Some call it a Sling band
Paul Saitowitz
Bass players tend to spend their time in the background, servicing
the songs and helping the drummer move the beat along -- just a cog
in the machine.
For Ginger Sling -- former bass player for Orange County
pop-rockers the Halo Friendlies -- being a cog got old.
After seven years of cross-country tours and writing and recording
songs as a collaborative, she was ready to break out and assume
creative control and pursue her own musical vision with no input from
anyone but herself.
On her solo debut, a five-song EP called “The Room,” the petite
rocker, whose bass is about as big as she is, eschewed the bubblegum
girl-power gusto of her former outfit for a more introspective,
singer-songwriter approach -- but there’s still plenty of sunshine to
go around.
Think Elvis Costello in his happiest moods, with Belinda Carlisle
helming the vocals and a touch of Elliott Smith’s melancholy singing
backup.
“I wrote about half of the songs when I was in the Halo
Friendlies, and that was a great experience, but I get a lot more
satisfaction writing by myself The songs are exactly how I want them
to be,” Sling said.
Growing up in Orange County ingrained a predilection for pop in
her writing style but also nurtured a fashion-forward image that’s as
tied to the county as anything else, thanks to the success of No
Doubt and its front woman, Gwen Stefani.
Sling’s blond locks, bright red lipstick and knee-high boots with
jeans tucked in paint a picture of what you would expect her to sound
like.
“My music isn’t really like hers [Stefani] at all,” she said. “If
I’m compared to anyone, it’s Letters to Cleo.”
She doesn’t sound at all like Stefani or write songs in that vein,
but for the narrow-minded, the sentiment is still there based on her
appearance and locale.
Her songs are enough to trump any of that, and her genuine love
for songwriting puts any ideas of another image-first musician to
rest.
“My only goal in writing music is to be able to do this
full-time,” she said. “I’m drawn to the craft of writing songs, and
that is all I want to do.”
Already a veteran of the Warped Tour, the summer punk powerhouse,
with the Halo Friendlies, she played a few dates on the traveling
festival as a solo musician last summer. She hopes to set up some
more dates for this summer, and there is a full-length album in the
works.
“I’m working on getting back in the studio to record my record,”
she said. “My cycle is to play shows and save enough money so that I
can afford some studio time.”
Sling and her band are the Monday night residency act at Detroit
Bar in Costa Mesa. Catch her Monday with the Model Airplanes at 9
p.m.
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