| TIMBO,
FROM HAMMOND, LOUISIANA, and Brady Sloan, a military brat moving
from all over eventually to LA, met each other in a bar in 1996.
As a few beers passed they start talking music; they realized they
had the same influences, listening to country as kids and punk rock
as they grew older. Timbo and Brady saw a band that combines the
attitudes and music of both. LA resident Pat Muzingo soon joined
on the drums. The band would go through many guitarists before they
finally found Don Rutherford of Knoxville, Tennessee, and Greg "The
Chin" McMullen on a pedal steel guitar to make the band complete.
Speedbuggy now has the line up necessary to play the music they always
envisioned. To date Speedbuggy has released five LPs, two EPs, plus
a bunch of compilations. A few records on the Cargo label, one for
the now defunct Man's Ruin, a record on the Porterhouse label that
the owner Greg Hetson produced, and of course a bunch of stuff on
the "good luck finding any money" type of labels, and most
recently a live one produced by John X.
How has your sound evolved over time?
imbo: The first stuff we were doing was a tinge of country on top
of punk rock, whereas now we're country with a punk rock attitude.
Our punk rock influences have really helped us be more realistic
with the songs we write, and our attitude towards the world,
what's going on in it, and just the everyday shit that revolves
around us.
You mention country; how are you different from others in the
genre?
Timbo: A lot of people now don't know about the great old country.
They might know of a handful of names but don't fully understand
it. People might turn on the country radio stations today and think "What
the f**k? I might as well turn over to the classic rock station
because this does nothing for me."
Brady Sloan: A lot of people don't realize country has had some
amazing songs and musicians over time, a lot of real s**t kickers,
heavy songs. Check out Kris Kristofferson, songs about hardcore
drinkers and hardcore partying, way more than some of the rockers
ever were. Somehow country music has gotten watered down over the
last 20 years or so--banjo, fiddle seem taboo. We see ourselves
bringing the music back to its roots, to its original form.
Any skating history amongst you guys?
Don Rutherford: I started back in 1977 with a Nash, then went
through a couple of Western Auto decks. My folks didn't support
me at all. I would do downhill and street stuff in the suburbs
of Knoxville. In 1982 I got my first real board, a Mike McGill,
and built a half-pipe. Then in 1987 1 blew out my knee and didn't
skate for four years. When I started back up people were jumping
stairs, flips and s**t. Sorry kids, but that's not what I'm about;
for me it's all transition and flow. I did my thing for a little
bit, and now I'm out in Cali with all of these nice parks and I'm
still skating at the ripe ol' age of 39.
Pat Muzingo: I was lucky I grew up in LA. Like Don, I started
around '76. I went to construction sites, ripped off all the wood
I could left and right, then I built a halfpipe. I used to skate
all of the old parks. I was lucky; I was able to skate Marina,
Upland, Whittier--you name it. I went up north to ride Winchester
and down south to Del Mar and Oasis. In a contest when I was 12
or 13 so I skated with Tony Hawk. He had to have been about 11
or 12. I came in fifth, he was 23rd or so. By 1983 I started to
get good, but I was also playing in a punk rock band at the time
(Decry). I decided to quit
because I had peaked. Plus I couldn't do what others were doing.
So 20 years went by and I decided to pick it up again. I'm not
as good as I was, but I don't care. I just want to have fun.
You returned from Europe. How was it?
Brady Sloan: Great. We pack them in over there. The European crowd
is more receptive than some of the shows we have done here in the
States. The two biggest bands in country and rock over there are
Johnny Cash and the Ramones. We infuse sounds from both into what
we do, which in some ways gives the audience the best of both worlds.
Over in Europe are you playing more clubs, festivals, or a combination?
Brady Sloan: Depending on the time of year, we will do four to
five festivals a tour, then fill the rest of the time with club
dates. Club shows typically draw around 300 to 600 people, whereas
some of the festivals we've played have drawn upwards of 20,000
people.
What kind of bills do you usually play?
Brady Sloan: We play with everybody. Sometimes we're next to punk
bands, other times it's a country or metal band. Sometimes we wonder
what we're doing on the same bill with some of these guys, but
the reality is that it doesn't matter over there. The audiences
like it all, they like having it mixed up and that's what we are
all about. In a little German town we were in we spent the whole
night hanging out with these kids who were listening to the theme
songs for Knight Rider and Friends all night long, and when we
say "all night long" we mean all night, because they
were playing that s**t over and over all night--and they were f**king
into it.
What are you working on now?
Finishing recording all of our new songs with John X, then we'll
shop the new album. We really like the stuff we have going, it
has a lot of different flavors. The new stuff has bluegrass, some
old school country, and blues, just what Americana should be. It's
chalk full of drinking songs, hard luck songs, songs about how
you can work as hard as you want and life is still going to suck
because it's always sucked and will continue to suck.
COPYRIGHT 2005 High Speed Productions, Inc
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group |