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SplatterTribe:
I know the lineup has
changed a bit in the last
year or so, what
is the current lineup of
THC?
Big Dad Ritch: Right On...Well the main nucleus of the band is my bass
player John Exall and my lead guitar player Randy Cooper. The other guys are good
ole boys and they're there to help us out and we appreciate the Hell out of'm, but that's who
THC is, is us three..
SplatterTribe: I know you had to cancel some shows. Is there
something up with the band now?
Big Dad Ritch: No, we're just goin' through some personnel changes at the
moment. The road is a very hard bull to ride brother and it aint for everybody.
Me, John and Randy, we aint been thrown yet and we're hoping to ride for the
whole 8 seconds.
SplatterTribe: Where you three ever together in previous bands?
Big Dad Ritch: No, actually
Randy & John have played together in a
few bands in the past. Whenever I started this band, I just went around...I live
in a little town called Denison, Texas, a little... town down in the Great
State of Texas. This county down here, it's loaded
with great musicians. So I just went around and gathered up like the best bass
player from one band, the best drummer from another, the guitar player from
another (and) basically just kind of threatened to whoop'm all if they didn't
come play for me.
SplatterTribe: Did you play in any previous bands yourself?
Big Dad Ritch: Yeah, when
I was younger, I had had a couple of
bands together. We where a whole lot heavier, more Metal. Back in '91 when I had
that band together we where some of the heaviest stuff out there between Slayer
& Pantera. It was somebody else's band that I was in. Then later on I got in
another band called God Awful Mess, that was somebody else's band. It was '94,
'95 (and) somewhere closer to Tesla, maybe and starting to get to where I wanted
to go. About seven years ago, I did a... job for about 9 years, been away
from music for about 5 or 6 years and I just wasn't loving what was out there.
There wasn't anything that made me want to go and buy the album. There wasn't
nothing on the radio that made me go ,"WOW, That's awesome!", you know? So I
really wanted to put something out there that was in my vein, which was, you
know Johnny Cash, Waylon & Willie, get that Outlaw spirit out there, get that
Southern Rock N' Roll style of 38 special, ZZ Top, Molly
Hatchet, Lynyrd Skynyrd...get
that vibe to come across, but definitely want to keep it modern with that Power
Groove that is ALL Texas. I do hear some Pantera in there but I also hear some
Lynyrd Skynyrd, you know?
I even had one guy come up to us after one of our
songs and say, "Hey man, do you like Johnny Cash?" I said,"That's why I dress in
black baby! I love Johnny Cash" He said ,"I just kind of...It was weird I just kinda felt it all of a sudden." So it's great that that comes across in the
music, because I really want it to.
SplatterTribe: I read where you actually got
the chance to see Johnny Cash
perform. That's something I never got to do, what was that experience like?
Big Dad Ritch: Man, you know, growing up in the south you go to church a
lot. My Grandma was a big Pentecostal woman and she dragged me into church a
lot. You get to hear the preachers, all the preachers down here, they're very
eloquent speakers. When I went and seen Johnny Cash, the songs, you know, really
struck home with me...He lets you in deeper then a lot of musicians out there
will let you in. A lot of musicians are writing about...fiction, you know what I
mean? I felt like he was giving you something that was real and it really came
across, but what really captured me was in between the songs...The way he talked
to the audience. The things that he spoke on. The things that he said. You could
just see the whole audience just having fun and Rocking out to these good ole
Country songs that he was PLAYING. Then when it was time to talk between songs,
he had'm all. They where all there. He was captivating. He was the best front
man,
the most awesome showman that I had seen...and I was just totally blown away by
it and I knew then that that was exactly what I wanted to do.
SplatterTribe:
Where you a major fan going into the show?
Big Dad Ritch: Well as a young kid I listened to a lot of
Southern/Country music. The Oklahoman's, The Texas boys, you know Johnny Cash,
Waylon, Willie, David Allen Coe. I always was all of that. So I was a little bit
of a fan but after the show, I was a monster fan.
SplatterTribe: Getting back to you guys, tell us a little about the
somewhat extensive tour your on right now...
