Honeybrowne offers "something to believe in”

Tom Geddie, December 2005

Don't wake up Fred Andrews from his dream, which is writing songs and performing with honey-smooth Honey-browne, a trendy young Texas band that's part rock, part country and only the tiniest part Lone Star rowdy.

The band's new CD, "Something to Believe In," released Nov. 15 on Compadré Records, blends classic and contemporary rock, alt-rock and pop with a little bit of country that's more contemplative than angry, yet still youthful enough to appeal to the 20-something crowds. And rootsy enough to appear on the Americana Music Association's music chart.

So, what makes Honeybrowne a trendy band?

First of all, and, really, least important except perhaps for the independent attitudes it fosters, the band's members - all in their late 20s and early 30s - don't just live in the musical Mecca of Austin,; they live in trendy South Austin where the rent's cheap, where the neighbors are likely to be artists, too, and where the belief is that Austin itself is now too corporate or too crowded or too, well, "something" that just isn't hip enough.

More important, the guys - Andrews (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Cody Banks (drums), Jake Blackwell (bass) and brand new member Cale Richardson (lead guitar) - are still youthful enough to appeal to the college-age crowds and now old enough to begin appealing to more mature audiences, too. They've been on the road together since the late 1990s.

"We're very happy to do what we do. We've gone through all the hardships of the teens and early 20s and are approaching having a solid personality," Andrews says. "We just like to write about things we love and like to do. Music is one. Women is another."

Most important, the songs aren't all about binge-drinking beer and yeehah Texas, a formerly trendy movement that may actually be beginning to wake up from its own hangover.

In other words, lyrics - and lyrical variety - count.

"We're lifers. We just want to play music around the songs we write," Andrews says. "Our main goal is to mix the pop side of songwriting - the catchy melodies - with the Texas style of songwriting - telling stories that have a lot of meaning. The combination of making a pop hit and a country hit is to have lyrical substance. We're trying to achieve that goal."

Andrews began writing songs in the early 1990s when he was studying at Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos to become a teacher.

He grew up listening to what his dad listened to: Billy Joel, Simon & Garfunkel, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Elvis Presley. As a teenager, he was into U2, The Replacements, The Smiths, The Cure.

"I think my songwriting reflects a combination of that stuff and my Texas music heroes," Andrews says, referring to Willie and Waylon, Kris Kristofferson, Townes Van Zandt. "Those are givens for me."

Andrews began playing in college to entertain himself and his friends.

Andrew says at the start he didn't know how to play other people's music. So he did the next best thing - he made up his own.

Eventually, he learned to play other's people's songs.

From playing at parties, Andrews moved to weekly gig with a changing group of friends at a local club. When they won a gig opening for Jackopierce and needed a name, they pulled Honeybrowne off a beer coaster.

"I want people to feel the emotions that hearing great music brings out in me," Andrews says. "I just want to make music that's real. We play from the heart, sing from the heart, write from the heart. It's just honest, good music."

"Finding Shade" was the band's debut CD in 2001, followed by "Live at the Fabulous Satellite Lounge" and "Good For Nuthin'."

Andrews says putting together the new album "was done with a lot of tender loving care.

"I didn't rush anything. The guys just came into the studio and we played the songs until we liked them, until they worked out right. There was no urgency to get it out at a certain time, so we took the time we needed to pre-produce and record. We're very happy with the final product."

Mark Addison, who owns The Aerie Studio in Austin, produced "Something to Believe In." Addison has produced and co-produced for Guy Forsyth, David Garza, Ian Moore, Bob Schneider and Will Sexton. Gene Simmons, Joan Baez, Cher, Paul Thorn, Willy Porter, and Maia Sharp have cut his songs.

"He is just an amazing idea person," Andrews says. "He has a thousand melodies coming out of his pockets and endless ideas.

"When you work with a producer who doesn't have ideas for you, it's tedious. Mark works with your ideas, and he has ideas and something good comes out. He's an amazing musician and producer and songwriter that I and everybody in the band believe in."

Andrews says he is still learning the craft of songwriting; most of his cuts on the new CD are co-writes. In addition to six songs written or co-written by Andrews, the CD also features contributions by Addison and his longtime collaborator Nina Singh, former Honeybrowne guitarist Alex Weeden with Austin rocker Matt McCormack, and rising Texas talent Ryan Carter (son of Austin songwriter Bill Carter).

"It's not just writing a song in five minutes or whatever and calling it a song. That's just a skeleton," he says. "You've got to rewrite and edit. I'm learning the craft from really great songwriters like David Newhouser and Mark Addison. I've been at it a long time, but I'm still learning this craft. I can take a lot of knowledge from people who've been writing songs for 30 or 40 years, and the more I can learn from everybody, the better off I am. It helps me to learn everybody else's style and craft in songwriting and melody writing."

Songs on "Something to Believe In" look at love, of course, but range across a rainbow of other subjects too.

Addison and Singh's "8 Roses" take a human look at sidewalk vendors.

"Living in Austin, you pass one of these guys every day on the side of the road," Andrews says. "He is not asking for handouts. He is trying to make a living as a roadside businessman by selling roses wrapped in cellophane from a plastic bucket. Next time you see one of these hard working businessmen, stop and buy a rose for someone special."

"March of Life," an Andrews co-write with Seth Harrison, looks at life and career changes.

"It seems we are taught to graduate from school, get a job, get married, have kids and then retire. Not many people take chances, which is okay," Andrews says. "However, I think there are regrets with not taking chances and not following your dreams. Doing what I do is a dream. It seems that so many friends and acquaintances tell me their dreams. They wanted to be actors, singers, dancers and other risky professions. But for some reasons, good or bad, they decided to go the safe route. We only have one shot at this life, and regrets should not be a part of it."

Andrews even turns toward the church on one song, "I'm Here."

"I'm not much into church, but I am pretty spiritual. I have never written a Christian song until now," he says. "God is here at all times, when we are down and when we are up, loving us the same and always keeping a loving, watchful eye over us. That is what unconditional love is all about."

Andrews taught special education at a middle school before music took him on the road full time.

The touring increased to the point where Anrews bagged the day job and became a full-time musician.

Honeybrowne does 150-170 or so gigs a year now, mostly in Texas and the surrounding states except for a more-or-less annual southeastern U.S. tour. The band has also toured twice now opening for Pat Green.

What little rowdiness there is in the band shows up in the live shows rather than on CD.

"The band is a talented bunch of guys who know how to play to a song and have a great time on stage," Andrews says. "They take my ideas and put their own ideas in and come up with something really unique for the live shows. Our live shows are a little more edgy than the CD. There's a little more tendency to rock out every once in a while at shows. We have such a great bunch of people who come see us. Everybody who buys an album and comes to shows, it's not the first time; it's the second or third, and they bring friends. It's a good deal. I wish it on every musician I know."

With the new CD, the schedule is becoming a little more hectic.

"For a while, we're going to be touring probably 25 days a months," Andrews says. "We're going to pound this album into people's heads and get it into the hands of everybody who wants a copy."



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