Red Collar

Genre: Rock
Secondary Genre: Punk Durham/Chapel Hill, North Carolina USA Contact

From MAGNET Magazine. August 2009. The North Carolina natives are known to play each show like it’s their last, and their studio sound doesn’t fall short. Red Collar’s debut album, Pilgrim, gives you everything there is to love about rock.

Artist Information

Biography

“There's a feeling in the room when Red Collar is playing that is hard to describe. It is as though the club or room has been lifted from its foundations and pulled straight up--that we've been taken out of time, and transported to a time before ironic posturing became the norm. A time before we used terms like post-anything. I'm not talking about false nostalgia for a better time. Just a different time. When this band plays it is ALRIGHT to yell along and to clap your hands.”
-Evan Rowe, drummer for Maple Stave, Des Ark

In the fall of 2005, western Pennsylvania expatriates, Jason and Beth Kutchma were looking to add a second guitarist to their nascent Durham, NC based rock band. At the same time, Mike Jackson moved to Durham from Chicago and posted an ad on Craiglist in the hopes of meeting some Triangle area musicians who embraced “energy and almost danceable rhythms”. Beth’s response to Mike’s post was simple, “You have almost exactly the same influences as our other guitarist. You should come by and play with us some time." With a friend and Duke graduate student on drums, Red Collar was born. Not wasting any time, they played often and everywhere, acquiring a strong legion of sweaty, clap-happy local fans, racking up a few hundred broken guitar strings in the process. Ultimately, the commitment required became too much for a full-time student and Red Collar began to look for a new drummer, specifically one who hit hard and played with the same enthusiasm and sense of purpose as they did. They found that person right under their noses. A fan of the band since the day he arrived from Clemson, South Carolina, Jonathan Truesdale, an aspiring photographer, was a fixture in the first row of Red Collar shows, shouting along and snapping pictures of the mayhem.

“Beth came up to us and said Jon was a drummer and was interested in playing with us. We all knew even before we played with him that he was our guy. It’s funny how things work sometimes. We all came together from different parts of the country, all thinking that maybe we had missed our chance… it’s just been amazing. Everything we do, every practice, every show, the record, it’s all a gift to us. We don’t take any of it for granted. It’s a privilege.”

Red Collar plays rock and roll. Of course that can mean a lot of things but at its core that’s what it is, period. It’s the effrontery of early 90’s Discord bands. It’s straightforward, working-class lyrics with the earnest delivery of Springsteen. It’s the shout-along choruses of The Replacements and the buoyant, danceable rhythms of The Clash. Taken together, it’s a bold, energetic wall of sound that dares the audience to come a little closer and join in the fun.

"It’s always hard to say what you sound like, because someone will always disagree. No you don’t sound like band X, you sound like band Y. The thing we love about this band is that it combines all the different elements that we love about rock music into one band. Maybe that makes us hard to put into one category, but that’s fine with us. This is the music we have always wanted to make.”

Let’s be honest. The live show is becoming a lost art. In this modern world where bands are made from clever marketing campaigns; where it’s shtick over substance; and what’s hot today is all but forgotten tomorrow, live music seems more about who’s at the show and who’s not, rather than about what’s happening onstage. The bands themselves frequently seem bored or tired, or even worse, cynical. This is not a Red Collar show. Whether they are playing for a packed house at the Cat’s Cradle or for ten wide-eyed teenagers in someone’s living room in Greenville, NC they only know how to play one way--like it’s the last show they’ll ever play.