Big Dad Ritch: Yeah, we're actually rollin' pretty much non stop. They are
being so kind as to givin' us 4 or 5 days off here and there. Being centered in
a central location in the middle of the United States, in Oklahoma and the
northern most part of Texas, it's pretty easy to run east coast to west coast
and have a little stop in the middle on the way home. So, right now, we actually
just left the east coast, like I said, a couple of days early. We're just here a
couple of days. We'll be headed out to Oregon next week. We got some shows up in
Oregon, up in Washington State. We're number one on the radio up there in
Spokane. We're gonna go up there and service that radio station up there and
give everybody in Washington the old what for. Which is great for me because at
a young age my dad was a Hippie and when I was 2 years old, my dad loaded me up
in a Dodge van and we took off to Washington state and I lived in Washington
state till I was about 9 years old. And I had hair all the way down to my ass at
that young age (laughs)
SplatterTribe: A band at the stage that you are at in your career
doesn't get a lot of time off at all do you?
Big Dad Ritch: I actually was just speaking with my boy the other day, my
oldest boy, he's a pretty smart little feller. I don't know where he got it
from... I know his mom was a dumb-ass No, I'm just kiddin' (laughs)... You
know, he's got a higher level of intelligence and he's already explained it to
me that I've been home 65 days this year. He's keeping track of it and he's
letting me know.
When I get home I disappear off the face of the
Earth
because I smother myself with my children. I try to spend as much time with
them... I'm not very good at basketball, so they beat me easily, but football I
can tackle really good and the fact that they are only 13 and 7, it usually only
lasts about a half (laughs)
SplatterTribe: Many fans probably couldn't even envision you having
a home life...
Big Dad Ritch: There really isn't much of one. Like I said when I'm home
I just come straight home and smother myself with my family. This morning I got
up and took my daughter to preschool. I'll pick her up this afternoon. I'm just
being Mr. Dad when I'm at home, you know. That's one great thing about being a
musician is I mean, you don't get to be there everyday. That does suck, but the
fact that when I am here, I don't have any obligations other than to maybe do an
interview on the phone or something like that. It really gives me my whole day
to do whatever I want. Today I'm picking my daughter up early, taking her
shopping and get her some new shoes and then later on today I'm picking my boys
up...
SplatterTribe: What's the writing process like for THC, do you do
any writing when you're not on the road?
Big Dad Ritch: Actually, me and
John and Randy write all of the time. We
are writers pretty much nonstop. We are always throwing ideas at each other. Of
course, I write all the lyrics. I do the song arrangements, structure and stuff
like that. Even the rhythms that come at me, I might change'm up, take some
notes off, add a note and then elongate it or shorten (it). My main writer is
really my bass player John. Really there is no format for us. I've had trouble
answering this question before because we write in every case, every scenario,
just nonstop. Right now we've got a lot of songs that we just weren't able to
get on this last album and we've already wrote 4 or 5 more since this album has
been wrote. So we're setting here looking at these songs having fights over what
we think is going to make it onto our next album.
SplatterTribe: In 2008,
I got to Rocklahoma the day before it
started and after check in and everything was over and it was time to relax and
get ready for the festival. We ended up riding our golf carts out to the side
stage where sound checking and the first thing I saw was you guys sound checking
to the song 'Cocked &
Loaded' wich is on the new album. So I know that song dates back to at least 2008. So how old are the
songs that are on the new album 'Rollin'?
