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This Good Thing
BY CHRISTOPHER GRAY
The Stingers know they don't fit in.
These days "ska" means Goldfinger, Sublime, and the Mighty
Mighty Bosstones, and that's if anyone's thinking about ska at all. It's
been at least one music revolution since Rancid and Reel Big Fish were
on the radio, and Dropkick Murphys are too House of Pain. The electro-New
Wave hybrid of No Doubt's latest disc, Rock Steady, retains a faint Jamaican
accent but finds little room for skanking in its synth-rocking boogaloo.
All this leaves the Stingers, more in line with Don Drummond's Skatalites,
circa 1962, in a somewhat precarious position.
"To someone that doesn't know ska started in the early Sixties,
it's hard to say, 'We play traditional ska,' because they don't have an
idea what that means," shrugs Stinger singer Miguel Harvey.
Funnier still is that these six sharp-dressed men wound up playing ska
almost by accident. None of the players in the current lineup had much,
if any, previous experience with ska. Yet they do it well enough to have
landed a deal with Germany's Grover Records, one of the most respected
labels in the industry and the home of genre legends like Desmond Dekker
and Laurel Aitken. The group's first European tour late last year went
so well that they've been asked to return at the end of this summer as
Aitken's backing band. This Good Thing, their 2003 Grover debut, is available
now at all your favorite local record stores.
The Stingers' second CD, This Good Thing is the work of Brooklyn émigré/soulman
Jon Meyers, guitarist, bandleader, and principal songwriter of the band;
fellow original member Harvey, 25, a self-described onetime "little
punk jerk" with vellum-smooth vocals; keyman Patrick Pestorius, 30,
once a bassist for eclectic pickers Zuckerman Electric; and sage trombonist
Wayne Myers, 30, a doctoral candidate who previously spent his nonacademic
hours playing horn for local reggae lions the Killer Bees.
The two newest Stingers are baby-faced bassist Willy Camero, 26, late
of garage-blues heavyweights the Hard Feelings, and bearded, married drummer
Pat Kelly, 23, former timekeeper for Houston's Los Skarnales who lives
in Space City and divides his time between the Stingers and H-Town's Sound
Patrol. Both have been members for less than a year. The man most responsible
for the Stingers' existence? He's no longer with the group.
"If it wasn't for him fucking around in Mars [Music], this band
would not be together," states Meyers unequivocally.
"Him" is Walter Dunn, former ROTC student, self-promoter extraordinaire,
and instigator of the Stingers. Onstage, Dunn had the hyperbolic charisma
and dimensions of the Happy Mondays' Bez or the E Street Band's Clarence
Clemons, but it wasn't at a club where he first came to Meyers' attention.
"He was sitting by the amps like every guy that walks in there and
decides to play loud and annoy the fuck out of you," says the guitarist,
who began working at the now-closed Hancock Center Mars Music superstore
soon after his move to Austin in 1998. "Except his stuff wasn't annoying."
Bonding over Toots & the Maytals and Desmond Dekker, Dunn and Meyers
were soon busking on the street and booking gigs as the Soul Stingers.
After a tryout at the Black Cat, Dunn asked Harvey, then playing drums
in another of his bands, to come try some backup vocals. This he failed
to tell Meyers.
"I worked so fuckin' hard on singing the harmonies and playing at
the same time," Meyers swears. "And I show up at the gig, and
he's like, 'Hey, there's Miguel. He's going to be singing the harmonies.'
I'm like, 'Fuck that guy. I worked my ass off. Who is this weasel?'"
"It wasn't just Johnny," insists Harvey as the rest of the
Stingers collapse into laughter. "Everyone totally hated me at first.
We're still working through those issues."
Meanwhile, Meyers became acquainted with Pestorius at a Cactus Cafe show
that "coincided with Zuckerman breaking up," according to the
then-bassist. After seeing the Soul Stingers at a party, Pestorius wanted
in and convinced the then-acoustic band to go electric. Electricity, as
in flying sparks, came close to sabotaging the Stingers' Black Cat audition:
Harvey was late to an acoustic show at Ruta Maya earlier that same day,
so Meyers sang all his parts. When Harvey finally arrived, Meyers wouldn't
let him onstage.
"I was sick," vows Harvey. "I was sick, and I couldn't
find a microphone, and Johnny wouldn't share one with me."
"Right after that, we went to the Black Cat tryout," remembers
Meyers. "With all that anger and energy, we said, 'Look, we've gotta
play a gig, so let's play the gig.' For then, for us -- first gig -- it
was great. A month after that, we had the Thursday slot."
