Denver Post, The (CO)
July 31, 2005
THREE QUESTIONSTrampolines are
jumpin'
Author: Elana Ashanti JeffersonDenver Post Staff
Writer
Edition: SUN SCENE
Section: ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Page: F-14
Index Terms: musicQ&A
Article Text:Few characters cultivate sour grapes as well as
creative types in a competitive town.
Sorry, says Mark Sundermeier at The Soiled Dove, but the reason labels are sniffing
around The Trampolines, the acoustic rock group he forged with East Coast
transplant Chris Stake, is not his music-world contacts.
Sure, after years of booking bands into LoDo, Sundermeier knows
whose hands a CD should fall into. But he says everything that happens
after that results from talent, hard work and a little luck.
We caught up to Sundermeier and Stake to hear more about their
speedy success.
Q: Your band bio lists The Trampolines as a foursome, but only
two of you are in the photos. Are the other guys shy, homely or
both? A: (Chris) They're homely, and we keep them locked
up. A: (Mark) Chris and I first got together playing the
"Acoustic Circus" series at The Soiled Dove ... (Later) I went to a talent
buyer's convention and ended up bumping into (an executive) from Warner
Bros. He said, "These songs are wonderful but I'd like to hear a full
band." We consider those other guys (bass and keyboard player Todd Davis
and drummer Scott Schroeder) part of the band. So at this point our show
is much more rock than acoustic. Q: Does a group calling itself
The Trampolines traffic in the highs and lows of life?
A: (Mark) The way I look at it is Chris brings in a song that's
three-quarters written, and we arrange it together, or I bring in a song
that's three-quarters written and we arrange it together. The name affirms
the idea that we bounce ideas off each other. A: (Chris) When I
first met Mark, we were into a lot of the same music. I grew up in
Washington, D.C., and used to listen to this band called The Greenberry
Woods. That was one of the first bands Mark and I talked about. They had a
song on their first CD called "Trampoline."
Q: The song "Stealing Home" - an homage to baseball? A:
(Mark) Honestly it's not. The connotation is being in a relationship and
then being dumped. The song is just saying that along with leaving me high
and dry, you're also taking everything else with you.
A: (Chris) Mark really doesn't know baseball so if there is a
baseball analogy there I don't know how it happened. That's actually one
of my favorite songs. It's got a great rootsy rock feel and a catchy
chorus. I love the rhythm of that song. The
Trampolines play a CD
release show Tuesday at Film on the Rocks before the screening of ``The
Princess Bride" at Red Rocks Amphitheatre. Tickets: $8 via
TicketsWest.
Copyright 2005 The Denver Post Corp. Used With Permission
Record Number:
1269402
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