J. Charles and the Trainrobbers

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J. Charles & The Trainrobbers
Upon Leaving
End Sounds
ADDS 9/25/12
DIGITAL ONLY

At the intersection where cowboy boots meet Converse, where twang ties into tough-minded rock riffs, and country collides with the power of punk, you’ll find J. Charles & The Trainrobbers. To refer to them as country-rockers would be to call up a false impression of laid-back Laurel Canyon dudes lost in a cloud of pot smoke. In fact, the Dallas-based band’s insistent, urgent sound thrives within the continuum of true American originals that includes everyone from Black Flag to Billy Joe Shaver, Tom Waits to Willie Nelson, without stopping to wonder about the stylistic borders between one and the other.

So how did this roadhouse-ripping sound come together? Well, it all started in early 2010, when J. Charles Saenz, former front man for recently disbanded Southern rockers Sangre Sangre, as well as ex lead guitarist for punk rockers the Strays and Death on Wednesday, decided to make a long and permanent drive from Los Angeles to the great state of Texas. Turns out Saenz hit town with a batch of new songs in his back pocket, and one of his first moves in bringing those songs alive was to reach out to his long time buddy, drummer Steven Visneau, who had worked with pioneering pop-punk outfit The Queers and Dallas’ own Slowride under the nom du punk Stevey Stress. Something special started happening right off the bat, and from there it was simply a matter of putting the rest of the puzzle pieces together in the right order.

With the undeniable Americana element of Saenz’s songs crying out for the proper twangy touch, it was decided that the only thing missing was a pedal steel player. Enter Danny Crelin, of Dallas country heroes Eleven Hundred Springs. “The guy came in and was bigger than life,” recalls Visneau, “Aggressive, loud, smooth, just perfection.” Since no band in their right minds would tamper with perfection, this cemented the lineup. Saenz and his gang of co-conspirators in turn became J. Charles & the Trainrobbers.

 In most cases, a brand new band would have had to build its following from the ground up, but J. Charles & the Trainrobbers had a handy headstart, thanks to the impressive musical backstories of each member, as fans of the guys’ former bands contributed to the quick growth of the new project’s audience. In a short period of time, the Trainrobbers have played alongside an impressive array of artists including Lucero, Deer Tick, Dawes, Middle Brother, Shovels and Rope, and many more. But any band that hits the stage enough to develop their own sound eventually has to take the next step and capture that sound on record, so they can share it with more than however many people the club they happen to be playing on any given night can squeeze into its doors.


RIYL: Lucero, Drive By Truckers, Ryan Adams
TRY: #4, 5, 7, 2

J. Charles and The Trainrobbers - Something Wrong by End Sounds

Download Full Album Here:
https://www.piratepirate.com/downloads/

More Info Here:
http://www.endsounds.com/artists/artist.asp?ArtistID=18
http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/pages/J-Charles-the-Trainrobbers/148617485162472
https://twitter.com/Trainrobbers
http://thetrainrobbers.com