It's a sweltering 4:30 pm and Sweet Nasty is setting up at Coyote Joe's. There's a round of beers perched on the beer keg table, and Anton Teschner, the guy who plays both flamenco guitar and saxophone for the band, is eating a pizza. They're not playing until twilight and it'll be a hell of a show. But for the time being, the heat's slowing them down and they're happy enough to sit and chat.
Every man in the band has a musical career stretching back 10 years or more, and they wear their history on their faces or, in the case of rhythm guitarist and Seattle refugee Johnny Low, inked on their arms.
“Among all of us, we've probably played every genre of mainstream music,” said bassist Jimmy Stiles. That includes rap-metal, country and blues, to name a scant few.
What they've pulled together for their latest project is unapologetically fun to listen and move to. The band plays Latin-tinged sets when Teschner picks up the flamenco guitar; it spins more eclectically with Teschner on the sax. Danceable grunge ska might come close to their sound, but doesn't capture it. It's utterly enjoyable, which is what every member of the five-man band (six if you count Teschner twice) is going for.
“You can never go wrong with melody and groove,” said Stiles. “We all agreed on that.”
That they would meet in Prescott's microscopic and nurturing music scene was a foregone conclusion; the synergistic chemistry among the five members was not. Teschner started the band with guitarist Anthony Fusco, and once they got a rhythm section in place they were off to the races. According to Fusco, the band got together after Halloween and was gigging two weeks after their first practice.
“Our second practice was on AZTV at 9 in the morning,” said Fusco.
Lifting a brew, bassist Stiles half-jokingly put on the hard sell.
"Download [the performance] on MySpace and friend us,” he said (for the record, their MySpace page is available here).
{tabs=Mike Kreidel }
The force behind the Sweet Nasty Fast Track (or 8-Track)
Musicians aren't typically known for their assiduous approach to left-brained entrepreneurial output, but Sweet Nasty drummer Mike Kreidel appears to be the exception. This spring, he produced the band's first album in his Prescott Valley music space, Studio 79.
According to Kreidel's web site, he departed a life of full-time gigging in 2006 to start a web design business. He couldn't leave music behind for long though, and found himself back behind the skins in late 2007 with Sweet Nasty. The juncture of Kreidel's musical, technical and production chops were a lucky stroke for the band; after barely 9 months of playing, Sweet Nasty rolled a sharp 6-song LP of originals, Bread, Wine and Circus.
Kreidel's more laid-back bandmates regard him with a mixture of awe and gratitude – and maybe a touch of confusion. “He's not really a drummer – he's more like a machine,” bandmate Anthony Fusco said. “He did have some help from the Oompa Loompas, but his therapist says everything's gonna be OK.”
{/tabs}
The urge to plug his band is as irresistible to them as the urge to grow as quickly as possible; their ambition is as infectious as their grooves. And so far, Stiles and his bandmates are smokin'. In about the same time it takes to grow a fetus, the men have built a catalog of 19 original songs, cut a 6-song album, Bread, Wine and Circus and begun planning gigs in LA. Their rapid ascent, they say, comes from being a band of grownups.
And none of them are drug addicts, they tell me proudly. Then they clarify. No drug addicts, but the band does have two functioning alcoholics and four schizophrenics.
A joke.
Seriously though, Stiles said, "There's no baggage, nothing weighting us down.”
“We just bought $4000 worth of baggage,” one of them volunteers, referring to the mother-lode of new equipment that's propped up on CoJo's pine stage.
“It's stepping stones,” said Fusco.
“We figure we have limitless potential, so why f--- around?” said Stiles. And, he said, they sound great on substandard equipment, so imagine the potential.
For more info and performance dates, visit Sweet Nasty's MySpace page.
{Online Editor's Note: This version has changed from the original version with the addition of the sidebar, shortened title, and removal of dated elements.}













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Prescott native Erica Ryberg has been writing narrative features on social issues,
adventure and conservation since 2003. Her work has appeared in regional publications as
well as in High Country News and Smithsonian; view it online at 