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S.T.U.N.
BIO
S.T.U.N.
BIOGRAPHY
Christiane
J. Lead vocals
Neil Spies Guitar, Vocals
Nick S. Bass
Bobby Alt Drums
Take the lyrical integrity of The Clash, combine it with the high-energy,
fearless-punk-sensibilities of The Sex Pistols, empower it with innovative
future soundscapes of bands such as The Pixies and S.F.A and youve
got an idea what S.T.U.N. is about. The four members of the band bring
music back to its essence with volume, reason and movement to create new
limits with Evolution of Energy, their Geffen/Interscope debut (June 24,
2003). Its aggressive, dangerous, and volatile. But its not
the 1-2-3-4 of the past; its punk circa 2003.
As a group, S.T.U.N. are unified in delivering a message, both through
their lyrics and through their music. Some of the topics S.T.U.N. deal
with on Evolution of Energy are the Governments growing control
of the globe through lies and deception, the healing power in finding
your own answers, the warning of the trap of blind compliance, the cowardess
and effect of judgment, and the celebration of love and chaos until equality
is accomplished. Their name says it all: its an acronym for Scream
Toward the Uprising of Non-Conformity. Influenced as much by linguist
Noam Chomsky and author Daniel Quinn as they are by The Clash or Janes
Addiction, S.T.U.Ns message is central to their music. Our
music is a call for unity and awareness, says Neil Spies, guitarist
and songwriter/lyricist. When I grew up, every effort was used to
force me to comply with the thought process that whoever was in authority
was right and thats rarely the truth. Were here to
prove that if you are brave enough to fight adversity for what you believe
in that you will have your own message to send that will enlighten the
world.
Were
not pushing opinions on anyone everyone should question everything,
and make decisions for themselves, Spies continues. We feel
that we have a responsibility, though. When I was a kid, music saved and
taught me you cant feel more alive then when you are part of revolution.
When we talk to the kids, they really seem to be starving for a band to
fight the play it safe, fabricated passion state of the music
industry right now. We are playing for them.
The members of S.T.U.N. were equally absorbed by Janes Addiction,
Radiohead, Depeche Mode, The Smiths, Super Furry Animals, Pixies, and
David Bowie. We believe in melody, but these dont feel like
traditional melodies to me, says singer Christiane J. understating
one of the many distinctive elements of the bands incendiary music.
Produced by Sean Slade (Radiohead, Hole, The Cure, 60 ft. dolls, Sebadoh,
Circle Jerks, Boo Radleys), and mixed by Slade and Paul Kolderie (Pixies,
Dinasour Jr., The Lemonheads, Billy Bragg,) and Andy Wallace (Nirvana,
At the Drive-in, Rage Against the Machine, Janes Addiction, System
of a Down) Evolution of Energy is a record that runs on both adrenalin
and free-moving intensity.
True to their no-frills aesthetic, the S.T.U.N. saga is short, sweet and
to the point. Formed just under three years ago in Los Angeles around
the uncompromising music and liberating message of Spies, the groups
members found themselves experiencing a process akin to creative osmosis.
There was a chemistry between us from the moment we met, asserts
lead singer Christiane J. The challenge was to build on that and
take it to the next level.
We
played any where we could and every chance we got, said drummer
Bobby Alt. We played parties, local clubs, and eventually, record
company showcases. It was a quick, but natural progression, and what meant
most to us was the music seemed to make an immediate connection with all
different types of music fans.
S.T.U.N. slowed down their lightning fast ascent long enough to carefully
consider their choice of producer. We chose Sean Slade because he
had a real understanding of the bands that influenced us and how those
influences came out in our music, continues bassist Nick S. Recorded
at Slades Q Division Studios in Boston over the proverbial forty
days and forty nights, Evolution Of Energy took shape quickly and decisively.
We came in totally prepared, mentally and physically, says
Spies. The focus was on capturing as much of the sensory overload
from our live shows as we could, while still using studio technology to
bring out new aspects of music. Slade allowed just the right amount of
improvisation and experimenting which I think is lacking in records these
days. Geffen heard the finished record, and signed the band to a
deal in the Spring of 2002.
S.T.U.N. is political and thought provoking all the while somehow
instilling a unified, entertaining, celebratory atmosphere. Their audience
crosses over the genre-divide: there are people who are into hip-hop coexisting
with people who are into punk. You never know whats going to happen
next at our shows. They are never the same, thats how it should
be. S.T.U.N.s live shows have been described as sensory overload.
or, as Neil describes it, chaos. Its chaos with a reason,
he says. Its chaos that creates love and unity.
Were
still playing for certain audiences that have not seen our live show before,
Christiane adds. So when we tour, people are in shock and
then theres anarchy. On stage, Im in freefall. Ive never
jumped out of a plane without a parachute, but that is how I would explain
the feeling I get when Im performing.
I
dont write about myself right now. I did everything I could to write
about what everyone in the world is going through and could relate to,
says Neil. Theres so much that Ive learned. Theres
so much Ive come to understand. I got bruised going against the
grain and not accepting things I knew were lies -- but I also found a
beauty and an urgency in life from it, and thats what S.T.U.N. is
about living in the moment. We are just a moment away.
Visit
the official S.T.U.N. web site for additional information.
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