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Article published Apr 27, 2007 Justin Melendy and the Bros. Pena: This ain't no mariachi party
By Steve Wildsmith of The Daily Times Staff
Things you won't see at a concert by Justin Melendy and the Bros. Pena:
— Band members wearing wide-brimmed sombreros. (Unless it happens to be Cinco de Mayo, perhaps, or there's much alcohol involved.)
— Band members playing instruments like the vihuela (a high-pitched, five-string guitar) or the guitarrón (a small-scaled acoustic bass).
— Flamboyantly embroidered charro suits.
Basically, Justin Melendy and the Bros. Pena are not a mariachi band, drummer Kicki Pena told The Daily Times this week. That's important to point out, because the group's name can sometimes cause confusion.
"The name throws them off a little bit, because I think it conjures up images of a mariachi band or something like that," Pena said. "People sometimes come in, expecting something we're not. My brother and I are half-Mexican, but neither of us looks Mexican, and what they get is rootsy, in-your-face rock 'n' roll.
"We didn't want to get a name that seemed hokey to us. We're all into our adulthood, and we wanted to come across as a serious band, so we didn't want to try to be too hip in coming up with a name. We just do what we do. Sometimes our shows get a little rowdy, but that's fine — we want the whole beer-drinking aura. We want people to come and have a good time."
That's an about-face from the Pena brothers' previous outfit, the goth-rock outfit Pegasi 51. Not that Kicki and his brother, bassist Estevan, were all doom-and-gloom in Pegasi; but when the group decided to call it quits, they wanted to move in a direction that was more true to their roots.
"We played in Pegasi 51 for five years, and when we disbanded in 2001, we took a couple of years off," Pena said. "That band was more of a gothic-tinged thing, and we wanted to go in a more traditional rock direction — sort of country and honky-tonk with a punk edge. We tried to scout around for a front man, and we kind of happened on Justin. He had a good presence and the scratchy voice we were looking for, so he fit right in."
That was back in the summer of 2003; Melendy threw his lot in with the brothers alongside guitarist Shawn Adams. They quickly recorded a six-song, self-titled demo and promptly started touring around the Southeast. Around the same time, former Superdrag drummer-turned-production wizard Don Coffey Jr. had just opened Independent Recorders; with D.T. Fordham (formerly of Skyebone and now a member of Saturday Night Preacher) replacing Adams on the guitar, the quartet cut "3 Drink Special," another EP that perfectly encapsulates the band's gritty roots-rock sound. The band plans on recording with Coffey again in June, this time for a full-length album of new material.
"We've been using that EP for the last two years, and it seems to still be relevant," Pena said. "We've gotten a lot of exposure with that — we recently played in Atlanta and Johnson City. I think we're playing pretty much the sort of rootsy kind of rock that anybody can enjoy. We really like the Whiskeytown, Ryan Adams-type of songwriting, and we try to focus on good lyrics and good vocal delivery.
"That's not to say the music is unimportant. But it sort of lies in the background and anchors it all with a good groove. To us, it's all about good, well-crafted songs, and that's a big part of it."
It's a successful formula that puts Justin Melendy and the Bros. Pena into a category of local bands that can hold their own with any regional or national act that passes through town. Melendy's voice has the right amount of swagger and bravado, and the Bros. Pena (including new guitarist Casey Miller — stage name "Dickie Pena" — replacing Fordham) lays down a full-on rock assault that's reminiscent of the Rolling Stones, circa "Exile on Main Street." Songs like "Come On" and "Hours" play like scratchy rock anthems that should be blasting out of the back speakers of a jacked-up Camaro roaring over East Tennessee backroads on a warm summer night in 1976.
It's a far cry from the brothers Pena's days in Pegasi 51, but evolution is a funny thing. And given the confidence and enthusiasm for which the band plays its particular brand of rock 'n' roll, it's certainly not a bad thing.
"I can't really say that Pegasi was an unfulfilling band — we were really good, and we had a good following," Pena said. "But as I get older, I feel like I've changed a little bit. I felt like we all kind of hit a dead end for a while, and we weren't being really creative. I still love the music and the guys I played with, but you get to a point where you want to try something different.
"We grew up on the kind of music we play now, and it's what we want to explore. And it allows us to get played on the radio and reach more people, because it's palatable to more people than just the punk kids."