Big Dad
Ritch: Well, the album that's out now, the 2 songs that are
really the newer songs on there are Intervention...(and)...Groupie Girl is a
fairly new song because we had it. We tossed it around. We didn't really know if
it was us. I kinda liked it. I went in and revamped it. (We) done some stuff to
it, got it to where it is now. Actually when we presented that to the record
label. That was the one song that we turned in that they weren't crazy about at
first. I was like, "Well, dang, OK, if you're not digging that that's cool." and
then about 4 or 5 days days later I get a call from my manager. I get a call
from the label. They're both saying, "Hey man, I think we're wrong. We've been
listening to that Groupie Girl and we love it." (laughs)
I think the theme of
this band is when we go to write we don't say, "OK, we're Heavy Metal. We're
writing Heavy Metal songs" or "OK, we're mainstream Top 40. We're writing that"
or "Hey, we're a Southern Rock band. So we're just writing that." You see all
the elements from Country to Rock N' Roll to Southern Rock to
Heavy Metal. All
those influences come across, at least I hope they do. I feel like they do. When
it comes to writing a song, it should stand the test of time. I mean, there's a
couple of songs that didn't make the first album that we still have and if the
label was to let them in, I would put them on there. They're all songs I feel
good about. I figure that me and John and Randy together, I figure us guys have
probably wrote about 40 songs together and I bet you we have probably only
thrown away about 4 or 5 of them. (laughs)
SplatterTribe: And you've released about 20, so that means you're
setting on a good 15 songs basically...
Big Dad Ritch: Yeah, we definitely do have enough to punch out a double
album if we wanted to, but I think what we'll do is we'll nitpick at each other
and we'll pick out the best tracks and we'll get them on the next album.
SplatterTribe: How much say do you guys have with the label?
Big Dad Ritch: Well actually, in my contract and verbally with
Carved
Records, which I have to say is...It's an upstart record label and it's been a
pleasure signing with'm and workin' with'm because they have really givin' me
full range. They seen what this band was doin' without a label and everything was
running well. So really all they've done is just kind of jumped in and souped up
the engines, so to speak, and got us some sponsors on the side of the car (laughs)
and are helpin' us make the racetrack a little quicker, you know what I'm sayin'?
Really, I turned in 11 songs on the last album and they approached wanting to
know if they could release 'Pissed Off And Mad About It' on this album as well.
I told them that that would be cool. So I actually only handed over 12 songs for
this new album and 10 of them made the album and the other 2 are most likely
going to make the next album. I really feel strongly that they are both that
good. That they should be on an album.
SplatterTribe: Did you hesitate on putting 'Pissed Off.." on this
album since it was already on your independently release Pride Of Texas CD?
Big Dad Ritch: I did. I did kind of hesitate a little bit. The label just
kind of let me know that that was a song that they really liked. Pride Of Texas
is something that we held onto for us, you know. So we could have our first
independent album that belonged to us. We could do whatever we wanted to with
it. They (the label) came at me and whenever you say the right things and you
put dollar sign in front of it, it can be very convincing.
SplatterTribe: What about the next video or single release?
Have you guys come to
terms on that yet?
Big Dad Ritch: Actually we are gonna do 2 videos at once. We're fixing to go to Columbia... Bogota, Columbia and
while we're down there we're gonna be filming a video for Intervention and when
we come back we'll be filming a video for Groupie Girl. We should have both
videos...The first one should be in the can and available for the public by
March. The next one should follow up and be (released) shortly after
hopefully by the first of summer.
SplatterTribe: Have you already worked out the details for each of
the video's or is that still in the process?
Big Dad Ritch: Well when we're down in Bogota, Columbia, we're actually
gonna be...They have a hired military that are gonna be taking us from place to
place and we're just gonna do more like a 'LIVE' video, but with a lot of
underbelly. You'll be able to see us praying before we go onstage. You'll be
able to see us going from the backstage to the front of the stage. It will just
be all live shots like we did with 'Pissed Off And Mad About It'. A little bit
of the cutaway will be all the underbelly, the behind the scenes. All the stuff
that's goin' on like that. I'm looking forward to that video really. We got some
great people involved in South America that are going to be filming it. The
cameras we are using are...I forget the kind of cameras they are. They use them
for movies and stuff. There's a band out there called 30 Second To Mars.
They always shoot with these kind of cameras. I'm always braggin' about their
video. I didn't know that (was what they used). I was always like, "Man, this
bands videos, they look so wicked", wide shots, the way they look and
everything. When the guy was presenting to us what he wanted to do with it, that
was his pitch. "We'll be using the same cameras they use in movies, something
like 30 Seconds To Mars has done." (I was like), "AWE, That's Awesome!"
(laughs) you know what I mean..
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