When we last saw MIDDLE CLASS RUT, the band was tearing through a North American tour in support of 2010's No Name No Color and hit single "New Low.
" The song shot to #5 at alternative radio, its companion video racked up more than 4 million YouTube views and Middle Class Rut was, as USA Today declared, "on the verge."
The Sacramento, CA-based duo of vocalist/guitarist Zack Lopez and vocalist/drummer Sean Stockham shared stages with the likes of Muse, Social Distortion, Them Crooked Vultures, Alice In Chains, 30Seconds To Mars and Linkin Park and more than held their own, drawing rave reviews from NME, the BBC, Alternative Press and Kerrang!, who proclaimed, "Their sound is nothing short of colossal, and one that a mere two-piece shouldn't be able to create, combining the boisterous swagger and pomp of Jane's Addiction and the feral fury of Rage Against the Machine."Added Alternative Press, "it’s mind-blowing to witness the sheer depth and complexity of the sound these two guys are capable of unleashing on their own."
Lopez and Stockham are raising the bar with Pick Up Your Head, an album that sees the duo opening up their sound. “We realized we’d exhausted everything we could do with drums, guitar, and vocals,” Lopez explains. “Once we decided to take an 'anything goes' approach, the songs poured out. We were freer with layering and didn’t worry if we couldn’t reproduce it live, as long as we captured the music with the highest energy possible.”
Mixed by Grammy winning producer Dave Sardy (Johnny Cash, LCD Soundsystem, Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds), the album was produced by the duo working alone in the studio. “We wanted to have a distinct sound,” Lopez says. “Instead of jamming together, I’d write a bassline or a vocal melody. Sean would lay down a tempo and we’d write around that.For percussion, we’d use whatever was laying around – pots and pans, an old desk– anything with a nice crack and ring to it.”
They recorded together in one room, so the music and vocals bleed into eachother to preserve the feeling of a live performance. “There are more layers onthis album, but we’ve been playing together so long, there was never aconversation about what kind of record we were going to make,” Stockham says.“The songs and arrangements evolved as we played them.”
The music on Pick Up Your Head has a denser, fuller sound than before, with Lopez playing bass and rhythm guitar, sometimes laying down multi-tracked parts. “On every song,we added percussive elements that play along with the drums to get a more spontaneous bang to build off of. It’s not overkill, but it does sound more like a normal rock band. We had a budget, but we didn't send out for any fancy equipment. I used my practice amp and the usual amps I use on stage. We didn’t use samplers. We didn’t want any sounds a thousand different people have used before.”
On“No More,” Lopez piles up layers of grinding rhythms as Stockham’s looped drum track adds a hint of funk to the song’s message of desperate heartache.Stockham sings lead on “Dead Eye,” a mournful tribute to the friends and family he’s lost in recent months. The track's loping bass line and shimmering, reverb drenched guitar lines give it a country-esque vibe. “Sing While You Slave”describes the frustrations of a dead end job, alternating punched up guitars and a growling rant with jolts of processed vocals full of quiet desperation.The band shows diversity on tracks like “Leech,” which has the bright feel of a70s glam rock hit in its bouncy backbeat; the heavy surf guitar, tidal bass and primal drumming of “Cut the Line” and the Latin-tinged rap’n’roll of the title track. “Born Too Late” is a full-on blistering post punk attack, while “Take aShot” closes the record with a quiet meditation on life’s disappointments.
The album is introduced via its electrifying lead single, "Aunt Betty."Says Stockham, "A lot of the songs on the new record, including ‘AuntBetty,’ existed as finished demos long before we even set foot in the studio. They were like these elaborate little buildings, finely chiseled, where every ornate detail had a definite purpose. Some needed a facelift, others needed ass implants. In the case of ‘Aunt Betty,’ she just needed some weight in the bottom end - a new foundation. We chopped her in half at the waist, fed her legs to the wolves, and rebuilt some new stems with thunderous thighs and bunda booty."
