The Slackers

"The Slackers are part of an imaginary universe. It wasn't their fault, well not completely. The caterpillar

told them not to eat the mushroom on the right. But they did and for years now they've had to play

Imaginary-Jamaican-Rock-and-Roll, and try to explain that to everyone who passes. One asks,"Are you

a reggae band?...where are your dreadlocks then?" Another says,"YOU DONT SOUND LIKE PUNK-ROCK

WITH HORNS AT ALL!!" One elderly gent says,"Why it sounds like a lot of music I used to like, but I don't

think any of you boys look addicted to HEROIN!" Doomed to try and explain themselves to a world full of

hungry club-promoters, style-police, genre-slaves and the generally confused, they wrote bio upon bio,

hoping to snag someone...ANYONE!...who might understand...here is attempt #6,364…"

Vic Ruggiero, The Slackers

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The Slackers have spreading their gospel of "Jamaican Rock N Roll" for 21 years

now. While they have been influenced, and even personally taught by Jamaican ska/

reggae originators, like the Skatalites and the Upsetters (Original backing band for

the Wailers) they play it with a decidedly American accent. Basically, this band is

equally appreciative of old blues, country, 60s soul, rock, and Rnb as it is of reggae,

rocksteady, dub, and Ska. It is as if the Rolling Stones or the Yardbirds had grown

up on Bob Marley as well as Muddy Waters.



Smashing the stereotypes of "ska" as happy,uptempo, and shallow music, the

Slackers play with an aggressive edge and their songs veer in themes from the

personal to the political. Back in 1996, the NY Times declared the Slackers to be

part of "the sound of New York", a mantle they haven't given up since. Ten years

later, Alternative Nation stated that their music is "protest music made for dim,

sweaty basements, The Slackers would sound at home supporting Rancid as well as

some grizzled New Orleans electric blues trio." The LA Weekly wrote about, "their

unfettered energy, unerring skankability, and playful anger."



The band basically divides its recorded output into 2 categories. First of are

their "albums", which are as sax player, Dave Hillyard, says with just a hint of

his typical sarcasm, "these are where we try to take over the universe." This

steady stream includes Better Late Than Never (1996), Red Light (1997), The

Question (1998), Wasted Days (2001), Close My Eyes (2003), Peculiar

(2006), Self Medication (2008), and The Great Rocksteady Swindle (2010).



The Great Rocksteady Swindle is a songwriting tour de force with all band

members contributing to its gutsy muscular sound. "Mr. Tragedy" references the

Specials while "Boll Weevil" references Sam Sham & the Pharaohs. "Cheated"

seethes with bitterness while "Thank You" offers the possibility of hope. As the band

has matured you can't even tell anymore where the rock begins and the reggae

ends, its become The Slackers. As band leader, Vic Ruggiero says, "we wanted to do

an album that feels real. You can hear the band punching its way through."



Not content with letting the record industry dictate their output schedule, the band

has also put out numerous eclectic and whimsical albums following their different

interests of the moment. Slackers & Friends (2002) saw the band performing with

some of their idols like The Congos, the late Glen Adams of the Upsetters, Cornell

Campbell, and Doreen Schaeffer. International War Criminal EP (2004) was a

bitter broadside against the Bush Administration. Afternoon in Dub (2005) is pure

reggae bliss. Boss Harmony Sessions (2007) was a collaboration with DJ Boss

Harmony who arranged and refiltered tracks in unorthodox ways. Lost & Found

(2009) is a compilation of forgotten tracks, alternate versions, and remakes from the

bands recording vaults.



Their most recent release, The Radio, is a change of pace, being their first all cover

album. This was the brainchild of Whatevski Records' mogul, Tom Gibbons, who had

an idea of a fantasy old school FM radio station where all the songs were played by

the Slackers. The result is creative re-workings of Atttitude (Misfits), Bitch (Rolling

Stones), The Letter (Box Tops) amongst others. The most startling track was an

especially tender reggae ballad version of a track Madonna made famous, 'Like a

Virgin.' As Hillyard explains, "cover records have a bad rep in the Ska world, we

wanted to avoid this and find songs we could be true to. Our goal was to make

better versions than the original song. We didn't want something cute…oh look a

reggae version y'know? With 'Like a Virgin', Vic is able to live the song and takes

away all the cute bubble gum delivery of the original and is able to get to the deeper

meaning of the lyrics."



The band has also put out 3 live albums; Live At Ernestos (2000), Upsetting

Ernestos (2005), Slack In Japan (2005), and 2 DVDs; The Slackers: A

Documentary (2007) and Live at the Flamingo Cantina (2009).

More recently, the band has started releasing their live concerts through

www.whatevski.org and has plans for releasing more compilations digitally.



This focus on the live show is not surprising because the Slackers have a good part

of their existence on the road. Since 1997, the band has been doing around 110

shows a year. This includes some 28 major North American tours, 16 European tours, 3 Japanese tours and 3 Brazilian tours. They have played in 43 different US

states, 6 canadian provinces, 22 european countries, 5 Latin American nations,

Turkey, Japan, and South Korea.



They have appeared on the stages of the Warped Tour (1998), the Lowlands

Festival (1999), Pukkelpop (1999, 2004), CMJ (2000), Montreal Jazz

Festival (2000), the Bourges Festival (2001), the Dour Festival (2002, 2007),

Deconstruction Tour (2004), Augustboller (2005), Streetbeat Festival

(2005), Popkomm (1999,2006), Summerjam (2007), Mighty Sounds (2007),

Ilosaarirock (2007), Glastonbury (2008), Beautiful Days (2010), Rebellion

(2010), and Ink N Iron (2009,2012).



They have opened for Rancid (1999,2003, 2006), Hepcat (1999), Joe Strummer

(2002, 2003), Floggin Molly (2002), Jimmy Cliff (2002), the Beat (2002),

Pennywise (2004), Toots & the Maytals (2005), The Pogues (2006), John

Spencer's Heavy Traffic (2007),and The Specials (2010).



They have sold out numerous headlining gigs including such venues as Bowery

Ballroom (nyc, 2 times), Slims (San Francisco, 5 times), Lee's Palace (Toronto, 3

times), The Underworld (London), Troubadour (LA, 3 times in 2006 alone), the

Knitting Factory (NYC, 5 times), the Melkweg (A-dam), SESC Pompeia (Sao

Paolo, 2 nights in 2006), and the Loft (Tokyo, 2 times).



Hopefully, if you have read this far, you are starting to get the point that the

Slackers are a phenomenon. A worldwide phenomenon. An underground band with

a cult following, they can fill venues everywhere!



The band has come a long way from their little dirty rehearsal studio on e.3 rd street

on the lower east side.