So far, RBF aren't feeling any of the heat -- other than the hot
stuff the summer sun provides -- and are busy in a Los Angeles
studio adding horns to the twenty songs the septet has begun
recording, seventeen of which will make the final cut. "We're still
trying to figure out what we're doing," says RBF vocalist/trumpet
player Scott Klopenstein. "It's what we have been trying to figure
out -- the mix between pop, ska and rock, and really getting a mix
of the three."
The band is considering several titles for the album, though
Fun in the Sun falls off the tip of Klopenstein's tongue.
"We're procrastinators," he says. "We don't figure anything out
until the deadline and [the powers that be] are like, 'we have to
have an answer now.' [We'll say], 'Oh, we'll do it this way, OK?
How's that? You happy now? You have your answer.'"
Once again, John Avala (Oingo Boingo), who co-produced Turn the
Radio Off with RBF, is manning the console with the group.
"He's probably one of the nicest, most patient people I've ever
met," Klopenstein says. "We're not into too many producers, and we
don't know too much about we're doing. We just knew we wanted to do
it ourselves and John was somebody we definitely trusted."
So far, Klopenstein is particularly enthralled with the tracks
"Somebody Hates Me," which he ironically calls "extremely festive,"
and another with the working title "Song 3." "We figure Fugazi had
a "Song #1," Blur had "Song 2", Reel Big Fish can have "Song #3,"
he explains.
He also says the album has a theme of sorts. "[On Turn the
Radio Off] we've been complaining about making it big, being
successful and being in a rock & roll band," he says, "and this
[new album] is what happened. These are our songs from the road.
This is all the stuff we wrote while we were on the road and
learning to do this wacky, wacky, wacky thing."
Among the wackiness is the decision to record a slew of cover tunes
the band has played live but never gotten on tape. Reel versions of
the Cure's "Boys Don't Cry," Lita Ford's "Kiss Me Deadly" and
Sublime's "D.J.s" may appear on Fun in the Sun B-sides or
a future all-covers album. "We like playing other people's songs,"
Klopenstein says. "We get bored playing ours."
Reel Big Fish have been in the studio for more than a month now and
expect to finish recording in mid-July. The album is slated to hit
stores by October and the road beckons soon after.
BLAIR R. FISCHER
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.