Steev from Florida writes: This article from my high school newspaper captures a turning point in the early life of Egyptian Joyride, a young and ridiculously self-important new wave rock band that was perpetually only a single line-up change away from becoming one of the most successful local bands to perform original music in a small pocket of the north Florida music scene usually dominated by blues rock and heavy metal cover bands. We were, of course, also complete idiots.
The band's original guitarist and reluctant front-man, Cary Mainous, first introduced me to bassist Jason George on Jason's first day out of jail. Granted he had only served a short term for failure to pay off some parking citations which hardly qualifying him as a hardened criminal. But while
As a shy and easily impressed 15 year-old, desperate for the acceptance and approval of my college-age band mates, I found my new band mate's possible criminal background terrifying and thrilling at the same time.
One important omission in the article: it was a fairly public secret that we didn't actually win the contest described in the article-at least, we didn't win it fair and square. Truth is, we cheated to the point of absurdity, not only by pestering everyone we knew in town to call in to the radio station as many times as humanly possibly, but also by disguising our own voices and calling the station as many times as we could ourselves (these were the days before caller ID was common, so this was a low-risk scam at the time).
Soon, Chris took over leadership of the group, and
The band only finally started coming undone when I refused to drop out of high school before the start of my senior year, so that the band could "go on the road full-time" (as far as I know, neither Chris or Jason really had any idea what that meant or any concrete plans for how to go about doing it.)
Our final performance was a fund-raiser benefit for WKGC, that same small, local college radio station that had helped us establish ourselves and done so much to help promote us over the years since. Throughout that show, the security guards at the on-campus venue hosting the event threatened to cut the power to the PA system several times, because Jason refused to stop swearing drunkenly into the mic.
It was probably clear to anyone in the audience at that moment that in our minds, this was a defining moment in the history of rock and roll. Then, about halfway into the song, someone finally cut the power to the PA for good.
Here is one of the thumpingly good tracks Egyptian Joyride recorded for a local music compilation that was sold on-campus and around town to raise money for WKGC. According to the author, the mixes are a noisy, muddled mess, but as he claims, " that was just how we rolled in those days." The track is called Attitude.
5 comments:
Dude, you're supposed to let a PUBLICIST pestering everyone on earth about how great your group is.
Ha! I lived in Mexico Beach from '88 to '90 and knew Chris Green. Met him through his friends Ed and Philip. I remember going over to his house for fajitas!
Always thought Copper Quarter Throwback was a great band name.
Man...that was a long time ago!
Wow, I randomly did a search for Egyptian Joyride after being unsuccessful at trying to find Prose N Poetry online.
I was the dj at WKGC who ran the contest and helped put together that compilation tape of local bands. Yeah, we were pretty amused with you guys trying to disguise your voices and having relatives call in.
You wouldn't happen to be able to make mp3s of the rest of the songs on that compilation would you? Mine is long gone and I would love to hear the rest again. hanswatson@gmail.com
Wow, a blast from the past. Where are Jason and Cary now?
Jason disappeared off the face of the earth. I'm in Nashville.
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