|
Mike
Barbel - Bass
Decidedly both rock and roll, this bass
player doesn't give the fret board any
downtime. Allow yourself an evening to
hear low end that's out of the ordinary, and
get acquainted with the touch of a velvet
hand like a lizard on a window pane.
When
cut, his blood spills the likes of Chris
Squire (Yes), Geddy Lee (Rush), Paul
McCartney (Beatles) and John Paul Jones
(Zeppelin). |

Mike Barbel |
|
Jake
Brens - Vocals
"A little bit
better than phenomenal," Jake has
a voice with a rare multitude
of pitch and harmonics. Once, while
singing at the entrance of a cave, he was able to lead
a group of lost explorers to safety
from dwellings over a mile underground.
He
literally owns the stage (well, he's leasing with an option to buy) when the Lazy
Maybes perform, but will gladly rent you
the dance floor.
|

Jake Brens |
|
John Meseke - Drums
John presents an array of driving rhythms on a healthy dose of fills that will pull you into the music. Lazy Maybes have trademarked the term “intelligent noise” to describe exactly what John Meseke does. Grab a seat at the eardrum saloon, and take in his smooth percussive stylings.
Whatever you do, though, don't question the all-seeing-eye. He'll pop it out on the end of his drum stick and throw it at you. |
John Meseke
|
|
Ben Provencher -
Guitars & Vocals
Ben was born serenading the doctor with that
acoustic guitar in his hands. He's versatile
enough to harmonize with a room of crying
babies, and you'd swear you've heard the
song before.
Whatever Ben's doing...we're digging it!
Ben might be the only person alive
who looks cool eating a piece of cake. |

Ben Provencher |
|
John
Stephenson - Guitar & Vocals
Although he didn't necessarily start the
fire, he's capable of putting it out.
John's energy doesn't come from sleeping in
a hyperbolic chamber, or from an overage of
meat consumption, but we're getting closer.
One things
for sure, he's cooking up some licks that
contain an exorbant amount of taste.
Jeff
Graham - Sound Engineer
If something
really cool fell out of the sky, you found
it, and didn't want to let it go, that
thing would be Jeff. If you are
hanging out with Jeff, you are already in a good
place.
We'd like to
find equipment that controls its own sound,
but the technology is just not there yet.
So the man behind the mix is Jeff, the
detail of sound, the stallion of balance,
he's making sure the audience is being moved
by our music.
As Jeff says, "Life is like a bag of chips. It's filled mostly with air and leaves your hands greasy."
|

John Stephenson

Jeff Graham
|