Nothing Error
Nothing Error didn't "rise from the ashes of
[insert band A and band B]." Nothing Error isn't "out for global
domination." Nothing Error is not your typical band with a typical
background and typical mind set. Nothing Error began as an impromptu
spoken word performance.
In the summer of 2003, Doug Hill was attending a marketing workshop for
music artists. Hill hadn't written any new music for several years but
was searching for a new direction in a business in which he found
fascinating. He had recently gotten the news that his father-in-law had
been diagnosed with terminal cancer. The leader of the workshop shared
that he too had battled cancer and survived. The prognosis wasn't as
positive for Hill's father-in-law. This wasn't the first time someone
close to Hill had been taken away by cancer and it reminded him of a
song he wrote about his friend Mark who died from a brain tumor at 25
years of age. During a portion of the workshop where the attendees were
encouraged to perform a song for the rest of the artists, Hill, who
hadn't performed the song in years and had never performed it without a
wall of sound behind him, took the stage and told the story of
Mark-what a great person he was and how even at a young age we're not
indestructible. He then just spoke the lyrics to "Preen." After the
last words were spoken, Hill quickly retreated and headed for the bar.
After seeing the reaction of the audience of 250 stunned people, the
leader of the workshop followed after him and asked, "Who the hell are
you? You need to be doing this!" From there, the challenge was set to
take his message of recovery from emotional devastation to the public.
Doug
began work on his new project calling it Nothing Error and recorded an
EP "I Am Here To Break Your Heart" (released in the Summer of 2004) in
his studio, 60 Psycho Hum, in Southern Oregon. He hired a session
drummer to perform the tracks and played everything else himself. From
there, Hill began playing shows with only an electric guitar and a
microphone. He focused on the stories behind the songs and drew the
audiences in with his blend of humor and dark subject matter.
In early 2005, after reflecting on the shows he'd done in the
Pacific Northwest, Hill decided it was time to put a backing band
together and return to the energy of the rock show. Doug hired drummer
Jerret Kenworthy and bassist Dave Hitchcock and they recorded "Dallas,
TX" for Mental Records' "Spare Change, Vol. 1" CD. Soon afterward,
Jerret parted ways with the band and was replaced by Justin Bullen.
Nothing Error has been playing shows in Oregon and California
blending the story-telling aspect of Doug's early shows with a high
energy rock show. They've been invited to open shows for various
national acts such as The Presidents of The Untied States, Static-X,
and MXPX. Nothing Error's song Down (from the IAHTBYH CD) was featured
on a compilation included in the April 2005 issue of AMP Magazine which
led to interest from some major labels. "I Am Here To Break Your Heart"
received airplay from many college radio stations on the West Coast
including being ..24 on Wolfpack Radio in Reno, NV.
They are currently in the studio working on their new
release (tentatively titled "The Secret of My Excess") with producer
Lawrence Gelburd.
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