News Release
March 2001
(Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania) -- Platinum-selling recording artist, 3 Doors Down will
perform at Moravian College’s Johnston Hall on Sunday, April 22
at 7:00 p.m. The bands latest release, The Better Life, has sold over
four million copies.
3 Doors Down established a strong national presence with
the success of Kryptonite, their number one charting single which remained
on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart for 41 consecutive weeks. The Better
Life was the number 11 biggest selling record of the year 2000.
Most recently, the Mississippi-based rock band took home
the American Music Award for Favorite New Artist in the Pop/Rock category,
and earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best Rock Song with Kryptonite.
The band also won two Billboard Music Awards for Rock Track of the Year
and Modern Rock Track of the Year.
The concert will open with performances by Tantric and
Shades Apart.. General admission tickets are $22. Tickets are available
at the Moravian College Bookstore or by calling 610-861-1499. Johnston
Hall is located at Monocacy and W. Locust streets in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
For more information, call the HUB desk 610-861-1491 or visit the Web
site at www.moravian.edu.
When radio station WCPR in Biloxi, MS, started getting
phone calls for a song by a band from nearby Escatawpa, the staff figured
it was hearing from the group’s friends and relatives. But then
the number of phone calls exploded. "This went way beyond just
girlfriends and family calling with requests. I have never experienced
phones of this magnitude," WCPR operations manager Kenny Vest told
the Biloxi Sun Herald. The song was "Kryptonite," and the
group is 3 Doors Down, a four-piece rock band whose beefy sound and
explosive dynamics generate a high-impact blend of modern sonics and
timeless rock conventions. Produced by Paul Ebersold (Sister Hazel)
and mixed by Toby Wright (Alice in Chains, Korn), The Better Life, the
band’s debut album for Republic/Universal Records, offers tight,
finely-constructed music that’s driven by an energy that is at
the same time almost out of control and supremely focused.
Music has always been in the crosshairs for singer-drummer
Brad Arnold, bassist Todd Harrell and guitarists Matt Roberts and Chris
Henderson. Longtime friends from Escatawpa, each of the musicians felt
the call early—particularly Arnold, who as a child would "set
up pots and pans when I was little, just beat on stuff, whatever I could
find."
Having older siblings—four sister and two brothers—gave
the fledging, utensil-banging drummer and his friends a valuable musical
grounding. Through his brothers and sister, he developed a taste for
commercial rock before graduating to heavier fare. "I kinda like
everything," says Arnold. " Everything influences me everything
I hear."
After one of his bands broke up about four years ago,
Harrell hooked up with Arnold and Roberts. The resulting music clicked
for all of them. Arnold soon found himself not only pounding the skins
but doing the group’s singing as well. "I always used to
sing to myself when we were playing, "he says. "I was always
singing around the house. Then one day I got a microphone, and nobody
else would do it, but I did and I enjoyed it." Arnold became the
band’s lyricist as well, often coming up with material in his
high school algebra class.
The trio played its first gig at a friend’s party,
roaring through a repertoire of four songs. "We knew one by Bush,
one by Metallica and a couple of originals, "Arnold says. We played
‘em over and over again." The repertoire grew in short order,
however, and the group started playing out. One of these road trips—to
Foley, Alabama – also netted them a name. We came out of this
building, and some of the letters had fallen off the front and it said
‘Doors Down,’ "Arnold remembers. "At the time
there were just three of us, so we said ‘3 Doors Down.’
The three became four about two years ago, when Henderson,
who’d played in previous bands with Harrell, was invited in to
bolster the group’s sound. Now they are five, having added drummer
Richard Liles, from nearby Hattiesburg, so Arnold can step out and front
the band. Meanwhile, the songs kept coming, and in 1997 3 Doors Down
recorded some demos. They pressed a CD to sell at gigs, and fans flocked
out to see them live, numbering more than 2,000 per show. That, coupled
with the buzz generated by "Kryptonite," brought major labels
calling and sent the band to New York City, where it showcased at the
legendary CBGB’s and was signed by Republic/Universal.
"We like to rock," Arnold says, and that’s
borne throughout The Better Life, which kicks off with "Kryptonite"
and moves through the ringing ebb and flow of " Loser," "Life
of My Own," "Duck and Run," and "Be Like That"
as deftly as it does the crunchy fury of "By My Side," "Smack,"
"Not Enouth" and "So I Need You." All of the songs
feature the dynamic interplay of Roberts and Henderson’s guitars
atop the muscular rhythmic bed provided by Arnold and Harrell. "We’ve
got good lyrics; everything tells a story," explains Harrell. But
ultimately, the bassist and senior member of 3 Doors Down feels the
sound is what says the most about the group. "It’s a rock
‘n’ roll band, straight up, " Harrell explains. "It’s
not really alternative or metal or anything – it’s rock
’n’ roll."