That’s the short story. The long story of Watershed’s journey from rock’s minor leagues to the majors and back is the subject of Oestreich’s book Hitless Wonder (2012), featured on NPR’s Weekend Edition. Donald Ray Pollock (The Devil All the Time, Knockemstiff) named Hitless Wonder “the best and most honest memoir about the thwarted desire for rock stardom that you will ever read,” while Tom Perrotta (Election, The Leftovers, etc.) called it “a wonderful book about […] a scrappy band that doesn’t know how to quit.”
Produced by Tim Patalan—who also recorded the band’s best-received albums, The More It Hurts, the More It Works (2002) and Fifth of July (2005)—Blow It Up Before It Breaks is available on all streaming services, at bandcamp (digital), and at watershedcentral.com (vinyl).
On Blow it Up, Watershed sounds like a (gasp) rock band. That may sound trite, but these days rock bands—real rock bands, the kind that play Les Pauls and Marshalls, not MacBooks—are hard to come by. As Amplifier Magazine’s Tom Semoli writes, a Watershed show is “akin to the manner in which the Replacements and the Faces once bravely blurred the fine line between mayhem and total professionalism.” In the Midwest, Watershed shows are legendary. But Watershed hasn’t stuck it out for all these years to be “legendary” any more than Cool Hand Luke downed all those eggs because he was hungry. No, Watershed takes the stages of musty clubs, belting their songs like their lives depend on it, because they’re one of the last rock bands standing. And that’s what rock bands do.
Food & Bar: Our full food and drink menu will be available before and during the show. If you would like to eat before the show we encourage you to make a dinner reservation on Resy for our kitchen side of the venue.
Event Venue
945 King Ave, Columbus, OH, United States, Ohio 43212
Tickets
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