“For us it’s about the live show. Yes, we record, but the recording is more a flyer for the show. When we play live the goal is always to be able to break down the barriers between the band and the audience. When we can get past the ‘we’re up here playing and you’re all down there watching’ and get to a place where we’re all participating in the same thing, where there is no us and them, that’s when we feel like we've succeeded as a band, and, in the end, isn’t that what rock and roll is about? ”

Red Collar is releasing its first full length album, titled “Pilgrim” on March 17, 2009. Recorded and produced by Brian Paulson (Beck, Superchunk, Slint, Archers of Loaf) the album seeks to capture the spirit and energy of the band’s lauded live show, while bringing to the forefront the hooks and intricate songwriting that can be lost when you are surrounded by a hundred rowdy, shouting fans. They’re looking forward to the release, but even more, the opportunity it provides to take their live show across the country.

Instrumentation

Jason Kutchma - guitar and vocals
Mike Jackson - guitar and vocals
Beth Kutchma - bass and vocals
Jonathan Truesdale- drums

Discography

PILGRIM (Self Release, distributed by Suburban Home Records

Limited Vinyl release in Dec. 2009 on Loose Charm/Vinyl Collective)

The Hands Up EP (Powerteam Records)

307 Knox Records Free Diskette Compilation-A two CD venture

Rockin' the Blocks Compilation (North Carolina Compilation)

Audio

  • Pilgrim
    Listen  
  • Used Guitars
    Listen  
  • Hands Up
    Listen  
  • Radio On
    Listen  
  • The Commuter-Live at the Pour House, WKNC Double Barrel
    Listen  

Lyrics

Video

Photo Gallery

  • Red Collar - credit: Rachel Leah Woliansky

  • Live July 12, 2008

  • Live. January 2008

  • Jay Kutchma

  • Mike Jackson - credit: Jo Kingsbury

  • Beth Kutchma

  • Jonathan Truesdale - credit: Jo Kingsbury

  • Cat's Cradle - 2/25/09 - credit Jo Kingsbury

Press

  • The Astronaut, KEXP Song of the Day [+ Show ]

    Durham North Carolina’s Red Collar is a self-proclaimed throw back to the early 90’s Dischord era of...

  • This new full-length from Red Collar, Pilgrim is really hard to pin down. [+ Show ]

    This new full-length from Red Collar, Pilgrim is really hard to pin down. It was described to me as ...

  • Red Collar-Great 8 0f 2008 and Best 35 of 2007 [+ Show ]

    David Menconi of the Raleigh News and Observer named Red Collar as one of 8 Great Bands to watch in ...

  • Red Collar Flees the Suburbs [+ Show ]

    SO PUNK ROCK As Salem and I sat at a table in the Garage about an hour before Red Collar’s concer...

  • Creative Loafing [+ Show ]

    This Durham quartet is one of N.C.'s most electrifying new acts, and watching them light up a room w...

  • Red Collar in the Blogsphere [+ Show ]

    Captain Obvious http://www.musicbanter.com/general-music/24705-cmj-weekly-top-5-a.html The band'...

  • Broken Hearts and Used Guitars [+ Show ]

    Steeped in post-modern disillusionment, punk rock passion and the notion that the truth might hurt, ...

  • Six Points Music Festival Preview [+ Show ]

    "In a small bit of irony, this five-piece from Durham, N.C., is the Six Points band with the most cl...

  • Raucous and Rowdy: Red Collar Rips Rock a New One [+ Show ]

    BY: ASHLEY ESS I don’t listen to mainstream radio unless I have to. On the occasions that I have le...

  • Red Collar-The Hands Up EP [+ Show ]

    From power pop to punk rock, Red Collar skips from major chords and quick staccato punk percussion i...

Setlist

average set length is 40-50 minutes

1. Rust Belt Heart (PILGRIM)
2. The Astronaut (PILGRIM)
3. Tools (PILGRIM)
4. Stay (Hands Up EP)
5. Used Guitars (Hands Up EP )
6. Hands Up (Hands Up EP)
7. The Astronaut(PILGRIM)
8. Radio On (PILGRIM)
9. Tonight (PILGRIM)
10. Pilgrim (PILGRIM)
11. The Commuter (PILGRIM)

Basic Requirements

Calendar

There are no upcoming dates at this time.