Wake the Bear
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Wake the Bear

Cincinnati, Ohio, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2005 | SELF

Cincinnati, Ohio, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 2005
Band Alternative Singer/Songwriter

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Music

Press


"CityBeat Album Review"

For his debut, titled Woe Is Meat, Cunningham goes truly solo, recording and performing all the instrumentation himself. A humble, dreamy lushness is crafted with acoustic guitars, keys, synths, layered voices and heart-swelling string sounds, all tied together by Cunningham's emotive, vivacious lead vocals, which have the kind of effortless elasticity that only truly great singers can pull off. Like the Flaming Lips on downers, the disc has an orchestral tinge that is countered by a somewhat melancholic spirit. With its climbing melodies and sensual atmospherics, the album, while distinct, falls somewhere between Bright Eyes' Digital Ash in a Digital Urn and Arcade Fire's Funeral. Highlights include the Elliott Smith-ish "Soundtrack"; the sparse, poignant "Moving," with its stunning melodic build; the steamy, luxurious "Our Romantic Apocalypse," which is the dark equivalent of an Indie Pop Barry White slow jam ("In this bathtub/While we make love/As the water/That surrounds us/Slowly drowns us"); and "The Myth," on which Cunningham comes off like a less angsty, male version of Fiona Apple. Woe Is Meat is a luminous, textural bedroom magnum opus, as good as any one-man-band album you'll ever hear. - CityBeat: Oct. 26, 2005


"Entertainment Weekly"

Well, traditional radio stinks -- so here's our guide to the best websites that play cool music.
by Andy Horonzy

Now that Entertainment Weekly's Michael Endelman has explained the problems with traditional radio, it's time to consider the alternatives — and there are plenty. As Internet radio wins over the kiddies, how do you find the right station for you? Here are a handful that we think are worth a visit.

WOXY.com Free live streaming (Windows Media, MP3 formats) ?WHAT'S HOT Unsigned, a weekly podcast of undiscovered bands. This Ohio station — one of modern rock's first champions — went Web-only in 2004. Though WOXY specializes in up-and-coming bands with funny names like Wake the Bear and the Gingerbread Patriots, you'll still find some Death Cab for Cutie and Afghan Whigs in the mix. A simple interface shows you what's coming up next.
- Entertainment Weekly


"MidPoint Showcase Review"

The first artist I see Thursday is the polar opposite of the last band I'll witness. While Saturday's set by "Japunk" animals The Spunks shows the unhinged, outrageous and explosive side of music, local singer/songwriter Scott Cunningham's first set as Wake the Bear is a reminder of music's luminous beauty and tender-heartedness.

No Emo whiny-boy, Cunningham unspools lustrous nuggets of melodic splendor, armed only with an acoustic guitar and small keyboard. His effortless set is witnessed by about 30 people at the smallish Courtyard Café, but each seems appropriately spellbound.

While the rest of the fest would be filled with performances ranging from excellent to mediocre, with some bands doing their best to show off what they believe to be a rockin' live show, Cunningham's set is all about his amazing art and songcraft. Above marketing, schmoozing and promoting, that's really what any music festival should be about. - CityBeat: Sept. 28, 2005


"CiN Weekly writes..."

...quietly complex and beautifully layered with guitar, keys and vocals. - CiN Weekly


"MidPoint Showcase Review"

The first artist I see Thursday is the polar opposite of the last band I'll witness. While Saturday's set by "Japunk" animals The Spunks shows the unhinged, outrageous and explosive side of music, local singer/songwriter Scott Cunningham's first set as Wake the Bear is a reminder of music's luminous beauty and tender-heartedness.

No Emo whiny-boy, Cunningham unspools lustrous nuggets of melodic splendor, armed only with an acoustic guitar and small keyboard. His effortless set is witnessed by about 30 people at the smallish Courtyard Café, but each seems appropriately spellbound.

