Date: Fri 06-Feb-1998
Date: Fri 06-Feb-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Goldfinger-Feldmann-Mabel
Full Text:
Still On The Road, Goldfinger Has A New Hang-Up
(with cut & album cover)
BY SHANNON HICKS
John Feldmann says his band's new album is more about people he and the three
other musicians he works with have met while touring, and less about
relationships than his band's debut album was.
Feldmann is the lead singer for the band Goldfinger. With the band having
toured steadily for the past two years, logging 382 shows in 1996 alone, there
were plenty of opportunities for the band to meet quite a few people. And
apparently that's just what the band did. When they weren't collecting
speeding tickets between shows, that is.
Hopefully the band won't pick up another ticket when Feldmann and company
return to Connecticut. The band has a show scheduled in Danbury next Tuesday
night.
Goldfinger's new album, Hang-Ups , has been out for five months. The band has
been back on the road -- after a short nap break -- for the last eight. The
latest tour supports Hang-Ups and the 1995 release that brought the band into
the music world's spotlight, Goldfinger . The debut album featured such hits
as "Here In Your Bedroom" and "Mabel."
While Goldfinger offered listeners 14 selections -- what the band's guitarist
Charlie Paulson once called "...hyperactive love songs for people on Ritalin"
-- the new collection is a compendium of 20 songs, with a wider variety of
sounds involved. This time Paulson has said, "For the new album, we tried to
focus more on writing a collection of songs rather than trying to make sure
we're playing fast enough or making a statement of style. We're all two years
older, as are most of our fans, so why hand them yesterday's newspaper?"
Both albums present listeners with a one-two punch of Ramones-speed music, fun
lyrics and energy. Energy is everpresent with this band: with the amount of
inexhaustible steam each member seems to possess, the enjoyment of living on
the road and playing for fans is something that can't help but be captured in
each song.
"We love what we do," vocalist Feldmann said last week. He was calling from
Winnipeg, working on getting rid of a cold that had been dogging him for a few
days but wasn't strong enough to knock him off his feet.
"I think we all still pretty much love the music," he continued. "I'm sure
some of the songs get old sometimes, but you look out there and see people
going crazy and it makes you think, `Wow! We've got something good going on.'
"Plus, after 23 hours of sitting around and taking a nap, I am ready to go!
I'm ready to play. All of us have wanted this since we were kids, so now it's
like `Wow! Here we are!' So why not do this as much as we can?"
Goldfinger remains on the road, touring, touring, touring. With two albums
under their collective belt, band members -- which in addition to Feldmann and
Paulson include bassist Simon Williams and drummer Dangerous Darrin Pfeiffer
-- now have a larger choice of songs to perform each night. The set list is
generally half and half, straight down the middle, of songs from Goldfinger
and Hang-Ups , usually seven or eight cuts from each. Crowd reaction plays a
big part of how a show progresses, says Feldmann.
"If we're having a good time," he said, "sometimes we'll play everything off
both records. It also depends on whether we're headlining or opening for
someone else."
Goldfinger has a headlining show at Tuxedo Junction, 2 Ives Street in Danbury,
on February 10. Sgt Skagnetti and The Pilfers will both play opening sets.
Tickets are $10 in advance, or $12 at the door, and the show is open to all
ages. Doors open at 7 pm; the music starts around 8.