Keepingwith the "anything goes approach," Lopez and Stockham are amplifyingtheir live sound by adding a bassist, guitarist and percussionist. Explains Zack, “We were talking about our touring and figuring out how to play the new songs live and realized we had two choices: either we play to a laptop loaded with tracks, which would be lame, or we bring in some guys to fill out the sound, which seemed cooler. Sean was a little reluctant at first, which then made me reluctant, but we agreed to at least try it. If it works, great. If not, we’ll just go back to the way we’ve always done it.”
The band's roots can be traced back to Sacramento in the early 2000's. Stockham knew he was going to be a drummer from the moment he saw a fellow student bashing the drum kit in a junior high jazz-fusion band. “The sound of the drums in that big practice room was it for me,” he says. “I’d been singing and dancing since I was four or five, but when I heard those drums, I knew that’s what I wanted to do with my life.” His parents had gotten him a drum kit and he spent every afternoon in his living room, bashing away to the bands on MTV.
Lopez, meanwhile, had been forced to take piano lessons--not the coolest instrument for a teenage boy. After struggling with a nylon string classical guitar that he couldn't get his fingers around, he got an electric.He learned the basic chords, ditched his teacher and started teaching himself. The two eventually hooked up and together with a friend, formed a band. Zack’s mom had a tape deck. As soon as the still-unnamed band started writing songs,they’d record them. “We liked to listen to what we were writing right away,”Stockham says. “We needed to hear it come out of a stereo.”
The band called itself Leisure. They continued playing until everyone had graduated from high school. Lopez and Stockham were the core of the group, with other singers and guitarists coming and going. Eventually, they got signed by a major label and moved to LA. “We played bad rock music,” Lopez says. “Sean and I played well together, but the other guys didn’t. We’d always existed as a band within a band, it just took a long time to realize we could do it all ourselves.”
Leisure made two albums; the label shelved them both. “The label got us an agent and a business manager, but it was pretty silly,” Stockham says. “All this money was flying around, but we started getting disgusted by things that we had to do to keep playing the game. At the end, they didn’t want to deal with us and we didn’t want to deal with them.” The band imploded. Lopez and Stockham stopped playing music for two years. “After the major label deal fell apart, we had to get real jobs,” Stockham says. “While I was working, I was thinking, ‘If this is what I’m going to be doing rest of my life, I’m going to go back to making music.’” The pair reconnected and decided to play as a duo.
They were reenergized and recaptured the excitement they felt when they first started playing together, only this time they could both wail on their instruments, with a bracing intensity and aggression to spare, even when they played acoustic songs.
“We decided to be totally independent,” Lopez says. “We booked and promoted ourselves and did a national tour before we had a label, just two of us in a van, with one buddy who did our sound.” Stockham had recorded the music he made with Lopez years ago, developing his production skills as they learned how to play. They quickly fell into a pattern of intense songwriting, recording and performing. “Recording our own music was a part of our process, ever since we were kids. As soon as we finished writing a song, we cut it. That’s what we did with Rut."
Lopez agrees. “We cut [everything] on the album live, just threw down guitar and drums and it was finished. If we like something enough to record it, we’d capture it with the highest energy possible, right in the moment, everything totally stripped down.” The recordings were sold online and at shows as The Blue EP and The Red EP. When DJ Andy Hawk at KWOD in Sacramento played “NewLow,” things opened up and the band took off. Bright Antennae signed them,their demos became their first album, NoName No Color, and they've never looked back (read: no more day jobs).
“We’re super-excited about this record,” says Lopez. “The first album was a collection of songs that had been written and recorded over a period of years. This one is way more cohesive from start to finish. When you listen to it, you can tell that it was all written in the same headspace.”
The album got off to a good start, with USA Today naming “Aunt Betty” “Song of the Week” in the March 6th edition of the paper. “It’s a good sign,”says Stockham. “Wait till they hear the other 13 tracks.”