s2r are playing with No Means No at the Record Bar, Wednesday, October 4, 2006.  They are so good its just 

Also, check out the S2R track on the new 24-song Killdozer tribute by buying it and then listening to the song.
Aug. 2006

More about Killdozer



Nov. 1, 2005

  

























After 3 hours of wrapping, unravelling, and re-wrapping, we discovered that mummifying a band is harder than you might think. It was a fun and hallowed evening, the mummies were suffocating, and monsters were everywhere. Keep sending your photos and video, and we'll keep posting them. Thanks to Paul Malinowski, the Record Bar, and Anvil Chorus and The Esoteric for their scary greatness, and thanks to all who came, dressed up, went off, passed out.







NEWS 9 / 05:
Season To Risk melted the opening track on the new DIE KREUZEN
tribute album, released Summer 2005.
More info...


DIE KREUZEN (pronounced dee-kroytzen) from Minneapolis, MN, were one of the most innovative and creative punk-metal bands of their time. They explored more musical ground than most bands ever do, and were a huge influence on the international underground music scene of the 1980's and early 90's.
Steve Albini explains...

 

Make plans now to be at the S2R show Halloween 05 weekend in Kansas City, MO

Saturday 10/29/05 - Record Bar - KCMO - 9pm - Costume Contest

with ANVIL CHORUS and ESOTERIC

 

Congratulations to our man Steve and our friend Shawn Sherrill (of Roman Numerals/Shiner), the proud new owners of the Record Bar (formerly Molloy Brothers), the best venue in Kansas City, MO.

 

Below is a collection of words from the first 15 years: reviews, fanmail, message board posts, and press.

Posted by sucka mc on 7/9/2003, 2:59 am
Didn't STR say they were not quiting but just taking sum time off? After 14yrs or so.. damn! Let em take an F-ing vacation!. F!

 

S2R are the best band ever - Posted by esau skrrring... on 6/17/2003, 6:53 pm
Hello all...I'd just like to say thanks to the MEN OF S2R for all of their help, advice, inspiration, and most importantly music in the eight or nine years since I first met them. They are indeed the single best band from Kansas City ever, in my humble opinion, and I'm quite sure many of us started bands after seeing/hearing/meeting S2R.

mny moons ago
Posted by damaged on 5/5/2003, 1:55 pm
I was on holiday in Miami Beach a long long long time ago...I saw STR playing some shitty little club with The Buck pets (I think)...I thought they were really good, I spoke to the singer after, he gave me some of his vodka and we had a chat about that William Hurt film, the one about the peyote...I was told to put myself on the mailing list, but the lads who took my name just sneered at me and I just knew they'd toss my shit in the bin...I waited and waited for some news, but now after years and years I've given up!!! Have played the LP I bought loads of times, still do after all this time, made me get into Harry Crews and I still like to grumble 'Snakes, snaaaaakes' everytime I have a drink too far. Hope alls well, and the band have got some nicer people collecting fans names!!!


S2R Poster for Sale: 6 color serigraph, 32 3/4 x 17 in, edition of 250 - Commissioned by Sony records.

Buy Now for $400.

damn.
Posted by jd on 4/12/2003, 7:26 am
i am in shock and not awe. the march post seemed to have a tinge of hype for a new s2r project of some kind. granted, the DVD is very exciting news, and i am very much looking forward to those shows. it's just the word "extended" in the phrase 'extended leave of absence' that makes me a little nervous. but i still hope (and will continue to hope) that s2r does once again come together post-june 28/29 for more noise-making mayhem, for more reasons that i could possibly think of so early in the morning...that said, thank you for an outstanding and wonderful, albeit somewhat turbulent, 14 years. what all members of the tree of life have contributed to is commendable and admirable, and it could not have been any other way.
see you, jd

What the ####?!
Posted by Dan The Fan on 4/11/2003, 7:36 pm
Okay I am going to post a reason you guys should not break up everyday until the shows on the 28 / 29 in PROTEST! I understand that to play just to perform old songs over and over like a jukebox is pointless. However, you guys are the most innovative creative human beings in this city, maybe the country. If you tell me there is NO new music left in Season to Risk then there is no hope for the rest of us out here. I just can't believe that! You guys, whether you choose to believe it or not are THE pillar of our musical community. Sure, we have alot of good bands in KC, but none of them have the talent, charisma,individuality or strength that you do.
The mere thought of you guys breaking up, for me is inconceivable. This is insane.

Reason 1
Posted by Dan The Fan on 4/11/2003, 7:37 pm
I will look like even MORE of an asshole having this ####ing tattoo.What in the bloody #### is your ####ing problem guys?

Posted by John Bersuch on 7/1/2003, 1:13 pm
When I saw you back with your powerhouse drummer at the Hurricane, one question kept running through my head again and again. Why is the best ####ing band in Kansas City stopping? What kind of idiotic retarded shit is that. You guys are way too good to quit. I like Overstep, Dirtnap, and Unknown Pleasures, but come on dude, this band should not stop. Well I don't know, you have your reasons I guess, but damn, it was good this weekend, damn good. I had almost forgotten how badass it used to be until I saw it with this line up again.

Posted by Craig-KITA on 7/2/2003, 10:09 pm
I recently saw the finale of one of my all time favorite bands and great friends. RIP S2R...you will be missed ..S2R RAWKS!


Posted by Juliesigns on 6/30/2003, 12:59 am
Thanks for the ROCKIN shows boys...this weekend and the many years past. S2R will be deeply missed!!!que¿


holychrist almighty! Season to Risk/Cease to Exist/Sweet LLama's Kiss
Posted by Everybody's X on 6/30/2003, 5:11 pm
Oh the Brutality! I just woke up from the pummeling I received last night. Thank God I caught that show and I hope it isnt truly the last.
No offense to Messrs Metcalf,Gerkin,or Poopsie but DVIVID is the ####in man, it was nice to see him beating the shit out of the drums after several years (at least since I saw him last)He needs to write a book about building your stamina because I don't know how he does it. Metcalf looks like he's riding a tank over a cliff and isn't sure if HE'S the one driving or not. (I meant that in a good way of course) thanks to S2R for years making me feel like if I ever thought I was heavy or passionate or cool or psychotic or even remotely in the same league that I was terribly wrong. Take a bow boys, take a bow

 

seasonal rash/reason to fist/bees in my piss
Posted by mike w. on 6/30/2003, 5:20 pm, in reply to "Season to Risk/Cease to Exist/Sweet LLama's Kiss"
it goes on and on. #### what a band. thanks yall

 

S2R
Posted by gooch on 6/30/2003, 6:32 am
season to risk was awesome this weekend..great show good to see all the boys back together again

 

Re: S2R
Posted by MF on 6/30/2003, 7:37 am, in reply to "S2R"
Fukking Christ. Pummelling. Sooooo amazing.

