"There's been no shortage of Rage comparisons, but we've got no
problem with that," says co-frontman Justin
Mauriello ("Goldtoof" to his friends). "They've called us
'Rage crossed with the Offspring,' too. But we love all those
bands, so it's okay. They could be saying a lot worse."
Based in Orange County, Calif., breeding ground for everyone from
Agent Orange to Bad Religion, the members of Zebrahead were each
playing in different bands when they first jammed together. Band
member Ben Osmundson suggested bringing in
Ali Tabatabaee, a high school friend whose rapping
soon transformed Zebrahead from a nascent junior version of the
Offspring to the funky, hard-edged hip-hop outfit they are
today.
"Orange County is so saturated with pop-punk bands, and that's what
all of our bands at the time were," Mauriello says. "We just wanted
something different; you know, with rapping, with singing, with
funk. Pretty soon we left our old bands and stuck with this one. It
went really smooth, actually. We feel like we kind of have our
niche now."
Soon after, Zebrahead struck a deal with small Orange County indie
Dr. Dream that led to a self-titled release
earlier this year and, eventually, a deal with Columbia
Records. Their first single, "Get Back," and a brief stint
on the Warped Tour have helped catapult Zebrahead into the modern
rock radio Top 40. "In the last couple months it's been amazing,"
Mauriello says. "We'd go to cities where there were, like, two
people who'd heard of us, and that was through the Internet or
something, and now we [come back through town] and everyone's
there, and they're singing along."
Besides making an appearance in the movie Clubland, the
upcoming directorial debut from Alanis Morissette producer
Glen Ballard, Zebrahead, who have been on the road
since last May, will be touring at least through the end of 1999.
The band will play supporting dates for Everlast, Goldfinger and
Reel Big Fish before launching a planned headlining tour later next
year. Their hard-to-pigeonhole, hard-rock-meets-alternative sound
has enabled the band to open up for everyone from Sevendust to
Cypress Hill to Harvey Danger over the past few months, something
Mauriello says he still can't believe.
"When we started this band, we never expected to have anything like
this happen," he says. "Just to hear our song on the radio is still
amazing to us."
ALLISON STEWART(December 18, 1998)
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