posted by: Rotten
Rotten Cheri
Amongst a music scene filled with pretense, Rotten Cheri keep it
simple by writing irresistible, hook laden songs infused with a
sense of fun and sensuality that is resonating with a new and
expanding base of fans. The Brooklyn, NY rock trio’s new
album, 02, is both a statement of purpose and a labor of love that
required some very real sacrifices to be made on the band’s
part. The seeds of Rotten Cheri were planted with the partnership
of guitarist/keyboardist Kee Chung and drummer Howard Alper. The
two were playing together when Howard became friendly with
co-worker Stephanie St. Hilaire, who would soon become Rotten
Cheri’s vocalist. Recounts Howard, “Steph and I were
working at the same gym together and she knew I was working on a
project with Kee. She kept bothering me at work, telling me that
she could sing. She was so relentless about it that finally we had
her rehearse with us – and she was perfect.” Kee and
Howard immediately asked Stephanie, a California native, to join
the band. With the addition of Stephanie, the band, now named
Rotten Cheri, began to find their sound, a mixture of Kee and
Howard’s love of hard rock and Stephanie’s
“California girl” influences of No Doubt, Blink-182,
swing and ska. They also began playing the NYC club circuit, where
they quickly gained a reputation as a high-powered and dynamic live
act, in part due to Stephanie’s sense of drama, honed in her
background in theater and years of performing experience. After a
couple of years of constant rehearsing and playing in New York
clubs, the band settled down to write and record. Recording at
Sugar Box studios, they quickly realized that if they were going to
be able to pay for the album, some sacrifices would have to be
made. Kee discovered that he would have to find a cheaper place to
live in order to continue paying the studio, so he moved into a
cheaper apartment. Howard sold his baseball card collection for
studio time, and Stephanie, well, Stephanie made the most rock
n’ roll sacrifice of all; she sold her eggs. That obvious
devotion to the music is evident in the band’s debut album
02. Intense and hard rocking, lyrically, the songs reflect the ups
and downs the band was going through while recording. As Stephanie
explains, “At the time I first start writing, everything is
so serious. I write about serious things, but with the music we
make fun of it and make light of it. My lyrics complement the music
that Howard and Kee write perfectly.” “Things I Hate
About You” captures the musical and lyrical vibe of the band
to a “T.” Stephanie’s vocal is immediately
engaging, telling the tale of her relationship with her former
roommate, a small town girl, who, as Stephanie recounts,
“started working at a fashion magazine and started to change.
She dumped her old life and who she was so should could accomplish
things.” And as that first verse ends, the song explodes into
a Kee’s guitar and Howard’s drums, supporting and
expanding upon Stephanie’s immensely catchy and melodic
chorus. Kee’s ominously sensual guitar and keyboard riffs
highlight “Before It’s Over,” a lament of an off
and on and off again relationship. As Stephanie says, “I
wrote about a past relationship that never ended, even though I
thought it was kaput. He promised that he wanted to spend the rest
of his life with me. It was all one promise after another broken
promise.” The beauty of Rotten Cheri is that they are the
perfect mixture of lightness and darkness – dark enough to
have depth and resonance that one can sink into, light and catchy
enough that one can forget about the darkness and just sing along
to their irresistible melodies and choruses. The band is now
working to take their music and career to the next level – to
an indie label, to music conferences and to film and television.
The more that this band’s music is exposed, the brighter
their future will be.

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kee
sup sup + -
Christine
Wicked! + -
Nicolas
kicking ass... + -