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With the average person changing careers every
five to seven years, it is astonishing that the Nadas have been together
and touring for twelve years. “A lot of bands don’t stay
together for more than twelve weeks,” jokes Mike Butterworth, singer
guitarist and co-founder of the band. When asked why The Nadas have persevered,
Jason Walsmith singer, guitarist, co-founder says, “We love it.
And we’re pretty pig headed.” The Nadas are rounded out by
Justin Klein on drums and Jon Locker on bass.
Heralded in 2004 by Playboy as "The Best
College Rock Band You've Never Heard Of," the Nadas have carved
a thriving career out of what was once their college pastime, consistently
filling clubs and colleges across the country selling more than 75,000
albums through their own Authentic Records.
The Nadas' Listen through the Static is their
fifth studio album and seventh overall. Listen through the Static is
the second effort with producers Todd and Toby Pipes of Deep Blue Something
and mixed by Grammy award winner Stuart Sikes (White Stripes, Loretta
Lynn).
“We had such a great time working with
the Pipes. We knew we wanted to do this record and with them as well.” Butterworth
explains. “We (Mike and Jason) wrote collaboratively most of the
songs on Static,” Jason adds. “We hadn’t written together
that much in the past and wanted to try it. It worked well.” The
collaboration on the album resulted in a more cohesive and straight ahead
rock and roll record than past releases.
Listen through the static is eleven new tracks
featuring the title track which explodes into a chorus about today's
struggle to find something palatable on the radio. Listen through the
Static is by far the band's finest effort to date.
"The fans, the fans, the fans," says
Mike Butterworth, when asked what has kept his band going a remarkable
10 years. "The fans… and a lot of coffee," adds Jason
Walsmith. Certainly, it has not been easy, but The Nadas have carved
a thriving career out of their college pastime, consistently filling
clubs across the country and selling more than 50,000 albums through
their own Authentic Records.
The Nadas' latest achievement is "Transceiver," their
fourth studio album and sixth overall. Produced by Todd and Toby Pipes
of Deep Blue Something and mixed by Stuart Sikes (The White Stripes,
The Promise Ring), the record is the band's best yet blend of Butterworth's
rock 'n' roll intuitions and Walsmith's alt-country roots. If John Mayer
and Ryan Adams collaborated on an album, it might sound something like "Transceiver."
From the opening "Drowning," a Beatles-influenced
gem (and one of few Nadas songs written by Butterworth and Walsmith together),
to the closing "One More Chance," a tearjerker with a numbing
pulse, "Transceiver" is easily the band's most entertaining
and compelling record to date.
"The Pipes had fantastic energy and great
ideas, well, except for the whole kazoo through the Marshall episode, " jokes
Butterworth, recalling the three weeks spent in the Dallas studio owned
by the hit-making brothers. "Even though it drove us partially nuts,
they were able to realize the finished song before the pieces were all
in place. Our attitude ended up being, 'OK, we'll try it and see how
it turns out.' We didn't rerecord anything."
The adventurous sessions yielded an impressive
variety of songs. There's dance floor ditties, like the groovy "Feel
Better" and the bluegrassy "The River," next to tender
relationship tales, like "Now That I Found You," a duet between
Walsmith and his wife Stephanie, and "California II," a sequel
to a classic from 2000's "Coming Home."
And, like all Nadas albums, "Transceiver" features
a few instant hits, most notably "Diner" and "Hold On." The
latter includes a melody played on an antique Casio keyboard, just one
example of the bold sounds found on the record. The best, though, is
the CB chatter heard at the beginning of "Drowning," which
was accidentally recorded when vintage amplifiers picked up muffled conversations
from truck drivers crossing a nearby interstate.
The album's title comes from that recording
tidbit, as in a "Transceiver" is a device that both transmits
and receives. However, one could say the same about The Nadas. Since
Butterworth and Walsmith joined forces a decade ago in Ames, Iowa, the
band has been both transmitting (music) and receiving (motivation --
from the fans, the fans, the fans).

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