Re: S2R - Posted by maygun on 6/30/2003, 4:33 pm, in reply to "S2R"
i feel like a silly girly little fool (which is good, 'cause i mostly am)...when s2r played out a lot in the mid 90's i was just getting into local music and was nonplussed by rocknroll boys'cause i wanted bikini kill and kim gordon. so i ignored them and waited for frogpond to play (not that they were like bk or kim, but they were girls, you know what i mean). i was 14 and have since then forgiven myself for not keeping an open mind, among other things. and to know steve and billy and the rest and to see them up there not simply as the local music stalwarts they are (yes, i called you stalwarts)was truly awe-inspiring. i was done proud and i regret i was not able to appreciate them earlier in the game.. my bad.. maygun

 

Posted by Tom Pugh* on 7/1/2003, 1:10 pm
thanks for Saturday night, it was loud and beautiful! I'm still going over it in my mind, it was a very memorable show. Wish I could've seen Sunday's show, too... I appreciate all the work you guys have done over the years to create that music and to do things your own way. *commander steve nelson

Season To Risk - Posted by Josh/Third World Sin
I was watching the Metal channel (510 on Time Warner digital cable) and "Bloodugly" by season to risk was on. It was nice to see a local band on there.

 

a comment about S2R's finale - Posted by brendon on 7/1/2003, 12:19 pm
Thanks S2R for an incredible show and some great memories over the years. You guys were the first KC band I ever heard. Kind of embarrassed to say, but I used to subscribe to RIP magazine when I was in Atwood, and your perfect review in there was the start of a great musical awakening for me (RIP couldn't have been all bad just based off of that review alone). Great turnout for a Sunday, and an even better wall of sonic destruction.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Responses:
hey Thanks - tulipana 7/1/2003, 12:43 pm

 

Season to Risk – The Shattering (Owned & Operated records) BY KURT BRIGHTON
Perhaps the best indication that a band is doing something new and genuinely interesting is when music critics thrash around in desperation looking for other bands to compare it to. Season to Risk has been associated most often with Jesus Lizard -- probably because of Steve Tulipana's growling, howling vocals. But the band has also been compared to Helmet, Tool, Pantera, Fugazi, Henry Rollins, Voivoid, the Sex Pistols, Bad Brains, Cop Shoot Cop and Unsane, sometimes all in the same article. To see the regal music scribe reduced to such grasping must be satisfying indeed to a band long known for straddling genres. Season to Risk is somewhere in the neighborhood of noise rock, loud indie rock and arty punk. But this neighborhood is definitely on the wrong side of the tracks, and the band would probably burn it down given half a chance. The Shattering, Season's first release on the Fort Collins-based Owned & Operated Records, blends these elements into a nasty, bleak stew that rages against the modern world's unending mission to crush the spirit out of humanity. And they make it fun, too.
Painting musical pictures that seem to outline the sickness that dwells between the crumbling walls of blasted gray cityscapes -- as well as between the sun-dappled green lawns of suburbia -- Season to Risk emerges on The Shattering a more mature and fully fleshed-out band. The band still plays with guts via the pounding, relentless rhythm section it's always had, but it is the deviations from more typical song forms that are most interesting. Granted, there's all kinds of weirdness here: odd, disjointed rhythms; manic, shouted tribal chants; super-deep, freaky vocals that cannot be endured when a listener is taking certain substances. But on songs like "Despair," for instance, the band creates a slower, darkly trippy sonic walkabout, the rhythm for which sounds like it was created by someone banging on a broken car door with a hammer.
If the apocalypse is to be televised, The Shattering should be the soundtrack.

 

CMJ's Weekly Industry Mag:
"..
metal for recovering indie rockers."
Season To Risk has always been one of those bands that never sacrificed smarts and angular rock for the sake of its meat n potatoes muscularity. In fact, the quintet somehow achieves the perfect (albeit delicate) balance between the two. Despite bouncing around from label to label over the course of its existence, Shattering is Season To Risk at its finest, doling out maximum dosages of squalling distortion, rumbling basslines and post-core rock n roll abandon. While the abrasive Shattering undeniably sounds like it came from the early 90s (former Babes In Toyland nemesister Kat Bjelland even lends her yesteryear shriek to Or Highwater) with its unpolished, yet thoroughly skull-hammering abundance of clattering guitars, the choppy, stop-start riffs give the album its extremely current edge. In fact, Shatterings turbulent tunes, like Ace Of Space, Spasser, and Mono Fuego could arguably be considered metal for recovering indie rockers. Heres to the future. < Amy Sciarretto


Season to Risk -The Shattering
"...a quiet triumph in every sense of the word."

With yet another new lineup in tow, S2R continue to expound on their characteristically stuttering pulsing POWER-rock through more dynamic restraint and, most obviously, the vintage synth destruction that was hinted at on The Shatterings predecessor. If S2R could have ever been accused of foregoing songcraft in favor of pummeling their instruments and the listeners' eardrums, that charge gets thrown out here, as smartly accessible tracks like the demanding Demand, the ace Ace of Space, the angular Straight and Narrow, and the deserving Deserve render the band's maturing dynamic contour and deliberate restraint most admirably, communicating on infinitely more emotional levels than just mere anger or rage, with a tinge of downered melody thrown in for good measure. Likewise, the studio-quartet/live-quintet all try their hand at taming the synthesizer all throughout The Shattering with mostly rewarding results, the finest examples being the terrifyingly tense Or Highwater and Despair: Their sound still intact, this relatively new dimension to the S2R fold fleshes out the dark underpinnings that've always gurgled beneath their surface and, as a whole, allows them to bubble forth like molten lava (most subtle example: the tribal-mantra sketch of Spasser). Elsewhere, we get prime Season to Risk - lurching bass, stumbling yet forceful drums, chiming slicing guitars, and Steve Tulipana's vaguely British vocals, conveying that all is not necessarily good and well in their hearts and minds; basically, a quiet triumph in every sense of the word. With that in mind, for as contractually and personnally troubled as S2R have been during the past decade, it's awe-inspiring to see them succeed so grandly as they do here. So how does this all fare for the discerning metalhead? After all, The Shattering hardly cozies up to the conventional definition of heavy metal. But, for those heads who pine for the lost wisdom of 90s Killing Joke or Prong, this should be right up their alley - or, the respective allies of more adventurous bangers. And, likewise, the boundaries of heaviness have been increasingly broadened with each passing year, so it's high time we extreme-dwellers advance with the much-welcomed evolution or resign ourselves to primate status: whose side are you on? Let's hope the robots don't win. [Nathan T. Birk] Digital Metal

