In an industry that sometimes squanders its most valuable resource, Tishamingo is
a breath of fresh air. Having toured extensively for the last half-decade,
the Georgia-based quartet has honed its collective musical instincts
and songwriting craft to present its most accomplished record to
date -- The Point.
For the last half-decade, Tishamingo has grown tighter as a playing
unit and increased its core fan base through constant touring (on
both sides of the Atlantic). The Point, produced by John
Kurzweg (Creed, Puddle of Mudd), reflects this personal and musical
evolution and marks a new chapter in the band’s ever-advancing
story. It’s the record fans – and the band members
themselves -- have been waiting for. “I think we had to go
through our first two records and spend five years on the road
together in order to make this record,” says guitarist/vocalist
Cameron Williams.
Flavored by the same salt-of-the-earth humanity inhabiting The
Band’s Music From Big Pink and Northern Lights-Southern
Cross eras, infused with sentiments of self-indicting relationship
dysfunction (a la Gregg Allman) and Ronnie Van Zant-esque Southern-rock
lyrical poetry, and built on an organic recording process unprecedented
in the band’s career, The Point is true to its title:
it’s the band’s most focused artistic vision to date. “We
knew how important this record was and we were all working toward
the same goal,” says Williams. “We’re a step
above where we were for the last record, and just working with
John –someone we’ve wanted to work with for a long
time – really capped things off for us.”
“It was great to work with a band whose main focus was the
music,” adds Kurzweg. “They had been searching for
their sound and they’d found it. They are like modern-day
troubadours.”
GETTING TO THE POINT
In early 2006, Cameron Williams (guitar/vocals), Richard
Proctor (drums), Jess
Franklin (guitars/keys/organ/vocals), Chuck
Thomas (bass) holed up in a remote Alligator Point, Florida, beach house
for a very productive writing session. The timeout helped to spawn
numerous tunes and, ultimately, the title of the record. “We
thought it would be a great place for a retreat,” Williams
says.
With a dozen-plus songs under its belt, Tishamingo ascended upon
Kurzweg’s home-studio, The Kitchen, in the hills of Santa
Fe, New Mexico. Or, as the band came to know the town -- “Fanta
Se” (read: fantasy) -- which became more a state of mind
than a physical locale. “There’s just this openness
and creative atmosphere in Santa Fe,” says Williams. “We
definitely picked up on its vibe.”
“It’s been said that Santa Fe brings out aspects of yourself that
have remained hidden,” says Kurzweg.
After two months in the studio (on and off between venue engagements)
under the guiding presence of Kurzweg, what emerged was an 11-track
record packed with kick-ass guitar overdrive, straight-ahead rock
backbeats and deep rhythmic pockets, and shades of classic and
contemporary rock. “John is like a coach, and the best football
coaches are the ones who are not only great with Xs and Os but
also with people,” says drummer/lyricist Richard Proctor. “He
sees your talent and talent level and works accordingly. He brought
out the best of us.”
The ill-conceived tag of “neo-hippie jam band” often
applied to Tishamingo is completely shattered by instantly familiar,
gritty, guitar-driven songs such as, “Are We Rollin’?,” the
stompin’ Son House-meets-Joe Walsh six-string slidin’ of “Travel
On,” the Texas boogie of “Bad News,” the
Southwestern-tinged “Devil’s Love Song,” “Chest
Fever” (a cover of the classic Band tune), and the lethal “Get
On Back.”
“I think the guys really wanted to take it to the next level
with this record,” says Kurzweg. “I have a tendency
to work hard and long in the studio, but these guys were up for
all of it.”
The Point’s musical characters recall rock’s
classic personalities, from Bad Company’s “Shooting
Star” to Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Curtis Loew.” Tishamingo
presents its real-world observations and trusts the listener to
get the message (i.e. “the point”) without being preachy.
In “Mitchell,” for instance, we experience spiritual
resurrection on the streets of downtown Birmingham, Alabama. “Are
We Rollin’?” speaks to unexpected kindness of strangers,
and the compositionally dynamic, multi-layered “Tennessee
Mountain Angel” easily draws comparisons to Skynyrd’s
enduring anthem “Free Bird” and The Marshall Tucker
Band’s signature tune “Can’t You See.”
"It
was probably the best two years of my life that I never want
to do again."
-Cameron Williams
After forming in Atlanta, Georgia, Tishamingo moved into a farmhouse
outside Athens. Like The Band at Big Pink or Traffic in an English-countryside
cottage, Tishamingo bonded in a private space, blasting away into
the night without a care. “We were out in the country and
with no one else around we could play music as loud as we wanted
to,” Cameron says. “We were poor, we were struggling.
But it was fun. It was probably the best two years of my life that
I never want to do again [laughs]. It proved how committed each
one of us was to the band.”
In recent years, the band has “taken on the road” – in
a big way – solidifying its focus and winning fans inside
and outside America, from European festivals and Bonnaroo to Skynyrd’s “Gimme
3 Days Cruise.” Tishamingo has distilled many of their personal
experiences on and off the road and created a very satisfying record
in The Point.
“I think we said, ‘Finally,
we made the record we’ve wanted to and with an amazing producer,’” says
Williams. “That’s a great feeling.”
~ Will
Romano