Georgia Maestro, Mike Grover and Pat Williams of Pushbox started making music together again last year, after a five-year break.
Georgia Maestro, Mike Grover and Pat Williams of Pushbox started making music together again last year, after a five-year break.

There was no fight to prompt the dissolution of Pushbox, but the Reno rock band played its final show on July 22, 2011 at Sidelines Bar in Sparks.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t like we stopped playing together, but I needed a break from people in general,โ€ said Georgia Maestro.

The multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriter describes her life during the years that followed as a โ€œspiritual walkabout.โ€

โ€œSome parts of it I was traveling around, all over the U.S.,โ€ Maestro said. โ€œParts of it I lived in L.A. It was a big, big, huge transformational period for me, in order to find who I was without being around anybody else who could imprint what their thoughts of me were. I played with other people. โ€ฆ I took more vocal lessons. I joined the Nevada Opera when I came back into town. I did vocal jazz a cappella โ€ฆ and even took more piano lessons from my mom.โ€

Her bandmates, drummer Pat Williams and bassist-cellist Mike Grover, stuck together, for the most part.

โ€œWe went to a little different, more of a funky vibeโ€”as bass players and drummers kind of have a tendency to do,โ€ Grover said. โ€œAnd we didnโ€™t really look to replace Georgia. We just did it for funโ€”which is a good thing, because we never lost our timing, our fit-together.โ€

A little more than a year ago, Grover and Maestro decided to start collaborating again. It wasnโ€™t long before Williams joined them.

โ€œIt was cool because as soon as we got back together, it was just like we had never left each other,โ€ Maestro said. โ€œAnd it was fun because all we did was likeโ€”I laughed so hard I cried, and then I played music with these wonderful people.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve always had an amazing thing where we can just play and write really well together,โ€ Williams said. โ€œI donโ€™t think weโ€™d probably ever experience it with other people. We can write a song in like 10 seconds, it seems like.โ€

Thatโ€™s only sort of hyperbole. In the 15 years since they first started playing together, the trio has written more than 200 songs. And theyโ€™ve been writing more since their reunion last year.

โ€œWeโ€™re gearing up for recording, and I think thatโ€™s coming sooner rather than laterโ€”so thatโ€™s one of things that I want to see us all doing,โ€ Maestro said. โ€œI think thatโ€™s another art form that we really thrive in togetherโ€”recording, for sure. I mean, before, when we were together, we had at least like eight albums of recordings. Not all of those are complete gems, but we recorded quite a bit.โ€

The bandโ€™s new music actually sounds a lot like its old stuff, which is to say itโ€™s eclecticโ€”with songs that cover the canon of rock โ€™nโ€™ roll styles, from ballads to art pop numbers in the vein of artists like Fiona Apple.

โ€œFor me, the difference in the band is that each of us is an individual, and weโ€™re not dependent on the success of what this group can do, because we are successfulโ€”because every time we get together it is successful,โ€ Maestro said. โ€œAnd thatโ€™s different. I think the drive, in the past, was to make itโ€”whatever that means. Now, itโ€™s like I have made it, because I get to play with these people.โ€

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