review of the Overstep/Season to Risk show in Monroe, LA
Let's just say that last night was mythical. mythical. Overstep simply rocked our poor little smelly town to a new level. Pulsing rhythm and calculated dissonant arrangements with stellar drumming and coy, sinister vocals. And they were LOUD. find their music and get it immediately. Then their was Season to Risk. They were a wall of sound. I couldn't even pay attention to everything that was going on because i was truly engaged in the whole experience. Steve Tulipana, the lead singer made you believe that he would seriously injure himself/expose himself/ injure someone else. and he made you like it. The night ended with a hazy dream, flashing lights of angry police, threatening, but overall benign. Much like the show itself, which shook its fist and was brutal by the sheer force of it all, but was a refreshing, renewing experience.

Gathering Storm, September 16, 2002 - Reviewer: jamesinman.com
There's an old Zen koan... What's the sound of one hand clapping? When someone asked me about Season to Risk... I thought... Ah! Good question... What's the sound of carpet-bombing? What's the sound of fifteen grenades exploding inside your skull? If you were to survive an atomic blast what would the shock wave sound like? I suppose I could compare Season to Risk to a workingman's Nine Inch Nails or Marilyn Manson without the makeup... I thought of System of a Down on acid... But I think System of a Down IS on acid... So that doesn't quite explain it... I saw Season to Risk live at the Hurricane in Kansas City and it all seemed to make sense... Every song is like a giant storm and the short pause between each break is the eye of the storm... You're in a lifeboat and you just made it through the maelstrom and then another terrible roar... Huge locusts are swooping and diving around the raft... There's some kind of machine in the sky that you can't explain... Your hair is standing on end... Your jaw drops and your eyes widen to try and understand it all... More waves are crashing... You check the rigging and pull yourself over to the man selling CDs during the show but they're already sold out... He's yelling, "Please remain calm... I think you can find it on Amazon!" This group has it strapped down tight... Just make sure you bring a life jacket and industrial grade raincoat if you buy this CD...

 

For Kansas City music fans, missing the White Stripes was worth the Risk. BY ANDREW MILLER
Plenty of time has passed since Season to Risk emerged with its influential debut discs -- more than thirteen years, in fact....the band revisited this period, with Paul Malinowski (later of Shiner) returning to his post as bassist and David Silver arriving from Boston to man the drum kit. This reunited rhythm section still pulsed with the industrial efficiency of an assembly line, and the group's choruses sounded like an automated worker blowing a circuit and terrorizing factory hands...
Fellow rockers made their usual show of support, with members of Life and Times, Overstep and Moaning Lisa dotting the crowd, and lots of just-plain fans celebrated their years of devotion to S2R by singing along and, in one case, flashing the stage.

 

Mean Dean – Pitch.com, KCMO
"Too often, Season to Risk gets lumped in with experimental indie rock," Edington rants. "Bow down and respect Season to Risk, for fuck's sake. Their new record is so phenomenal, and they never get to play in front of hardcore kids. I want to let them know that this isn't your older brother's irrelevant band. They're here, and they're going to crush you."'Season To Risk -- The Shattering -- This record is a testament of the importance of persistence and timing in music. It came along at JUST the right time for me and I've been so impressed by it. This is Steve and Co.'s best record yet. If this were a fair world, they'd be all over the radio.'

Season To Risk - The Shattering (CD, Owned & Operated, Noise rock) Baby Sue review
"...heavy, hard, mindbending, and real
."
Another excellent release from one of the great loud and noisy rock bands of our time, Season To Risk. Unlike other great loud and noisy rock bands, for some reason unknown to us this band has yet to reach a large audience. A few years back we were at a very small club to see another band and Season To Risk just happened to be on the bill. Because we weren't very familiar with the band, we were not expecting very much. From the moment Season To Risk launched into their first tune they had us completely mesmerized and under their control. Not only do these guys play like holy hell, but they have major presence...something that makes their live shows something that you do not want to miss. Ever since that show, we have had great respect for this band. The Shattering is probably S.T.R.'s best release yet as it captures the band's live sound but also corrals the chaos so that the songs shine through clearly. Interestingly (and appropriately), this album was recorded by Bill Stevenson and Jason Livermore. The sound is crisp and sharp. And despite the fact that the tracks are noisy, this is by far the most melodic collection of tunes yet from Season To Risk. If you like it heavy, hard, mindbending, and real, you owe it to yourself .

 

SEASON TO RISK: THE SHATTERING
I don't know what they are putting in the Kansas City drinking water, but it seems to be producing a slew of hard hitting, intelligent, noise rock bands who continually kick ass. Like cousins Shiner, Season to Risk takes heavy metal into the next decade, updating its sound, rhythm and vocal textures. The Shattering stimulates and agitates and is best if digested according to the instructions on the CD: play loud.
The opening title track introduces us to singer Steve Tulipana and his sing-shout method of spit-firing the lyrics. Thick, deep bass lines from Billy Smith pulse along underneath the vicious but tasty drum work by David Silver. Recorded at The Blasting Room in Fort Collins, The Shattering retains an indie, low-budget sound while being anything but. Crisp, powerful production adds to the weight of the music, incorporating the compelling pop melodic sensibility and the abrasive, dissonant crunching of Duane Trower's guitars. A great track is "Spasser," just a monster of a tune ... off-beat rhythms and power chords, simple howling and gnarly mayhem. It's followed nicely by "Deserve," a dark, ironic tune about relationships and all their glory and gore.
This is another offering from Owned and Operated Recordings from Fort Collins. Season to Risk has endured line-up changes, wrecked tour vehicles, floods, major label goofiness, and evictions, and still they tour relentlessly and make solid records. --Judy B.