While the rest of the fest would be filled with performances ranging from excellent to mediocre, with some bands doing their best to show off what they believe to be a rockin' live show, Cunningham's set is all about his amazing art and songcraft. Above marketing, schmoozing and promoting, that's really what any music festival should be about. - CityBeat: Sept. 28, 2005


"Sound Description"

...lilting, falsetto melodies, acoustic lushness and an emotional vibe that'll send tingles up your goosebumps. Chilled-out Arcade Fire, Promenade, Bright Eyes on helium... - CityBeat: Sept. 22, 2005


"Randomville Music"

After Promenade broke up, singer Scott Cunningham wasn’t content to rest on his laurels. This guy is good. Really good. The city doesn’t have a lot of singer songwriters right now (or at least very few of any note), and Wake the Bear will fill that niche nicely. He plays well and he sings even better. - Randomville Music


"Sound Description"

...lilting, falsetto melodies, acoustic lushness and an emotional vibe that'll send tingles up your goosebumps. Chilled-out Arcade Fire, Promenade, Bright Eyes on helium... - CityBeat: Sept. 22, 2005


"Blissful Solitude"

Blissful Solitude
With new CD, Wake the Bear gets more comfortable in his solo skin
By Mike Breen


Years ago, when I would meet up with Scott Cunningham, then lead singer and bassist for the local Pop/Rock trio Promenade, it was usually at a bar. Or maybe we'd hook up at his swank downtown bachelor pad, which he shared with a couple of college buddies.
But on the eve of the release of his second solo album — under the moniker Wake the Bear — we arrange to meet at his new house in Pleasant Ridge. As I approach the home, his new bride is fussing with some flowers out front on the porch (her mom is there to help plant some new ones). The house is a pleasant two-story, nicely decorated, immaculately clean and perfect for young newlyweds. And, though Cunningham has never been the messy type (and this isn't quite "white-picket fence" Suburbicana), it’s a far cry from all those times I remember doing shots in his kitchen or worshiping at his apartment's porcelain altar.
Cunningham and his wife Amanda seem to have one of those “easy” relationships, where they appear to fit together perfectly. Obviously, as a songwriter who writes songs about relationships (among other things), Amanda’s spirit and inspiration loom pretty large over the new Wake the Bear CD, If We Survive This Rapture. Fitting, as their wedding took place directly in the middle of the Rapture creation process.
That’s the “ghost” of her, holding a cup of coffee, on the back of the CD. She even contributes some backing vocals to the choral atmospherics of “Holy Moses.” Chances are, she checked in on Cunningham more than a few times while he was recording the new album, since Cunningham no longer spends thousands of dollars recording in a big-time studio, opting instead for a small upstairs bedroom in his new home, loaded with instruments (a synth, a drum kit, a guitar, a few old Casio keyboards) and a Mac computer, on which he does all of the recording. And, of course, you can feel Amanda’s presence in many of the album’s songs, be it the lush, warm, peaceful feel of the music or the lyrics, some directly related to their relationship.
When we adjourn to Mapletape Studios (as he calls the room) to chat, I ask Cunningham if Amanda is his “muse.”
“She’s a muse,” he clarifies, with an embarrassed, sly smirk.
“As far as relationship songs, yeah, I’m sort of focused on a person,” he says with a laugh, “which probably influenced (the music). In the time between the first one and this one, there’s more positive light, just figuring things out.”
After 13 years with Promenade, which included heavy industry pushes and some regional touring, he and his longtime partner, guitarist Steve Sauer, made the decision to end the band a couple of years ago due to a variety of reasons. One was the departure of drummer Jason DeBruer, who’d been an integral part of the band’s sound, but mainly, Cunningham and Sauer just felt Promenade had run its course.
They did decide to do one last album, Part 2, which turned out to be a stepping-stone to Wake the Bear’s emergence. The decision was made to record the last Promenade album on Cunningham’s new recording gear. As his band recorded their swan song, Cunningham also began making his solo debut and got deeper into the recording software operations.
Cunningham professes a deep-seated love for writing and recording music (he’s much less enthusiastic about live performance, which, like his studio work, he does alone), something that stretches back to his childhood.
“I remember being in fourth grade and I set up this corner in my room with these old dressers and I had some Casio keyboards and I remember some Rap songs I did and there was a ballad, ‘Rose of November’,” he recalls, describing an Erector Set version of his current home studio set-up. “I guess I always liked creating music.”
Twenty years ago, if Cunningham were to end a band but decided to keep making music, his only option (besides being an acoustic singer/songwriter) would have been to start another band. With today’s cheaper and easier-to-use recording technology, all of that has changed. Working on music at his own pace, without a clock clicking away like a slow taxi meter, Cunningham now has the luxury of working when he wants to, on his own terms and without any pressure.
“If I couldn’t record at home — if I was paying for studio time — I don’t think I’d release anything,” he admits.
Cunningham says he misses some of the “checks and balances” of being in a band situation. But, at the same time, his newfound freedom (he calls it being “single”) has enabled him to find his own voice and take chances he wouldn’t have previously. That’s good and bad, he says.
“There’s no filter now,” he says of his musical bachelorhood. “Which is great because it means I can” — as if on cue, his two large dogs begin barking up a storm —“put a dog bark on the album if I want to.” As the dogs continue to yelp, he quickly adds with a grin, “but it also means I could p - CityBeat


