Carl

Kevin
Jeff

  • Carl Bell - guitar, vocals
  • Kevin Miller - drums
  • Jeff Abercrombie - bass
  • Brett Scallions - vocals, guitar
Brett


SOMETHING LIKE HUMAN is Pennsylvania rock band, Fuel's second major-label album and the eagerly anticipated follow-up to their critically-praised, smash platinum album of 1998, Sunburn. "Shimmer," one of four hit singles off of Sunburn, was cited by Radio and Records as the most played track on modern rock radio in 1998. Other hard rocking radio and MTV hits generated off of Sunburn include "Bittersweet," "Jesus or a Gun" and "Sunburn" (featured on the soundtrack for Scream 3).

Released on September 19th, the 12-track SOMETHING LIKE HUMAN (produced by Ben Grosse -- Filter, Vertical Horizon -- and co-produced by Carl Bell), ricochets from starkly bellicose, but ebullient rockers ("The Last Time," "Down") to more reflective, lushly crafted, but aggressive tracks like "Innocent," "Solace," and "Empty Spaces." The hard-driving, vibrantly melodic "Hemorrhage" is the album's first single. Most songs were written by guitarist Carl Bell who admits that he is as proud as he and his bandmates were with Sunburn, SOMETHING LIKE HUMAN reflects the band "really hitting our stride."

After a well-deserved, month-long rest following their two-year, international tour in support of Sunburn, pre-production and rehearsals for SOMETHING LIKE HUMAN began in January 2000 in an isolated cabin in the snowy Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. Formal recording sessions were then carried out in a midtown Manhattan studio during February. SOMETHING LIKE HUMAN is the first true Fuel recording using all four members of the band -- hard-slamming drummer Kevin Miller officially joined after Sunburn was already recorded (the line-up is rounded out with bass player Jeff Abercrombie).

Fuel's unrelenting, two-year world tour schedule transformed the quartet into true rock & roll road warriors, openeing for the likes of Aerosmith and Creed, while garnering enthusiastic critical praise. Fuel swiftly moved on to their own headlining gigs, selling out many venues and working with support acts like Buckcherry, Vertical Horizon, Stroke 9 and Finger Eleven. The SOMETHING LIKE HUMAN tour kicked off on August 3rd in Allentown, PA and promises to keep the band busy well into 2001 and maybe 2002.

BAND HISTORY:

Carl Bell and Jeff Abercrombie grew up as boyhood friends in a small Western Tennessee town ("Carl's mother used to baby-sit me when I was in diapers," recalls Abercrombie with a smile). Growing up without television in a "two stop light" town, Bell's primary entertainment as a teenager was listening to the 500 vinyl albums his older brother won from a Memphis radio station. "Instead of coming home and watching 'Gilligan's Island,'" says Bell, "I'd throw on a Stones record."

Although both boys started out playing guitar, Abercrombie jokes that Bell slyly convinced him to play the bass "'cause it was cooler." In a town so small that there were only 27 people in Bell's graduating class, the guys found themselves struggling to find fellow musicians. Abercrombie was actually the first to meet Brett Scallions, who grew up in the town of Brownsville, Tennessee and was trying to get by playing small gigs with various musicians.

As a young singer Scallions worshipped the vocals of the Cult's Ian Astbury, but Scallions' own powerful voice resonates with a unique, expressive energy. Fuel finally crystallized when Scallions joined the band on lead vocals and rhythm guitar. The group recorded an eight-song demo cassette which sold nearly 5,000 copies at shows and stores. That first flush of success convinced them that a move to a larger city with greater radio, gig and media options was essential. Although Harrisburg, Pennsylvania may not rank with Seattle or Austin as user-friendly music towns, Fuel made the most of a great location that placed them in a central point near Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

"We began to build a loyal following," says Scallions. "The fan base supported us from day one and it just grew and grew." In fact, upon the release of the band's self-produced, promoted and financed EP Porcelain, local radio stations immediately jumped on an early version of "Shimmer," garnering the band early airplay, sold-out gigs, positive press and the attention of record companies. Shortly after a gig at the Electric Factory in Philadelphia, Fuel was signed to 550 Music.

At the same time, drummer Kevin Miller befriended Bell, Scallions, and Abercrombie while playing with another East Coast band. After recording Sunburn with an outside session drummer, Fuel approached Miller to join them -- beginning with a high-profile showcase at New York's C.B.G.B.'s, with a mere six hours of rehearsal time.

"It was my first show and they threw me right in the melting pot," laughs Miller. "I figured that I had honed my skills for years and years for a moment like this, so it was either put up or shut up!"

As gifted musicians and dynamic performers with a gold certified debut album and hits on radio and MTV, Fuel has had a truly meteoric rise through the ranks of up-and-coming rock bands. Now they're hungry to hit the road for their own headline gigs, like their appearance at Seattle's Bumbershoot Festival in early September '98. All four musicians are quick to confess that they thrive on the adrenaline rush of Fuel's raucous live shows.

"I like to establish to everyone early in the set that you're coming on our ride," says Scallions, "and it's going to be a lot wilder than you expected."


Latest News:

The New Album, Something Like Human In Stores NOW!

Fuel is on tour now in support of the new album!

Fuel's debut album, Sunburn, has been certified platinum!

Upcoming Shows:

Date
City
Venue
4/25/01
Millersville, PA
Pucillo Arena
4/26/01
Bristol, RI
Paolino Center
4/29/01
Wilkes-Barre, PA
Marts Center Gymnasium
5/2/01
Washington, D.C.
Washington & Jefferson Univ.
5/3/01
Cullowhee, NC
Ramsey Center Theatre
5/4/01
Myrtle Beach, SC
House of Blues
5/5/01
Greenville, NC
X-Fest
5/6/01
Atlanta, GA
Music Midtown Festival
5/12/01
Dallas, TX
Smirnoff Music Center
5/13/01
Claremont, OK
Will Rogers Downs
5/18/01
Burgettstown, PA
Post-Gazette Pavillion
5/19/01
Tinley Park, IL
Tweeter Center
5/20/01
St. Louis, MO
Pointfest
5/25/01
Somerset, WI
Float Rite Park Amphitheatre
5/27/01
Washington, DC
RFK Stadium
5/28/01
Washington, DC
RFK Stadium
6/6/01
Hartford, CT
Ctnow.com Meadows Music
6/10/01
Holmdel, NJ
PNC Bank Arts Center
6/16/01
Wantaugh, NY
Jones Beach Amphitheatre
6/22/01
Hershey, PA
Hersehypark Stadium
6/24/01
Bristow, VA
Nissan Pavillion
6/26/02
Mansfiled, MA
Tweeter Center
6/28/02
Mansfiled, MA
Tweeter Center
6/30/01
Burgettstown, PA
Post-Gazete Pavillion @ Star Lake
7/2/01
Toronto, ON
Molson Amphitheatre
7/5/01
Tinley Park, IL
Tweeter Center
7/9/01
Noblesville, IN
Verizon Wireless Music Center
7/13/01
Clarkston, MI
DTE Energy Music Theatre
7/15/01
Darien, NY
Darien Lakes Six Flags
7/17/01
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
Blossom Music Center
7/19/01
Maryland Heights, MO
Riverport Amphitheatre
7/21/01
Bonner Springs, KS
Sandstone Amphitheatre
7/23/01
Englewood, CO
Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre
8/10/01
George, Wa
The Gorge
8/16/01
Chula Vista, CA
Coors Amphitheatre

©1999 Jaci Schulgen | Bittersweet