ooc: Narrator will be in bold, the band will be in regular print, and scenes will be in italics.
Part 1: We All Gotta Start Some Where
The scene is set with a few pictures of the their home town and the hills around it. It's nothing special to look at but naturally there is more to some places than meets the eye. As the few shots fade into few the sound of a distorted guitar marching along can be heard over it. A ballad type tune of sorts that is being created and ad-libbed. Johnny's voice comes in to narrate with the pictures as they come into view.Johnny: It was different. This is the type of area we grew up in. Beautiful to look at but not much in the way of being real metropolitan. We did what most guys our age did. Well versed in the outdoors you could say. Swimming, camping, and all that fun stuff. But I can remember music being a part of us just as much as the land was.
Johnny: I grew up out here mostly. This is where the band practiced and we do a lot of our recording there most of the time. It's come a long way from where it used to be. It really was the important link in the band. That big link in the chain you could say. It's gotta special place for us.
Johnny: But if my house was the chain this was the glue. Yep, that's my home town and there wasn't much to do on a weekend. You could play music or party your ass off. We kind of did both. But yeah, it's funny how it all worked out. We all kind of grew up together. So the chemistry was already there.
Johnny's voice fades out as a nondescript narrator sort of takes over for him. We being to see pictures of the high school where the guys went to school. There's a few pictures showing them playing together and hanging out. One of them is of them standing around a fire and drinking beer. Another photo features Johnny standing in the back of a pick-up truck pretending to play a shotgun like a guitar with a cigarette dangling from his mouth. Oddly enough though the band picture is actually a three piece.Narrator: Johnny McDougal and Joe Anderson were the two founding members of the punk rock group now known as "Those Meddling Kids." They grew up in a small West Virginia town together. Mack McKenzie came into the band a year later and took over Joe's bass playing duties. He was a childhood friend that had moved back into town after his parents had gotten a job in the area once more.
Along with a common friendship they had similar tastes in music. The band was formed in the early summer of 98 when the boys were 13. Drummer Clyde Bonner, cousin of Anderson, rounded out the trio who at the time was known as "Mudd Flap and The Cruzers." They weren't entirely serious about being the band that they are now.Johnny: We largely considered ourselves a joke band really. Sure we all played our instruments fairly well. But we stripped down to the bare minimum. There was a general agreement to go the way of The Dead Milkmen and write songs in that manner. Ninjas, Pirates, Zombies, Kool-Aid, or whatever we could think up that would be a pretty fucking funny song subject was spit out.
Joe: Everything was kind of fair game then. If it was stupid we made a song about it or just if we thought it was cool. We went as far as writing songs that made fun of each other. Most of those though are songs we probably won't ever release. Just because they're that sentimental. Even if they're personal and poking fun at something that happened between us.
Johnny: We have a song that we used to do at our soundchecks for local shows called "Clyde's Stuck In The Toilet"
Joe: Long story short. Clyde went to McDonald's and went to the bathroom to unload. Well, there was no toilet paper. You do the math.
Clyde: You really look like a moron trying to reach under the stalls with your pants still around your ankles. *They all laugh together.*
Narrator: As mentioned earlier Mack McKenzie joined the band a year later. He was given the bass playing duties over Joe whose primary instrument was guitar. Though he was good at both instruments he largely considered himself a fill in until a better one came along. Mack was the perfect fit for the band and barely had to audition to join.Mack: I pretty much just heard they had a band now. Walked up and asked to play. They were like sure dude! It helped that we knew each other I guess.
Joe: As soon as I heard Mack wanted to play he was in. Turned out to be a good decision in the long run. Dude bangs a bass like Claypool. So that was pretty much how the band was formed into its current state. Sort of....
Narrator: Trying to juggle between playing local and area shows on the weekend on top of going to school. It proved difficult as many times classes were spent catching up on sleep. It's said that the new name came to them through Johnny's father after the four of them had gotten trouble for playing a prank at school.Johnny: We would travel at least a distance of 3 hours or more to play shows. There was a following there even if we didn't take ourselves too seriously. The drive was to be the greatest joke band in the area. At least until high school was over.
Joe: Sometimes stuff would break down or not work. It'd make it ten times harder. Then we'd have to go back to school like in the next day or so. Lotta wasted study halls that we slept through and most classes. We did our best really.
Mack: Our grades were all slipping big time. So we were thinking of all just quitting together. Getting our GED's.
Clyde: I don't know how we managed to scrape by and graduate. But we had conspired to all quit together so we wanted to do something memorable as a send off.
Johnny: Hence the band name.
Johnny: We had decided to rig up some home made stink bombs. Set them to blow off in the vents. Also we had rigged the microphone for the announcements to explode flour. So the principal got a faceful of it and we stunk up the school. However we forgot about the security cameras.
Joe: Two week suspension. They were pretty harmless pranks though. The principal actually didn't sue us or anything. He was a good sport about it later on. The stink bombs not so much.
Johnny: My dad was so pissed at us at first but he was trying to be angry and not find it hilarious at the same time. "You damned meddling kids!" He yelled it at me and well it stuck. I told the guys and we agreed that it would be our name permanently. Though we've considered name changes. However, this one is just us. It's who we are and changing it now would kind of tarnish a legend I guess. *He laughs.*
Narrator: The new name came with some minor changes to the band's current repertoire of playing mostly songs that were meant to be laughed and tongue-in-cheek sort of tunes to something slightly different. After Johnny got his hands on a Sublime cd given to him by a friend. This is what later lead to the band's major influence as he passed the album along between the boys in the band.Johnny: I set it on random because I didn't want to hear it in order and wanted to be surprised. The first song I heard was "Santeria" and I was just blown away. When I got through with the rest of the record I realized that later on down the road I wanted the band to go that direction of not being specifically genre defined. It was something the rest of us agreed on. But it was the first serious song we actually played during a show.
Joe: It was a welcome experience to play something new that wasn't really what the band normally did. The reaction we got made us want to take the band more seriously. As an actual playing band and not just a joke band of sorts.
Mack: We wanted something we could get behind really. This seemed to be the rallying point when we started becoming more musically active. Practices were more intense and we wanted to record some demos that stepped away from our normal approach of being silly. It was at that point when we became more politically active as well and the sound changed to a haphazard distortion of over reverbed guitar to something a bit more polished. We were sort of channeling Rise Against and other activist bands fueled by our teen angst.
Clyde: Something changed and our songs began to really mean something. We sang about blue collar injustices, the plight of rural existence, and everything that we grew up with. Seeing men and people we love kind of broke down by the establishment.
Narrator: That direction would stick with the band through the rest of their career as they tried desperately to make it on the underground scene. It would come after a demo got into the hands of a local record producer and owner of small time indie label "Flying Boxcar Records" that would lead to their rise into stardom. At 18 years of age and fresh out of high school the boys would be playing first major shows courtesy of the Vans Warped Tour. Things were just getting started. OOC: Part 2 coming soon. Thought it would be longer, sorry guys.
Edited by user 24 June 2011 03:08:52(UTC)
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