December 20, 2007
While recently re-watching Rushmore,
Steve Kerwin realized with some dismay that a memorable line in the
film bears an unintentional resemblance to the title of his band's
latest album, With Friends Like You, Who Needs Enemies?
That's
not to say that his band, The Response, has a policy against
pop-culture references. On the contrary, they embrace them. The first
song on With Friends Like You, "I've Made a Huge Mistake,"
evokes an oft-repeated lament from the cult sitcom "Arrested
Development." Another song title, "…I'm Lloyd Dobler," pays homage to
John Cusack's geeky boast in Say Anything.
Rushmore,
however, carries certain connotations. In recent years, the film has
played muse to a horde of modern-rock and emo-bands, like My Chemical
Romance, Motion City Soundtrack and, most notoriously, Fall Out Boy,
the titans of contemporary emo.
Even without the shared interest in Wes Anderson's
oeuvre, The Reponse is already fighting off comparisons to Fall Out
Boy. Little matter that The Reponse eschews ostentatious choruses and
meathead power chords a la Fall Out Boy; the bands share enough cursory
traits—spiky guitars, punkish enthusiasm, earnest lyrics and wordy,
farcical song titles—to keep those comparisons coming.
Kerwin
says that he doesn't take particular offense to The Response being
labeled emo (although he concedes, with all due respect, that "if
people were to keep saying we sounded like Fall Out Boy, I guess the
four of us would try to rethink what we're doing"). Kerwin says his
band takes inspiration from modern-rock staples like the Foo Fighters,
and '90s favorites like Jimmy Eat World and The Get Up Kids. In a
sense, they carry the torch of Milwaukee's emo forefathers, The Promise
Ring and The Benjamins, but they're more likely to be lumped in with
new-school emo acts like The Starting Line and Hawthorne Heights.
The Response's trendier, radio-ready sound actually
makes them an oddity locally. In Milwaukee's fiercely individualistic
music scene, local bands with allegiances to semi-obscure sub-genres of
underground music far outnumber those in step with the commercial rock
depicted on MTV2 and promoted by Alternative Press. "We just want to let fans of this music know that a band like us really does exist in Milwaukee," Kerwin says.
Although
The Response has been playing together since 2001, the group is
emerging from something of a hibernation. Three years ago, a small
independent label promised to foot the bill for the group's new album,
only to dissolve midway through the recording process, leaving the band
with the tab. Demoralized, the group ceased writing songs and scaled
back on concerts, falling out of the local music scene's consciousness.
They finally rallied the energy and the funds to complete the album
this year, recording parts of it in Kerwin's bedroom using microphones
strewn between piles of dirty laundry.
The band will have a
chance to reintroduce themselves to Milwaukee this weekend, when they
play a show at the Turner Hall Ballroom, one of the largest venues in
Milwaukee that hosts local concerts.
"The Turner Hall show should help us a lot, I
think," Kerwin says. "Not because it proves we've arrived or anything,
but because—well, I'll use my mom as an example. She doesn't take any
of our shows seriously, because she doesn't understand them. But then
when you mention a venue like The Pabst Theater or Turner Hall, she
pays attention. It's like you're a real band."
The Response
headlines a CD release party at the Turner Hall Ballroom on Saturday,
Dec. 22, at 7 p.m. with a trio of local indie-rock openers: Fable and
the World Flat, From the Headline, and Kid, You'll Move Mountains.






