Posts Tagged ‘Almost Famous’

A collection of the 6 demos recorded by Nancy Wilson and Peter Frampton for the songs they wrote for the fictional band in the iconic rock film “Almost Famous”. RSD will be the exclusive vinyl edition, the tracks will appear on a future project but available only on CD and Digital.

In the movie “Almost Famous” (2000), the band Stillwater was supposedly an amalgamation of Poco, The Eagles, Led Zeppelin and a few other bands that Cameron Crowe had actually written articles about early in his career with Rolling Stone.

One of them leapt off a hotel balcony into a swimming pool. Another almost missed a ride on the tour bus after making a detour to an after-show bash. They met groupies and partook in their share of on-the-road partying, and a newspaper headline declared that the band “runs deep.

If you think that sounds like Stillwater, the fictional band from Almost Famous, you’d be correct. But those tales also apply to a real-life group of the same name that existed during the same period,

The 1973 moustached collective featured in writer/ director Cameron Crowe’s ”Almost Famous” has a legitimate rock pedigree. Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready is the real talent behind Russell Hammond, the band’s charismatic lead guitarist (played by Billy Crudup), while ex Heart guitarist Nancy Wilson (Crowe’s wife) plays rhythm guitar for the group. What’s more, ’70s vet Peter Frampton penned several of the Stillwater tunes heard in the movie, and Wilson and Crowe cowrote the band’s bass driven anthem ”Feverdog,” which made the film’s soundtrack.

Wilson, who also scored the film, says she recruited talent with classic rock roots (Frampton) and contemporary know-how (McCready), because she knew she wouldn’t create a believable sound otherwise. The goal was to make a band ”that’s really good, but not all the way formed yet,” she tells EW.com. ”An ‘opening for Black Sabbath’ kind of sound.” And she also wanted to complement the movie’s satirical if loving take on rock & roll Über egos. ”We had to walk the line between parody and something that sounds legit,” says Wilson

Record Store Day 2021 release from UMC

Front to back, Slutever deliver Almost Famous with a sneer. Amid shouts of “smother me!” and “nobody loves anybody,” LA punks Rachel Gagliardi and Nicole Snyder craft huge, heaving grunge blasts that smell like stale cigarettes and taste like last night’s regret. Wake up hungover as fuck, look around discouraged, go right back to bed  Almost Famous confronts grown-up problems with anxiety and unpreparedness: “Now that you’re older, things aren’t much better/ It starts to look bad when you can’t pay your rent.” Yeah, that’s bad, but at least Slutever are stumbling through it with style.

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The first sounds of Slutever’s latest EP are a propulsive smash of drums and three notes on a guitar that hit the listener like an elbow to the face. Rachel Gagliardi and Nicole Snyder have been regulars in the L.A. grunge-pop scene for roughly a year, playing sweaty sold-out gigs at the Smell and dropping a split tape with Girlpool. But their new EP “Almost Famous” was recorded in a blitz right before they left Pennsylvania – and right when they thought the band was over.

Snyder and Gagliardi met as teenagers in a music program at their Pennsylvania high school, but it wasn’t until they were both in college that the two joined forces. Both were devoted followers of the same rip-and-rock brand of punk; both were studying the music industry and gunning for similar gigs. It seemed to make sense… plus, they were bored.

“A little bit of curiosity, and a little bit of boredom,” laughs Snyder. “That’s how Slutever was born.”

After that came a string of demo collections and early EPs (their debut, according to Snyder, “sounded shitty” but was “really popular on Tumblr… I think because it had a girl throwing up as the cover art”). For a few years, the band tread water in the Philadelphia scene — and then Snyder got an internship in Seattle. The concept of a new album took on a do-or-die urgency.

Slutever-by-Faye-Orlove-sm

“We just basically like… emptied our bank account and said, ‘All right, we’re using all our money, recording all the songs and we’ll see what happens.’”

“’Smother’ and ‘Maggot’ were written literally two days before we went into the studio,” adds Snyder, “and we didn’t finish them until we were halfway into the recording process.”

The burst of activity ended when Snyder packed her bags in June 2013… and then the songs went into artistic cold storage. Gagliardi wound up hoofing it to Los Angeles just four months later — and after nearly a year in the northwest, Snyder joined her. It wasn’t until the duo joined forces with fellow Angeleno twosome Girlpool for an East Coast tour that they finally unfroze “Almost Famous”.

“We were kinda nervous [the songs] would never see the light of day,” Snyder admits. “The tour with Girlpool really helped us realize we should just do it ourselves. We started as friends so we should just keep ourselves the focus.”The result? A half-dozen tracks of driving drums and gut-crunching guitar, squeezed into a cassette tape and covered in a hand-drawn label done in Magic Marker. The two spent the last few weeks on a speedy tour up the Left Coast, but are back in town on Friday for a night at the Smell. After that, the future is decidedly up in the air. But now that they’re back together — and living in a cramped Hollywood apartment — it’s also bright.

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 A West Coast pair of “teen girl culture” enthusiasts, Rachel Gagliardi and Nicole Snyder specialize in feedback-filled punk anthems that get the blood boiling. With the band Sounds LikeIf Girlpool hit the distortion pedal and added a drummer, or if X-Ray Spex reunited and moved to present-day East Los Angeles.
Let Slutever “Smother” you with their combative EP opener. The forthcoming six-song set, titled “Almost Famous”, will drop on February 17th.