 

The Shattering (Owned and Operated Records)
Jazzy hardcore? That may sound funny, but it’s one of the first thoughts to enter your head when hearing ‘The Shattering.’ Chaotic, but in a controlled way, Season to Risk perform the music on their latest offering with an eerie syncopation, keeping the music hardcore, with a punk feel, but adding diverse and complex elements in the music, making the tunes far from noise, but at the same time difficult to digest in just one listen. Verily, it takes multiple listens of ‘The Shattering’ to imbibe the CD into your consciousness, and with each successive listen you will find yourself still picking up new things that you hadn’t noticed previously. A treat in the sense that it’s not your typical hardcore offering, Season to Risk are also toeing a fine line, as many casual fans or "true" hardcore fanatics may find this too rich for their blood. Still, kudos for trying. And if you’re open minded enough to allow yourself to be perplexed, you just may find this album to be one of the unpolished gems of 2001. <A. Ristic> -8-

Karen Novak Photography

Kansas City Star - Thursday, Aug 23, 2001
One of Kansas City's loudest, oldest and most uncompromising bands, Season still traffics in hardcore mayhem and scabrous, high-speed aggression ("National Gomorrah"). But in several places, like "Ace of Space," the noise is more orthodox, so the melody, as it were, has room to breathe. Most interesting are the four tunes toward the middle of the disc that interact like an informal suite: "Spasser" is a scintillating blast of gothic psychedelia, and the next three -- "Deserve," "Despair" and "Demand" -- are interlocking etudes in dissonance and trippy vocal/lyrical experiments from Steve Tulipana, who has more flavors of rant and scream than any singer I've ever listened to. "Straight and Narrow" is more standard S2R hard-rock/industrial punk, but that's a setup for what's up next: the blindsiding horror-jazz tornado "Mono Fuego." Ex-Babe in Toyland Kat Bjelland steps in for a campy cameo on "Or Highwater," a trippy industrial-glam rocker. But no one overshadows the singer or the band behind him: guitar wiz Duane Trower and the barnstorming rhythm section of Billy Smith on bass and David Silver on drums. The album ends with a burst of calm, "Cease to Exist," which must be a pun on the S2R name and not a forecast because this band sounds like it could rage on forever.

SEASON TO RISK - Upstairs at Nick's, Philadelphia, PA
Well the fellas from Kansas City were back in Phily for one more night. The stormtroopers of dissonance were on parade and ready to rock.
This was to be the fourth to the last show on their long tour of these Great United States supporting their third major release, Men are Monkeys, Robots Win on Thick Records. Duane, guitar, was not wielding his usual Gibson SG, but some strange instrument with one really big knob.
Steve, vocals and guitar, had his usual guitar and smiling angst on display. And for once in S2R's history the bass and drums are the same for the live performance as they were for the record. Josh's, bleached blonde hair has been dyed black. And David had to borrow Buzzoven's cymbals because his cymbal bag was lying somewhere in an alley way in NYC. But phased was not he as the blonde beat machine marched on adding notes and pulses where they just shouldn't be.
S2R started off the night a bit sluggish, the effects of a long road stint showing on their faces, but about two or three songs into the gig, the electricity and charisma was just propelling itself towards the dumbfounded crowd. The set consisted of a perfect mix of new stuff and old stuff. In fact even thrown into the mix was the one song I had been waiting three years to see live, Dawgs (off of their 1st Columbia release). S2R dove right into the intro of Dawgs and never looked back. Man it was, to quote an 8th grader, "awesome." The four pistons were in full steam driving our souls and minds to another planet once again. They played a slightly shortened set because of their position on the bill, but even 40-min. of S2R still makes a grown man act like a child.
At the end of the performance, I caught up with Steve and Josh who were perched over their refreshments like two ravens. They both told me of how they drove from Arizona to Seattle without brakes on their van. I asked Steve if he could tell a little bit a bout the difference of being on Thick as opposed to Columbia. He said that he really enjoyed being on a label that cares about them. It's more gratifying to be on a smaller label who is willing to pay attention to a band rather than a large label where numbers are the only care they cast, said.
I also found Dave resting his hands and head a few stools down. He explained the '23' conspiracy and it's impact on the band and the past.
The fellas are back in KC by now, unless something serious happened to their van. They are going to chill for a while, but soon will start writing new stuff.
If you are lucky enough to have a record store that carries Men are Monkeys, Robots Win, please count your blessings, praise capitalism and buy the record. It's well worth it. And keep a sharp eye out for the next time S2R blasts into town.
Written By: Geoff @ SlenderMusic

 

Men are Monkeys, Robots Win (Thick records)
From the first glistening sound of Intriot, Season to Risk tells us that this record will be crisp, tight and slightly tamer than 'In a Perfect World.'
After a record label dispute, STR left Columbia in search of a new label. They shopped around for about a year and landed a deal with Thick Records.
'Men are Monkeys, Robots Win' is the first creation for the newly signed foursome from the country's heartland.
GAMEOVER comes crashing out of the intro on the one with the crack of a snare and the harsh reality of distortion . We soon learn that Season to Risk has been quietly incubating an offspring and the offspring has finally sprung. With swift speaking execution the instruments gather their full thrust as the CD LCD gauge reads '3.' David's sine wave/plaid shirt approach to drums surfaces on UNDERSELF. David splatters the chorus sections with a traffic jam of toms and ride cymbal bells tying the beat together with the high hat on the quarter of each bar.
The onslaught continues with the staple Season to Risk grind.
The next track offers us something brand new from S2R, a song we can sing along to - a song we can bounce along to- a song we can play for our girl friends and they won't get mad. Yes, OVER THEN OUThas a hook to it. The major hook, other than the lyrics during the chorus, is the driving groove culminating with the eighth note pause on the 4 and of the bar. Robots Wins can best be described as a cross between 'Season to Risk' and 'In a Perfect World.' It has that pulsating feel of 'In a perfect world' with the intricate counter-melodies of 'Season to Risk.' But, I refuse to give the rest of the record away to you, it's like giving away the ending of 'Sixth Sense or My Best Friend's Wedding. Anyway, please enjoy this record. And we all know that to enjoy it means to buy it.

 

SEASON TO RISK - In a Perfect World (Columbia)
The second and final release on Columbia for the quartet out of Kansas City. Compared to the previous release In a Perfect World takes Season to Risk into a darker more mysterious realm. Filled with dreamscaped swords and Cold Johns. I think Season to Risk did what they wanted with this record. It is doubly confusing and strenuous to listen to. But that's what i love so much about this band. They say "Piss-off" to the spoon-fed audiences of today's music listening generation.
Remarkable interplay between the three instruments and raucous vocals by Steve create power and intrigue. It's just the record i slip in when i need to get somewhere in a hurry or i have all night to do nothing, but try to figure out what the hell Duane is doing.

