Itโ€™s working-class grunge meets gospel. Itโ€™s blue grass meets hip-hop. Itโ€™s soulful acoustic rock that makes you dance without reserve.

Members of local band Pufferbilly say that they havenโ€™t found anyone quite like them in Reno. So do their fans and fellow musicians.

โ€œYou guys are gonna have 10,000 moshing hippies at your shows,โ€ Mamaโ€™s Trippinโ€™ guitarist Eric Stangeland once told the band.

Itโ€™s not hard to imagine Pufferbilly inspiring a fervent but folksy communal dance, whether theyโ€™re playing for the usually mellow coffee-drinkers at Deux Gros Nez, the artsy post-grungers at the Zephyr Lounge or the college crowd at the Little Waldorf Saloon, where they plan to hold their CD release party late next month. Theyโ€™re one of the fewโ€”perhaps the onlyโ€”bands in Reno that play their sets unplugged, have harmonizing lead vocalists and arenโ€™t afraid to rock out with a big crowd.

The lead vocalists, Dave Berry and Jackie McDonald, are brother and sister and grew up singing in church. Bassist Dave Sidley, who went to that same church, was a childhood friend of theirs. The three started Pufferbilly last October along with drummer Mike Wortman, who says that he started playing the drums when he was 6 months old, and guitarist Mike Fordโ€”or โ€œFozzy,โ€ as the band calls himโ€”who began playing Johnny Cash tunes in bars when he was 7 years old. McDonald says that she calls Ford her โ€œlittle mariachi player,โ€ since he loves to serenade audiences.

McDonald says that the band draws it name from a color of paint that Berry, a professional painter, bought. The name on the label said โ€œpufferbilly.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the weirdest color,โ€ McDonald says. โ€œItโ€™s a grayish, purplish tan. Itโ€™s very light.โ€

Their name and their music arenโ€™t the only things that make Pufferbilly stand out in the Reno rock scene. They also have the maturity and stability that come with family lifeโ€”big family life. Four of the five band members are married and three of the five members have kids. Berry has five kids; McDonald has four. Neither of them are 30 yet.

Day-to-day family life seems to work its way into Pufferbillyโ€™s music. Berry says that the bandโ€™s songs are simple and real, yet spiritual.

โ€œTheyโ€™re about real life, just as far as I know it. Thatโ€™s what interested me about bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam in the โ€˜90s. They had heart. [Pufferbillyโ€™s] music is from the heart. Itโ€™s not so sharp-edged.โ€

Berry says that he writes about spiritual struggles, but not in a preachy way.

โ€œI ainโ€™t one to tell somebody how to live their life,โ€ he says simply.

While Berryโ€”who draws inspiration from R&B, grunge and, in recent years, from Ben Harperโ€”writes all of Pufferbillyโ€™s songs, by practice time the songs belong to everybody in the band.

“[The songs] are all my style, but these guys all bring their flavor to the chili,โ€ he says. โ€œWe just all have a good time together, so it ends up being a good meal.โ€

And itโ€™s a good, hearty meal that audiences of all types can eat up. But itโ€™s not a meal thatโ€™s too heavy or sweet, so youโ€™re bound to have plenty of energy left for dancing.

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