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The Blue Rubys
Three girls for every guy
Of the uncountable thousands of rock 'n' roll bands on
the planet, very few have the gender composition of the Blue Rubys:
three women and one man. The combination gives the band a kind of
collective sexiness that's unusually complex, and they have a
diverse collection of onstage motion styles the exuberant
lead vocalist Nicole Marie gets around quite a bit of the front of
the stage with her dancing, while Vickie Hinz wields the bass guitar
in a graceful way, and the physical forward projection of rock music
is centered on lead guitarist Mark Neff.
The Blue Rubys play fun, romantic, straight-ahead rock
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers would be a reference point
sometimes drawing on the country and rockabilly rhythms that made
people dance with abandon to rock 'n' roll in the first
place. Just as Elvis Presley turned the sentiment of Bill Monroe's
"Blue Moon of Kentucky" into rock forward motion, so the
Blue Rubys adapt another bluegrass standard the Stanley
Brothers' "She's More to Be Pitied than Scolded"
(which got started, in 1898, as "She Is More to Be Pitied than
Censured"), reinterpreting it as a sassy celebration of barroom
nights and good times. Mostly their songs are original, and
they've got a certified barroom raver in "Come Waste My
Time."
Fueled by the snappy drumming of Michelle Donnelly, the band's
music is propulsive enough to fill up a dance floor. They drew
interested, uninitiated crowds when I saw them recently at the Elbow
Room and then again at TC's in Ypsilanti, but there wasn't
quite room for dancers to really do their thing. When the Blue
Rubys make their Blind Pig debut on Saturday, March 1, that
shouldn't be an issue, and people will definitely be out on the
floor. The band is also back at TC's on Saturday, March 15.
But here's the thing the music has enough subtleties
to keep them listening, too. There's almost always some harmony
singing happening, and Neff is a guitarist capable of pleasant
surprises. The band can move close to modern country or turn toward
punk-pop without losing its basic sound, and you get the feeling
each individual member is bringing something to the mix. The
contrast between Nicole Marie's girl-group vocals and Neff's
more full-throated turns in the lead is effective. Several of the
musicians have bounced around the local scene for a while: Neff
(who like Nicole Marie comes from Chelsea) is a veteran of various
local rock and country bands, including the Gigantics, and he says
his early background was entirely in country music. Hinz was most
recently a member of Chrome Mali.
There is, in short, a lot going on when the Blue Rubys play, and
they've boiled it all down to a sharp and compact set of moves.
And that makes them a new band to watch.
James M. Manheim
Photo by J. Adrian Wylie
[Review published March 2008]
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