 

SEASON TO RISK - 1st Album (Columbia)
Season to Risk's first Columbia recording. Each song is masterfully crafted. Flickerings of metal edged riffs, crafty drum parts and driving bass smatter the album while an underlying beauty and grace mold this record into a thick solid massive creation. This album contains one of my favorite guitar riffs ever. "Dogs" track four's main theme is totally above and beyond most guitarist in the fashionable world of rock and roll. Written By: Geoff @ SlenderMusic

 

Season to Risk (self-titled debut)
For a long time, since discovering music, i wondered what caused me to enjoy it. i am not quite certain that i have discovered a concrete answer, but one thing rests affixed in the concoction of ground gravel, water, and whatever else needed to make concrete. i enjoy rhythms and subtle melodies.
Season to Risk delivers these ingredients better than any band i have heard. Hailing from the Mid-western city of Kansas City, the (ever changing) foursome winds and ties and twines and binds (or any other wording equivalency for bondage, rope, and tightness) power, grace, passion, intelligence, skill, and confusion into a thick ball of twine- the real abrasive 99 cent twine. i first heard them when a good Russian friend slipped their self-titled Columbia release into my tape deck. i sat, or actually squatted, in front of the twin-spinning mechanism, with a churning sensation of my own inside my stomach, mind, and soul.
The first song i had the pleasure of listening to was, MINE EYES. i am having a difficult time relaying the experience only because of the grandiose scale on which it perched. STR emanates magic through speakers into the mind. As a drug free citizen, i know not off the effects of mind altering substances, on a first hand basis. But this song, was doing some weird crap to my head. Duane Trower's guitar weaving layer upon layer of confusion, while Chad Sabin (drums) and Paul Malinowski (bass) glued it all together. On top of all that lies, Steve Tulipana's gut wrenching vocals. Intelligent and thought provoking.
Needless to say, i continued listening and continued being mesmerized.
Although, Season To Risk, has lost two drummers and a bassist during their history. The new line up seems to be concrete and hopefully stay together for a long time. The drummer, David Silver took over during the In a Perfect World Tour. Since then, they have added bassist, Josh Newton . He played guitar in Glazed Baby and had a short stint playing guitar in the UNSANE. Since the initial listening trauma, I have seen Season to Risk four times. Each of the shows had similarities such as: me jumping and screaming along with the band's inescapable pulse, and 20 or so others standing there holding their ears. Well, actually one night in Philly at Upstairs at Nicks, the crowd was very responsive. The look of satisfaction on the band singed my brain and i knew why these guys do this. It's not for the money, which compared to most bands of Season's caliber, is enough for coffee and a doughnut every other day. It's not for the fame, well at least i don't think so. It's for the music. Pure music. Unadulterated music. Simply the music. They love it!!
Written By: Geoff @ SlenderMusic

 

Season To Risk In a Perfect World - Martin Bate
Woah. Cheese wire guitars. Bass rumble. Clenched guitar screech. Rattling drums. Throaty, threatening vocals.
Think the darkness of Cop Shoot Cop, the upbeat snarl of the Jesus Lizard, the unremitting weight of the Melvins. Chuck in a little Big Black and No Means No and newer elements such as Quicksand, Girls Against Boys (it's the way that bass *rumbles*), Clutch. Ha ha.
Opener "Jack Frost" spits and snarls over strangled harmonics and a spiralling mix of Jesus Lizard funk and Fugazi chorussing. All these influences make them sound like themselves even though you know the area they're operating in.
Lyrically, it's all pained, wordy stuff. But fuck the lyrics, it's the *sound*. A few good stick-out phrases are all that's important sometimes.
"Absolution" - Pantera dragged through Shellac. "Terrain Vague", looping and building until the masochistic squeals come as blessed relief. Played loud, it damages. "Future Tense" - if you can avoid jerking at least one part of your body through moments such as the staccato finish then you`re already dead.
The raging can get a little wearing even if the dynamics are frequently breathtaking.
Fists don't come much more clenched than this, the guitar necks are gripped tight enough to snap. Buy it for those special pissed-off days.

The Shattering (Owned and Operated, 2001) returns to rock
Season to Risk has been around for years. They’ve seen a million faces, rocked them all, and left most of them wondering, “what the Hell was that?” with a strong impression which is surely lasting if nothing else. It’s both a wonder they’ve made it this far and a strange thought to imagine KC without them. After all, music this dissonant doesn’t sit well with most people, and too many other area bands have been influenced by them and/or lured away former members of S2R for most local music fans to not have an opinion about them directly or indirectly. The band has evolved through various stages of hardcore/metal, avante-garde/experimental, and even industrial, electronic-based sub-genres (as various members became involved in other projects). How does such a group represent themselves in about an hour-long live performance? Which band will appear on the upcoming album? Could the essence of each album/stage even be completely represented? This time, they spent most of their time playing the guitar-based stuff.
Steve Tulipana and Duane Trower are the remaining members from the old days, but they show no less enthusiasm or signs of slowing down. Tulipana is still among the most energetic and stage-savvy frontmen in this area or anywhere. Trower offset his serious energy and concentration on his playing with his guitar’s Yugo emblems and occasional sarcastic displays of rock and roll salutes and facial expressions. Likewise, new bassist Billy Smith aggressively grinded out the low end of the intense noise-rock songs, but appeared eclipsed in size by his white Explorer-style axe. Drummer David Silver tirelessly pounded the rhythmic foundation for the noise orgy and clearly loved every minute of it. So did the mass of noise-crazy Kansas Citians. --Mark C

EMusic review
genres :: metal/hardcore, comedy/performance art, punk/hardcore
adjectives ::Alternative Pop/Rock
Similar to :: killing joke, jesus lizard, unsane, fugazi, black flag, stooges, no means no, laughing hyenas, big black, bad brains, bauhaus, sonic youth, the who, and the kinks.


Men Are Monkeys. Robots Win
On Men Are Monkeys, Seasons To Risk has continued its use of distorted bass, driving drums, manic guitar dissonance and impassioned vocal delivery. But, a keener sense of balance between the melody and the heaviness has heightened the effect of their songs. Electronic elements have creeped their way into s2r's songs, not in the dance friendly flavor of the day variety, but more in the what the hell is wrong with my stereo, head full of static way.

