The Voices in Your Mind, minus Rachel Lewis.
The Voices in Your Mind, minus Rachel Lewis.

As the band takes the stage, the audience doesnโ€™t know what to expect. The crowd continues to talk. Seconds later, as a bass-y bom-bom-bop and a sweet ya-dada-da fill the room, the crowd becomes transfixed by the quartet on stage singing Thomas Dolbyโ€™s โ€œShe Blinded Me With Science.โ€ Their voices mix and weave, filling the room as any rock band might, but without the problems of bulky equipment. Four performers with no instruments but their own voices.

A Web designer, a stay-at-home dad, a receptionist and a self-described โ€œBrรผka [Theatre] girl”โ€”thatโ€™s The Voices in Your Mind. Not a support group for schizophrenics, but an a cappella group that has been tearing up the open mic scene around Reno for the past few months.

Group members are Jeremy Capurro, 22; Myracle Speakman, 22; Rachel Lewis, 32; and Rodney Hurst, 40. The four have been performing together since February, although theyโ€™ve had a few changes since the groupโ€™s creation about a year ago.

โ€œI think weโ€™ve had about 10 people in the group, including ourselves,โ€ Hurst says.

Being in an a cappella group isnโ€™t the easiest way to attract an audience, but Voices have solved that problemโ€”they do covers. Theyโ€™re not exclusively a cover band, but their sets are full of the familiar tunes of the Culture Club, Alice Cooper, The Beatles and a ripping version of โ€œPsycho Killerโ€ by the Talking Heads. They arrange each song for four voices, sans band, adding percussion with feet, fingers and hands as needed.

The group isnโ€™t afraid of being called a cover band. Its mix of favorite songs and fresh melodies has been what distinguishes these a cappella artists from the rest of the pack. Their uniqueness is only surpassed by the skill with which they pull off closet classics from the โ€˜80s.

โ€œWe do more covers than anything else, but itโ€™s completely different from what you expect,โ€ Speakman says.

โ€œEverybody likes hearing familiar tunes with a new sound,โ€ Capurro adds.

Evidently โ€œeverybodyโ€ does. At the Artistsโ€™ Playroom, the Zephyr Loungeโ€™s Monday night open mic, Voices was one of five acts voted into a recent โ€œBest ofโ€ competition. Hurst, for one, didnโ€™t expect things to take off as quickly as they did.

โ€œThe novelty bands just arenโ€™t there [in Reno]. โ€ฆ People have been very enthusiastic and supportive,โ€ he says.

Lewis says she enjoys being in this group because, while it is not typical entertainment, it isnโ€™t traditional a cappella, either.

โ€œWeโ€™re not tied down by conventions or styles,โ€ she says. โ€œWe can do a fun afternoon matinee for kids, or we can be late-night smutty for their parents. We have a lot of freedom this way.โ€

They all agree that forming a group that is not only talented but also committed to practiceโ€”and playโ€”is a rare thing. Each has an extensive personal history in music and theater, but only recently found a collaborative group as supportive and successful as Voices.

โ€œWe wanted to play in a band, but none of us play any instruments, so we sing like a band,” says Hurst.

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