|
Home
About
Clients
Client Buzz
Consulting
Contact
Infolinks
Music/Video
News
Photos
Press
Press Releases
Album Releases
Single Releases
1303 16th Ave S.
Nashville, TN
37212
Tel (615)
327-0100
Fax (615)
320-1061

|


It all started in the living room of a
singlewide. Six to seven nights a week, Forty5 South would practice and
hone their craft until their biggest fans showed up: the police. The band
reminisces about those early days; The cops would always show up, know us
by name, and say thought you didn¹t want us coming back here again. A lot
has changed since then. The boys have upgraded to a warehouse rehearsal
and now have a fan base of rabid fans that spans the Southeast.
While the new CD received its unofficial
out of the trunk release October 25th, a recently inked distribution deal
has guaranteed that the album will expand its availability from the back
of the guys cars with a national release this summer The boys will embark
on a promotional radio tour throughout Texas putting Forty5 South on the
road for five weeks beginning in mid-May to promote their American summer
anthem, Back of My Truck. The rest of the summer will be spent touring the
Southeast in support of their debut release on TILO Entertainment. The
TEN-track progressive country album all penned by the group will be
looking for its initial stamp of approval in Texas. The band hopes to
break in Texas and take their act to a national recognition. Forty5 South
clarifies, Texas is where it's at now. If you can get street cred in
Texas, you¹ll have street cred anywhere. Outside of Texas, in any other
market, there's the question is it the music or the money?
Forty5 South is more than an arbitrary band
name; it's the road that ties the band together, quite literally. It is
highway 45-S that runs through the guys' collective home of Jackson, TN
that keeps them connected. In fact, it all started off 45-S in the little
sports bar, Jimmy D's. It was there at open mic nights that band founder
and lead vocalist Ashley Bowers had the idea to start a country band. No
one plays country in Jackson. With that, he recruited friends and locals
to form a band as influenced by country as it is by rock. The recruited
band is composed of vocalist Bowers, 22, drummer Tosh Newman, 22; bassist
Seth Gordon, 21; guitarist and mandolin player Phillip Lemmings, 24; and
guitarist Justin Tapley, 24.
Forty5 South is perplexed when requested to
compare their sound to an established act; nothing ever seems apt. To be
honest, we really don¹t have a comparable sound. That¹s the best thing
about it. You can't define it in terms of anything else out there, muses
Bowers. What is clear with these Jackson boys is while their years may be
young in age, their influences run deep. They draw from the blues of
greats like BB King and the players on Beale Street in nearby Memphis. And
the band is as likely to have Kenny Chesney in the CD player as they are
the Best of Guns n Roses, but it must be noted the Gun n Roses appearance
in the guys collection is only due to an irresistible $8 sale at Wal-Mart.
What Forty5 South can define though is their burgeoning audience. Our live
show is off the wall and rowdy and the college kids love it. But it's a
clean wild, you can bring your kids or your grandmother to it and they¹ll
both like it.
This dynamic live show drew the attention
of the AFE (Armed Forces Entertainment) group who took the band to Asia,
Guam, The Marshall Islands, Korea, and Japan to entertain the overseas
troops. The guys played twenty-eight shows in forty days
(September-October '03) and got a crash course on how to become a road
band. Lugging their own equipment from airport to airport, they came out
of the trip banged up but miraculously in tact (both the guys and the
gear.) Forty5 South had more than a couple close calls on the tour
culminating in the coined tube of death. Flying from one tiny island to
another, one trip took the band on a fifteen-passenger turbo-prop plane.
It's the kind of plane they train pilots, if that wasn¹t enough then, we
hit a rainstorm. The plane that flies regularly as 800 ft above sea level
dropped to 600 ft as the pilot assured them the alarms and lights always
go off in the jet and not to worry. Upon safely landing, their waiting
contact congratulated them on surviving the tube of death. Only $128 in
beer later were they calmed and ready to perform again.
Forty5 South's international touring
experience confirmed their first love of performing live. They genuinely
love to grind out hours practicing and playfully roasting on each other.
Humbly, the band wants nothing more than to make performing their living.
Outside of performing, the band's loftier goal is to see their name #1 on
the radio charts. It would make all those hours of warehouse practice
worth it and hopefully, help phase out the weekly police visits.

visit forty5south's
official website
|