The Exies
The Exies can be booked through this site. The Exies entertainment booking site. The Exies
is available for public concerts and events. The Exies can be booked for
private events and The Exies can be booked for corporate events and
meetings through this The Exies booking page.
Unlike most middle agents that would mark
up the performance or appearance fee for The Exies, we act as YOUR agent in
securing The Exies at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
The Exies and work directly with The Exies or the responsible agent for
The Exies 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 The Exies for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
The Exies Biography
After touring for over a year in support of 2003's Inertia, the
Exies returned to Los Angeles and wasted no time beginning work on new
material. But rather than take a more-of-the-same or
stick-to-what-works approach, the band set out to carve a new sound,
one with more impact and intensity. The next album had to be fueled by
the live energy of their shows, showcasing the band's presence on
stage. On their latest release, Head For The Door, the Exies deliver.
We really wanted to get back to basics on this album, says vocalist
Scott Stevens. We had experimented quite a bit with programming,
complex arrangements, and exorbitant amounts of tracks on Inertia, and just felt like this one should be more stripped down, more organic.
So the band recruited the talents of Grammy-winning rock producer Nick
Raskulinecz (Foo Fighters, Velvet Revolver) to help hone the new songs.
We're all huge Foo Fighters fans, recounts drummer Dennis Wolfe. He
produced their last record, and that album was really blowing up big
while we were out touring. We thought, 'Man, that's the sound we
want--big drums and punchy, tight guitars, and obviously this guy knows
how to get 'em.' The band clicked immediately with Nick at their first
meeting, and went straight into pre-production in Los Angeles.
Crafting a more aggressive, more forceful sound was a notion shared by
all, but a concept that was largely born on the road. Fans would
frequently comment on how the live show gave the music so much more
power and energy, and the band set out to capture that in the studio.
We learned a lot from that year on the road, says Stevens. We just
felt we could simplify things and make them hit a little harder.
The twelve tracks which comprise Head For The Door feature the band
at its edgiest, loudest, and most explosive. Big riffs and guitar solos
abound, but nothing gets in the way of the melody or the message. Their
first single Ugly showcases Stevens' dynamic vocal range as it moves
from a whisper to a snarl, and contemplates both the ugliness within
and all around us. It's partly about feeling ugly yourself and being
unsettled inside, Stevens says. But the song is also about how we
turn a blind eye to the unpleasant things we see every day, things that
are disturbing yet so easy to ignore.
What You Deserve charges out of the gate with bitter self-loathing
and karmic retribution as the primary themes, while Hey You recalls
an old friend bent on self-destruction. But it's not all doom and gloom
for the Exies. The soaring, melodic chorus in Tired Of You makes
everything seem right, and F.S.O.S. grooves with attitude and
swagger. From start to finish, the album delivers sharp hooks,
passionate performances, and a sense that the band has found its sound.
We had a blast making this record, says guitarist David Walsh. We
had a very clear idea of what we wanted going in, and Nick had the
production chops to get it done. Now we just have to get it out there.
The Exies formed in the summer of 1997 in Los Angeles, the product of
mutual friends and former members of various local bands who shared the
same musical sensibilities. The first batch of songs came quickly and
soon Stevens was shopping their demo around town, hoping for some label
interest. Little did he know, it would be all about the shoes.
I was working as a runner for a studio in L.A., and there was an
industry guy there that I wanted to listen to our stuff, recalls the
frontman. As I'm handing him the demo, he comments on how cool my
shoes are, saying, 'Well, this demo's gotta be good, coming from
someone with such good taste in shoes.' And sure enough, he passed it
along to some friends and things just started taking off. Those shoes
cost me a buck at a thrift store. Seriously.
As the A&R community started swirling around the band, they knew
they were on to something, and eventually signed with independent
Ultimatum Records. Their eponymous debut hit shelves in the spring of
2000, driven by the radio-friendly single Baby's Got A New
Revelation. That's when things started getting difficult.
Well, we had two big problems, says bassist Freddy Herrera. One, the
label did not have a huge budget for touring or promotion, so the songs
weren't taking off like they should, and we didn't get any major tours.
Two, things with our original drummer weren't working out. It was
during one of their lowest points on the road that the most unlikely of
circumstances proved to be the turning point.
Worst gig ever, recounts Stevens. We were playing this wretched club
in Miami, with nothing but a few drunks and addicts hanging around. No
soundman, and a dinky P.A. which we had to run ourselves from the
stage. I mean, it was awful. So we did like six songs, and said 'Screw
this.' As we were packing up, this guy comes up to us and says, 'I
really like your band. You got a CD? I want to send it to somebody.'
That somebody was Grammy-winning producer and label head Matt Serletic.
From that point on, things just got better and better for the Exies.
As soon as the band got back from the road, they set out to find a new
drummer. A want-ad in the local music magazine caught Stevens' eye, and
sure enough, it was for current drummer Dennis Wolfe. He was the first
guy we called, says Walsh. Scott brought him a demo of 'My Goddess,'
which sold him on the band. One phone call, one audition, one new
drummer. That never happens.
The new lineup began rehearsing and writing relentlessly, yielding the body of work that would become Inertia.
By the spring of 2001, the Exies had a new album's worth of material
and a new record deal on a major label. What a difference a year
makes, laughs Herrera. The band holed up in various L.A. studios for
the rest of 2001 with Serletic at the console.
Released in January of 2003, Inertia
launched the band into the mainstream with their break-through hit My
Goddess. The song drew major rotation at rock radio nationwide, and
the video careened to the top 10 at MTV2. Performances on David Letterman and Last Call With Carson Daly
helped spread the word, and the Exies found themselves on the road for
a year, sharing the stage with some of the biggest bands at the time.
That year was nuts , recalls Wolfe. You really start to appreciate a
little quiet time at home once you've been on tour for a year. But I'm
stoked to get back out there.