may have been a holdover from his own high school band back home in Maryland.

Hootie gig in Pappy's, 1986

By 1986, Mark and Darius had recruited a drummer from their dorm and a bassist and the original version of Hootie was born. I remember vividly being at a Carolina Alive party at the director, Richard Conant’s house where a bunch of us were sitting around the living room listening to Darius trying to come up with a name for the band. Two of the choir’s members, Donald and Ervin, came in the front door together about that time–each of them had nicknames based on their appearance; Donald was the puffy-cheeked “Blowfish”, Earvin’s large glasses had earned him the tag “Hootie”. Upon seeing them, Darius himself called out, “Hey, it’s Hootie and the Blowfish!” Hitting his own forehead, he said, “That would make a great band name!” The rest, as they say, is history.

During those first couple of years, the band’s gigs in Pappy’s were run by the same Carolina Alive member who ran sound at the choir’s shows, and he used the same USC-owned sound board and PA equipment the choir did–looking back, it’s amusing to think of the four-piece band using a 30-something channel board, only taking up about six channels of it. Since I wasn’t old enough to drink yet, I got appointed the sound guy’s assistant. My sole job, as I recall, was to guard the board during the shows and make sure nobody spilled their beer on it or threw up on it, or otherwise damaged the ‘borrowed’ board.
One particular show stands out, at least in reference to the sound board. Dr. Conant had been given an invitation to come out and hear the band but had not taken them up on it right away…well, one Friday he simply walks in the room while the band’s playing and hangs around for a while taking in the music and the crazy crowd–He looked over at the sound board, and at the guy running it who he also knew from Carolina Alive, and smiled, but nothing was ever said about it being the choir’s equipment.
Here’s a more recent clip of a song that Hootie has covered since those gigs at Pappy’s, “I Go Blind” from the Canadian band 54-40:

My favorite Carolina Alive story also involves Darius Rucker…we were down in Amelia Island, Florida to sing at a convention or some kind of meeting (we opened for B.J. Thomas) and they had put us up overnight in some condos on the beach. After we sang, the rest of the trip was devoted to partying, and by late in the evening a group of us had ended up poolside in the common area of the condo development, even though it was technically closed for the night. Darius was leading an impromptu game of Simon Says (I know, either we were all really drunk or really bored by that point…) and calling out stuff like, “Simon says stand on one foot,” etc. when he looks to the fence surrounding the pool area and says, “Simon says that’s a cop,” spotting what turned out to be a private security officer for the condo complex. After quickly putting down any incriminating cans, bottles, etc., we were then asked to leave the public area–which we did.

Mark Bryan, Hootie’s guitarist, was a DJ at the USC radio station, WUSC-FM, and he convinced me to sign up at the station my sophomore year. I’d already made the decision that Carolina Alive was taking way too much time outside of classes and quit the choir, so doing the radio station instead sounded like a good idea. I’ve said it before, but working at WUSC was my musical education and I hold Mark personally responsible for opening up that flood of musical information and pretty much setting the course of the rest of my life, at least as it pertains to music. It was at WUSC that I wrote my first piece of music journalism, an interview with Screaming Trees guitarist Gary Lee Conner published in the Fall Program Guide for 1987 or 88, I forget which. I do not have a copy of it myself at this point, but I remember it being a terrible interview punctuated by me asking him weird questions about color associations with the band’s songs and odd word associations that were probably my attempt at being ‘different’ than the average boring music journalist at the time.

I’ve seen Hootie & the Blowfish play more times and in more places than any other band over the years, mostly due to those pre-graduation shows near the USC campus but also later on in Charleston at the Music Farm, in Charlotte at Amos’, and a bunch of other venues in Columbia and elsewhere. It was at one of the Music Farm gigs, around 1990 or so, that I remember Darius Rucker offering me $30 for the red Reivers T-shirt I was wearing from their Farm gig a few weeks prior…I turned him down, and still have (and can still wear) that shirt today. At another Music Farm show, they were actually the opening act for a band they were huge fans of, The Silos.

The band’s Monday After the Masters concerts have always been a favorite for me, partly because they bring back some of the camaraderie and fun of the early cover band years. One in particular stands out, in 1998. I’d been writing reviews for the alt-country focused magazine No Depression for a year or so, and editor Peter Blackstock had accepted an invitation from Mark Bryan to attend that year’s golf tournament and concert. I offered him a couch to sleep on that night and served as his host and guide for the afternoon and evening, driving him past “Tunnelvision” and a few other local landmarks prior to the concert. After the Township we went down to the Elbow Room in 5 points, where Cravin’ Melon was playing an ‘afterparty’ that rumor had it Hootie was going to crash. Sure enough, about halfway through Cravin’s set the Hootie guys showed up, strapped on Cravin’s instruments, and proceeded to play a six-song set of cover songs to the delight of the packed house.

