Deirdre NewmanLive Aid. Farm Aid. We are...
Deirdre Newman
Live Aid. Farm Aid. We are the World.
Add Standard Tint’s name to the list of musical endeavors with
altruistic goals.
The band, comprised of three Costa Mesa residents and one Newport
Beach resident, sports the timely message of world peace and a desire
to change society for the better.
Standard Tint, which plays a blend of folksy and rock music, wants
to transform the paradigm of traditional bands by forming an
interactive relationship with its fans and acting as a conduit
between fans and organizations and causes they want to help.
Watch out, U2.
“We want to take it to the next level,” said Tyler Hoff, 18, a
student at Orange Coast College. “In addition to doing what a band is
expected to do, like selling [merchandise], we will put a Standard
Tint on the definition of a band.”
Hoff, who plays the guitar and sings, and fellow guitar player
Angelo Pugliese, 22, of Costa Mesa, have been jamming together since
1994. For Pugliese, music is a way to achieve world peace.
“I feel that all people, sooner or later, will remind themselves
and one another that world peace is very realistic because it’s in
our hands,” Pugliese said. “Being a part of Standard Tint is my way
of reminding our brothers and sisters.”
Hoff and Pugliese started writing songs last year and invited
Jason Kraft, 18, of Newport Beach, who plays the conga drum and the
harmonica, and Rachael Kone, 17, of Costa Mesa, who plays the fiddle,
to join them. All four sing.
Their first performance at Gypsy Den in Costa Mesa last March drew
the largest crowd the venue had ever had, Pugliese said.
“Even the [people working there] said it’s the most people they
had ever seen, so I guess that’s when we knew we had something on our
hands,” Pugliese said.
The band is planning to stage two big concerts a year and will
pass out surveys asking fans about their personal, social and
environmental needs. After the concert, band members will go
high-tech and enter the results into a database, print out a
spreadsheet and do what they can to fulfill those needs.
For example, if some fans want to help a nonprofit organization
that helps victims of domestic abuse, Standard Tint will invite the
nonprofit organization to its next concert to set up a table. And
individual band members will donate a portion of their proceeds to
various causes, Hoff said.
“When we sell CDs, obviously each one [of us] gets a portion of
the money that’s made,” Hoff said. “I would put 30% of my income
toward the Moses fund. That’s one example.”The Moses Fund is an
organization created by Kiro, who owns African Corner in Costa Mesa,
a store specializing in African art, jewelry, incense, and tobacco
pipes. The fund raises money for African children.
Some of the band members had participated in Kiro’s weekly
drumming circle. After hearing them play at Gypsy Den, Kiro invited
Standard Tint to accompany him on a trip he was putting together to
Africa to perform for children for peace. The band will travel to
Africa later this year.
“They wanted to do something positive for the children in Africa,”
Kiro said. “They talk about this all the time, so we decided to go.”
Standard Tint is also working with a Costa Mesa group called
Anybody Can Make Change, which is currently raising money for
schools.
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