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MIKE WHITE • deadlydesigns.com
oust
Friday, Nov. 8, local rock bands Vincas
and The Powder Room played a show in
Chicago, at a Logan Square spot called Quenchers Saloon. The
next morning, they woke up in a friend's Wicker Park apartment
and walked the block and a half to their van, which they had
parked across the street from a 24-hour convenience store.
When they arrived, they found that the vehicle's
side window had been smashed out—and most of
their equipment was gone.
Amps, custom guitars, cables, effects pedals,
laptops—basically "anything that could fit out
the van's side window" was taken, says Vincas
bassist Chris McNeal, who lost the 1978 Fender
P-Bass he had been playing for 17 years. "I can't
even count how many times one of us has slept in
the van before on tour," McNeal says. "And yeah,
we should've done that. But it was very cold that
night, and it just didn't happen, for whatever
reason."
The bands covered the broken window and g
headed home to Athens, canceling the remain- 3
ing two dates on their brief co-headlining tour. ^
McNeal describes the emotional low that followed. =-
"For the first day or two, I sat there kind of
in silence, thinking to myself, 'What am I doing
with my life? Should I continue doing this the |
way I'm doing it... when everything I own that I §
care about can be so easily taken from me?"' he
says. Gene Woolfolk, who sings and plays guitar in The Powder
Room, says that he "only spent the first four or five days [ago
nizing]. I had several panic attacks, and took several pulls on
bottles of whiskey."
But there wasn't much time for wallowing. The day after the
theft, unbeknownst to the bands, an enterprising Athenian,
a friend of McNeal's named Lindsay Leigh, had set up an
Indiegogo campaign, titled the "Vincas and The Powder Room
Evil Acts Relief Fund," to help replace some of the stolen gear.
Within days, word had spread, and it had raised over $3,000.
(The campaign, whose goal is set at $5,000, is accepting dona
tions until Jan. 8.)
"It was really just about helping some awesome guys get
back to playing music," says Leigh. "It's such a big part of
their lives. I just set up the platform—Athens gave the love."
Indeed, Woolfolk and McNeal say the success of the fund
raising campaign did more than bring them out of the dol
drums. It also reminded them of what they loved most about
Athens: its indomitable creative spirit.
"Just the fact that a lot of the people who are donating
are just as broke as us," says Woolfolk. "Every dollar counts. It
feels really good. You can't give up if people are helping like
that. It's very encouraging."
Folks have stepped up to help in other ways, too. The show
set for this Friday at the Caledonia Lounge featuring the two
bands, as well as local psych-rockers Hot Fudge and Atlanta
outfit Spirits and the Melchizedek Children, was booked long
before the Chicago incident; once word got out, the others on
the bill, and the club, offered to donate door proceeds to the
Evil Acts fund.
Unfortunately, what happened to Vincas and The Powder
Room is an increasingly common occurrence; they aren't the
first Athens bands to have their stuff ganked on tour, and they
won't be the last. But though they were victims of misfortune,
Woolfolk and McNeal admit that they could have safeguarded
better.
There are certain crucial steps musicians can take to pro
tect their property. Though not included in most home or auto
policies, musical equipment insurance is available through
membership in agencies like ASCAP. Bands can also insure gear
independently through various companies; one, Music Pro,
advertises policies starting at $150 per year.
There are other practical solutions. "Always
at least take your instrument inside with you"
at every tour stop, McNeal cautions, and watch
out where you park your van. And, of course,
there's always the nuclear option. "Stay at home,"
Woolfolk jokes. "Leave everything in the museum.
Don't be a dipshit. Don't play it out of your
house. Just don't try."
Though a detective is on the case in Chicago,
neither McNeal nor Woolfolk holds out much hope
that their missing equipment will be returned.
Still, thanks to the kindness of others, and a
healthy dose of perspective, the initial tragedy
has at least been rendered slightly less, well,
tragic.
"When it comes down to it, it's just stuff,"
says McNeal. "We can get more stuff. No one got
hurt; the van didn't fly off a cliff."
Most importantly, the incident has left the
bands undaunted. Vincas is writing songs for an
upcoming record; The Powder Room has posted
early demos for its debut LP to Bandcamp. Both
groups will hit the studio in the early part of 2014, with plans
for a split 7-inch—and, yes, perhaps even an accompanying
tour—in the early stages.
"We'll try this thing again," Woolfolk says.
Gabe Vodicka
c
WHO: Vincas, The Powder Room,
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Spirits and the Melchizedek Children, Hot Fudge
WHERE: Caledonia Lounge
WHEN: Friday, Dec. 13,9:30 p.m.
HOW MUCH: $5 (21+), $7 (18-20)
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/
DECEMBER 11, 2013-FLAGP0LE.COM 9