| "You could
consider the sound alt-country, but then you would be leaving
out a lot of stuff: bombastic beats, rock riffage, punk attitude.
Watching Collin Herring perform live, its hard to take your eyes
away from the stage." And now this Fort Worth Weeklys critical
darling is set to break out his own unique brand of dark, haunting
music that defies categorization with his dynamic sophomore CD,
"The Other Side of Kindness". Springing from
his love of his homeland and its people, Collin is set to crash
through Texas borders with a daring new album that at once embraces
Southern traditions, yet also bravely defies them. Leave your
expectations at the door. . .Collin Herring has arrived.
Collin Herring has been playing guitar and
writing his own compositions since the 8th grade. Growing up in
a musical family, Collin was exposed to essential rootsy singer-songwriters
like Willis Alan Ramsey, Tom Jans, Steve Goodman and John Prine
by his father, Ben Roi Herring, who very much influenced Collins
own craft. But after a stint away in school in Durango, Colorado,
where Collin worked in a CD store, he was turned on to an eclectic
variety of music that included Son Volt, Alejandro Escovedo, Richard
Buckner, The Jayhawks, and Drive-By Truckers. It was this vast
blend of influences that has come to shape and define Collin Herrings
own diverse musical style.
After leaving Durango and returning to Fort
Worth, Collin began assembling his eccletic mix of a band. Ironically,
he had asked his father to become a part of the group based on
one critical stipulation. Sure, Ben Roi could sing harmony and
play keyboards, roles that he had easily filled in the past. But
this time he had to learn to play the pedal steel if he wanted
in on his sons antics, an instrument that daunts and frightens
even the most grizzled of session cats and road vets alike. "I
wanted a rock band to get my songs across, but I pay attention
to anything with steel in it, so I needed that as well. I didnt
know any steel players, so I asked my dad to learn, not thinking
that he would take it on. Next thing I know, hes got three of
them and is cutting tracks not only my record but on friends of
mines albums, too!" In addition to Ben Roi, Collins core
constituents include classically trained bassist Jeremy Hull,
high school friend and guitarist Austin Barker, and drummer Billy
Walters, who collectively captured Collins unique sound and assembled
the debut album "Avoiding the Circus".
Recorded entirely live so that Collin could
achieve the "unproduced sound" he sought, the record
was produced and engineered by Matt Pence (Centro-matic, The Polyphonic
Spree, American Music Club) at his secluded studio south of Denton.
Acclaimed by Harp Magazine as "one hell of a debut,"
Avoiding the Circus was declared Album of the Year by the Fort
Worth Weekly, and Collin himself was simultaneously named Best
New Artist (2003). The Star Telegrams Malcolm Mayhew also listed
the album as one of the Top 5 Local Records of the Year, and his
songs have been featured on compilation albums for the Midpoint
Music Festival, Miles of Music and the North Texas New Music Festival.
Ironically, Collins biggest musical frustrations
came from the very state he loves. More often than not, Collin
found himself playing darker, more introspective music than the
bands for which he inevitably would be opening. As such, Collin
realized that the challenge for his band would be to produce an
album that would separate him from the Texas scene, while still
remaining true to the homeland of which he so much remains a part.
Collin had songs in his head that had been stewing for some time
and they touched on loneliness, heartache, distance and alcohol-fueled
regret...classic country themes all, but sonically he wanted enough
crunch-laden guitars to put a knife in and the pedal steel to
twist it.
In order to accomplish this, Matt Pence hooked
Collin up with acclaimed producer Stuart Sikes (The White Stripes,
Modest Mouse, Loretta Lynn), who agreed to produce Collins second
album after hearing his debut. Whereas "Circus" was
recorded by a new band full of friends (and one parent) anxious
to get their sound on tape, "Kindness" proves to be
a more layered and sophisticated affair, one that could only come
from a band thats played hundreds of shows together, tightening
and honing their sound but also absorbing influences that only
a few broke down tours and life lessons can provide. With Sikes
at the helm, the new album organically came together in less than
two weeks. Included on the 10 track release are 5 tunes originally
recorded by Collin in his apartment on a four-track Tascam, a
virtual relic by todays recording standards. The recording was
entitled "The Christmas Sweater EP" and was
given to family members and friends as a Christmas gift from a
"financially challenged" artist. Little did Collin know
at the time that those tunes would become the heart and soul of
"The Other Side of Kindness", and it would be the intimate
eclecticism of that home-spun project that Stuart Sikes would
recapture to showcase the uniqueness and diversity of styles that
Collin pulls off so effortlessly.
"The Other Side of Kindness"
is very much indicative of Collins life and experiences since
the release of his debut album. On top of the extensive touring,
the band played SXSW and at Bostons equivalent festival, NEMO
in 2004. Currently preparing for his second appearance at SXSW,
Collin is spending his daytime hours as a gallery attendant at
the Amon Carter Museum of Western Art in Fort Worth, keeping evenings
open for rehearsals and performing. "Its the simplest job
Ive ever had; its cool because Im surrounded by art all day, and
about the hardest thing I ever have to do is tell the occasional
visitor that wed prefer that they stand at least 12 inches from
the paintings." Ever the writer, he of course keeps pen and
notebook handy and is currently crafting a new collection of work
based on the variety of art which surrounds him.
Collin Herring is a Texas artist who loves
his home and all that it represents - but his soul and his music
extend much more universally beyond those borders. And now, with
the release of "The Other Side of Kindness",
Collin Herring is ready to break out and show the rest of the
world his beautiful and singularly passionate talent - one that
comes from a true labor of love - for music, for family, and for
the sheer simple joys of life.
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