No doubt about it
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Dave Brooks
Dozens of fans rolled up to the Viper Room on Saturday on two
chartered luxury buses. The four girls who make up the Huntington
Beach rock outfit Mudbath pulled their simple trailer into a
nondescript parking place and got busy unloading amplifiers and
performing sound checks.
Southern California has no shortage of struggling bands, but few
unsigned acts have been as successful at reversing the pop-punk
paradigm as Mudbath. Although the group hasn’t yet been able to earn
a living off its legion of fans -- known as Mudpuppies -- few record
executives can ignore its growing group of supporters who act more
like rock stars than groupies.
For Jenn Mendoza and Jeremy Colacchio, both 21, it was their first
ride on the Mudbus, a Vegas-style liner hired by band manager Kelly
Bartlone to take fans to Mudbath concerts. Mudbath adds other
personal touches as well.
“I thought it was cool that [guitarist Jamie Ross] delivered the
tickets to my house,” Mendoza said.
The buses arrived just minutes before the curtains opened to a
blast of electric distortion and high-pitched screams from the
audience. Mudbath front-girl Sara Barry entered center in her best
Betty Page garb, slithering her hips like an enchanted cobra, her
lips puckered slightly upward to catch the reflection of the overhead
lights on her beauty-mark piercing. She is a Siren, hypnotizing the
audience with eye contact that is convincingly sincere and constantly
fleeting.
“The minute you stop moving, you lose everything,” Barry said. “It
kind of comes to me when I’m singing the song, whatever feels right,
I just go with it.”
Mudbath sounds a lot like another female-fronted rock band from
Orange County, and it’s impossible to not notice the similarities
between Barry’s voice and No Doubt singer Gwen Stefani. Barry said
she’s very influenced by Stefani but wants to break that mold and
stand out on her own. That being said, Mudbath still performs a cover
of Vandals punk homage “Oi to the World,” repopularized when No Doubt
made the song a radio favorite.
The comparisons have probably helped Mudbath, whose growing fan
base includes frequent listeners of popular rock stations. Manager
Bartlone said that she is extremely confident that Mudbath will
eventually make it big; it’s just a matter of timing.
“Instead of chasing record labels, we’re trying to go in through
the backdoor,” she said. “We want to develop the fan base and show
that we can sell out places like the Whiskey with people pounding on
the doors to get in. That will get their attention.”
Few record executives could laugh at the dedication of the band’s
followers, eager to gobble up any merchandise christened with the
Mudbath logo.
Fans also seem eager to help. The entire Mudbath entourage is run
by volunteers like Tina Potter who works as the band’s webmaster, or
Gretchen Sturm who does merchandise and goes on puke patrol during
bus rides. Friend Georgia DeNaut flew down for the Hollywood show
from the Bay Area to help pass out fliers.
“Our goal is to have people really invested in not only the music,
but the band itself,” Bartlone said. “We want them to feel that sense
of excitement when they hear a Mudbath song on the radio.”
Mudbath does that, in part, by allowing fans to participate in the
lifestyle. Besides the bus rides, Mudbath makes themselves accessible
to fans, maintaining a friendly rapport while hanging out to greet
and chat after shows.
While newcomers work their way over to drummer Yvette Casali to
see what she put in her mohawk, friends gather around bassist Kym
Cienfuegos to congratulate her with flowers and pull a smile out of
the stoic metal-head.
“There’s no barriers and they’re very approachable,” said longtime
fan Tiffany Wilson, who enjoys the commandery of people going to
Mudbath shows. “We can be who we are freely, knowing that we’re all
part of the same group with some sort of honor code. It’s like the
village idiots, looking out for each other and helping to get back to
the left of right.”
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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