Don’t let the
first track from Bixby Lane’s sophomore effort CD “Us” fool you. Though it
may sound like it, they’re not an emo band. It’s not that they’re fickle,
they just have a wide range of musical influences to draw from. Influences
ranging from The Beatles to Miles Davis to Radiohead create the band’s
pleasurable mix of pop and rock.
Guitarist Jeff Viets describes: “We’re a rock band at heart.
We make rock music and try to give our audience something to dance to.”
Just take a look at the band’s danceable opening track “That’s Over Now”. A
clever title to a song that appears first on a CD. This tune grabs
you like a hook to a fish complete with a mimicked Fall Out Boy proclivity
in the vocals. Can’t be for sure but it seems to me if you’re taking
“That’s Over Now” too seriously you’re missing the point? “Exactly!” says
trumpeter/guitarist/lead vocalist John Wirt. “I love the emo bands out
there right because it totally reminds me of this new generation’s
adaptation of the ‘hair bands’ that were big when I was growing up as a
kid. We’re not an emo band by any means but this song just sort of wrote
itself one night and we thought it would be entertaining. The song is
completely as serious as it is not serious. The spiteful
nature of the lyrics definitely shouldn’t be taken to heart.”
The second track on the CD “I’ll Not Stand in the Way” shifts
almost 180 degrees from the first track. Instead of a blazing sawtooth
keyboard lead and an up tempo beat, this songs starts with just voice and
piano. “It’s a lot for the listener to take in,” says bassist Rick
Willoughby. “We just didn’t want to pigeon-hole ourselves into saying ‘okay
we’re only going to play this kind of music’ or ‘we’re only going to
play that kind of music’. We all listen to so many different styles
of music and find an appreciation in all of it.”
The band unquestionably wears many hats. “Sometimes,” says
drummer Giuliano Mingucci, “we prefer to show our jazz influences as in
songs like Miss Construed and The Top.” This brings us to the other lead
vocalist/keyboardist/pianist and composer of the aforementioned songs,
Jeremy Watson. “John’s style of writing and my style of writing are
comparatively different,” says Watson, “but we certainly meet somewhere in
the middle.”
The drums and piano on this disc were recorded by Eric
Summers at Berry Music Group in Kansas City but the rest of the CD was
recorded and mixed by the band’s own Giuliano Mingucci who spent hours upon
hours at the mixing board to get the sound just right. “It’s a good thing
that I don’t charge these guys by the hour!” says Mingucci. The CD was then
mastered by audio engineer Don C. Tyler in Los Angeles, CA whose roster
includes The Barenaked Ladies, Beck, James Blunt, and The Rolling Stones
among scores of others. The striking art on the CD was created by Bill
Phelan.
The new disc also features a string quartet in the mix.
“This was a new step for us,” says Viets. “Maybe we’ll start leaning more
in this direction…who knows?” Right now the band is quite focused on where
they’ll lean in the future. But they’re also in the now…in the
moment. And they hope you’ll come along too, on a ride where all are
welcome.