* En anglais uniquement
Cowboy Mouth are a collective of '80s rock & roll survivors -- musicians with slight new wave and alternative connections who have aspired to AOR stardom. Formed in the early '90s after alternative rock had broken into the mainstream, the group fused AOR with alternative and roots rock influences on a handful of indie releases before signing with
MCA Records in 1996. Although
Cowboy Mouth had trouble remaining on a major label's roster, the band has continued releasing material in the new millennium on a variety of imprints and indie labels.
Paul Sanchez (vocals, guitar) had previously recorded as a solo artist before teaming up with
Fred LeBlanc (vocals, drums). The pair formed the Backbeats, who were short-lived. After their breakup, Sanchez moved to New York, where he continued to perform solo. In 1988, he returned to New Orleans;
LeBlanc, who had just finished playing with
Dash Rip Rock, had Sanchez join his new band. The duo began jamming with
Griffith (lead guitar, vocals), who had just left
the Red Rockers, a new wave band who had a hit with "China." The trio played with a variety of bassists until 1993, when
Rob Savoy -- the former frontman for
the Bluerunners -- joined the band. The band released its first album, Mouthing Off, late in 1993 on the independent Viceroy Records. Two years later, they released
It Means Escape on the Monkey Hill label.
By 1995, the group's following had grown large enough to earn attention from major labels.
Cowboy Mouth decided to sign with
MCA in early 1996, and they recorded their major-label debut,
Are You with Me?, with producer
Michael Wanchic during Mardi Gras of that year. The album was released in the summer of 1996 and charted a hit with "Jenny Says," an older song that the band had reprised for its major-label debut. The following spring,
Cowboy Mouth released Live on Monkey Hill;
Mercyland appeared a year later, and both
All You Need Is Live and
Easy followed in 2000. Disappointing sales prompted Atlantic to drop the band after
Easy, but
Cowboy Mouth, undeterred as always (even with the departure of bassist
Rob Savoy), rose to the occasion and released the blistering
Uh-Oh on the independent Bayside label the following year. Voodoo Shoppe, which was issued by Eleven Thirty, arrived in 2005.
Fearless followed three years later, featuring a spunky ode to TV personality Kelly Ripa. After another three years passed,
Cowboy Mouth returned with
Mardi Gras, an EP salute to their hometown of the Big Easy. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine