Panic rips Joel Ackerson from his sleep. Light floods his
car, and he hears someone tapping on his window. Earlier that night,
Ackerson and his girlfriend had parked under a bridge but were now
exiting the vehicle, hands in the air, surrounded by five policemen. It
turns out the couple had stumbled onto a murder stakeout. Earlier, the
police found a girlโs body under the bridge and were looking for
the culprit.
Ackerson describes it as the worse date heโs ever been on, and
though he no longer sees that girl, he relives that night every time he
plays his guitar and sings โNo One Watching Usโ with his
band The Novelists. The band includes electric and upright bassist Zack
Teran, keyboardist Malary Engstrom and drummer Jason Thomas.
โI do say folk rock,โ Teran says when asked about the
bandโs genre.
โ[Folk rock is] like the oxymoron of the musical realm,โ
Ackerson says.
โWe do have a lot of sounds though. I kind of like
that,โ Engstrom says.
โLyrical rock is what I have been saying online a lot,โ
Ackerson continues. โThat tells you that youโre going to
catch the words when you go to a show, and we intend them to be the
focal point.โ
Every song the band plays is a story, which is why Ackerson named it
The Novelists, though most of the songs are nonfiction.
The band began in 2005. A friend who toured with Ackerson in another
band was supposed to move to Reno to start The Novelists with Ackerson,
but he never made it. Ackerson then founded the band consisting of a
weekly rotating cast of different musicians. The roster stabilized when
Teran and Thomas joined the band a year ago. The trio played around
Reno and went on a short tour last spring. Then, six months ago,
Engstrom joined the band.
The band sounds the best it ever has, according to Ackerson. When
the bandโs membership was fluid, some songs would be great one
week, then flop the next. However, with a steady cast, this problem no
long plagues The Novelists.
The band now hopes to incorporate a theatrical element to its shows,
including sets, costumes and dialogue. Once, before a show, Ackerson
appeared on the stage dressed as an old professor with a pipe. He
ignored the audience and typed out that nightโs set list on a
typewriter. Then his wife, Julia Ackerson, came out dressed as a
stewardess and introduced the band members like she would a flight crew
on a commercial airplane.
โDepending on the song, we would have specific costumes for
that songโthere might be dialogue before and after,โ Teran
said. โThat hasnโt really happened yet, but we kind of want
to make a bunch of alter egos for all of us.โ
However, this dream is costly and time-consuming, which is why the
band currently performs in a more conventional manner. Besides, the
bandโs current configuration is still new and working to polish
its sound.
Though this lineup has just started to hit its stride, its doom may
already be foreshadowed. Most members are in college, with graduation
dates looming or past. After Ackerson graduates, he plans to move to
New York with Teran in tow.
โI donโt even like to dream about it because it gets me
kind of weepy eyed,โ Ackerson says.
โNo, itโs true,โ Engstrom says. โI
donโt want everyone to go.โ
However, that may not be the end of the story. Engstrom and Thomas
are both invited to go to New York, as well. Even if their band mates
donโt follow them, the band may survive in a sequel of sorts.
Ackerson pointed to many bands where their members live in different
cities. Perhaps the band may also take on a few extra members.
โEspecially in a theater style rock band, the idea of a more
fluid membership doesnโt stress me out,โ Ackerson says.