Here’s a great clip of the band from around that time, a 1996 performance of “Be The One” off Fairweather Johnson:

The last dozen years or so I’ve seen less and less of the band’s shows, mostly because they just haven’t played many times in the Columbia area. Today’s unveiling of the Hootie Monument in 5 Points may not ‘officially’ be a Hootie show, but with all the bands scheduled to play their own covers of Hootie’s songs, can a surprise set from the guys themselves be too far behind?

Ten Columbia, South Carolina Bands That Matter More Than Hootie & the Blowfish

Okay, this week’s unveiling of a commemorative monument honoring Hootie & the Blowfish in their hometown of Columbia, SC is big news, at least around here:

Free Times Cover Story
State Newspaper Coverage

I contributed an opinion piece to the Free Times cover story that acknowledged the band has done plenty to deserve the honors they’re getting, even if the monument seems to be about ten years too late to really mean anything, but I didn’t really have the space to expand upon the relative importance of Hootie vs. others who came from their home state. Massive sales figures are great for the bank account but a lasting legacy of musical innovation and influence is not something that even Hootie’s members would lay claim to, surely. With that in mind, here are ten South Carolina acts who ought to have legacies that stand up to and perhaps outstrip their more famous ‘neighbors’ (though even they have some solid connections to Hootie themselves.)

1. Lay Quiet Awhile–the alt-rock of this late 80′s, early 90′s quartet could be artfully spare or a sonic sledgehammer, depending on the song. Their legacy? Singer Danielle Howle went on to a critically-lauded solo career of her own and bassist Dan Cook released two albums with Verna Cannon, served as music editor and now overall editor at the Columbia Free Times alt-weekly. Hootie connection: Cook played violin on the “MTV Unplugged” Hootie special taped on the USC campus.

2. Danielle Howle–Yes, she gets two spots technically since she was a member of #1, above. But her solo output has been even more lauded, appearing on several different indie labels over the past fifteen years. Hootie connection: Howle’s Thank You Mark album was produced by Hootie’s Mark Bryan, and she sang a duet with him on his most recent solo disc.

3. Isabelle’s Gift–one could say that these guys are here due to longevity, as they’re still out there plugging away. I’d argue that their length of service is a deciding factor only because their redneck punk/metal hybrid was ahead of its time when they started and now it would seem almost quaint, if it weren’t for the bulldozing intensity of their best material. Ask anybody in a hard rock band in Columbia what inspired them to play and I guarantee this band’s name will be on the list somewhere, if not at the top.

4. Treadmill Trackstar–Would Angelo Gianni and friends have conquered the world in the 1990′s if they hadn’t signed a dead-end deal with the Hootie-run label Breaking Records back then? We’ll never know, but for a couple of years you could hear “Shouldn’t I Take” on mainstream radio around here in regular rotation, and Gianni’s buzzsaw pop was in line with the then-popular Smashing Pumpkins‘ sound. Their indie release Excessive Use of the Passive Voice remains a favorite locally released album, and while the band’s recent resurrection and new music may not gain them the world, it certainly proves that there’s a lot more artistic output to come from them.

5. In/Humanity, Guyana Punchline, Anakrid--One cannot talk about Columbia’s music scene without mentioning Chris Bickel, and his bands have always had both the attitude and the aptitude to capture whatever punk-inspired zeitgeist was on his mind at the time of their many recordings–tapes, seven-inch records, albums, Bickel has released enough stuff over his career to easily fill up one of those old Peaches record crates.

6. Bedlam Hour–The first Columbia band I can remember signed to a national record label contract (Positive Force Records released the band’s epic Rock The Cradle), the fast and furious yet overwhelmingly positive punk rock that Chuck Walker and company played was a huge influence on a generation of young punks in Columbia and beyond, and “Grey Sweater” is one of the best songs ever to come from Columbia’s music scene. Hootie connection: Hootie’s Mark Bryan and BH’s Walker and bassist John Leroy (as well as second bassist Adam Kolesar) were all student DJ’s together at WUSC in the 1980s.