Tervitus. Season To Risk on vähetuntud bänd, millest kuskil eriti informatsiooni saadaval ei ole - isegi Alta-Vista leidis ainult mõned üksikud (õiged) vasted. See lehekülg on kokku pandud neist üksikutest saitidest ja plaatidest...
Season To Risk viljeleb juba 11 aastat hardcore-punki, kuid suurt edu ta mingil imelikul põhjusel saavutanud ei ole. Igaljuhul soovitan tõmmata mõne MP3-e ja kuulata - äkki meeldib. Kuigi kõik lood on head, soovitan siiski Mine Eyes'i, Dogsi ja Why SeeStraighti.
Lisage oma kommentaar ka minu külalisteraamatusse.
Kokkuvõtteks peaks praegune bändikoosseis olema järgmine:
Steven Tulipana: laul
Duane Trower: kitarr
David Silver: trummid
Joshua Newton: bass
Lehekülje autor M.F., e-mail: madja50@hotmail.com
Il grunge "progressivo" dei Season To Risk, formazione di Kansas City (Missouri), non e` mai riuscito a mantenere le ambizioni del gruppo ma ha rappresentato un capitolo interessante nella definizione di un suono post-punk.
Le canzoni di Season To Risk (Columbia, 1993) sono difficili da distinguere l'una dall'altra. Il complesso tenta in continuazione di costruire una tensione spasmodica (riff di hard-rock, basso inquietante, batteria psichedelica) attorno a una melodia innocua (Mine Eyes, Snakes), ma il sound rimane quasi sempre un confuso accumulo di gesti sonori, una sorta di incrocio fra Nirvana e Big Black ma senza il vibrante pathos dei primi e senza il genio brutale dei secondi. L'energia e` tanta che la musica sembra dissonante, anche se le sue parti non lo sono.
In A Perfect World (Sony, 1995) continua su quei toni truculenti e con quelle atmosfere claustrofobiche, e soprattutto con quelle armonie caotiche e rumorose. Il senso di horror latente, affidato a riff ossessivi e cadenze singhiozzanti, e` la loro specialita` (Jack Frost, Bloodugly), ma forse il gruppo ha trovato una vocazione piu` intrigante con lo sfogo volitivo e torrenziale di Nausea e con i sette minuti di cacofonie e tempi moribondi di Vertical Drive. All'istrionismo del cantante Steve Tulipana si devono diversi alcuni numeri da manicomio: le voci urlano un rap da ubriachi sul passo di carica panzer di Remembered, un delirio di predicatori invasati sovrasta il chiasso gratuito di Absolution, e Invisible Me sbraita senza ritegno disperazione e frustrazione.
Il gruppo si fa vivo a intermittenza. Men Are Monkeys Robots Win (Thick, 1998) e` ancor piu` sperimentale dei precedenti (con impiego massiccio dell'elettronica), e suonato in maniera ancor piu` competente.


 

SEASON TO RISK interview - conducted via e-mail on 05.1999 by Geoff at Slender Music.
Has Thick treated you well?
Steve Tulipana: It has been pretty good. They have been very supportive of whatever we want to do, musically and artistically, Of course, there isn't as much money to be used in promotion so I do believe the record hasn't been noticed by as many people as we had hoped especially critically. I always find it pretty interesting to read the reviews both good and bad. But, there hasn't been very many for this album. I think it is awesome that Thick went out of their way to license the first 2 albums from Columbia.
I am pleased that you are all still making music. Has the road been tough? Have you ever considered hanging it up?
The road can be very tough and very discouraging. This Oct. We will have been together 10 years and sometimes you do think what am I doing this for? Will it ever get better? will more people get into us? I think we have kind of chosen to march to our own beat and keep trying to reinvent ourselves and enjoy making music that is a little more challenging to a listener. So it really is our own choice to stay on the level we are at and not compromise. Again that can be discouraging and we have lost a lot of members due to this. It is hard to tour the country and play to small crowds for very little money. Most people think wow, I am in a band and I am traveling I am a rockstar now. Well, that is just bullshit. What you really are is a dumbass who just happens to love music/your own music. You love to play, meet new people, see new things. That really is the reward.
How many van accidents during tours have you all been in?
Many...fell asleep at the wheel in Colorado actually not too bad of an accident but scared the shit out of us. Rear wheel broke off in Minnesota-- near death but again not too bad. Flipped her over in Iowa in a snow storm..Drove all the way back from Seattle with no brakes, manually down-shifting with vice grips to slow down. This took years off my life I swear.
Did Duane have any reasoning behind not using the SG on this last tour?
I think has been having electrical probs with it not to mention I think he just wants to show off his custom work on the YUGO.
What were you like in high school? Were you an outcast? Or in the crowd?
We were the outcasted in crowd.... Straight-edge skater types...Pretty be straight laced but open...got along with every one pretty much...Just wanted to have fun really...Fighting and acting disaffected just seemed to take away from the fun...
What sort of effect did the whole Columbia Records situation have on the band's morale?
It was quite surreal. I mean we spent a lot of time in NY which I loved. We didn't have to work shit jobs for about 4 years, Met a lot of cool people, Met a lot of fake ass industry people. It gives a different perspective on the whole "it's a business" attitude...Morale-wise I think it drove Paul crazy and right out of the band. Duane and I just take it with a grain of salt....it was an experience that probably wasn't really ever supposed to happen.
How would you define success?
Contentment. Enjoying were you are at when you are there. I am not saying, hey I am a bum and that is all i will ever be so I don't work hard to get some where else. I just think you should have goals and enjoy each step in your advancement one step forward two back..It is a long life you know.
If you could be the star in any movie, who would you be?
I am and this movie is 30 years long so far...


Interview with Steve Tulipana in Modern Fix by Bushman

I know this band. No, I don’t mean I’m claiming status with personal affiliation (although my guitarists old bands drummer tried out for them once and the singer spilled beer on me when they played in Eau Claire, WI a long time ago), I mean I have been listening to this band as an avid fan since 1993. They are from Kansas City. So you should listen to them. They have had many line-up changes, so even if you think you know Season To Risk, ‘The Shattering’ proves you don’t know Season To Risk. The first self-titled album was an abrasive exercise in guitar scrape and tonal highlights. The bands follow up was an exploration even further down the pummeling, stark and brutally clean ‘In A Perfect World’. There was another album (Men Are Monkeys – Robots Win), which I didn’t hear, but never saw a negative word in any review I read. And I read many. Members have changed to account for the shifts in sound and the bands reputation for writing a killer albums worth of material, touring for it once, then refusing to play those songs live ever again. So after a decade of following this path of Season to Risk, where are we? With an album you really should own, ‘The Shattering’. It rocks with that noisy rock of the Jesus Lizard, AM Rep and other cool Minneapolis/Chicago/(and OK, Kansas City) flair for getting distortion through running shitty amps really loud. Creating tension through actual song writing and structure and not just jumping the loud/quiet formula. Singer Steve Tulipana is as neurotic as he ever was with his distinctive sense of gritty melody. His style is a spoken/shout that traces with melodic intention, but comes off like your friend shouting in your ear to be heard above the din and crash surrounding the whole scene. One might say an almost Ian Mackaye (Fugazi) type feel, until you hear ‘Deserve’ and then you’d definitely say an Ian MacKaye influence. This album shows more melody and repetition on a hook and steers away from the tear off the scab and poke the wound tensions of previous works. Also is the foray into more experimental territory as evidenced by the electronic drone of the instrumental ‘Despair’. This is still edgy, but a more mature and produced edgy. And edgy that comes with knowledge and sense of experience. Both of which Season To Risk have always commanded even in their early works (seriously, their entire catalog is solid, and worthy of your listening time). ‘The Shattering’ makes me appreciate the fact this band never seems to catch on despite critical raves and a loyal following. It keeps them hungry. And with a band like Season To Risk, it’s that sense of desperation that drives their craft. And I get to listen to more killer music.

