Great White
Great White is:
Jack Russell Vocals
Mark Kendall Guitar
Michael Lardie Keyboards & Guitar
Sean McNabb Bass
Audie Desbrow Drums
Ex-Sharks:
Krys Baratto Bass
Lorne Black Bass
Teddy Cook Bass
Dave Filice Bass
Gary Holland Drums
Matthew Johnson Guitar
Ty Longley Guitar
Jordan Martin Guitar
Tony Montana Bass
Tyler Nelson Guitar
Derrick Pontier Drums
Scott Pounds Bass
Eric Powers Drums
Francis Ruiz Drums
Like the fearsome, deadly denizen of the deep that shares
its name, Great White knows something about survival of the fittest. The
Southern California blues-rock band first took a bite out of the rock
scene in 1984 and has never let go. Great White has achieved worldwide
success, encompassing sales of over six million records. They received
a Grammy Award nomination for Best Hard Rock Performance for the song
"Once Bitten, Twice Shy", and earned a double platinum certification
for the album
Twice Shy.
With the release of Can't Get There From
Here, the group's first release from John Kalodner's label Portrait,
Great White is poised to conquer once again.
The
soulful, blues-based signature sound that turned songs like "Face
The Day", "Rock Me", and "Save Your Love" into international
hits drives the dozen new tracks on Can't
Get There From Here. According to vocalist Jack Russell, the
hooks are more monstrous than ever. "It's Great White, just bigger
and better." That is due, in part, to producer Jack Blades (Night
Ranger, Damn Yankees), who produced the album at his Northern California
studio, The Barn. The album was recorded in a mere 24 days in the spring
of 1998. Jack Russell recorded additional rhythm tracks at his own 710
studios.
Collaborating with bandmates Michael Lardie and Mark Kendall, producer
Blades, and longtime friend Don Dokken, Russell explored his own colorful
past to pen the lyrics to the rollicking "Rollin' Stoned" and
"Gone to the Dogs", an adrenalized ode to overindulgence. He draws
on experience to explore relationships both good ("Saint Lorraine",
"Sister Mary", "Ain't No Shame") and bad ("Loveless
Age"). Yet Can't
Get There From Here is not without its moments of broader social
commentary, skewering religious hypocrisy in "Wooden Jesus" and
poignantly giving voice to the plight of the homeless on "Hey Mister".
But
whatever his subject, Russell keeps it real. "I'm not trying to be
some innovative lyricist writing about things that nobody's ever heard
about before," he says. "Sometimes I think that people try to
be too hip lyrically, where they go beyond what other people can understand.
I think it's important that we keep telling ourselves the same stories
in our own way. The songs that have always been memorable to me were the
ones that were simple and basic, that remind me of a situation in my life."
Great White has been churning out memorable songs since the early 80's,
when Russell and Kendall joined forces and adopted the blues-based sound
that went against the era's glam rock grain. Great White quickly attracted
attention on the L.A. club scene. Their independently released EP Out
of the Night sold 20,000 copies and got local airplay. Great White
was snapped up by EMI America, which issued the eponymous Great White
in 1984. That year, the band embarked on their first European tour with
Whitesnake, and segued to a five month U.S. arena run with Judas Priest.
Shot
in the Dark, their follow-up independent release, marked the arrival
of drummer Audie Desbrow. By the time Capitol Records signed the band
and reissued Shot in the Dark,
keyboardist-guitarist Michael Lardie had come aboard. After the release
of Shot in the Dark, Great White
hit the road with Dokken and was on the verge of even bigger success.
The 1987 follow-up Once Bitten
,
which featured the hit tracks "Rock Me", "Lady Red Light",
and "Save Your Love", went platinum. Their next album
Twice
Shy, which featured the Top 5 hit "Once Bitten, Twice Shy",
more than doubled that tally.
The late 80's were boom years for the band, marked by non-stop touring
with some of hard rock's biggest names. Great White ended the Once
Bitten
tour with a headlining show at London's Marquee Club,
and returned to Europe on the Monsters of Rock tour with Kiss, Iron Maiden,
and Anthrax. While promoting
Twice
Shy, Great White toured with Ratt, and co-headlined a tour with
Tesla. The following year, they launched a headlining tour, supported
by the Michael Schenker Group and Havana Black.
The
band continued into the next decade performing "House of Broken Love"
on the American Music Awards in January 1990. That spring, Great White
embarked on their first tour of Japan. They soon returned stateside for
the Memorial Day weekend festival, dubbed The World Series of Rock, which
featured Whitesnake, Skid Row, Bad English, and Hericane Alice. Great
White recorded two more albums for Capitol Hooked,
which was certified gold, and Psycho
City. In support of Hooked,
Great White toured, completing a headline tour, a guest slot with the
Scorpions, and trips to Europe and Japan. Psycho
City was followed by a U.S. tour with Kiss.
Although Capitol issued a Best
Of compilation in 1993, Great White had already departed the label
to begin work on their next studio release, Sail
Away. Quoting a scene all too familiar in the music industry,
Lardie explained, "After the label changed presidents for the fourth
time, we decided to get out of Dodge." Great White spent a grueling
seven straight months on the road headlining clubs. According to Lardie,
it was "the longest stint we ever did without a break." Great
White kept up the pace once Sail Away
was released on Zoo Records in 1994, touring the country several times
over the following year and a half. Their next release, Let
It Rock, was released through yet another label, Imago, in 1996.
After
leaving Imago, Great White signed with Portrait
Records, an imprint founded by A&R guru John Kalodner that features
fellow established hard rock acts such as Ratt, Damn Yankees, and Cinderella.
Russell began sending demo tapes in 1997, but it was the combination of
songs and co-writer/producer Jack Blades that proved to be the winning
ticket to clinch the deal. The "pair of Jacks" began collaborating
after Blades asked Russell to provide background vocals on Night Ranger's
Seven CD. "He's just amazing. He'd go off in the morning, running
down the hill with his dogs, and come back with nine tenths of a song
written," compliments Russell, who was equally pleased with Blades'
job as producer -- a role Great White had assumed several times in the
past. "I really don't think that you can totally produce yourselves,"
he says now. "It's difficult to let go, but you have to. You have
to say, 'Look, this is better for us. Let somebody else take this role.
Let's just be musicians.'"
Can't Get There From Here is
the band's first album to feature bassist Sean McNabb a member
since the Let It Rock tour.
Great White was put into hyperdrive, but the whirlwind pace didn't faze
the band. In fact, they are gearing up for a tour with Ratt, Poison, and
LA Guns, and are already working on their next album. "This whole
year has been like being sucked up in a tornado, like going from one extreme
to the other. It's been amazing. It's been like a Cinderella story,"
Russell raves.
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