Windsor Star

ROCKERS NEVER SAY DIE

Hootie & the Blowfish’s 2019 plans include new album and lengthy tour

- KRISTIN M. HALL

Twenty-five years after Cracked Rear View launched their careers, Grammy-winning rock band Hootie & the Blowfish will release a new album and launch an official tour next year after a decade-long break. The Southern pop-rockers, featuring lead singer Darius Rucker, Mark Bryan, Jim Sonefeld and Dean Felber, broke out with their major label debut in 1994, which has been certified 21 times platinum and made the Recording Industry Associatio­n of America’s list of the top-10 most popular albums of all-time. With Top 10 hits like Hold My Hand, Let Her Cry and Only Wanna Be With You, the South Carolina-based band went from playing college bars to selling out arenas and winning best new artist at the Grammy Awards in 1996. The band put out five studio albums and other live albums, never coming close to the popularity of the first, with the last one in 2006. Their last official tour was in 2007.

But with a big anniversar­y approachin­g in 2019, the four musicians who still play together a couple times a year for annual charity events decided it was time to go out on the road and bring with them some new music. “Nothing has changed,” insists Rucker, who is now a major country star in his own right with several country radio hits such as Wagon Wheel. “When the four of us get back together, we fall into the same dynamic of the band that’s always there. We’ve been a band for pretty much 30 years now. We’re just older now. There’s a lot less alcohol.” Rucker said they hope to have a single out in the spring with a full album next summer.

The tour also includes Toronto-raised act Barenaked Ladies who will play all of the dates, including a stop in their hometown on Aug. 29.

The Group Therapy Tour starts May 30, 2019, in Virginia Beach, Va., and will hit 44 cities, including the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles, T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Madison Square Garden in New York and Bridgeston­e Arena in Nashville, Tenn. The tour ends in Columbia, S.C., on Sept. 13. The band who met at the University of South Carolina, were in Columbia when they sat down to discuss why their album was so successful, and deciding to go dormant as Rucker explored his solo career and returning to their hometown on tour. The answers have been edited for brevity.

Q How different does the campus look now from when you went there?

Felber The university has changed a lot. The dorm where we actually met is now in the dump (the university demolished the dorm several years ago). It’s improved and grown massively. Bryan One interestin­g fact is we’re going to be doing our first Columbia, S.C., show in probably 20 years. The town that we came out of, that we played a million shows in when we were young, we haven’t played here in 20 years or almost.

Q Are you expecting a lot of old college friends to start texting you again?

Rucker We’re changing our phone numbers.

Q Looking back at Cracked Rear View, the crazy amount of success and attention must have been a big change for you?

Rucker We probably toured seven years before we got a record deal.

Felber We did two cassettes and a CD before we got signed and did Cracked Rear View, and had been on the road for four years pretty solid. By the time we got there, we were pretty ready and pretty busy.

Bryan But we also jumped to the big stages really quick, which we weren’t used to. So, it was kind of interestin­g trying to take our set from like a club show to these big arenas and that sort of thing. So, there was definitely a period of transition there.

Q That album came out when the dominant sound in rock was grunge. Did that set you apart?

Sonefeld Our music was going against the grain of what was popular on radio at the time. It was more of the angst-driven, harder-edged rock and I think we brought back melody and brought back some of the harmony sounds that weren’t really in the middle of rock radio at the time.

Q Was there a conscious decision to put the band on hold?

Sonefeld The idea of going dormant for an unknown period of time can be daunting or scary. But we felt like going away for a while, getting back to our families and a little bit more of a sedentary lifestyle might be a good experiment. We didn’t say we were going away for six months or six years. We just said, ‘Let’s go dormant.’ And Darius was releasing his first (country), single at the same time. So, he really got the opportunit­y to put a great effort, a full effort into country music. And when that blew up, it helped in some ways to secure that we would be dormant for more than six months.

Q Where are you in the recording process?

Felber We have a bunch of songs, and so now we are just working on it and getting them together and deciding which ones are going to be good and which ones aren’t going to be good. And then just kind of playing and writing in the studio.

Q Beyond Columbia, are there certain venues or cities you’re excited about playing again?

Rucker The last time we played Madison Square Garden we played two nights and it was awesome. I haven’t been in there since to play a show. That’s exciting to know that we cannot play for 10 years and get to play those places again.

Q Darius, are you ready to rock after a decade in country?

Rucker I am looking forward to rocking again. Gonna be fun.

 ?? SEAN RAYFORD/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hootie & the Blowfish members Dean Felber, left, Darius Rucker, Jim Sonefeld and Mark Bryan are feeling reinvigora­ted and are ready to tour after being dormant for years.
SEAN RAYFORD/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hootie & the Blowfish members Dean Felber, left, Darius Rucker, Jim Sonefeld and Mark Bryan are feeling reinvigora­ted and are ready to tour after being dormant for years.

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