In reality, the Atlanta-based Marvelous 3 have spent the better
part of a decade struggling to build a grassroots following with a
combination of relentless touring (more than 200 shows a year) and
self-produced independent releases on their own Marvelous Records.
"It's pretty much been driving our own beat-up van and humping our
gear by ourselves in a different state every night to four or five
faces and in a different bar every night," explains
singer-guitarist Butch Walker. "And so this is not
a Cinderella story, but it's a good thing that it's happened so
fast."
A decade of incessant touring isn't exactly what most people would
regard as fast, but what transformed their years of struggling into
an overnight success was the decision of Atlanta's influential
alternative rock station 99X to champion the band's "Freak of the
Week." What followed was a major label deal, slots on high-profile
tours (Eve 6 and an upcoming stint with Collective Soul), an
appearance on the Late Show With David Letterman and the
opportunity to leave the van behind and get on a real tour bus.
"Without it sounding like a sob story, we have given
twenty-four/seven, 365 on this for about ten years now," Walker
says. "And if this is my fifteen minutes I'll enjoy every bit of it
until I have to go back to the van."
Walker, bassist Jayce Fincher and drummer
Slug have been playing together in various
incarnations over the years, each of which produced its own albums
and toured extensively. With the radio success of their second
album, Hey Album, the majors came running. Elektra wanted
to re-release Hey Album exactly as it was, but the band
wanted to enhance the indie version. Enlisting producer Jim
Ebert (Jason Falkner, Meredith Brooks) they re-cut bass
and drums to go with the original vocals and guitars. The result is
an unlikely blend of skinny-tie New Wave, arena-sized Cheap
Trick-isms, dashes of hair-metal and Queen-styled bombast. "We were
all Top 40 junkies growing up," Walker says. "We liked anything
from the [most obscure] metal, to the lamest pop rock like the
Knack and Rick Springfield ... when you're a kid they're gods. You
either love it or hate it, and for better or worse we loved
it."
Unlike many indie bands of the early Nineties who graduated to
major labels and brought with them a confused attitude towards
success and the music industry, the Marvelous 3 know exactly what
they are getting themselves into and embrace what is expected of
them. "File me under anything. I don't care if you file me under
Top 40. I got into this to sell a lot of records and have a million
people appreciate my art. I want people to love my songs. It seems
like you've got to defend that these days. It's weird."
DAVID DERBY(March 9, 1999)
Email
Stumble
AIM
Del.icio.us
DiggThis
Fark It!

- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.