Justin Moore – Vocals/Guitar * Phil Bogard –
Guitar
Shea Sowell – Bass * Matt Chambless - Drums
INGRAM
HILL’s story could start in several places. We could
begin at the University of Memphis in 2000, when vocalist/guitarist
Justin Moore and drummer Matt Chambless first met and eventually
formed the band.
Or we could go straight to 2002, when the quartet self-released
their Until Now EP and toured endlessly, sharing
stages with artists such as Jason Mraz, Michelle Branch, Lisa
Marie Presley, Saliva, Lifehouse, Maroon 5 and O.A.R. As with
years past, they did well over 200 shows in 2002 and garnered
airplay on radio stations in Memphis and throughout the Southeast.
Along the way, they drove three vans straight into the ground,
with the last one going through five transmission changes
alone. “We hadn’t been home for more than 10 days
at a time that year,” says Chambless. “But while
it’s easy to groan about being away so much, we’ve
had the opportunity to see the country and connect with audiences
from Chattanooga to Charlottesville to New York City.”
Their work ethic saw Until Now rocket all the way
to #5 on the Memphis retail charts, a remarkable feat for
a rock band in a town dominated by country music and R&B
acts. Equally impressive, the band sold more 10,000 copies
of the EP, and a sizeable chunk of those transactions took
place during their electrifying live shows, including 385
copies sold at a gig in Michigan and 200 at a stop in Washington.
“To go into a new town and play for an audience that’s
never heard of you, and then have them buy your CD afterward,
is an amazing feeling,” says Bogard.
The latest chapter of the band’s story starts with new
album, JUNE’S PICTURE SHOW. Fittingly enough, the record
marks a new beginning for the Tennessee natives, as it’s
their major label debut and in terms of songwriting and sonics,
betters its predecessor by a country mile. The band entered
the studio with producer Rick Beato (Billionaire, Flickstick),
road-tightened, revitalized and eager to record and it shows.
The result is an album that feels fresh and alive, written
and delivered by a group with a deep reverence for classic
rock and pop.
“I remember listening back to the final mixes and thinking,
‘Wow, I can’t believe that’s us,’”
says Bogard. “It turned out so much better than we hoped
it would. We just sat in our van and kept playing it over
and over. It just flat-out rocks.”
Ingram Hill initially issued June’s Picture Show
this past fall, planning to support it with another round
of DIY promotion and perpetual touring. But within a few weeks
of the album’s release, Hollywood Records signed the
band and decided to re-release it in early 2004.
Drawing from influences ranging from Elvis to the Black Crowes,
June’s Picture Show rattles and rolls with
bluesy rock fire. The arrangements are smart and taut and
filled with hummable melodies both tender and tough. Chambless
and Sowell provide the foundation, driving upbeat tracks like
“Never Be The Same” and “Hanging Around
Again,” and then locking into smoky, laidback grooves
on “To Your Grave” and “Maybe It’s
Me.” Bogard soars above them, his guitar work an earthy
blend of acoustic roadhouse soul and melodic barroom rock.
Vocalist Moore brings June to life, offering warmly
sung meditations on loneliness (“Will I Ever Make It
Home”), unrequited love (“Chicago”) and
family (“The Captain”). In “To Your Grave,”
he tells the somber, unsettling story of a guy who kills his
girlfriend and then himself. With “On My Way,”
“Waste It All On You” and “What If I’m
Right,” the singer sifts through the wreckage of a broken
relationship and looks to the renewal that follows. According
to Moore, the songs were inspired by an old fling. “I
was devastated when it ended, but I’m thankful for it
now,” he laughs. “It’s provided me with
tons of material. I look at it as an emotional investment.”
How would Moore describe the album’s overall sound to
someone who’s never heard it? “I call it pop rock
with a Southern twist,” he says. “Someone once
said that if there was a Southern Pop category, we’d
own it. I kinda like that.” |