"Blissful Solitude"

Blissful Solitude
With new CD, Wake the Bear gets more comfortable in his solo skin
By Mike Breen


Years ago, when I would meet up with Scott Cunningham, then lead singer and bassist for the local Pop/Rock trio Promenade, it was usually at a bar. Or maybe we'd hook up at his swank downtown bachelor pad, which he shared with a couple of college buddies.
But on the eve of the release of his second solo album — under the moniker Wake the Bear — we arrange to meet at his new house in Pleasant Ridge. As I approach the home, his new bride is fussing with some flowers out front on the porch (her mom is there to help plant some new ones). The house is a pleasant two-story, nicely decorated, immaculately clean and perfect for young newlyweds. And, though Cunningham has never been the messy type (and this isn't quite "white-picket fence" Suburbicana), it’s a far cry from all those times I remember doing shots in his kitchen or worshiping at his apartment's porcelain altar.
Cunningham and his wife Amanda seem to have one of those “easy” relationships, where they appear to fit together perfectly. Obviously, as a songwriter who writes songs about relationships (among other things), Amanda’s spirit and inspiration loom pretty large over the new Wake the Bear CD, If We Survive This Rapture. Fitting, as their wedding took place directly in the middle of the Rapture creation process.
That’s the “ghost” of her, holding a cup of coffee, on the back of the CD. She even contributes some backing vocals to the choral atmospherics of “Holy Moses.” Chances are, she checked in on Cunningham more than a few times while he was recording the new album, since Cunningham no longer spends thousands of dollars recording in a big-time studio, opting instead for a small upstairs bedroom in his new home, loaded with instruments (a synth, a drum kit, a guitar, a few old Casio keyboards) and a Mac computer, on which he does all of the recording. And, of course, you can feel Amanda’s presence in many of the album’s songs, be it the lush, warm, peaceful feel of the music or the lyrics, some directly related to their relationship.
When we adjourn to Mapletape Studios (as he calls the room) to chat, I ask Cunningham if Amanda is his “muse.”
“She’s a muse,” he clarifies, with an embarrassed, sly smirk.
“As far as relationship songs, yeah, I’m sort of focused on a person,” he says with a laugh, “which probably influenced (the music). In the time between the first one and this one, there’s more positive light, just figuring things out.”
After 13 years with Promenade, which included heavy industry pushes and some regional touring, he and his longtime partner, guitarist Steve Sauer, made the decision to end the band a couple of years ago due to a variety of reasons. One was the departure of drummer Jason DeBruer, who’d been an integral part of the band’s sound, but mainly, Cunningham and Sauer just felt Promenade had run its course.
They did decide to do one last album, Part 2, which turned out to be a stepping-stone to Wake the Bear’s emergence. The decision was made to record the last Promenade album on Cunningham’s new recording gear. As his band recorded their swan song, Cunningham also began making his solo debut and got deeper into the recording software operations.
Cunningham professes a deep-seated love for writing and recording music (he’s much less enthusiastic about live performance, which, like his studio work, he does alone), something that stretches back to his childhood.
“I remember being in fourth grade and I set up this corner in my room with these old dressers and I had some Casio keyboards and I remember some Rap songs I did and there was a ballad, ‘Rose of November’,” he recalls, describing an Erector Set version of his current home studio set-up. “I guess I always liked creating music.”
Twenty years ago, if Cunningham were to end a band but decided to keep making music, his only option (besides being an acoustic singer/songwriter) would have been to start another band. With today’s cheaper and easier-to-use recording technology, all of that has changed. Working on music at his own pace, without a clock clicking away like a slow taxi meter, Cunningham now has the luxury of working when he wants to, on his own terms and without any pressure.
“If I couldn’t record at home — if I was paying for studio time — I don’t think I’d release anything,” he admits.
Cunningham says he misses some of the “checks and balances” of being in a band situation. But, at the same time, his newfound freedom (he calls it being “single”) has enabled him to find his own voice and take chances he wouldn’t have previously. That’s good and bad, he says.
“There’s no filter now,” he says of his musical bachelorhood. “Which is great because it means I can” — as if on cue, his two large dogs begin barking up a storm —“put a dog bark on the album if I want to.” As the dogs continue to yelp, he quickly adds with a grin, “but it also means I could p - CityBeat


