The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features

Urge Overkill return to settle the rock score

Re-saturation
By DANIEL BROCKMAN  |  June 29, 2011

Urge Overkill boston music 
HAVANA HOLIDAY “We had to get away from it, we needed a break, not just from the band but from the music business and everything that goes with it,” says Urge Overkill’s Nash Kato (left).

Sometimes the problem with dreams of rock stardom is that they come true — because, like all lamp-rubbing genie tales, the "coming true" part can materialize in ways that make the whole wish seem ill-conceived in the first place. For Chicago hook-heavy crew Urge Overkill, who come to T.T. the Bear's on July 9, years spent assuming the posture of rock gods were scant preparation for the real thing. Especially since — once the stakes got real — the small-time disappointments and hijinks of their lean days turned into major disappointments and life-threatening, friendship-destroying fuck-ups.


Nathan "Nash Kato" Kaatrud and Ed "King" Roeser are in a far better place — musically and personally — in 2011 than they
have been in a long time. In part it's because they have a slamming new UO record, Rock & Roll Submarine (Redeye Label) that is finally resuscitating interest in the band (the current line-up also includes Mike "Hadji" Hodgkiss on bass and drummer Brian "Bonn" Quast). But mostly it's because, after having weathered the brutal disappointment and acrimony that followed the band's mid-'90s drug-fueled meltdown, they are back together as songwriters, rockers, and friends.

"At the time, after Urge," explains Roeser, "I was like, 'Shit, man, I was in a great band, and it's probably not going to happen twice.' And then it took a number of years — it was categorically impossible to play with this other person, and then that changed." Nash, chiming in on the same phone call, agrees: "It was just 'game over.' We had to get away from it, we needed a break, not just from the band but from the music business and everything that goes with it. Maybe we could have manned up and toughed through it, but it could have been disastrous — and one of us could not be here talking to you."

What's remarkable about the band's late -90s nadir is that if we take the time machine to just a scant five years before, Urge Overkill were on top of the world. After years slugging it out in indie-land, morphing from an Albini-esque noise band to a full-on rock machine, their world started to change. Accolades for 1991's Supersonic Storybook turned into a major-label bidding war, resulting in opening slots on Nirvana's Nevermind tour and Pearl Jam's Vs tour, all part of the ramp-up to the Geffen release of what was surely to be one of 1993's biggest albums, Saturation.

The high hopes were warranted: Saturation is filled front-to-back with radio-ready missiles that avoid the woe-is-me bullshit that hampers most early-'90s rock. Lead single "Sister Havana" piled up catchy riffs, tight rock action, and dramatic arena-ready hooks; "Positive Bleeding" oozed charisma and bounce; and "Bottle of Fur" poured a strong cocktail of dapper nonchalance mixed with classic-rock heft. It didn't hurt that Urge had a striking image — suits and ties with often-matching UO gold medallions. They cloaked their rock in a narrative of band-as-suave-playboys, a refreshing antidote to the then-prevailing alt-lumberjack nation.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Slideshow: The Hush Now, You Could Be a Wesley at T.T. Bear's, Slideshow: The Thermals at the Middle East downstairs, Something for everyone, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , rock, Nash Kato, T.T. the Bear's,  More more >
| More
Add Comment
HTML Prohibited

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 08/16 ]   Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra conducted by Nicholas McGegan  @ Tanglewood Music Center, Seiji Ozawa Hall
[ 08/16 ]   Trent Burleson: "Birds and Other Metaphors"  @ Newport Art Museum
ARTICLES BY DANIEL BROCKMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE YOUNG PUNK BLOOD OF DENMARK'S ICEAGE  |  August 10, 2011
    The big conundrum at the center of the Iceage phenomenon is one of intentionality: could vocalist Elias Rønnenfelt and Co. really have known what they were doing when they crafted New Brigade's thorny morass of no-wave HC effects-laden kicks?  
  •   EMA FINDS HERSELF IN POP'S GRITTY DEPTHS  |  July 13, 2011
    It's a paradoxical yet undeniable truth: sometimes in order to rise above, you need to bottom out. Erika M. Anderson, now doing business as EMA, could be a poster child for the phenomenon.
  •   GANG GANG DANCE TRIP THE LIGHT FANTASTIC  |  July 07, 2011
    Some musicians craft songs meant to elicit an emotion, and some fashion sonic mazes for the listener to get lost in. Over the course of a decade-plus career in shape-shifting psych, Brooklyn's Gang Gang Dance have found a way to do both.
  •   OREGON  |  July 07, 2011
    Unknown Mortal Orchestra
  •   KENTUCKY  |  July 07, 2011
    Sleeper Agent

 See all articles by: DANIEL BROCKMAN

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed