Five distinct personalities joining forces to make one mighty sound - that's Runner
Runner. The SoCal band's self-titled debut album -released through a new partnership
with Capitol Records, C.E. Music (a new label formed by David Letterman's Worldwide
Pants Inc.) and Jack Ponti's MRV label - combines skillful songwriting and
musicianship, punk-infused intensity and humungous pop hooks.
The entrance that Runner Runner - front man Ryan Ogren, guitarists Nick Bailey and
Peter Munters, bassist Jon Berry and drummer James Ulrich - is making on an
unsuspecting music scene is in keeping with its name that has its origins in Ogren and
Berry's love of poker: "runner runner" is a poker term that, loosely defined, means
"coming out of nowhere and pulling off a winning hand at the last possible moment."
Produced by Dave Darling (Stray Cats, Brian Setzer, Soulive), Runner Runner introduces
a vital young band blessed with a rarefied collective gift for crafting instantly accessible
songs that reveal additional layers of meaning with each listening, as well as the elevated
skills to deliver their taut material with slam-dunk forcefulness. This is a band that cuts
through the crap and delivers the goods, directly, powerfully and exhilaratingly.
If that reads like hype, stop reading right now and take a listen to the wicked-clever first
single "So Obvious," the aerodynamic anthem of the uplifting "Unstoppable" and "Paper
Cuts," which explodes from a wistful opening to a widescreen power ballad, setting off
its cutting central metaphor. And that's just the tip of the iceberg on this 12-song, allkiller,
no-filler longplayer.
Runner Runner was formed in the punk and surfing Mecca of Huntington Beach,
California two years ago, after honing their respective chops to a serrated edge in
Virginia skate-punk outfit Over It (Bailey, Munters and Ulrich), New Jersey pop-punk
unit Don't Look Down (Ogren) and its SoCal counterpart Rufio (Berry).
Having admired each other's talents and enjoyed each other's company on numerous
occasions as their bands crisscrossed the country on various van tours, the five musicians
snapped together like Lego pieces when serendipity presented them with the opportunity
to form a band together.
Says Nick, "We all grew up playing punk-rock, we all came from touring bands and met
on the road. When my band toured with Ryan's or Jon's old band, I felt a connection with
those guys that I couldn't really explain. It was like my subconscious was telling me that
somewhere down the line I'd be working with them. When our other bands started
slowing down and the five of us were trying to put together our vision for what we all
wanted to do with music, that was when we started writing together and jamming on
songs we loved, mostly from the '80s. It just naturally came together, and we all got
really excited about the music that we were writing. And then Runner Runner was born."
Adds Jon - "the token native Californian" as he jokingly describes himself - "It's nice
doing something with guys who have the same dedication. In all of our previous bands,
people who didn't have the drive were weeded out, and then the five of us came together.
That's what it really takes to have longevity in music. You've gotta have the drive and
personal motivation to do it. We love to write honest songs that move people and make
people want to move."
Since the moment the five musicians threw their lots together, the perfectly named
Runner Runner has been on track, experiencing exponential artistic growth from the
springboard of fully integrated skill sets, fierce determination and shared values.
"We all come from strong families," says James, the band's soft-spoken hard hitter. We
all grew up with good morals, and we treat each other as family. We try to take care of
each other and our friends. The bigger we get, the more friends we're gonna bring along
with us. We like all kinds of music. Music's something you either have in you or you
don't, and we all have it in us, very much so."
While all five members of Runner Runner contribute to the songwriting process, Nick
and Ryan share the primary songwriting duties, with Ryan being the hub of the band's
collective creative process.
"I've been writing songs for a long time, and I'm constantly trying to get better," says
Ryan. "To have an idea, a melody, a drum part in your head and seeing it come to fruition
is the greatest feeling in the world. I also like taking someone else's idea and trying to
make it better, to make the person who initiated the idea love it. Music is a big part of my
life - the only part of my life."
Each band member has a particular passion. When they're not making music, Nick and
Jon are catching waves, and James is riding his motorcycle. A voracious reader, Peter
enjoys tooling around Huntington Beach on a 1972 Schwinn Paramount road bicycle he
inherited from his grandfather. And if some guys are gym rats, Ryan is a studio rat,
obsessively laying down tracks in the home studio that spills out of one bedroom of his
two-bedroom apartment. To relax, he digs into his complete collection of Seinfeld
episodes, which he watches endlessly.
"Our band is an effort in friendship," says Peter, an articulate guy in a band loaded with
articulate guys. "We all believe that our friendship is our destiny, and therein lies the
convergence of our talents. We have an amazing support system where together, we
commune with the magic in us that makes us write. The story of Runner Runner is really
one of following your heart all the way to rock bottom, battling rejection, the fatigue of
the road and the vastness of humanity, and bouncing all the way back into a stratosphere
we may have never even realized we could reach. Some of us channel our creativity from
family or an obsession with cards or guitars; some of us find truth in the ocean. In the
end, although we're very different, our songs and our accountability to one another make
us whole."
At the heart of this band is a profound sense of purpose, as Nick explains. "What brought
us together was the ambition to write songs that people connect with and relate to in their
own ways. I've been through difficult life experiences, and I've always turned to music to
help me get that out and to find inspiration again. That was something we all bonded
over: the desire to create music that helps people . . . and ourselves as well. Music has the
power to heal the soul in some magical way. One song can change everything."