The Stingers could rightly be called the last of the Black Cat bands.
Before burning down in early 2002, the worse-for-wear Sixth Street venue
fostered an impressive roster of earthy, funk-soaked local talent including
Joe Rockhead, Little Sister, and Soulhat. But by the time the Stingers
came along, it had been years since a Black Cat band had drummed up much
buzz.
Nevertheless, the band raised its profile further by releasing a self-titled
CD and playing several Rock & Roll Free-for-Alls, which came about
courtesy of Meyers' Mars colleague, Paul Minor. When Dunn was assigned
overseas as expected, that was that. Or so they thought.
Minor wanted the remaining Stingers to play a set at the 2000 Free-for-All
birthday festival, a weeklong run of free shows and perpetual highlight
of the Hole in the Wall calendar. As their singer was en route to Germany
to be all he could be, the Stingers were at a bit of a loss.
"We're like, 'Paul, we're not a fuckin' band anymore, we don't have
our singer,'" recalls Pestorius. "He's like, 'Ah, forget it.
Work it out. Do something else.' So I cram how to play eight of the songs
on Rhodes piano, and we bring in another guy to play bass. We do the set.
"I leave for Europe the next day for a month. I come back and it's
like, 'So, did everybody have a good time?'
"'Yeah, we had a good time.'
"'You wanna play another gig?'"
After a gin-soaked summer learning to play keyboards atop a window air-conditioning
unit, Pestorius and the other Stingers regrouped, even winning back Thursdays
at the Black Cat. Black Cat bands were expected to play two- to two-and-a-half-hour
sets with no breaks and, with little media attention directed the club's
way, were responsible for all their own promotion. The best of it came
from overseas.
Dunn met a Grover staffer at a show in Germany and eventually passed
along an EP. The label liked it enough to sponsor the Stingers' first
European tour. Also, the label hooked the band up with their top choice
of producers, Victor Rice, an NYC-dwelling studio swami behind several
Grover releases. The result is Austin's first great album of 2003.
This Good Thing draws its rich, vibrant energy from the same wellspring
as the original ska masters: soul, R&B, reggae, calypso. Meyers' airtight
chords frame Pestorius' breezelike organ swells and Myers' cockeyed trombone
glissandi, as Harvey croons about missed melodramas over Camero and Kelly's
rock-steady rhythms. All told, it washes over you like a tall glass of
island rum, warming your insides and loosening your inhibitions. Ska may
be a remnant of another era, the Stingers themselves about as retro as
Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, but it works well enough to fill the
Continental Club, Flamingo Cantina, or Ego's on weekends.
The Stingers know they don't fit in, but they'd like to.
"I mean, there are really great roots bands to come out of here,"
Meyers says. "We'd like to be known as the roots-ska band."
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Extracurricular activities put on hold: Schools to
focus on March tests
Tuesday February 11, 2003
By Aesha Rasheed
Staff writer
Interim Superintendent Norward Roussell has called off all extracurricular
activities that aren't clearly related to instruction at public schools
until after the March LEAP and Iowa testing.
The president of the New Orleans principals association said the memo
came as a shock to principals, but only because they knew of no such noninstructional
activities taking place.
In a memo sent to principals last week, Roussell told school leaders
that activities including "pep rallies, student assemblies, dances,
field trips, etc." come to "an abrupt halt until after testing
has concluded."
The original memo, dated Feb. 5, included "sports activities"
among activities that should be halted. An amended memo replaced "sports
activities" with "student assemblies," and a district spokesperson
said games and practices are allowable.
The second memo, distributed Thursday, added a new section to explain
that noninstructional activities should not interfere with regular classroom
teaching or extended-day programs designed to help students master concepts
included in the annual tests.
"We need to be focusing on instruction; our children need to focus
on instruction," Roussell said. Asked at Monday night's School Board
meeting whether principals have been instructed on which activities are
instructional and which are not, Roussell would only say "principals
know what this means."
Although the memo caused some confusion at Guste Elementary, where teachers
mistakenly thought they had to cancel a puppet show related to instruction,
Florida Woods, president of the New Orleans principals association, said
most principals were already limiting school activities to those focused
on preparing for the upcoming high-stakes standardized tests.
Most principals seem to be taking the memo in stride and have not needed
to make adjustments to their schools' schedules, she said.
"We know that the focus now should be on building a climate in which
the children feel comfortable and confident," for the tests, she
said.
Woods said the memos were followed up with meetings between principals
and district executive directors who are working with principals to help
them make the call on activities that fall in a gray area between fun
learning events and extraneous activities.
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