Joey O Band
By Mark
Hunter I'm sitting on the floor in Joey O's basement on
a Sunday afternoon, my back against a half-sized refrigerator full of bottled
water, and watching as the Joey O Band runs through a practice session. The
band is rehearsing for a gig Friday night at the Dekalb County Fair where they
will open for Mr. "Rock n' Roll Hoochie Coo" himself, Rick Derringer,
who Joey says is "Playing better than ever." There's Joey O, perched on a vinyl topped swivel
stool, a Fender baseball cap packed down on his generous head of hair, his
trademark round shades right where they should be. Standing next to Joey is
vocalist Jeremy Miller. Both Joey O and Miller turn to face the rhythm section
packed next to the back wall. Jon Gauthier is fingering his bass, while Justin
Gillespie bounces his sticks on his drums. Easy banter flies back and forth between Justin
and Joey, who have played together for years. Joey has known Jeremy since Joey
moved to Auburn over a decade ago and started showing up at the local music
store to talk shop. And Jon, well, he's from Montana, brought to Fort Wayne by
Sweetwater Sound for his engineering skills. And because he's a musician. Joey O's basement is not like most basements.
Apart from the lack of dankness permeating the majority of basements built in
central Auburn and elsewhere in the early part of the last century, this one
also lacks the usual dust and spiders. What it has that other basements don't
is soundproofed, triple-thick walls and popcorn ceiling, all painted white,
with carpeted floors and an escadrille of Fender amps and guitar cases. A black
case, a blonde case, another black case and another blonde case, all awaiting
orders. There's also a Fender lunch box sitting on the fireplace mantel, a
Fender clock and a neon Fender guitar hanging on the wall. Joey O likes Fender.
"I don't know how to describe it other than
to say Britney Spears rules the world we live in," says a frustrated Joey
O as he describes his decision two years ago to hang it up after years of
trying to make it as a blues guitarist. His resume is deep. Joey O has played
everything from high school dances to clubs full of patrons with, at best, a limited
appreciation for the blues. He's made the rounds in Los Angeles, reached the
point of being "on the verge," been offered audition with bands like
Canned Heat, The Black Crowes and Arc Angels. He's even played with bluesman
Doyle Bramhall in Texas and opened for a slew of national acts. Despite what most would consider to be great
achievements, Joey O had decided to abandon the Joey O Band and all possible
future incarnations of the Joey O Band to concentrate on teaching. "I
always book in advance. Through '04 and '05 I was simply fulfilling
obligations. Above and beyond that I did nothing. I'd had enough." Joey Ortega grew up in Michigan and started
playing drums as a kid before moving on to keyboards. In 1988 he decided to
teach himself how to play guitar. A few years later he found himself in Los
Angeles, meeting all the right people and making all the right moves. Music
Connection Magazine's Kenny Kerner said this about Joey O, "A star.
Genuinely special ... incredible strong knack for writing ... an A&R's
dream ... his pure pop vocals are a natural for radio." Joey O received a
rating of 8 (out of 10), the highest rating ever in publications demo critique
section. There is just one problem, "By the time I
was getting established in L.A., Poison and New Kids on the Block were big.
Where do I fit in? When record companies started talking to me, Nirvana was the
biggest thing in the world. Here I was a good-looking, well groomed guy and bad
hygiene was all the rage. I was a fish out of water." Also, it seems, blues is not at the top of the
demand list. "L.A has a larger population than Canada. Besides me there
was (maybe) one other blues guitarist in town. That was scary." So Joey O waves goodbye to La La Land and heads
east, eventually settling in Indiana to regroup. He considers Buddy Guy.
"Here's Buddy Guy venting on some radio station or something somewhere.
Buddy Guy has sold something like 2 million records his whole life. Wilson
Phillips' debut record sold 10 million. Vanilla Ice has outsold him. What does
that say about the industry?" Then comes a call from the Black Crowes
management. They're looking for a guitar player and ask Joey O to audition and,
if he makes it, to become a party in the various lawsuits the band has going.
It would have been an odd pairing, anyway, considering Joey O doesn't drink or
do drugs. Canned Heat calls, too. They want to fire their guitar player and ask
Joey to audition. Back and forth phone calls ensue. Then their bass player
quits and they decide to keep the guitar player and just replace the bass
player. "At the end of the day, teaching guitar doesn't sound so bad,"
Joey says. Last September he finds himself with one more gig
to play. One more obligation to meet, nearly all of the crap involved with
playing cover tunes in smoky bars gone forever. One more commitment and then
he'll be through. No more bar owners to haggle with, no more chasing gigs to
stay busy. But, he also finds himself short a bass player and a vocalist. So he
calls Miller, who calls Gauthier and they go to the gig and basically wing it
and have a blast. A year later, and Joey O is in his basement with
Miller, Gillispie and Gauthier running through Led Zeppelin songs and working
on their own songs for a CD. And if "Still Dreaming" is any
indication, the record will be very good. Things are great; Joey likes his
band, and his band likes him. He's got a DVD of his career in the works
complete with students he likes. He has another month-long trip to Germany
coming next year and sporadic gigs. "I didn't plan this band. It just fell into
my lap, and I feel lucky for it. I work in a music store giving guitar lessons.
Every week some guy in a band is complaining about somebody else they were in a
band with. I feel fortunate that we really like each other. That made a world
of difference. [There's] got to be some reason to continue doing it." Copyright 2006 Ad Media Inc.
With a quick count-off the Joey O Band plunges
into Stevie Ray's "Pride and Joy," followed quickly by "Black
Magic Woman," "Midnight Rider" and an original pop tune called
"Still Dreaming." They finish with a Led Zeppelin medley. But wait.
An original pop tune? Pop? From Joey O? "This is not your father's Joey O
Band," quips somebody. You can say that again.