Discography

Plans (2015)

Lullaby (Mo, I need a cold one) (2014)

I Think I'm Ready for This (2013)

Player Piano (2009)

If We Survive This Rapture (2007)

Woe Is Meat (2005)

Photos

Bio

A humble, dreamy lushness is crafted with acoustic guitars, keys, synths, layered voices and heart-swelling string sounds, all tied together by Cunningham's emotive, vivacious lead vocals, which have the kind of effortless elasticity that only truly great singers can pull off...lilting, falsetto melodies, acoustic lushness and an emotional vibe that'll send tingles up your goosebumps. Chilled-out Arcade Fire, Promenade, Bright Eyes on helium. (MikeBreen, CityBeat)

A year and a half after the debut release, Woe Is Meat, Wake the Bear released If We Survive This Rapture in June 2007. From aliens, chickens and surviving the 80s – to a dog, a god, and a good many drinks – Rapture wears its heart on its sleeve – without the cheese. Up-beat poppers. Low-key stoppers. Frailly held together with stuck-in-your-head glue.

• Best New Artist Nomination, 2006 CEAs
• Showcase Slot, MidPoint Music Festival 2008, 2006, 2005
• Supporting slots for VHS or BETA, Bob Mould, Andrew Bird, Adrian Belew

Experience with former project, Promenade
• Winner of Cincinnati Entertainment Award for Best Indie/Alternative Band
• Shared the stage with SUPERDRAG, TAHITI 80, NADA SURF, SPONGE, GIN BLOSSOMS and more
• Showcases in Canada’s celebrated NXNE & MidPoint Music Fest
• Music heard in MTV’s “Undressed” and independent film, Dream Catcher
• Part One: Album of the Year nomination, Cincinnati Entertainment Awards 2004
• Save the Radio: Album of the Year nomination, Cincinnati Entertainment Awards 2000
• Radio-favored “Nervous Wreck” was a year end TOP FIVE SELECTION with influential WOXY 97X station DJ

Under the influence of Happy Chichester, Flaming Lips, U2, Pixies, Ryan Adams, Stevie Wonder, Prince

Band Members