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RX Bandits

A Decade of Doing Battle: RX Bandits Celebrate Album Anniversary at Ace of Spades

In the summer of 2006, RX Bandits released their fifth album, titled …And the Battle Begun.

That was 10 years ago, a time when the music industry (as a profit-generating entity driven primarily by CD sales) was clamoring for ways to fend off its impending death-by-advancing-technology. Online piracy and the iPod were shredding the major labels one miserable fiscal quarter at a time, and no rabbit they could pull from their hat could stop it.

With this scene as the backdrop, RX Bandits were poised to deliver an album they were immensely proud of, and yet they were weathering their own set of personal storms as well. One had to do with their record label, Drive-Thru, which simultaneously gave them an audience at a very young age, but also pigeonholed them into a scene populated by the poppiest of punk and emo bands. It was a scorching-hot scene, but it had all the signs of a passing trend and, most importantly, the RX Bandits didn’t fit into it.

Their next album was to be their last one owed to Drive-Thru, which had just been acquired by Universal to help with distribution. …And the Battle Begun had been written and recorded and was supposed to come out in 2005, but it wouldn’t see the light of day until a whole year later, and in the end wouldn’t come out under Drive-Thru at all.

RX Bandits lead singer Matt Embree spoke obliquely about the split during a recent phone call, not even mentioning Drive-Thru by name in what was clearly an effort to avoid trudging into negative territory.

Getting the Record Out

“We were in a tough spot,” he said. “They didn’t like it, but we felt it was an honest representation of who we were. The relationship had been breaking down for years.”

The RX Bandits started off as the Pharmaceutical Bandits, a pretty straight-up ska band from Long Beach, very much borne out of the third-wave ska scene that bubbled up in the ‘90s. They were already pushing beyond that narrowly defined genre by their second and third albums, though, both of which were released under the band’s newly abbreviated name. Their fourth, The Resignation, kicked the door wide open. The high-end upstrokes and trombone lines typical of ska music were laced throughout the record, but they were stacked alongside freeform jams, intricate progressive rock riffing, some reggae and plenty of straightforward melodic punk rock. A cult following was solidified, and a foundation for the band’s future was set.

Which brings us to …And the Battle Begun, which was tracked live at John Baccigalupi’s old The Hangar Studios in Sacramento. The guitars, bass and drums were all recorded live in one room, with the tracks bleeding into one another’s microphones and allowing members to feed off each other as they committed the tracks to tape.

“Just imagine the four of us in a square,” Embree said. “If we made a mistake, we started over. It was a way to ensure that even if we wanted to, we couldn’t go back and change it.”

This new album took all of the genre-defying elements of The Resignation and doubled down on them. Drive-Thru was riding high with radio-ready pop-punk bands like New Found Glory and Something Corporate—appealing to teenagers’ emotional sensibilities and moving T-shirts off Hot Topic racks all the while.

“We were the odd band out on that label,” Embree said. “But it kind of helped. People who did like it became fans for life.”

After a drawn-out skirmish with the label, they ultimately split, although the details of the divorce are unclear. …And the Battle Begun was finally released under Embree’s own label MDB along with the brand new, indie-friendly Sargent House.

On September 25, a little more than 10 years after the album’s release, they’ll bring …And the Battle Begun to Sacramento in its entirety.

A Decade Ago

Album sales were still a crucial part of the business model back in 2006, but the foundation was giving way. Embree remembers watching industry executives attempt to weather the growing storm. He gave the example of The Resignation, which came with a live DVD, allowing the label to tack a few extra dollars onto the price.

“That was the master plan,” he said. “’OK, now we can charge $15 because it has a DVD, and people will want this because DVD pirating isn’t around yet.’ The music industry is built on creative people, but the people who run it are some of the most boneheaded fools.”

He says indie labels are different, mostly because they’ve been forced to think progressively to ensure survival from the get-go. They can’t count on quintuple-platinum albums to float the boat and pad pockets.

As RX Bandits set out to tour behind …And the Battle Begun in celebration of its anniversary, the industry climate is quite different. Music is more likely to be hosted in a cloud and get piped down through a person’s cell phone, with very little income generated in the process.

Embree is accepting of that reality, though, in part because he’s always made his artistic living playing live. RX Bandits toured the world for the better part of 10 straight years, although they’ve slowed down more recently, even taking a hiatus after their 2009 album, Mandala. Any tour they go on could potentially be their last, and that includes this one.

“As you get older, things get more complicated,” he said. “There’s normal life shit. I’d like to make some more [RX Bandits] music, but as of right now we have no plans. This could be it, or maybe we’ll make a new album one day.”

Old Songs

Some of the songs on …And the Battle Begun have been staples in the RX Bandits’ live set since the moment the album came out. Others, as you might expect, haven’t been played in years.

