Guster

There's no drummer in Guster. Instead, a standing percussionist hits skins and even cymbals with just his taped-up fingers. It may not make a huge difference in the band's sound--there's still a kick drum after all--but it's the first clue that the band is a little out of the ordinary...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

There’s no drummer in Guster. Instead, a standing percussionist hits skins and even cymbals with just his taped-up fingers. It may not make a huge difference in the band’s sound–there’s still a kick drum after all–but it’s the first clue that the band is a little out of the ordinary. The mostly acoustic trio (supplemented on the road by an additional guitarist/bassist) plays songs that aren’t sweet enough for pop, aren’t hard enough for rock and are too energetic for folk. Basically, Guster is a jam band that doesn’t jam, instead trading musical improvisation for creative oddity. It covered the Violent Femmes’ self-titled album for an MTV2 special last November, and along with the steadily increasing supply of live recordings it sells online via Apple’s iTunes, it also offers a version of its major-label debut, Keep It Together, sung using only the word “meow.” Let’s see Phish top that.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...