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SOUTHERN FLAW
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To complement Southern Flaw's heavy blend of punk and
Southern-fried rock, Bobby Johnston's (AKA Load's) lyrics are covered with a layer of
autobiographical grit. You could almost see him as Mickey Rourke's character in Barfly;
he exudes an unpredictable intensity and embodies the down-and-out poet
shrouded in cigarette smoke, always asking the bartender for another
round.
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Biography
The lanky, denim-clad Bobby "Load" Johnston has contagious energy.
He'll bounce up and down when he's telling you a story, his wispy,
shoulder-length blond hair bouncing with him, punctuating his
sentences. Beneath his effusive exterior lies a hint of Southern charm,
making Bobby's front-man persona a natural. "I used to be a drummer,"
he says, "and I just got sick of all these Jim Morrison types, and I
figured, you know, if Circle Jerks and Black Flag could do it -- I
could do it!"
Together with bassist Pat Joyce, guitarist Ceratelli, and drummer Jeff Contaldo, they make up Southern Flaw Behind the Music.
Joyce says the name choice was easy: "Bobby was talking about some girl
with a Southern drawl, and we thought, 'How about Southern Flaw?'" -- a band of veteran SoFla musicians who have enough history together for their own
"We're flawed, and we're from Florida," the
33-year-old Johnston explains. "We're a bunch of fuck-ups. I've got a
Florida tattoo on my forearm. I've tried to move away, but I didn't see
anything that was better than down here."
Their sound is as sleazy and Southern as Anna Nicole
Smith when she still worked at Wal-Mart. Joyce sums them up as a
"dirty, drunk, loud, and loose band" whose influences stretch back to
their junior high AC/DC and Rolling Stones records.
The group's résumé is a laundry list of old local
bands: Los Diablos, the Hell's Anglers, Load, R.H. Johnston (Bobby's
acoustic one-man show), Boffa, the Holy Rolling Hellfires, and the
Nikki Taylors (until they got a Fed-Ex package from her management to
cease and desist). Now in their 30s, the members have known one another
since they were teenagers and were in several less-inspired bands.
Thirty-four-year-old Joyce's first band was a glam romp called Trix.
"It was like Kiss with colors," he says. "It was totally stupid as
hell, but I was 15."
When the band formed two years ago without a singer,
Johnston, like a stray cat, led himself to the mic. "I tried to fight
it, but he kept showing up at the damn warehouse," Joyce says. "He sang
on one of the songs, and it was awesome, so we said, 'You're in. '"
The scene at downtown Fort Lauderdale's Poor House on
any given Friday or Saturday night is familiar. Young men and women
pile into the club's close quarters to hear the band and unwind. People
sit at the bar and swap stories while a handful of tipsy patrons spills
out into the street, oncoming cars be damned. A man in a soiled apron
wipes his forehead as he drags to the curb a trash can heavy with empty
beer bottles and watches the garbage water leak out onto the street.
The air is an intoxicating mix of sweat, smoke, and pizza. The usual
suspects are all here -- hanging out at this bar has been the
equivalent to cruising the ol' high school parking lot for well over a
decade.
On the corner south of the Poor House, Bobby Johnston
(ex-singer for '90s sludge rockers Load) sits with friend and bandmate
Dan Ceratelli, romanticizing his well-known vices. "You know me, man,"
he laughs. "I snuck a flask into Barfly and laughed at all the girls who thought Mickey Rourke was ugly." Their gritty, Budweiser-splattered live shows are
unpredictable too, whether Johnston's screaming wildly in an audience
member's face or just too tired to finish -- the latter of which
actually happened at a Poor House show. "The last two songs I sang, and
[Johnston] ended up falling asleep on the side of the stage while we
were playing," Joyce recalls. "I wish someone had a picture of that."
You can catch Joyce saying "these kids" a lot, but
the band's youthful fan base and bombastic shows help ease the aging
process. "All these kids [in local bands] are like ten years younger
than us," Joyce says. "I remember seeing older guys at the Button South
and being like, 'God, you're 30 -- give it up! Get a normal job, and
get married!' You know, 'cause we were kids, so we'd rag on 'em. But now, me and Dan just rag on each other."
Being the grownups in a scene of younger bands isn't
all bad, though. After ten years as the throat-straining front man of
Load and battles with various vices, Johnston says, "I'm just happy
I've made it this far. When I was younger and partied, I thought,
'Please just let me make it to 21.' When I was younger, I couldn't wait
until I got to this age so people would respect me a little more. But
you know what they say -- 'Don't trust anyone over 30."
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