“We most definitely have to relearn some songs,” he said. “There are like two songs on the record we’ve never played live, except for the few times we played the album in its entirety.”

Other songs, meanwhile, have evolved and taken new shapes and sizes over years of live performances.

“’Only for the Night’ became a nine-minute jam,” he said. “That was the closest thing to a pop song on the album. I really like doing that.”

Embree says a tour like this is definitely a nod to the fans, who get to revisit a time and place in their lives through a collection of songs. But the artist gets something special from it, too, he said. The band took a similar anniversary tour for The Resignation a couple of years ago.

“We never got to play those song on a proper stage back in 2003,” he said. “It was our first headlining tour as a band, so a lot of times the stage was super small and the sound system was shitty.”

At that time, the band was also still shaking undeserved stigmas attached to Drive-Thru and a genre of ska that had receded from the mainstream.

…And the Battle Begun was the last album RX Bandits recorded with any horn players as formal members of the band, although trombone and saxophone do show up sporadically on the records that followed “The whole ska stigma stuck with us for a long time,” he said. “I always loved having horns, but once we got to The Resignation and Battle Begun, it felt like our own style. We were incorporating horns into different styles of music.”

There were no four-measure horn melodies sectioned off between verses like you’d hear in a Mighty Mighty Bosstones song (or that first Pharmaceutical Bandits album, for that matter). The horn sounds on …And the Battle Begun are weaved into the fabric of the songs, treated no different than the keyboards, vocal harmonies or any other overdubs.

Embree says he would never try and play through this album without horns, so they can be expected on this tour.

Distractions and Technology

An early RX Bandits song called “Analog Boy” laments the distracting nature of technology on our culture, with lines about our surrender to electronic devices and the isolation that can bring. He points to cell phones and TVs as the culprits in the song.

“Analog Boy” came out in 2001, when most cellphones were plastic Nokias and texting wasn’t much of a thing. Many of us were still on dial-up. MySpace wouldn’t arrive until two years later, and Facebook a year after that. Suffice it to say, whatever he was singing about 15 years ago has since multiplied exponentially.

Embree, who turns off all push notifications on his cellphone and shuts it off entirely anytime he’s writing or playing music, does his best to keep some distance between himself and technology.

He shared a quote from one of his favorite authors, Kurt Vonnegut, after the Orlando nightclub shooting back in June and was treated to the blunt-force power that can be wielded by human beings when they hunker down behind a computer screen or cellphone.

The quote he pasted (which you can find on their feed if you’d like to do some scrolling) wasn’t dissimilar from a lyric you might find in an RX Bandits song. But the whole thing went up in flames, in part because it was being delivered into a social media feed rather than a set of speakers.

“I learned a lot from that,” he said. “I’m not super involved in the social media universe partially because I try to keep my focus on making music and being an artist. I respect them as people, but being too involved in what fans think can derail your focus.”

Come late September, he’ll be embarking on a month-long tour in which the music gets to be the centerpiece. And on this tour in particular, he and the band will get to take a sonic trip 10 years into the past as they do it.

RX Bandits’ …And the Battle Begun 10-Year Anniversary Tour with special guests And So I Watched You From Afar comes through Sacramento Sept. 25, 2016 at Ace of Spades, located at 1417 R St. The all-ages show starts at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $22.50 in advance and $25 the day of the show and can be purchased online at Aceofspadessac.com

What’s Next? CHLLNGR

Steven Borth’s CHLLNGR takes dub to the next level

Jet setting around the world to collaborate and tour, studio sessions with music’s most renowned creators, and splitting living time in Sacramento and Copenhagen with a beautiful girlfriend would seem to make for a full life for most musicians, yet Steven Borth II seeks more from his endeavors. The well-traveled musician is exploding back onto the scene with his new project, CHLLNGR, a dub revolution that takes some history-digging to get to its source.

Borth was born and raised in Sacramento, but found his niche as a musician in the Bay Area. Remember ska? More specifically, remember third-wave ska punk? It had a good run in the ’80s and ’90s and Steven Borth II was a part of that as a member of the East Bay’s Link 80. He joined the group in the latter years of its existence, but his involvement is integral in shaping CHLLNGR.

Link 80 frequently toured Europe, enjoying the fruits of the punk rock circuit in the United Kingdom. It was on these tours that Borth acquired a taste for dub music. “I would help load in the gear, do a sound check with just enough to time to go outside and ask someone where the nearest record shop was,” he said. “I would make it just in time before they closed, and I would pick up what I thought may be good. How I really got started was collecting the Trojan box sets.”

