WhatzUp
Sweetwater

Best Rock Band/Covers

28.44% The Wailhounds*
25.00% Rosemary Gates*
17.75% Sfumato (Black Tooth Grin)*
6.34% Black Jack Shellac*
4.17% The Agency
2.90% Bel Airs
1.99% Shelley Dixon Band
1.63% Ghost Galleon
1.45% Gold Room
1.09% Might As Well

Others with Votes:
Misfit Toys, Unkyl Dadday, Bel Airs, Borrowed Time, Buttonhead, Chris & Paul, Rule Seven, Actual Size, Industrial Strength, Jettingham, Octopussy, Third Frame, Cavefish, David Todoran & The Mobile Homewreckers, Disclaimer, Dream Evil, Forehead, Freak Brothers, Gravity, Mouthpiece, Northern Kind, Nostalgia, Phil’s Family Lizard, Pixie Stix, Pop ‘N’ Fresh, Sad Boy Trouble, Soul Mine, Spike & The Bulldogs, Tempest, XS Force


2000 Winner: Wailhounds

1999 Winner: Actual Size

1998 Winner: Michaelanjelo

1997 Winner: Rushville Whig

* On the ballot

Gee, Joe Trammel, you could have been a little enthusiastic after your band, The Wailhounds, had won their Whammy for Best Rock Band/Covers.

"First of all, it was great just to be nominated and have that much recognition. To receive the award left me speechless. We hadn’t expected to win. There are so many good bands in town. It was just wonderful."

Obviously, we’re just teasing Joe. The Wailhounds, which began as an idea among old friends five years ago, became a band about a year after that. All four members - Trammel, bass; John Warney, drums and percussion; Noah Golden, lead guitar, bass; and Scott Wasvick, lead vocals and various instruments - had known each other at Snider High School, and there were various alliances of friendships and dating of sisters. Just the thing to cement the bonds among musicians. Ages range from 23 to 28.

"We’ve pretty much played all of Indiana, from Hammond to Evansville, wherever we could find a bar with a stage," Trammel said.

The music produced by The Wailhounds is best described as "psychedelic groovy with a blues-based sound." They like to touch all the bases in a live show, from jazz to country to classic rock n’ roll. There’s plenty of 70s rock n’ roll, such as Hendrix and The Rolling Stones. But there’s also about 50 percent original music, also played in the aforementioned crowd-pleasing style.

"We’re trying to get our own music out there, but we do the covers to help keep the attendance up and the excitement about what we’re doing. The originals portion of the show is, I think, the highlight. We really get to shine and cut loose a little bit. The crowd dances more to our originals than to our covers," Trammel said.

The past has been great for The Wailhounds, but the future lies in the studio. Trammel said the band is planning to lock itself in Sweetwater Productions in March to record half a dozen tunes for a demo CD.

"Our goal is to play music full-time," Trammel said. "This is our life."

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