FUEL
Brett Scallions - Lead Vocals, Guitar
Carl Bell - Guitar, Vocals
Jeff Abercrombie - Bass
Kevin Miller - Drums
On a steamy September night, Fuel front man Brett Scallions stalks
the stage of New York's Roseland Ballroom. He clearly enjoys the sight of a packed house,
occasionally propping himself precariously on a monitor and playfully taunting the crowd
-- not surprising for a guy who admits that he loves the freedom of throwing off his
guitar and "getting in everyone's face. It's clear that New York fans don't mind one
bit.
As Fuel lashes into the last caustic song of the set, "Ozone," Scallions closes
his eyes and sings with savage ecstasy as thrashing moshers are lifted on raised arms just
a few feet away from him. Drummer Kevin Miller is stripped to the waist and sweat-soaked,
slamming the skins with carnal rage. Guitarist/songwriter Carl Bell and bassist Jeff
Abercrombie, weave around Scallions, creating the glorious wall of electric fury that
makes Fuel one of the most explosive hard rock acts to emerge in recent memory.
In fact, at a recent club gig in Sacramento, California, Scallions and Bell collided right
in the middle of "Ozone," the headstock of Bell's guitar cracking Scallions in
the face and splitting the singer's upper lip. "I saw stars," says Brett.
"I turned around and grabbed the towel off my amp to wipe my face off, looked down,
and saw that it was covered with blood."
Scallions turned back to the mic and attempted to finish the song -- then realized the
injury made it impossible for him to sing. "He had trouble with those P's,"
laughs Bell. "Later, the hospital report called the incident 'assault with
guitar.'"
Riding on a wave of success generated from their runaway hit single, the gorgeous and
gritty "Shimmer," the guys who made Harrisburg, Pennsylvania a hot music scene
have a lot to celebrate these days.
Not only are they in the midst of a heavy tour including overseas gigs and arena support
dates in the fall of 1998, but Fuel's debut album Sunburn has been certified gold and hit
the No. 1 slot on Billboard's "Heatseekers" chart. The follow-up single to
"Shimmer," the more aggressive "Bittersweet," is already riding the
active rock and modern charts. The band recorded a new long entitled "Walk The
Sky" for the platinum Godzilla soundtrack with Pearl Jam producer Brendan O'Brien.
The guys had their first taste of television, performing on "Late Night with Conan
O'Brien." They have played large festivals throughout the country with everyone from
the Foo Fighters to Green Day. In October '98, Fuel's "Shimmer" video was
nominated for two Billboard Music Video Awards, for Best New Artist Clip in both the
Alternative/Modern
Rock and Hard Rock/Metal categories.
Most notably, the guys have been overwhelmed by enthusiastic press response. "Breezy
melodies with full-out metallic aggression," wrote Rolling Stone, and Entertainment
Weekly praised the band's "brutish guitar stylings and familiar, yet contagious
choruses." New York Times music critic Jon Pareles caught a live gig and admired how
the band played with "passion and precision," noting Fuel's "sharper riffs
making way for clear melodies."
The entire year has been a happy, but head-scratching one for a group of four determined
guys who just inked their first major label deal with 550 Music a mere year and a half
ago.

"On many occasions Carl and I will walk out into these arenas mid-afternoon before
soundcheck," says Miller. "The seats are empty and we just sit there, put our
foreheads together and say 'is this really happening to us?' It's like an outer-body
experience."
Produced by Steven Haigler (The Pixies, Quicksand, Local H) and mixed by Tom Lord-Alge
(Marilyn Manson, Hole), Fuel's Sunburn is eleven compelling tracks of hard-edged, but
strikingly melodic rock born from the prolific ideas of songwriter Bell.
"Writing is like therapy for me," says Bell. "It helps you decode what's
going on in your life." Currently working on new songs while the band tours, Bell
admits to spending hours sometimes searching for the right word, the most compelling lyric
that matches the melody in his head. "There has to be something that hooks
me," he points out. "You have to find it quickly and then slowly flesh out the
details."
Carl's diligence paid off with the songs on Sunburn. Edgy, raw and explosively played,
tracks like "Untitled" and "Jesus Or A Gun" shift into surprising
moments of introspective beauty. On "It's Come To This," Fuel actually uses a
drum 'n' bass approach in structuring a rock song, creating a bold mix of genres.
Lyrically, Bell immerses himself in the perils of relationships and life, from the
vulnerability of "Shimmer" to the brutal revelations of "Sunburn."
Carl Bell and Jeff Abercrombie grew up as boyhood friends in a small Western Tennessee
town ("Carl's mother used to baby-sit me when I was in diapers," recalls
Abercrombie with a smile). Growing up without television in a "two stop light"
town, Bell's primary entertainment as a teenager was listening to the 500 vinyl albums his
older brother won from a Memphis radio station. "Instead of coming home and watching
'Gilligan's Island,'" says Bell, "I'd throw on a Stones record."
Although both boys started out playing guitar, Abercrombie jokes that Bell slyly convinced
him to play the bass "'cause it was cooler." In a town so small that there
were only 27 people in Bell's graduating class, the guys found themselves struggling to
find fellow musicians. Abercrombie was actually the first to meet Brett Scallions,
who grew up in the town of Brownsville, Tennessee and was trying to get by playing small
gigs with various musicians.
As a young singer Scallions worshipped the vocals of the Cult's Ian Astbury, but
Scallions' own powerful voice resonates with an unique, expressive energy. Fuel finally
crystallized when Scallions joined the band on lead vocals and rhythm guitar. The group
recorded an eight-song demo cassette which sold nearly 5,000 copies at shows and stores.
That first flush of success convinced them that a move to a larger city with greater
radio, gig and media options was essential. Although Harrisburg, Pennsylvania may
not rank with Seattle or Austin as user-friendly music towns, Fuel made the most of a
great location that placed them in a central point near Philadelphia, New York,
Baltimore and Washington, D.C.
"We began to build a loyal following," says Scallions. "The fan base
supported us from day one and it just grew and grew." In fact, upon the release of
the band's self-produced, promoted and financed EP Porcelain, local radio stations
immediately jumped on an early version of "Shimmer," garnering the band early
airplay, sold-out gigs, positive press and the attention of record companies. Shortly
after a gig at the Electric Factory in Philadelphia, Fuel was signed to 550 Music.
At the same time, drummer Kevin Miller befriended Bell, Scallions, and
Abercrombie while playing with another East Coast band. After recording Sunburn with an
outside session drummer, Fuel approached Miller to join them -- beginning with a
high-profile showcase at New York's C.B.G.B.'s, with a mere six hours of rehearsal time.
"It was my first show and they threw me right in the melting pot," laughs
Miller. "I figured that I had honed my skills for years and years for a moment like
this, so it was either put up or shut up!"
As gifted musicians and dynamic performers with a gold certified debut album and hits on
radio and MTV, Fuel has had a truly meteoric rise through the ranks of up-and-coming rock
bands. Now they're hungry to hit the road for their own headline gigs, like their
appearance at Seattle's Bumbershoot Festival in early September '98. All four musicians
are quick to confess that they thrive on the adrenaline rush of Fuel's raucous live shows.
"I like to establish to everyone early in the set that you're coming on our
ride," says Scallions, "and it's going to be a lot wilder than you
expected."
    

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