The dissolution of ska was far from pretty. Link 80 suffered traumatic losses and its surviving members found new outlets. For Borth it was joining Rx Bandits, another Bay Area ska revival band. He’d been in Link 80 for four years, but when Steve Choi offered him a spot, he joined up because, he said, Rx Bandits’ sound shared the direction of his interests musically and politically. Those Trojan box sets he scored while on tour with Link 80 introduced him to dub originator King Tubby, which inspired him to continue his exploration of dub while on European tours with Rx Bandits.

Borth started a side band called Satori while playing in Rx Bandits. He described that band as homage to Jamaican music, which served as a foundation for CHLLNGR—his foray into the next era of dub.

Borth first graced our radar as the bearded, almost Teen Wolf look-a-like saxophonist in Purple Girl. The all-too-short-lived funk band could have been Sacramento’s answer to Hall & Oates, but it was not meant to be. Months later, Borth’s three-piece project Dub Defender emerged at The Press Club. Dub Defender’s first run of shows featured Borth on keys, vocals and sax, with Purple Girl/Who Cares keyboardist Young Aundee contributing falsetto vox and DJ Whores cutting up club-friendly hip-hop samples into the dubbed-out fold.

That night featured hip-hop and indie rock bands, yet wedging a dub set into the mix was far from an uncomfortable juxtaposition. Borth’s willingness to let his projects breathe and grow makes Dub Defender an intriguing plot. There is no blueprint for Dub Defender. Borth opts to let his instincts and interests amalgamate until he’s satisfied with the results. “One of the most important things for me in music and in life is to always be open to new ideas,” he said. “I try to make open roads for myself and anyone that is involved in my projects.”

Borth and company leaked a single, “Change Is Great,” as Dub Defender before changing the name. The project is now called CHLLNGR, which is pronounced “Challenger”—he just dropped those useless vowels. Borth explained that the new name is meant to express the boundless nature of the project. “I felt the name Dub Defender could be restricting stylistically,” he said. “I really want to explore this project and take it as far as it can go.”

CHLLNGR began on a TASCAM 388 reel-to-reel machine made in 1985, which Borth purchase in San Jose, Calif. He enjoyed the dusty aged sound of the quarter-inch tape. “[The seller] tried to say it worked, but I knew that it didn’t,” he said. “It cost me $800 to fix, but in ’85 it was retailed at $5,000. Using it made me think a lot about studios, and if you’re looking for a vintage sound, it’s better to be limited, because that’s technically how it was.”

The recording sessions were structured as a game for the collaborators to play. Borth invited his friends to add their touch to the simple chord changes he’d laid down, until each musician was satisfied with their bit. Once the structure was settled, he recorded on the TASCAM until the proper vibe filled the room.

“I wasn’t looking for perfection as much as I was listening for the take where everyone’s own style came out the most,” Borth said. “What I really captured in doing it like this was that once we got it, there was a certain freshness to the sound since we were really learning and creating the songs while in the process of recording them.”

Those sessions will be CHLLNGR’s debut EP, which is scheduled for a spring release on Green Owl. The EP’s release has been pushed back several times, but the delay has not phased Borth. He said, “When the project gets debuted we want it to be perfect. The people I’m working with on this record have been making music for a long time, so we know how to do it wrong. We’re taking the necessary measures to be certain that the timing is right.”

The live set, since we last heard it, focused primarily on dub vibes; but when Borth mentions collaborating with Zach Hill, Brooklyn’s Ninjasonik, former The Defendants member Dr. Echo and London’s Afrikan Boy, the direction of CHLLNGR becomes puzzling. It’s not surprising his session with Hill in the Bay Area involved noise nuisance disputes. Borth invited Hill over to lay down drums and even took the necessary steps to warn his landlord and neighbors of the impending noise. “I knew it was going to be loud, but I had no idea how loud.”

“[The landlord] said it would be fine but to try to get done by a certain time since they had their grandparents coming over,” Borth said. “Once we were done we walked outside and my landlord looked like he wanted to kill me. He said it shook the whole house. Needless to say, we were done in time and no heart attacks occurred.”

Living the life of a nomad, but keeping an apartment in Copenhagen, Borth said it’s been a taxing process to continue recording CHLLNGR on his beloved TASCAM. “I have been creating a lot more of my music utilizing modern technology, i.e my laptop, micro-Korg and an Mbox, which I think will be reflected in the sound,” he said. “I will most likely use the TASCAM again for this project, but at this point since I am traveling quite a bit, and it is easier for me to put everything in a duffle bag, travel around and capture sounds.”

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CHLLNGR played the Submerge 50th Issue Party/second anniversary on Saturday, Jan. 9 at Marilyn’s on K with TAIS and DJ Mike Diamond.
To see when and where CHLLNGR will play next you can check out www.myspace.com/chllngr