Thursday, March 15, 1334 Pago 14 Daily Nebraskan dJ teiay Hem Continued firori Vs.?,- 13 So Reno took.up the saxophone. It took him a year to get 'to the. point ' where he felt comfortable on stags at the Bluebird. . His experience at the Bluebird help ed him define the role he desired the saxophone to play in hii music, as well as develop, hb style. "I wasn't really trying to become what I call a technically proficient and jazzy kind of player, I was more Ulce interested in the total style tnat tnese guys played. They didn't use a lot of what I call notes and jazz technology. They really worked a style and rhyth mic approach as opposed to a lot of notes and improvisation stuff "he said "It was mere rhyth mie. It wa3 a let of use of the horn and its range from honking to a real subtle soft kind of style to just a wail on top, just a screa- ToirTir a::o rr COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTISTS vc - .! ;! V yA - - ; : : , 'i I1' """" ill If! 1 - " 1 1 kh. V' : THE LEROX BROTHERS "HOT ROCICN ROLL FROM TEXAS" THURS.-FRL, MARCH 15-16, 9-1:00 min wail that sounded like a freight train comin That whole style really intrigued me." , . Alter developing a sound, Reno nit the road with a series of Texas-based bands, including Stcvie Ray Vaughn and the Juke Jumpers. In May of last 5 r Reno left the Juke Jumpers to form the Sax Maniacs. The band's pur " pose was easily defined. "Our main goal is to make saxo phone king of the bandstand again," he said. ' , ' Helping Reno pursue that goal are "Frank Harrell (bass), Gerard Dailey (keyboards), Jeff Howe (drums), Kevin Hinks (saxophone) and Bill Eden (saxophone). Several of the band members can play saxophone, which gives the band both an accessi ble and innovative sound. "I'm really trying to move the instru ment to a position of mass popularity," Reno said. 'Therefore, I'm not really concentrating on the blues as much as other bands. When I started this band the idea was to try and reach kids that listened to the radio and heavy metal a lot..." "The instrument that I play and playing it really flamboyantly like I do will get their attention, before they sit down and listen to the music," he said. "Once you get their attention and kind of start listening to it I think that there's a chance for us to do better on a larger scale." The visual aspect is an important part of Reno's act. His performances at the Zoo have been distinguished by his on-stage briQrk3, which include wander ing into the audience and jumping onto the Zoo's tiny bar. As important as the visual image is, Reno acknowledged the importance of signing a major recording contract The band released it's first album, Born To Blow late last year, on tiny Black Top records. Reno currently is pinning his hopes on a contract with Elektra Records, a subsidiary of the giant Warner Communications empire. "We have a record with Elektra Records coming out May 1. It's a com pilation of several Texas bands. Its , sort of a taste for the market to see which bands might get a little atten tion," he said. - Recent trends in therecord industry have made it more difficult for a region-, ally popular act like Reno to hit it big. Before the years of the big record con glomerates, in the late 'CO-, and all the way up to the early '60s really, you could have independent labels work ing certain regions and still have nation al hit records. And that's almost impos sible now, that hasn't happened in years," he said. Reno said he didn't experience any major problems in the transition from a "live" act to a "canned" one. "I didn't find it difficult, just challenging. It's challenging to make a good record it doesn't necessarily take the same in gredients to make a good record as it does a good live performance," he said. Of course, live performances do have one key advantage over recorded products: spontaneity. "A couple of crazy things happened last night," Reno said of his Friday night Zoo per formance. "I don't think people really notice because it goes by so quickly. But you notice it if you're a musician and you play a certain pattern the same way 100 times and it winds up being different because either the rhythm section or the horns do some thing different. Technically you call it a mistake. But I think mistakes are the most interesting parts of art." The life and work of rock 'n' rollers like Johnny Reno and the Sax Maniacs are rarely glamorous. Since they have no roadies, they do all their own dirty work: loading and unloadingtheir truck and trailer, driving themselves through a Midwest circuit which provides near ly 200 dates a year. The glamour of the big time may be less alluring to Reno then the simple prospect of having a hired hand or two. "Once you start doing a little better, it enables you to have a couple people around to helpAt this level, you're very humble. 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