
Outlaw rock and roll. The phrase instantly conjures up imagery
of Cash, Jennings, Haggard. In its highest form, the music is heart-wrenching,
regaling the listener with tales of tragic loss allowing them to
see these hardships through the eyes of the story teller. But in
addition, at its very core there exists a faint message of hope.
That through it all, the protagonist possesses the ability to persevere
through any and all obstacles laid before them. If then, the word
that best describes outlaw rock music is perseverance, the Del Bombers
are the very embodiment of the genre.
The band originally formed in 1996, when Stephen Grillos (vocals
and guitar) and Bob James (drums) began collaborating. The two were
of a similar vision: to create American rock and roll that centered
around the story. They relied heavily on their travels across America:
James, a very accomplished touring artist (opening for acts like
Social Distortion, and touring throughout the country opening for
AC/DC on their Ballbreaker tour); and Grillos, a free-wheeling wanderer,
who had spent time in New York, D.C., Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco,
and many of the highways and byways that connect them. Within months
the duo went into the recording studio, releasing their first full
length CD Life is Pain. The album spoke with authority about lifes
great tragedies and triumphs. Songs like the Road, about a wanderer's
quest for self worth in a society that negates him, La Pistola a
man's battle to overcome his own self destruction, and Fading Fast,
a faithful portrait of a criminal's tenuous hold on his faith in
God, created a strong, visual fabric to accompany the somber and
emotive musical foundation. With their first studio album released
to rave reviews, the band was completed with the addition of Daniel
Nolan on bass, a multi-instrumentalist and highly respected Bay
Area artist, and Scott Sneddon on lead guitar, a guitarist James
had toured with extensively (including the Ballbreaker outing with
AC/DC).
With a completed lineup, the Del Bombers focused on live performance.
After a few years of collaborating with Nolan and Sneddon, the group
entered the recording studio to record their second album Time Wont
Wait. Tracking and mixing took over a year, but when it was completed
Time Wont Wait had taken the formula of Life is Pain to the next
level. The album had a more raw live essence drawing heavily on
the groups roots influences while at the same time demonstrated
a maturation in the song writing and lyrical crafting of the band.
Just when the band readied itself to release the album tragedy struck
far to close to home. James daughter Scarlett, who suffers from
RETT Syndrome, began having epileptic seizures, as many as one hundred
times a day, leading to week and month-long stays in the hospital.
James and his family spent the next few years in and out of the
emergency room, with doctors giving them little hope. With the band
hanging in limbo, Grillos turned towards academia, studying in New
York and Chicago. Still, during this horrific time in James life,
the two kept in constant contact, writing songs over thousands of
miles distance. James desperately needed the outlet, and pored all
of his pain and frustration into his haunting lyrics. Grillos responded
with some of the most heart-felt and powerful music he had ever
crafted.
In early 2005 Del Bombers appeared on two compilation albums released
by Shut Eye Records, The United States of Americana, and Buzzlighter
10. The Del Bombers enjoyed significant radio play throughout the
country due to the two compilations. By the summer of 2005 Grillos
returned to San Francisco, and James daughter had made some recovery.
They began writing music again with Nolan and Sneddon, and are nearing
completion of preproduction for their third album Saints and Heathens.
Mike Ness of Social Distortion has signed on to produce the album,
which will begin recording in early 2007. The future looks brighter
than ever for the Del Bombers. Like the people they sing about,
they have suffered, hit absolute bottom, but have managed to overcome
all obstacles, to do what they were put on this earth to do. They
have not recreated the wheel, they are not attempting a new musical
genre that will disappear as quickly as it surfaced. What they are
doing is creating some of the most honest and heart-felt American
music that would make their predecessors proud to call outlaw rock
and roll.
Web site: http://www.delbombers.com
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/delbombers
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