Harmonizing vocals and Southern rock riffs keep Two-20-Two on the melodic side of metal. From left, band members are Rob Basine, Matt Smothers and Gus Caba.
Harmonizing vocals and Southern rock riffs keep Two-20-Two on the melodic side of metal. From left, band members are Rob Basine, Matt Smothers and Gus Caba.

Thereโ€™s a certain thing that happens when a band forms, they say. A certain spark or chemistry is present at birth if the band is going to be worth its salt.

Two years ago, Rob Basine, a guitarist with an East Coast heritage and โ€œSouthern rock bluesโ€ musical roots, put an ad in the paper. He wanted to start a band. The ad caught the eye of Matt Smothers, a long-time drummer, music teacher and Stockton, Calif., native.

โ€œBut I was with another band,โ€ Smothers says.

Still, he answered the ad. He and Basine hooked up and played together for a couple of hours and hit it off. He asked Basine to join his cover band, Feed the Fish, which went on to enjoy a sort of flirtation with its newest member before disbanding completely.

But that was hardly the end of the affair. A few months later, Smothers and another former Feed the Fish member, bassist Gus Caba, called up Basine. They formed Two-20-Twoโ€”named after Feb. 22, 2000, the date the name was chosenโ€”and started to write their own hard, but not quite heavy, metal tunes.

And then came the spark. The chemistry. The energy.

โ€œI see [being in] a band as dating that many people,โ€ Basine says. โ€œI have two girlfriends.

โ€œOnly weโ€™re not having sex,โ€ Smothers quickly interjects.

What they are having, however, is one wild, impassioned rock music ride. Theyโ€™ve played nearly 60 shows in the last year, says Caba, a second-generation musician who doubles as the bandโ€™s bassist and vocalist. And theyโ€™re far from worn-out. Regardless of the scene, the vibe or the size of the crowd, Two-20-Two is determined to give the audience its moneyโ€™s worth.

โ€œWe always get excited to play if itโ€™s three or 300,โ€ Caba says.

A touch of theatrical costuming doesnโ€™t hurt. Basine, known to me as โ€œthat scary vampire guyโ€ before our interview, slips on vampire teeth and white contacts for shows.

โ€œItโ€™s all in the name of shameless stage theatrics,โ€ Basine says with a conspiratorial smile. โ€œItโ€™s so diametrically opposed to my personality.โ€

While he brings an element of visual outrageousness to the stage, Basine is in fact the one least willing to attach the descriptor โ€œmetalโ€ to Two-20-Twoโ€™s name.

โ€œRob hates the term โ€˜metal band,โ€™ โ€œ Caba says.

โ€œI play Southern rock riffs in a metal context,โ€ Basine explains.

The guys also note that the presence of โ€œhigh harmony vocalsโ€ helps keep them on the melodic side of rock. Smothers and Caba do harmony vocals together, sometimes throughout an entire song.

โ€œWeโ€™re such a heavy band, but the vocals make it melodic,โ€ Smothers says.

Basine also says that the bandmatesโ€™ diverse musical backgrounds and tastes keep Two-20-Two from being pegged too definitively. Caba and Smothers are enthusiastic Kiss fans; Basine loves Led Zeppelin. Both musical influences are certainly present in Two-20-Twoโ€™s music but are far from dominant within their hard-driven and melodic musical framework.

โ€œWe all have very different ideas of what great bands are,โ€ Basine says. โ€œDiversity is the mother of creation. โ€ฆ You canโ€™t say what we are until you see us.โ€

And once those unique styles and personalities work themselves into Two-20-Twoโ€™s heavy but harmonious tunes, something happens. That spark, present at the bandโ€™s birth, becomes one crazy, magical affair.

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