Karr.

Three fine musicians, formerly members of well-liked local bands, have joined forces to create something new.

Karr features drummer Russel Waldron (formerly of Spankshaft), guitarist and vocalist Paul Karr (Unheard) and bassist Andy Gorrill (Machinโ€™, Warsaw Poland Bros.), and the group will be making its low-desert debutโ€”and playing its second show, periodโ€”at The Hood Bar and Pizza on Saturday, Sept. 1.

During a recent interview in Yucca Valley, Waldron said he was looking to play music again after leaving Spankshaftโ€”and found chemistry with Gorrill and Karr.

โ€œI consider it like the band Chickenfoot of the desert,โ€ Waldron said. โ€œWe all come from these big bands of the desertโ€”Warsaw Poland Brothers, Spankshaft and Unheardโ€”and we decided to go our separate ways from them. As far as Spankshaft goes, I still love those guys like brothers, but it was time for a change.

โ€œMe and Paul (Karr), who is my brother-in-law, got together. I jammed with everyone I could in the desert, but with Paul, it just clicked, and it felt like a heroin feeling. โ€ฆ After three practices, I was like, โ€˜Oh my god, this is where I belong.โ€™ Itโ€™s been awesome, and itโ€™s a huge breath of fresh air.

โ€œWe were on the prowl for a bass player, and Iโ€™ve played with 90 percent of the bands in the valley, and I never thought about hitting up Andy Gorrill; I always thought he was busy. I remember he texted me saying, โ€˜Totally interested!โ€™ He came over, and after the first practice, Paul said, โ€˜Heโ€™s in!โ€™ Weโ€™ve been practicing two to three times a week.โ€

For Paul Karr, the band marks a return to the rock world.

โ€œIโ€™ve been doing acoustic sets here and there, but nothing in rock for several years,โ€ Karr said. โ€œI didnโ€™t really think I was going to do it again; my first intention was to get together with other guys and do stuff acoustically. That didnโ€™t happen. I put an ad out on Craigslist, and it was while Russel was still in Spankshaft. I got all these replies and booked all these practices. But Russel said, โ€˜Hey, letโ€™s get together!โ€™ So I canceled all those. โ€ฆ I had been playing mostly benefit stuff because my mom is involved in a lot of charities.โ€

Gorrill said that while being part of Machinโ€™ was fun, he and frontman David Macias didnโ€™t always see eye to eye.

โ€œI definitely had different life goals,โ€ Gorrill said. โ€œDavid (Macias) wanted to go one way, and it was different than what I was up for doing. โ€ฆ I played ball for a long time, but it got to a point where I needed to do me. It left a sour taste in my mouth, but it was good for me, because it let me not have to worry about shows, not worry about gigging, and it let me sit in my garage and play what I wanted to play, which was loud rock โ€™nโ€™ roll. โ€ฆ In this band, itโ€™s, โ€˜Letโ€™s try this,โ€™ or, โ€˜Letโ€™s try that,โ€™ instead of, โ€˜Learn how to play it is this way!โ€™ Thereโ€™s a lot of freedom now, and weโ€™re not focused on perfection. Music should be fun, and when it becomes a job, the fun starts to peter out.โ€

Waldron said he understands itโ€™s not easy to run a successful band.

โ€œYou have to keep the momentum going,โ€ Waldron said. โ€œYou have to keep up with your publicity and all that. It can become a second job, but as long as itโ€™s fun, and Iโ€™m happy like Iโ€™ve been, and it stays this way, I could play music for the next 20 years with these guys. Itโ€™s super-fun, and itโ€™s exciting, and weโ€™re just going to grow. Itโ€™s not perfect right now by any means, but itโ€™s pretty damn awesome.โ€

Only a short demo for Karr has been released so far, but all three members agreed that coming from different music backgrounds was a positive.

โ€œGenre-wise, I came from a ska band,โ€ Waldron said. โ€œWe did a lot of ska, reggae and pop-punk. Iโ€™m still a huge reggae and ska fan at heart, so Iโ€™m going to bring a lot of those roots with me. Itโ€™s really cool to blend these different backgrounds together and see how it goes. I bring a lot of my roots with me, but playing with Paul and Andyโ€™s different styles brings a lot of new stuff out of me I didnโ€™t know I had.โ€

Karr said the creative atmosphere works well for him.

โ€œWay back in the day in my band, it was way more catchy and riff-driven. As time went on, it became harder and harder, and it felt like it was becoming depressing metal,โ€ Karr said. โ€œBut for me now, Iโ€™ll bring something in, and I never leave bummed out, because weโ€™re continuously creating. I feel like theyโ€™re more open to working on a song and giving it their best shot.โ€

Gorrill said Machinโ€™ should not define him as a musician.

โ€œIn Machinโ€™, there was the cumbia, the ska and the gypsy jazzโ€”which was all cool. Itโ€™s great to have that background, but itโ€™s not what I listen to when Iโ€™m at home,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™m listening to Foo Fighters and stuff like that, so itโ€™s nice to be in a guitar band.โ€

Thereโ€™s no doubt that Karr will offer some surprises during the show at The Hood.

โ€œWe have some studio time โ€ฆ and weโ€™ve been putting it off, because weโ€™ve been working on our set, but we want to go in there and get some records done hopefully by the end of the year. Everybody has been seeing our posters everywhere, and we have no music to show them yetโ€”so the only way youโ€™re going to hear us is to come to the show.โ€

Karr will perform with Sunday Funeral and Sticky Doll at 9 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 1, at The Hood Bar and Pizza, 74360 Highway 111, in Palm Desert. Admission is free. For more information, visit www.karrband.com.

A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Brian Blueskye moved to the Coachella Valley in 2005. He was the assistant editor and staff writer for the Coachella Valley Independent from 2013 to 2019. He is currently the...