For his part, vocalist/bassist Chris Kennedy
doesn't seem too concerned about the turbulence that Ruth Ruth, now
signed to RCA, have experienced in the past with
former labels, Ventrue and
Epitaph. Nor is he losing sleep over the loss of
drummer Dave Snyder, who was replaced by
Christian Nakata following that
musical-differences-thing that nearly destroyed the band.
Given the two years that have elapsed since famed hardcore label
Epitaph released the group's pop-punk blast Little Death,
one might assume the band was feeling the pressure to produce their
first hit this time out, or risk becoming "damaged goods" forever.
Not so, says Kennedy. "I felt a really great freedom writing for
[this] album," says Kennedy. "If there was any time to take a
gamble, do what we want to do, branch out with my writing, it was
now or never. I wanted to write a pop record more than I wanted to
write a punk record this time out.
"The first two albums [Laughing Gallery and Little
Death] were a reaction ... to playing live for a year
straight, kind of 'thrash-it-out' music," he continues. "But I
would never call Ruth Ruth a punk band, I just don't see that at
all, and with the new album we didn't want to do any repeating of
what we'd done before." Are You My Friend?, for the first
time, strays from the quartet's punk roots and contains different
elements and textures, such as sampled loops, assorted keyboard
flavors, and an overall pop bent.
Kennedy credits the sonic shift to his infatuation to the Rocky
Horror Picture Show rather than to the guidance of producer
Chris Shaw (Weezer, Tricky). "I've been to that
movie a million times, just like everyone else, but when I finally
bought the soundtrack, it made a huge difference in my
songwriting," he says. "I delved back into what I loved growing up
-- some Beach Boys, Beatles, Blondie, Cars, Jam.
All of that junk is in there somewhere."
Currently, the band is in the middle of a three-week tour of the
Midwest, working hard to get their live chops back after their
prolonged period of woodshedding and recording. "People who are
clued in to the band know about where we've been and that we've
been around for awhile," says Kennedy. As far as playing
blue-collar cities like Detroit, Cleveland and Chicago, "the fans
have been really good to us [there], but it's possible no one out
there will remember who Ruth Ruth are."
COREY DU BROWA(September 22, 1998)
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