Blue October
Blue October can be booked through this site. Blue October entertainment booking site. Blue October
is available for public concerts and events. Blue October can be booked for
private events and Blue October can be booked for corporate events and
meetings through this Blue October booking page.
Unlike most middle agents that would mark
up the performance or appearance fee for Blue October, we act as YOUR agent in
securing Blue October at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
Blue October and work directly with Blue October or the responsible agent for
Blue October to secure the talent for your event. We become YOUR agent,
representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
the acquisition of Blue October for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
Blue October Biography
Blue October isn't just your average, everyday rock band from
Texas. The group was formed in Houston in the late '90s by lead
singer/songwriter/guitarist Justin Furstenfeld, his drummer brother
Jeremy, multi-instrumentalist Ryan Delahoussaye, and later joined by
guitarist/vocalist CB Hudson and bassist Matt Noveskey. The group's
epic live shows and exploration of subjects like mental depression,
drug use, love, betrayal, forgiveness, and cathartic transcendence have
helped them amass a strong, loyal following through five albums, three
of which have been released by Universal Records.
Blue October released their first album, The Answers, in 1998. The group was signed to Universal for their August 2000 major-label debut, Consent To Treatment, but with rock radio non-responsive, they were soon dropped. The band then signed with Brando Records and released History For Sale in July 2003. When Calling You, which was also included on the American Wedding
soundtrack, began picking up airplay in Dallas and other Texas cities,
Universal offered to re-sign the group. After considering several other
major label offers, Blue October decided to return to the very label
that dropped them.
We're not an easy band to understand, says Justin about the decision
to return to their major-label home. I just felt at Universal, we had
a team of people who understood us, and who loved us for all the right
reasons. I wasn't about to walk through life with people who didn't
really know me.
That Blue October hasn't followed the ordinary path to success is clear from the first single from Foiled,
Hate Me, a song that recalls such aching-rock anthems as Joy
Division's Love Will Tear Us Apart or Jane's Addiction's Jane Says
for Justin unflinching look at himself. It's a song portraying a man's
selfishness in a relationship, then coming to terms with it, and
admitting the mistakes.
I have to block out thoughts of you/So I don't lose my head/They crawl
in like a cockroach/Leaving babies in my bed, he sings, the images
underlined by the matter-of-fact sing-song way in which they're
delivered. It's like, let me just kind of clue you in on what it feels
like in my own brain, he offers.
That brand of intensity is welded to wide screen sound that evokes an
array of eclectic influences such as prog-rockers Peter Gabriel, Pink
Floyd, Flaming Lips, U2, and Coldplay, attracting a hardcore following
who not only relate, but ardently sing along with the band's songs.
Our fans really make us what we are, says Justin's older (by 14
months) brother, Jeremy. We have a tight bond with them. Many have
become our friends through the years. To see them sing these songs
right back at us as we play them is amazing. It blows me away every
time.
Into The Ocean, with Delahoussaye's seductive violin siren call and
plucked mandolin, openly contemplates a death wish with so much
honesty, fans write to the band, claiming tracks like this have
prevented their own suicidal impulses.
I love Justin's lyrics, says Hudson, whose early influences include
such players as Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, Eric Johnson, and Stevie Ray
Vaughan. He speaks the truth. It's all real-life experiences everyone
can relate to. Being able to work with someone like that is special.
Our music touches people in the heart. I'm really proud of that.
If I have saved others, I don't know what to say, admits Justin. But
if I can do that for them, why the f--k can't I do that for myself?
It's a reasonable question to ask for Justin, whose first musical
memory as a child was hearing fellow Texan Roy Orbison's plaintive
Crying. That led to an interest in other melancholy groups like the
Smiths, the Cure, Red House Painters, and Idaho. Having been in therapy
since he was 14, Justin turned to music to get away from his problems.
Songs like What If We Could, about the longing of a true love that is
seemingly doomed by distance and circumstance, or the apocalyptic
Sound Of Pulling Heaven Down and Let It Go , with its mournful Neil
Young harmonica line halfway through, deal with that self-doubt in no
uncertain terms. As Justin asks in the latter: Why do I feel this
way?/Why do I kneel?/How could I let it go?/Why do I feel?
I don't remember writing these songs, he says. They just come out
when it's getting too much for me. It's like getting closure. Now, I'm
not so hurt about that relationship. I'm actually in a better place
now. I'm just waiting to write that happy song. I welcome it with open
arms.
After eighteen months of touring on History For Sale, a double-live CD/DVD, Argue With A Tree, which captured the amazingly symbiotic live relationship between the band and its fans, was released in February 2005.
Without any radio airplay or press, and after being off the road for
more than a year, a fall '05 tour was booked, resulting in sold-out
shows in nearly a dozen Middle America cities, proving the band's
audience was growing even stronger.
I really wanted to be part of this, says Noveskey, a Michigan native
who worships at the altar of Motown's Jamie Jamerson and Sly & the
Family Stone's Larry Graham. He briefly left the band, only to return
in time to record the new album. It was an amazing process. Everything
worked out the way it was supposed to.
Foiled isn't just about despair, delusion, and dementia. X
Amount Of Words is Subterranean Homesick Blues with a lively New
Order/Depeche Mode dance beat. On the other hand, Drill A Wire Through
My Cheek is a harrowing glimpse into Justin's Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde, a
devil on one shoulder, an angel on the other, connected by the titular
wire through my cheek, which Justin is willing to pull to defeat his
dark side.
That's me at home, when nobody's around, he says sarcastically.
There's an element of light at the end of the tunnel, a hopeful
optimism that comes out in the album's final two songs--the sweet soul
of Everlasting Friend and the idyllic love of the sweeping 18th
Floor Balcony, for which Hudson wrote the music. That's the first
love song I've ever written without doubt, admits Justin. At least I
know in my head I'm capable of loving. It's great to know that my heart
still works.
This really is our best record yet, says Delahoussaye, classically
trained on piano at the age of four, violin at six, and viola at nine.
We're more accomplished in fine-tuning the way we want things to sound
and what our mission is.
You can hear Blue October's collective heart pumping--alternately breaking, healing, and breaking again--on Foiled. It is a sound you won't soon forget.
Written by Record Label