Bushman: How has coming from Kansas City shaped your sound and direction?
Steve: We had talked about moving to Chicago right before recording that first album. Before anybody had heard us outside of some local shows. We recorded the first album there. But it didn’t make any sense to move there. We could live whereever we wanted.
Your band has also been influenced by the Minneapolis music scene as well. (Red-Decibel release)
Steve: I think all the Midwest sound. Any of the post-hardcore stuff was a huge influence on us. Before this band, we were into straight up punk rock bands. 80’s hardcore punk rock or whatever. Most of those Minneapolis and Chicago, Big Black... any number of bands from back then were trying to do something different that totally influenced us and gave us that attitude that we could do it to. I won’t deny that we weren’t influenced by Skinyard and then hearing Soundgarden. Guys that were influenced by underground rock music weren’t afraid to bring another standard great rock element.
What is the musical climate there now? Any bands the pubic should be aware of?
Steve: There’s a ton of great bands here right now. There always has been. Back in the mid-nineties, people were throwing around this term, ‘The Kansas City Sound’ which I think completely denied a lot of great bands that were here at the time that had nothing to do with it. Tenderloin... any number of them. Some of them people are still making music. There’s a bunch of great records in that genre right now that are coming out of here. Some good noisy punk bands. There’s a lot of art rock.
I’ve noticed that the region always had a lot camaraderie with the bands. Molly Mcguire and Shiner seemed to be mentioned a lot in the same breath as Season To Risk, either through projects or touring.
Steve: It’s because we all grew up together. We’ve all been skateboarding and going to the same clubs. We’ve all been friends. So when opportunities come, we all just kinda talk about each other. Some people were pissed because us three bands got a lot of attention... because we always talked about each other. Probably to Season To Risks fault, I talk about other bands more than I talk about our own band.
What does Season To Risk offer the listener they cannot find anyplace else?
Steve: I don’t know... that’s a tough question. I think that we have elements of so many different kinds of music going on. It’s aggressive, heavy rock. But, particularly on the new record we’ve really achieved a good combination of heavy agro stuff, with some melodic hooks, and straight-ahead beats and plenty of math in there. But it’s not half the math rock that the second one was. That was our math-rock opus.
Define the perfect show for you.
Steve: I see a million shows. I worked in a bar.
It’s very interesting you interpreted that to mean someone else’s show. (Says something about your character). I was referring to a perfect Season To Risk show.
Steve: When there are enough people there, it doesn’t have to be a massive amount of people, but the right amount of people. And the right amount of people interested in sharing the energy of the show. 7 out of 10 of those smaller shows... the energy is there more focused. And it translates into how we are performing our songs. Everyone of our songs isn’t just a song, there’s a lot more going on. There’s just an energy and history about each one. And when you go out and perform them, it’s just an extension of that. So for me, a perfect show is when it IS that. And it’s not just going through the motions. You get that when you get the right... something happens... the right amount of focus... it’s hard to describe. It can be on the shittiest PA or it can be on the greatest thing. Over the past ten years, we have had every combination there of, from playing in somebody’s garage to playing on a huge stage in front of several thousand people.
Through the history of Season To Risk, themes of solace, paranoia, and loneliness are common in Season To Risk - Almost a sense of continual loss. Please explain.
Steve: Sometimes I go back and look at everyone one of the records. This is the first record that someone else helped write some of the lyrics. Billy (the bassplayer) helped write some of the lyrics on some of the songs. It was interesting. I liked it. Each album had talked about solace and loss, but in different ways. I’ve always thought of each album as suite of songs that were connected. Similar themes anyway. I don’t want to make it really simple and say, ‘oh this was the album about THE girl. And this was the album about loss of health and being inebriated.’ I don’t want to oversimplify these things. The Shattering is a continuation of the Men are Monkeys album. because I don’t think that album was released properly. It was a time when it just didn’t get out there. We had a hard time getting it distributed. We weren’t touring as much. We didn’t have a publicist on that record who was calling the writers and saying ‘Hey, this band still exists after they got dropped from the major label’. Once you get dropped from a major and are on an independent label, sometimes its really hard. The kids are like, “Well, I don’t want to talk to them.” I mean, the label has got it there and anybody who wants it can get it, but they are not working it.
You and Duane Trower are the only two solid, original members that breathed the life into Season To Risk since 1989. Please offer some insight into your working relationship with Duane.
Steve: Duane and I are both, and sometimes to our discredit, are really mellow easygoing people. We care about it, and I think that’s some of the frustration of why some people have left at certain points because we aren’t like, “Go go go go go.” To us its art and not work. And once it becomes work, we kinda kick back. Not to talk badly about anyone, but I think that’s why have continued working together and keep finding people who are down with that. Not that our work ethic is lazy.
You moved to New York to record, ‘In a Perfect World’ with Martin Bisi at B.C. Studios which was the environment that was producing Cop Shoot Cop and Unsane. That album definitely reflects the climate.
Steve: We had an opportunity to record with Martin Bisi, and we had an almost unlimited budget for that record. But we weren’t the kind of people who go, “Let’s get Bob Rock.” So we had the opportunity to work with Bisi and we just wanted to make it right. None of us had jobs at the time so we just kinda moved into the studio. We were there for two months, we left for a month, and then came back for a month. For that album we were ready to do something really heavy, and something different. Columbia was asking for the first album. They wanted an album full of ‘Mine Eyes’. They wanted it slicker and they wanted it bigger. They had us actually re-record the songs ‘Mine Eyes’ and 'Snakes' for the second album. We said no, and they kinda let us be the artists we wanted to be.
Why don’t you play songs from the old albums much live?
Steve: There’s just so much material.
What about the obligation to the fans?
Steve: There have been so many years between albums, we really want to turn them onto the new stuff. On an underground level like this, you have to keep it fresh. No offense to anybody whose been there since the beginning, but we’re playing to 80% new people everytime.
Why do you seem to continually shifting? Both members and crowds?
Steve: Attention Deficit Disorder. And the fact that all four albums had different people.
The cover of ‘The Shattering’ has a picture of a sun?