7. From Safety To Where/Bolt/Death Becomes Even The Maiden–a mutiple band listing that acknowledges the interrelated lineups of these groups, all three of which play some sort of hyphenated post-punk rock amalgam that was (and is, in the case of the ongoing DBETM) light years ahead of their local and national peers. If Columbia were a hipper town in the national music press, Eric Greenwood would be referred to as our Roger Miller (Mission of Burma and No Man founder, not the country songwriter).

8. The Rob Crosby Group–The token 70′s band on this list, to be sure, but Sumter’s Rob Crosby was one of the most popular southern rock acts in the state in his day, and members of his band have gone on to play in other groups and combinations ever since. Crosby ended up a songwriter in Nashville with a string of hit songs, a couple of which he took to the country charts himself.

9. Toro Y Moi–As much as I enjoy Chaz Bundick’s other band I’m not even going to mention them here because this bedroom side project has meant much more to his career (and Columbia’s currency on the international music scene, if it has any). Causers Of This, released back in the beginning of 2010, has immediately secured a spot on my list of the best albums ever by a Columbia act, and one that’s bound to inspire countless kids in bedrooms across not just South Carolina, but the world.

10. Jack Williams–Okay, he doesn’t live in Columbia or even South Carolina any more but there’s no songwriter alive whose music is more intricately entwined in our state’s history, topography, and culture. Since 1997′s Across The Winterline Williams has been releasing album after album of captivating, folksy observations on southern life, and life in general, and touring all over the country.

2010 Free Times Music Crawl Wrap-Up

If there has been a better day of music in the Capitol City before yesterday, I’d be hard pressed to name it. With the Columbia Blues Festival, the Congaree Bluegrass Festival, the Chili Cook-Off, and the Italian Festival all featuring live music during the day, it’s hard to believe that the Free Times Music Crawl that evening seemed to have an even bigger crowd than usual.

As a contributor to the music coverage of the Columbia Free Times, Music Crawl night for me is kind of like Christmas for local music, in my eyes…35 bands, six stages of music, all that’s missing is a baby in a manger or a fat guy in a red suit. My goal as always is to see as many of the acts as possible in the time allowed (seven hours between 7 pm and 2 am), and this year I was able to get to at least a couple songs from 23 of the Crawl participants. My random thoughts about each are below, including video of a bunch of them (mostly of the earlier bands as the battery on the camera died around eleven.), in roughly chronological order:

Sweet Vans: Chosen to kick off this year’s Crawl as the lone 7 pm act, this joke-rap duo added some live band effects to the mix along with a whole bunch of expletives…not exactly a family-friendly start to the outside stage but Will and Bakari were clever enough to open with a bit that referenced Free Times:

Kemp Ridley: I’ll go ahead and label this band “most improved” in town over the past year, they’re light years ahead of the early sets I witnessed last winter. the can’t-take-your-eyes-off-her Cayla Fralick is still the visual centerpiece but musically they have grown from being “Cayla’s backing band” to a fully integrated unit that’s cranking out some fine ensemble playing.

The Mercy Shot: Thomas Crouch has found a new vehicle for the sputtering punk mayhem he used to foment back in F-13 days with this garage-rock gorilla of a trio. Loudest set of the night, I think (though I missed Tunguska, so maybe not.)

CherryCase: Billed as the band but actually just singer and songwriter Jake Etheridge playing solo acoustic, it was a little hard to let the warm fuzzy feelings of his songs envelop you with the football game noise bleeding through from the next room, but Etheridge did have a small cadre of devoted listeners.

Death Of Paris: Blake and Jayna from This Machine Is Me returned to the Art Bar outside stage with their new band, which sounded a lot like the old band only with a few more synth textures and more of a focus on the dance side of their dance-rock equation.

Pinna: The extended grooves of a Pinna song are the kind of things a listener can get caught up in easily, and guitarist George Fetner puts his classical training to good use without going all prog-rock on us, either.

Kingslyn: No matter what Erich Skelton does band-wise, it always comes out sounding like him, so the fact that this was his latest ‘band’ wasn’t as important as the fact that they were playing new Skelton songs from the band’s recent debut.

Coma Cinema: My first scheduling casualty of the night, I only caught about two minutes of these bedroom rockers’ last song, but it was a glorious 120 seconds that made me want to hear more, soon.

Haley Dreis: She has a new accompanist on acoustic guitar and backing vocals since I last saw her play, but that doesn’t change the delicately strong tunes. The two I heard, Dreis played violin on, including one which she said was the first time she would be singing while playing it.

