I knew I was at the right place last week when I spotted the van parked outside, coated in bug remnants. Not just your typical specks of insect goo, mind you, but bloody, gory, sizable bits of bug carcasses stuck onto the already hard-tested former tour vehicle of Trampled by Turtles.
Inspecting the damage was bleary-eyed Dead Man Winter guitarist Erik Koskinen, who had just pulled in that morning to finish the 3,200-mile trek from Alaska.
"When we crossed the border into North Dakota, we were like, 'Woo-hoo, we're home!'" Koskinen mused in a very unamused tone. "But we had another half-day of driving to do."
The new band of mostly old cohorts went all the way to the 49th state for their first official tour. They played two weeks of shows in towns with drop-dead scenery and in rough bars where probably a few patrons have indeed dropped dead. Their choice of destinations tells you plenty you need to know about the sideways career of this side-project band.
Started in 2008 as another, rockier songwriting outlet for Trampled by Turtles frontman Dave Simonett, Dead Man Winter went through several lineup changes -- and still has rotating drummers -- before solidifying over a month of Tuesday gigs at the Turf Club in December. That's also when Simonett amped up the recording of the band's debut album, "Bright Lights," issued last month.
"This isn't a band that came together as any kind of reaction or counterpart to Trampled," Simonett explained. "It was a band that formed out of, 'Hey, can you come over and help me record a song for a half-hour?'"
Among the participants who came over and stayed are two of Simonett's TBT mates, bassist Tim Saxhaug and fiddler Ryan Young, plus Koskinen (also in Molly Maher's Disbelievers) and the alternating drummers, Noah Levy (BoDeans, Trailer Trash) and Paul Grill (Hobo Nephews). They recorded and still rehearse in Koskinen's Realphonic Studio, housed in the Jayhawks' old studio space.
When it came to mapping out their first tour, DMW didn't overthink it: "We're all busy with other things, so we just don't have the time to go hit the obvious cities to build up our base," Simonett said. "So we went for something a little more wild and memorable."