Their story is pretty plain. Blind Melon, that hot new band who walks a string of love beads between grassroots retro and college cool, are really just five long-haired joes whose formula for success reads like a compendium of accidents.
Accident #
1: They Found each Other at All
Thousands of country miles separate the tiny hometowns of Blind Melon.
Singer Shannon Hoon hails from Lafayette, Indiana; guitarist Christopher Thorn
from Dover, Pennsylvania; and guitarist Thomas Rogers Stevens and bassist Brad
Smith from West Point, Mississippi. Like the bee girl in the band's video
for "No Rain," each ran away to a magical place where they hoped to find others
like themselves. "It's just one of those stroke of luck happenings that we
all met in L.A.," Smith says.
Hoon, Smith and Stevens
formed the band in March 1990. Thorn was then lassoed and, after auditions
failed to produce a drummer, Smith and Stevens rang Glen Graham, an old
Mississippi buddy. They considered the named Naked Pilgrims, Head Train,
Mud Bird and Brown Cow. "Blind melons" were what Smith's father once
dubbed some unemployed hippy neighbors.
Killer showcases and a popular four track demo raised enough A&R eyebrow to
get Blind Melon signed only eight months after forming. Capitol Records
hired producer David Briggs (Neil Young) but the EP, Sippin' Time
Sessions, never happened. "There was too much reverb and it wasn't
honest enough," Smith says. "We didn't need cannon sounding
drums."
Accident #2: Shannon visits Guns N' Roses in the studio during the recording
of "Don't Cry"
Axl Rose, who went to high
school with Shannon's older brother and sister, looked at Hoon and thought it
would be fun to try a vocal duet. The resulting sound hit like a speeding
four by four. Shannon reprised his role in the "Don't Cry" video. When MTV
aired it, the only question asked as much as "Where's Izzy?" was "Who's that
other singer?"
"I think it helped
thremendously," says Smith. "A lot of people probably went out and bought
the album for that very reason. And I think that half the people that
bought the album because of Guns N' Roses were probably unpleasantly
surprised. I think if a really heavy Guns N' Roses fan goes and buys a
Blind Melon album, he's go 'What is this hippy shit?'"
Before the group's self titled debut album was even recorded, Blind Melon opened
national tours for Soundgarden and MTV's 120 Minutes, featuring PiL and Big
Audio Dynamite II.
Accident # 3: The Reign of "No
Rain"
"The whole Guns N' Roses
connection got us 90,000 records," Smith says. "We've sold five times that
through this video already." Smith who wrote "No Rain" between solo folk gigs
just after his arrival in Hollywood, is dumbfounded. "None of us think
it's the best song on the album," he says. "It was just one of the songs I
had on a cassette somewhere...It's out lightest song - this lame song about
co-dependecy-but it's like our mascot song!"
"There are other messages we want to get out to the people," Smith continues,
"and I think they're going to come across just as strong as 'No Rain.'"
He pauses, then offers an anecdote only a long-haired bumpkin from West Point,
Mississippi could conjure: "I think it's like, the big field has been plowed
and we're going to plan our seeds for real now."