Whiskey Tango Revue
: The most ‘country’ sounding band on the bill, featuring steel guitar and a twang-laden girl singer.

Today the Moon, Tomorrow The Sun: As close to an accidental sighting as I got this year, I went to the Art Bar out of order for another band and this Atlanta group was rocking out so hard I stuck around for a song…watch the video, the girl playing keyboards looks like she’s having sex right there on stage.

The Unawares: Basic garage rock doesn’t get much more fun in this town than the blink-and-you-miss-them punk anthems of The Unawares. Managed to get two songs of theirs on video only because they’re both less than two minutes long.

Shallow Palace: Finally, a band that didn’t have to worry about extraneous noises disrupting their set at the Sly Fox…

Kenley Young & the Open Fires: Best thing about this set was probably the number of fellow musicians from other bands in attendance, Young is a popular guy among them with good reason–his songs.

Mac Leaphart & His Ragged Company: if the Stones reference in his band’s name didn’t give it away, be warned that this Charlestonian’s full band lineup is a little different than the acoustic singer-songwriter sound he’s sometimes heard playing at local rounds. Stomping like Waylon Jennings and cranking out some serious country-rock boogie, Leaphart’s set is where the Tin Roof crowd started waking up and having a party.

DayClean: One of the highlights of the evening had to be the mellow melodies of this duo of rapper-guitarist and singer-cellist. You’ve heard jazz-rap, hick-hop, and other less appetizing misuses of hip-hop’s forms, but classical-rap? It works even though it shouldn’t, really.

Daylight Hours: Every time I see David Adedokun I kick myself for not doing so on a more regular basis…one of Columbia’s finest songwriters, and he attracts a pretty decent band with members of Madison Fair, Magnetic Flowers, and Baumer put to excellent use.

The Restoration: The high point of the Music Crawl had to be the set from these Lexington historical fiction afficionados, whose literate, Falulknerian turn-of-the-century string band tunes seem unlikely crowd favorites. Maybe it was the odd configuration of the Tin Roof’s room but the crowd was packed in down front for the Restoration’s set and even the pretty girls standing up in the booth were singing along happily to such sunny lyrics as “I’m really gonna die.” A friend remarked that it seemed like one of those crazy Jump, Little Children shows from back in their more acoustic but no less popular days.

Dylan Sneed: To put a sensitive singer-songwriter type like Sneed near midnight in a venue where half the crowd seemed more into the football than the Crawl could have been a disaster, but the Texas transplant (currently living in Hartsville) soldiered through it admirably, playing several of his more upbeat tunes but not leaving out the quieter numbers that are his forte.

Magnetic Flowers:
There’s nothing quiet about a Magnetic Flowers set, and they were in fine form throughout their time on stage at the Flying Saucer, complete with a crowd that became almost a part of the performance as they sang along to every song.

John Wesley Satterfield and his Damn Fine Band: It’s not bragging if you can do it, and Satterfield’s band for this set included not only regular guitar foil Herbie Jeffcoat but temporary bassist Les Hall, who’s much more than a bass player. If you can get Villanova drummer Jeremy Roberson to come on stage during your set just to sing backing vocals on a song or two, you have a truly damn fine band on your hands.

Papa String Band: My ten minute per band template for most of the evening meant that I only got to hear one tune from this local jam band, in this case a textbook rendition of “I Know You Rider.”

Josh Roberts & the Hinges: It has become a Music Crawl tradition (at least for me) to close out the night with Roberts, and on this particular Crawl it seemed like many of the other bands had the same idea, as the crowd was heavily weighted with musicians who had been on stage themselves at some point in the evening. Roberts didn’t disappoint, catching fire on several extended instrumental guitar solo interludes and playing to the crowd with a set-closing stomp through an early favorite, “Nautilus.”

The Misses: the worst thing about a night like Music Crawl is that you miss almost as much as you see, and though I had plans to see more, the schedule just wouldn’t allow it. I was there on time for Say Brother but they took too long soundchecking for me to hang around for the actual set; I missed most of the Wet Willie’s bands due to falling a bit behind–to catch up I had to cut The Dirty White, Postcard Fiction, David Reed, and Fat Rat da Czar out of my list…next year, guys. Ditto to American Gun, Venice Is Sinking, Calculator, and Preach. I missed at least one due to mis-reading my own notes and going to the wrong place at the wrong time, sorry to Death Becomes Even The Maiden for that.

Overall, I’d put this year’s Music Crawl at or near the top of the list of ‘best’ ones; can’t wait until next year…