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Trees On Fire: Still Growing

by Vijith Assar

With music school brainiacs holding down four of the band’s five positions, you’d expect Trees On Fire to be prolific enough composers to have more than a single EP under their belt. They’re still waiting on the follow-up to last year’s The Green Room, but lately they’ve been logging some time at a Lovingston recording studio in an attempt to bang out new tracks for what drummer Paul Rosner says will eventually turn into the next album, possibly with another EP along the way.

“The hard part is that we have prolific songwriting going,” he says, “so every time we think we have a pretty good list for the album, something new comes up that’s pretty amazing.” That’d be the fault of guitarists Blake Hunter and Rob Mezzanotte, who’ve been writing buckets of new tunes on their own and then fleshing them out with the band during rehearsals.

Bassist Brian Wahl is excited about the new material: “We have some serious material that we’re trying to translate,” he says.

Chances are it’ll all be road-tested by the time they actually get to lay it down for keeps– they’re headed off for a tour of the Northeast later this month that will include stops in New York and Boston (the former college town of several members).

“That’ll be a homecoming of sorts for them,” says Rosner. “May is going to be our busiest gigging month ever.”

Amid all that hustle and bustle, they’re also rolling out Big Picture Initiatives– because, as Hunter told us a year ago, they hope to “reach a large audience and affect their lives for the better, affect their view of the world and their understanding of what’s going on.”

Their last major performance in town was at a benefit show to raise awareness about aggressive mining practices in nearby rural areas, and these days Mezzanotte is excited about a new batch of t-shirts made from organic cotton and other incoming green promo materials. (Bursting with excitement, he initially says, “Our fliers will be wind powered!” before clarifying.)

“I think the best way to make things change is if people are getting money. If the market is rewarding it, they’ll continue,” says Wahl. But sometimes– like with their carbon footprint as they truck all their equipment up to Boston and back– the little picture still has to win.

“Windmills kill 300 golden eagles a year in California,” he adds with a sigh. “It’s a trade off.”

Trees On Fire performs at Fridays After Five on 5/9.

Trees On Fire - In The Middle [via WXJM Live!]

  • Temerithy Junction May 7th, 2008 | 8:38pm

    Didn’t this band win some sort of online contest or something? Or didn’t they interviewed by this paper once? Why not provide a link?

  • squidtank May 8th, 2008 | 3:59pm

    That’s interesting, their fliers have always been windpowered in my hands into very compact aerodynamic shapes. Sometimes I have even recycled them into kindling.

  • theodore May 8th, 2008 | 11:28pm

    Any byline/attribution for this piece?

  • Betty Mooney May 12th, 2008 | 6:36pm

    Heard this band at the Tree Huggers Ball and they were fabulous!!!!
    Reminded me of a rock/folk version of the Paul Winter Consort and Oregon. I predict this will be the next big band to emerge from Charlottesville.

  • Nick Mezzanotte September 19th, 2008 | 12:21am

    they rock. go see them. now.

  • Nick Mezzanotte September 19th, 2008 | 12:22am

    http://www.myspace.com/treesonfiremusic … although if you search for them on youtube, you will get a better representation of their sound, since the 3 songs on the myspace aren’t really indicative of what they are all about. (they’re good though!)

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