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Damone
Band Bio
Damone
is:
Noelle (vocals/guitar) Dave Pino (guitar/vocals)
Vazquez (bass/vocals) Dustin Hengst (drums)
In
the year 2001, a rock and roll band was formed in Waltham, Massachusetts--a
working-class suburb of Boston--with a curious mandate.
Their purpose was to perform the music of a guitarist and songwriter by
the name of Dave Pino. Although Dave had become something of a Waltham
legend in recent years, he was wholly unknown outside of the metro-Boston
area, and his songs had never been commercially released. It is not inaccurate
to say the band--now called Damone, after a character in the film Fast
Times at Ridgemont High--formed on a lark. Dave and bassist Vazquez were
part of a small, tightly-knit community of small-town rockers who were
just insulated enough from the rest of the world to invent their own musical
language.
"The reason I got into music," Vazquez once said, "is because
in fourth grade Dave Pino brought an acoustic guitar to school and played
'La Bamba,' and all the girls suddenly wanted to hang out with him. So
I went out and bought a guitar the next day."
Dustin Hengst had spent a few years recording and playing drums in other
bands with Dave. The latter and Vasquez already knew Noelle because she
was the younger sister of a good friend. Noelle was playing in basement
hardcore bands with her brother, and her presence was conspicuous at Waltham's
prime teenage party hangout. In short, Noelle was the classic tag-along,
tomboyish little sister.
The original Damone demos were recorded in Watham, with the songs having
been written much earlier. Culled from a batch of about 80 songs Dave
wrote in 1996 and 1997 when he was 18 years old and working at the Waltham
Carwash--a location that figures prominently in his writing--they were
written specifically for an ex-girlfriend after a break up.
"She
was really friggin' hot, dude," says Dave. "Anybody woulda written
80 songs for her." Dave Pino has dark long hair with bangs, and he
doesn't discourage anyone from referring to it as a mullet; his automotive
pride and joy is a '67 Camaro with a stereo that plays only 8-tracks;
he has his own basement studio in his parents' house which he paid for
by recording rich-kid punk bands; and he speaks with a heavy, yah-dood
townie accent, and every other word out of his mouth is "friggin'."
One Christmas, Dave delivered these 80 songs to his ex-girlfriend on multiple
formats: CD, cassette, and 8-track. The girl liked the songs but declined
to resume their romance. Dave, who takes a strict utlilitarian approach
to songwriting, took this as a sign that the songs were simply not good
enough, and consigned them to the dustbin.
Noelle is short in stature and painfully shy; she is legally blind in
one eye; and her face is perpetually hidden behind a tress of gangly,
nut-brown hair. Noelle came alive in the basement, which after all is
her natural habitat. With only minimal changes to Dave's songs--the flipping
of gender pronouns, mostly--Noelle found the material suited her perfectly.
As Phil Spector found his Crystals, Shadow Morton his Shangri-Las, Kim
Fowley his Runaways, Dave Pino's songs found their ideal singer in Noelle.
"Dave was basically a 16-year-old girl when he was 18 years old,"
she likes to say, at least in part because it makes Dave mad. "I
can relate to these songs a lot. It's about, high school. It just gives
off that vibe, y'know
hanging out and smoking weed. They're really
girlie songs. Sappy and romantic " They're also really teenage songs,
fit to break your heart and spirit you up the half-pipe of your soul:
doleful and invigorating blasts of new-wave abandon, skate-punk frivolity
and '70s arena-metal heaven.
On the furious opening track, "Frustrated, Unnoticed (BMX),"
we're introduced to a new all-ages all-star-one raised on a steady diet
of Weezer and ESPN2. Noelle runs as fast as anyone she knows, she freestyles
wherever she goes and she doesn't cry when she falls. Elsewhere, she cleans
up after snotty girls who leave garbage strewn around the coin-op vacuum
pods and she dreams in stereo about a life that doesn't involve toweling
off I-ROCs. Her fantasy date? "In the day he can meet me in the park/BMX
all day until dark," she daydreams breezily on "Carwash Romance."
For a nightcap, they get high, ride their bikes to the car wash, and OD
on junk food. On "Up To You," she attempts to ask out a boy
without asking him out exactly and then hedges at the last second. And
when she finally gets around to an actual date, in "On My Mind,"
she can't get through it without her dad paging her "50 times for
every hour."
As if on cue, a bunch of people began proclaiming their love for the Damone
recordings. The underground disc was immediately embraced by critics and
garnered the group an almost instantaneous buzz. The Boston Globe described
the bands sound as "rooted in melodic, metallic crunch of the Muffs
and the early Go-Go's, and its indescribably refreshing to hear a teeeange
girl who actually sounds like a teenage girl and singing rock music about
the real business of being a teenager." In short order, they picked
up regional radio airplay and tour dates with the likes of Andrew W.K.,
Goldfinger, Injected, and Mooney Suzuki.
And then something funny happened, something that is too perfect to be
made up, something too strange to be anything but true. Five years after
Dave Pino wrote 80 songs for a girl, the girl called back. Scientists
are still divided on whether or not the songs played any part, but at
long last they reunited. The songs, Dave decided, were pretty good after
all
they worked.
With their major-label debut release on RCA--containing many of the original
recordings recorded in a Waltham basement--Damone are poised to take the
country by storm, one curb at a time.
Visit the official Damone band website
for more information about Damone.
Visit our Damone
Concert Tour Dates Page.
Tell us what you think of Damone
in concert.
Tell
us what you think of Damone's
new album.
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