Vocalist/rhythm guitarist Michael Sackler-Berner and lead guitarist Henry Geller knew each other in elementary school. Years later,
Sackler-Berner was in New York recording music for the television shows Sons of Anarchy and Law and Order and Geller was living in San Francisco and playing
live gigs. They connected on FaceBook by “liking” the same YouTube links to Black Keys tracks, Kinks B-sides, and obscure Jimi
Hendrix bootlegs. They started sending each other video clips of Gary Clark Jr., Dave Alvin, and the Black Keys. Geller recorded riffs on his iPhone
and sent them to Sackler-Berner. Sackler-Berner
added melodies and lyrics to the riffs and sent them back to his childhood
friend. They exchanged text messages
about making a record. Sackler-Berner sent iPhone mp3s of Geller’s playing to drummer
Liberty DeVitto, whom he connected
with for a session via MySpace two years prior. DeVitto, who has played drums
for Billy Joel for the past 30 years,
signed on for a couple of days of recording. One month later, the band assembled
in Brooklyn at Sackler-Berner’s home studio. Over the next two weeks, the newly named Slim Kings completed basic tracks for their entire debut album, Fresh Socks, and wrote half of the second
album, Dirty Socks. In the following
months, the band began playing concerts, had a song on the Songs after Sandy, Vol. 2 compilation album, and landed placements
on the television series Army Wives,
and in the upcoming Daniel Ratcliff
movie, Horns. The band has since been
rounded with bassist Andy Attanasio.
At the Bowery Electric
tonight opening for Ricky Byrd, the
Slim Kings showed that the band was more than computer magic. The quartet
played modern rock and roll songs with more than a hint of blues influences in
both the vocals and the guitar playing. The band paid its dues to classic rock
without necessarily sounding derivative of any particular band or sound. By the
second song, "Need Me Too," which was the band's own foray into
YouTube land, the direction of the band was established; this was a garage band
with some smooth finesse. Two songs later, "The Dime Is Mine," the
opening track of the band's second album, exuded the confidence of a man who
has secured a girlfriend that others want, but also possibly alluded to the
confidence of a band in its own organic music. On "My Waterloo," the
band worked tightly to achieve a pop sound driven by raw energy. Overall, the
band showcased a fresh twist on a vintage backdrop -- bluesy vocals, a wailing
guitar and drums pounded so hard that one could wonder how the sticks and skins
did not break on every song. The Slim Kings will squeeze in and widen the royal
court of rock.
Visit the Slim Kings at www.slimkings.com.
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