The Shawnee Mission East class of '08 loves its gay homecoming king.
Women loved Zachary Coleman. And he loved their money.
Everybody thinks Jeff Swanson is somebody famous. And he does nothing to dissuade them of the notion.
Even bassist Shonna Tucker — previously hidden behind her shy smile and grounded in the backbone of the band — steps out with three of her own compositions on Brighter. She reveals a rich, crystalline voice evocative of the siren quality that makes Neko Case such a seductress.
Hood remains the band's spiritual anchor, however, and his fearlessness and fury work dramatically throughout Brighter, particularly on a pair of songs inspired by the Iraq war. "The Home Front" unfolds in the frantic paces of a soon-to-be widow waiting for the inevitable bad news, while "That Man I Shot" walks in the grim shadow of the Green Berets Hood met backstage one evening. "All three of them had just gotten back from Iraq and one was going back, so for his sendoff party, they took him to see us," he recalls. "We ended up drinking a bottle of whiskey with them and it ended up being kind of a heated, intense night. We definitely had some different viewpoints, but at the same time, there was no denying the fact that they had been [in Iraq]. They were badass motherfuckers who had seen a lot of shit. Sometimes you just meet people that affect you like that out there."
It's this willingness to explore life's harrowing experiences that ultimately gives the Truckers such emotional gravity. "I've always thought of our records as movies without the movie," Hood says. "I think in more cinematic terms ... painting a picture and setting a tone. Our music's very visual." But with this band, it's as much about volume as it is about visualization. "For people that want to analyze it or whatever," he says with a laugh, "I say stop analyzing and turn it up!" Sage advice from a man who knows that endearing rock 'n' roll should be as brawny as it is brainy.