Of all the bands in all the townsโyouโre better off not starting a fight at a Flannel Fish show. Not only are three of the five members of the local bluesy rock โnโ roll band masters of the martial arts, but their shows tend to draw a lot of their high-kicking, brick smashing friends as well.
โWhen you go to one of our shows itโs amazing how many black belts are out there,โ says rhythm guitarist Henry King.
Included in the black belt ranks is the bandโs drummer, Steve Miller, as well as lead guitarist Scott Fritzinger, whoโs actually a third-degree black belt. Keyboardist Kerry Berry packs her own solid karate chop as the proud owner of a purple belt.
โWeโre very safe in the parking lot,โ says King.
But safety isnโt the only thing that self-defense practice has brought to the band. Itโs also responsible for bringing the majority of its members together.
When Miller and Kingโs original garage band, Good Question, broke-up about two and a half years ago, the two musicians knew they werenโt ready to throw in the towel just yet. Luckily, Millerโs second hobby came to the rescue.
โSteve said, โDonโt worry, I know a guy,โโ says King, and as it turns out, Miller knew a couple of guysโand a gal.
Fritzinger, Millerโs martial arts instructor at the time, was recruited first. Then came Berry, who attended the same martial arts studio. The fifth and freshest member to Flannel Fish joined in a slightly different matter, but once again, it was because Miller โknew a guyโโa guy who lived just across the street, to be exact.
โHeโs the youngest,โ Miller explains of 21-year-old bass player/neighbor Austin Krater. โHeโs infusing some youth into our thought process which is pretty cool.โ
With Krater added to the mix, Flannel Fishโs members now range in age from their 20s to their 50s, a gap which might pose a problem to another band, but has worked out quite well for this group, partially due to their set collection being comprised mainly of cover songs. Miller said about 30 percent of their set is original tracks by the band, while the rest are covers chosen from each memberโs individual influences.
โWe all bring different ideas to the band, different songs we want to cover,โ Fritzinger explains. โSo weโll get songs coming in from the Red Hot Chili Peppers and The White Stripes, but weโll also get some of the stuff from the โ70s and โ80s, like Marshall Tucker Band and Traffic. We all have our different influences, but itโs really cool because thereโs never been a fight about the music we play, itโs just a matter of playing it.โ
Despite being a covers-heavy band, Flannel Fish still strives to put its own unique twist on the songs it plays.
โWhether itโs a cover or an original, by the time weโre done with it we sound like Flannel Fish,โ King says.
As for what a flannel fish is, exactly, aside from the band itselfโwell, not much of anything. Which is precisely what the members were going for. But finding a meaningless name was easier said than done.
โItโs really hard to find a name that isnโt taken or has some meaning that we didnโt want to convey or couldnโt live up toโlike the ass kickers or the truth tellers,โ says King. โSo in the age where everybody thatโs ever had a band can keep that name forever, itโs tough to find one thatโs meaningless. But I think we did it.โ
