After meeting the pilots backstage at a Chicago show last year,
Sister Hazel bassist Jeff Beres and rhythm
guitarist Andrew Copeland became enamored with the
Blue Angels enough to visit the Angels' El Centro, Calif., training
facility last week. Both Beres and Copeland got the opportunity to
play passenger in an FA-18 for an hour -- in fact, the Angels even
let them steer a little. "It was absolutely incredible," Copeland
says. "Right after we took off, we went vertical. It was
super-intense. It'll change your whole outlook on roller- coasters
or things that are supposed to be scary." Scary enough to churn
Andrew's stomach. "Oh, I did [vomit]," he readily admits. "I say
that with no shame. They say it happens all the time."
The members of the Florida-based quintet reconvened last week after
an extended break to begin preparations for their next album,
tentatively due out this summer. Almost totally devoid of publicity
or video play, the band's major label debut, Somewhere More
Familiar, quietly went platinum. "I think we'll do it louder
next time," says Copeland. "We were all pretty stressed about our
sophomore album, then we were like, you know, we're in a really
great position. Now we've got the budget and time we would've liked
to have had for the first one.
"You're probably gonna see a lot of maturity in the songwriting,
but we don't want it to sound too polished," he continues.
"Sometimes you wonder what people mean when they say, 'Man, your
live shows blow your record away.' You just think, 'God, our record
must suck!'"
If Sister Hazel's live show has an edge on their albums, it could
have something to do with the band having toured for four years
straight, something Copeland doesn't look back upon with complete
fondness. "It's kind of hard being with five guys every day on a
bus. I mean, you can imagine. Luckily, we all have good
relationships. I'm looking forward to [the next tour], but before
January it was like, 'Man, don't even think about getting me back
on the road.'"
Copeland figures the touring won't be quite as lengthy next time around, or the break between records quite as long. "There may be an acoustic or B-sides CD in between [the next record and the one after], we don't know," he says. "We're open to suggestions."
ALLISON STEWART(February 23, 1999)
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