Steve: David, the drummer, came across a NASA website. Every day you can go look at pictures of the sun. It tracks solar flares. He’s completely enamored with it. An idea throughout that record is... The idea of the Shattering... it’s not really a ‘concept’ album but there are characters that made up this album. It’s the most non-personal album for us. There are personal ideas and feelings that you can identify with these characters. But these are the most ‘story’ songs I’ve ever tried to do. I don’t want to compare it to a cult leader, but someone like that. Someone who is hyper-intelligent, paranoid, and completely over-read, too much knowledge, has taken in every conspiracy theory, every scientific fact and theory about what makes it all exist and where’s its going. And the whole doomsday cult stuff. There has to be an end all to end all. Just like the shit that’s going on right now. The prophecies about the end of the world. People manifest that. It’s been written so they are gonna make it happen. Otherwise they have lived a lie. So that’s the idea of the Shevirah, The Shattering. There are facets of like say a diamond. And some divine light was shot through it and all those facets became the world. Like the big bang. So I was trying to layer all these different ideas to that. So this person thinks that at some point, the facets become so many, like when you look at that picture of the sun, it’s just so massive with all those little sizzling points of light, and you know at some point, that energy, that divine light that shoots through there to create it all, runs out. The hydrogen of the sun runs out and it collapses on itself and it implodes. And that’s just the end of one segment. So the idea is there are all these things in our world, all these different cultures that are butting heads so hard, it’s going to collapse. If you listen to Art Bell, he calls it ‘The Quickening’. That’s another aspect of all that.
‘Deserve’ sounds like a Fugazi song on the chorus. Why is that? (I had to check credits to see if Ian came in for backup vocals).
Steve: We just played a benefit for the WTC with a bunch of bands, Shiner played and this new great band called Onward Crispin Glover. We played a real short set of like 8 songs. We played ‘Mine Eyes’ and one other from Men Are Monkeys and the rest from the new album. I didn’t realize, because I’m really bad about listening to our material after it’s recorded. And this new one, before it got manufactured, I listened to quite a bit because I was just so stoked on the recorded quality. Livermore did just a brilliant job. I didn’t really pay attention to how many sing-a-long choruses’ there are on this record. But I don’t know if I’d call it a Fugazi influence. Although we are all fans of Fugazi. That’s cool though, I think that’s great. It was really random how that chorus fit. They had the music for it, and that line, I had written down for a long time. A couple of summers ago were on tour in Houston, and we were opening for ALL, and some guy was so stoked to see us, it made us feel great. But he was like, “Man, you guys are the shit. I’ve followed you since your first record. You guys deserve to be exactly where you are.” And to us, we had just got dropped from a major label, the studio we put all our money into got flooded, we are in the last van we bought that we still owe money on with a blown engine, we were sleeping on peoples floors. We were between records and didn’t know O & O was going to put the record out, we were just talking to them about doing it. Then we had lost our bass player and we hadn’t even started writing songs with the new one. So to us, it was kinda, “What did we do to deserve to be here?” But it fit perfectly into the time signature when they were writing it. The other parts where there except for that chorus so I was like, “That’s the line!”
When you break into a more narrative spoken style of lyrical delivery, do you see that as more first person, autobiographical sections, or are you speaking ‘through’ your subject?
Steve: It comes from the fact that 7 out of 10 times, I write the lyrics to the music. The times when it’s spoken, it’s almost always stuff that’s been written without music in mind. And then it’s been formed to fit the meter. So they are more stories that I wrote, for myself, dealing with a situation that just made it’s way there. Say on, ‘Deserve’ it was just an idea about people dealing with each other. It’s most poetry oriented than it is song oriented I guess. It’s a lot easier for me to use descriptive language when you deliver it like that, than if you just try to sing them.
Everyone has vocal credits and everyone has synthesizer credits on ‘The Shattering’.
Steve: Basically we had a bunch of stuff lying around the studio. This record was done in the least amount of time of any one of our records, but there were still experimental elements. We were there 12 to 15 hours a day working on it. Someone would be like that needs a, “ping ping ping”. Or like, ‘Despair’ that was completely improvised in the studio. We threw all this percussion and metal stuff in the tracking room and put up a couple of mics. And then everyone went in there and made random noise. Then we went in and edited it, made a loop of it and slowed it down. That main noise you hear in that song is some nails inside a lunch box that was pitched down and edited down. And all the cacophony you hear behind that is the main track. Then we added the layers of keyboards on it. There was a lot of freedom to do a lot of different things. We were only a four piece and have been for years. I wrote the main riffs onguitar for over half of the material in the songs. We got in the studio and I’m a horrible guitar player. I picked it up out of necessity because I wanted to write songs with the bass player at the time. So when we got into the studio this time, I was just sucking and taking too long. So Duane did a lot of guitars, I think only one of my guitar tracks made it on there. After I got home, I really liked the two guitar sound. So we hired, (‘hired’ like we are paying him - heh) we got our buddy Wade to come in and perform live.
How did you guys cross paths with artist Derek Hess? (The artist who did the cover of, ‘In a Perfect World’ and tour posters)
Steve: We played at a venue he worked at (Euclid Tavern, Cleveland!). And he was booking the shows there and doing the hand drawn flyers. Same kind of subject matter. So we always just kind of stayed in touch.
You were also involved with Frank Kozik (another reputable artist) on your first full length (he did the cover). It seems your desire to work with him was to the point it delayed the release of your album.
Steve: Most of us went to art school. We read Juxtapoz and stay on top of art. Very interested in it. We really wanted Shepard Fairey (Andre the Giant Has a Posse stuff) but we never followed up on it. But then we got thinking it was kind of predictable working with these known poster artists. We were trying to keep our eye out for something different. We actually had a local artist in town wanting to do this last one. I was all about it until David brought that picture and I just really thought it made the match better.
Messages to the masses?
Steve: There needs to be people who seek out culture and art and not just buy what’s easy to get. If you care about modern culture, you are going to have to seek it out if it has any worth or value. There is stuff everywhere, but the majority of things with serious or lasting value, is going to inspire you or make you remember it 20 years from now. You have to look for that stuff.
And when are people going to get to see your band?
Steve: West coast will be in February (2002). We are touring the Midwest in November. We are trying to do a 2-3 week run every 4-6 weeks.
Find the album. Find the band. Find the show and join the Shattering.

live photos: JD Nilknarf & Karen Novak