Chicago Sun-Times

Seems like old times for newly reunited Hootie & the Blowfish

- BY TRICIA DESPRES For the Sun-Times Tricia Despres is a local freelance writer.

It was the second show on the first Hootie & the Blowfish tour in 10 years, and Darius Rucker couldn’t keep it together, no matter how hard he tried.

“We were playing ‘I Go Blind’ and I looked over at [guitarist] Mark [Bryan] and, I mean, we have been playing together since I was 19 years old,” Rucker remembers during a recent interview. “I mean, he’s 52 years old and I’m 53 years old, and I just could not stop laughing.”

The Group Therapy Tour has Rucker, Bryan and their Hootie & the Blowfish bandmates Dean Felber (bass) and Jim “Soni” Sonefeld (drums) in the midst of a road trek that will have them visiting 44 cities, including a stop in Tinley Park at the Hollywood Casino Amphitheat­re on Aug. 24.

Getting the chance to come together again took its share of coercing and waiting and eventually trusting that it was the right time and the right decision for the band as a whole.

“We definitely talked about it for a couple of years,” says Rucker. “We almost did it for our 20th anniversar­y of [debut album] ‘Cracked Rear View.’ Every time we would meet about it, we all agreed that if it wasn’t going to be great, we didn’t want to do it. We then got together again about a year ago when we hit the album’s 25th anniversar­y. It was probably about two months before the tour announceme­nt was made that we made the final decision to do it.”

Rucker says he did have his share of reservatio­ns about the tour, right up to the very

moment they all first took the stage together on May 30 in Virginia Beach, Virginia.

“I just didn’t know if we could still pull in the people,” Rucker admits. “But I was wrong. [Laughs] I’m glad I was wrong. Once I saw those crowds singing every word, I knew I was really, really wrong.”

Some of those crowd members singing every word probably weren’t alive back in the ’90s when Hootie & the Blowfish were in the middle of their heyday courtesy of hits such as “Hold My Hand,” “Let Her Cry” and “Only Wanna Be With You.”

The tour conversati­ons also led Rucker and his bandmates to head into the studio to put together their first album in nearly 15 years, titled “Imperfect Circle.”

“It was just so much fun to get back in the studio and tell bad jokes and make the music we love,” says Rucker. “We still love the music.”

Rucker says fans shouldn’t expect anything on the new album (set for release on Nov. 1) that is too far out of the band’s universe.

“That’s the toughest thing for us,” Rucker admits. “Once we put the guitar on the song, it always just sounds like us. I mean, hopefully this new album sounds cool and different, but yeah, it’s us.”

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