press clips
Critics Choice
COUNTRY Rodeo Kill
If you don’t know where I stand with regards to the state of mainstream country music in the
21st century, then obviously you haven’t been paying attention. So for the last time, modern
country has seen a steady decline in quality with the model-sequel artists who are sold to the
masses like Pepsi Cola. Give me Neko Case, Drive By Truckers or Southern Culture on the Skids
over any of the commercialized bullshit they play on KMPS. Apparently the Northwest’s own
Rodeo Kill feels exactly the same way. Obsessed by the outlaw country music movement of
the early ’70s, the band has links on where to buy classic albums such as Redheaded Stranger
and Nashville Rebel on their Web site — www.rodeokill.com. More than 75 percent of the
tunes they pick are obscure covers from Steve Earle and David Allen Coe, as well as classics
from Waylon and Willie but also include some shit kickin’ originals into each set. Even
though they are a bit more progressive sounding than their heroes, they maintain the purest
attitude of the rule breakers from the past. Sunday, RK will issue its CD debut, Year of the
Steer, which is comprised of original material on its own label amply named Kill Country Stars.- TE, May 17, 2007 The Weekly Volcano
Country outlaws
Olympia’s Rodeo Kill loves to break the rules
There’s country music, and then there’s the
hard-rocking outlaw country of Rodeo Kill.This is a band with attitude. Its
inspiration - and the songs it covers - comes from such hard-edged ’70s icons
as Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings.“We consider ourselves outlaw country,
with the idea of breaking the rules of country,” said Ryan Leisinger, the
group’s drummer.“We’re going back to Willie Nelson and
Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings and David Alan Coe, who weren’t playing typical
country of their time.“We’re playing country, but it’s loud
and it’s raucous. It’s not of the pop-country genre.”The band, celebrating the re lease of
“Year of the Steer” with a benefit concert Sunday at The Brotherhood,
also has covered some more unconventional material.“We’ve done an Iron Maiden song, ‘The
Trooper,’ which we thought was supposed to have been a country song. We’ve done
Motley Crue songs.“Breaking the rules is kind of what
we’re looking for.”All of those covers - mostly of late ’70s
and early ’80s country tunes - help to explain why, though the band has been
together since 2002, Rodeo Kill is just now releasing its first full-length
album of original songs.“We started with just doing
covers,” Leisinger said. “It took us a while to build up a catalog of
the songs on there. We didn’t really focus on recording for the first couple of
years.“We were playing more than 25 shows a
year.”In its current incarnation, the band
consists of Leisinger, Scott West, Olivia Love and Rif Adams. Guest musicians
at the Olympia
show will include Jon Merithew of C-Average and Paul Pearson.At first, Leisinger and company didn’t
expect their own breed of country music to fit into the Olympia music scene.“In my opinion, the Olympia music scene is more dominated by
what’s considered independent music,” Leisinger said. “There’s
amazing artists that don’t fit into any genre that come out of Olympia.“At that time, I didn’t know of anyone
else here doing what we were doing,” he said. “Now, there are a lot
of other country bands, but to be loud and to be rocking, that’s
different.”What the band found, though, is that outlaw
country had a place in Western Washington.“We quickly discovered how many country
fans there were out there,” he said.“And being a little different
definitely is something that’s embraced in this town.”by Molly Gilmore, May 17th, 2007 For The Olympian
Outlaw Country - Rodeo Kill
Is hardcore twang your thang?
If the answer is yes, Rodeo Kill serves up a heaping helping of
outlaw country that will satisfy your Southern-fried appetite. Like Drive-by truckers and the Bottle
Rockets, these radical honky-tonkers are an ass whuppin’ alt-country band with deep roots in traditional country but add a little
extra powder to the keg for an explosion in sound.
- TE, July 27th 2006 Weekly Volcano
Loud and proudRodeo Kill describes its music as “outlaw country.”
(Think Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings.)
And if you believe the Olympia band’s Web site, they take
this outlaw business pretty seriously. After a 2003 show at
McMenamin’s Olympic Club in Centralia, the band was asked never
to stay overnight at the hotel again “due to various incidents
that may or may not have taken place on the roof of the establishment.”
More to the point, Rodeo Kill promises a “powerful, professional and
sometimes hilarious live act.”- The Olympian News Paper, July 2005
www.theolympian.com
Editor’s Pick
Music.Download.com
Outlaws, wannabe renegades, Cash fans, and others
merely deranged from too much Jim Beam on a dirt-scorched
afternoon are sure to dig this alt-country plea to
“Old Hank” from Olympia, Washington alt-country band
Rodeo Kill.
“I’m into country bands like Olympia’s Rodeo Kill. They saddle up the outlaw country classics from the likes of Willie Nelson,
David Allen Coe, Hank Williams Jr., Waylon Jennings, and other bad mo fos. They even wrangle their own songs that travel
the same dusty roads as their outlaw heroes. Best of all, Rodeo Kill runs tighter than a dry county.”
-Weekly Volcano - Dec 2003
Best of South Sound
The Olympian’s Pick
Bar band/ musician
“This local band draws on a history of outlaw
country acts. And their original compositions follow suit. Catch them at a variety of local venues from
Tugboat Annies Waterfront Bar to McCoy’s Tavern.”
- The Olympian News Paper
www.theolympian.com
