Brett Scallions-vocals, guitar
Carl Bell-guitar, vocals
Jeff Abercrombie-bass
Kevin Miller-drums
Fuel combines muscular, precise rhythms with
passionate and commanding lyrics bound by solid hooks. The four-member
Central Pennsylvania band creates emotive music, reflective of an era of
confusion and heightened self-awareness. However, Fuel — Brett Scallions
(lead vocals, guitar), Carl Bell (guitar, vocals), Jeff Abercrombie (bass)
and Kevin Miller (drums) — have been cultivating their ubiquitous sound
for years in the heartland.
The band's major label debut LP on 550 Music, Sunburn, was produced
by Steven Haigler (the Pixies, Quicksand, Local H) and mixed by Tom Lord-Alge
(Wallflowers, Dave Matthews Band). Recorded in a pastoral setting surrounded
by 1,500 acres of farmland, Sunburn's 11 tracks belie its bucolic birthplace
at Long View Farms in Massachusetts.
Sunburn's first single is "Shimmer," with its bittersweet warning
that "All that shimmers in this world is sure to fade." Fuel's songwriter
Carl Bell says: "The song was inspired by personal events in my life, but
I think people can relate to it universally. Everything is temporary."
A bleaker view is presented in the violent, desperate exhortations
from the power and fury of "Jesus or a Gun." "That's just about being buried
by everyday life—the social ideals and situations, you're just looking
for relief," says Bell. "Some people choose Jesus, and other people might
look for something a little more drastic and immediate."
Throughout Sunburn, a searching and often dark tone pervades along
with lingering hooks. "When I write a song, " Bell offers, "it's just what
I'm going through, or have seen someone else go through. Writing is like
therapy for me. It helps you decode stuff that's going on in your life."
Sunburn follows the group's phenomenal regional success in their
adopted home of Central Pennsylvania, where loyal support from radio and
numerous concerts boosted sales of their 1996 independent EP Porcelain
to over 10,000 copies, prompting the Harrisburg Patriot to note that "the
murmur surrounding Fuel is loud," while the Wilkes-Barre Times Leader called
their live show "the equivalent of a tank full of 94-octane gas."
Self-produced, promoted and financed, Porcelain was recorded and released
"against all odds and in less than accommodating environments," according
to its liner notes. The EP won Fuel immediate airplay on local radio stations,
with an early version of "Shimmer" attaining the band "Screamer of the
Week" status on a local modern rock outlet. Phone requests, increased airplay
and sold-out gigs led to Fuel's signing with 550 Music backstage following
a sold-out performance for 3,000 fans at Millersville University, PA.
The band soon released the college-only promo EP Hazleton on 550
Music, which enjoyed a successful run on the CMJ charts. Fuel went on to
perform with The Toadies, Verve Pipe and Dinosaur Jr., to name a few.
Fuel began with Carl Bell and bass player Jeff Abercrombie, who
both grew up in a small rural Western Tennessee town. "It was a town of
about a thousand people," says Bell. "It had two stop lights, and I had
27 people in my graduating class. I grew up without TV—so, you know, I
had to play guitar."
Bell's musical education was jump-started at age 12 when his older brother
won 500 LPs in a contest sponsored by a Memphis AM radio station. "I would
get home from school and listen to all these vinyl albums for hours. Access
to all those different bands hugely influenced my music."
Bell formed various bands with Abercrombie, but Fuel crystallized
with the addition of Brett Scallions on lead vocals and guitar. "With the
addition of Brett, the band really solidified," says Abercrombie. Fuel
began recording and rehearsing a growing catalog of compositions. The band
recorded a self-titled 8-song cassette as a demo, which sold 5,000 copies
at shows and in stores. Fuel decided to move from their sleepy southern
home in Western Tennessee to relocate to a city that has more rock and
roll, more media presence, and more strategic location. A city like...Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania?
"Hey, Harrisburg worked out for us! It was a short drive to markets
like Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, New York, Baltimore and D.C., where we began
building a loyal following," says Scallions. "The fan base here has been
really overwhelming. They've really supported us from day one and it just
grew and grew."
And with Sunburn, Fuel is now poised for the next step. "Voicing
music on a national level is a great thing — it's something we've always
dreamed of," says Scallions. "We love to travel, see the road and get personal
with people. We're very excited about that."