When you get a member of the Gaslight Anthem on the phone at a record store in their native New Jersey, one question immediately comes to mind: Which of the Boss' albums are you picking up?
"Nope, no Springsteen," guitarist Alex Rosamilia said flatly, talking last month when the band had a rare week off.
For good reason, the Gaslight Anthem has been held up as torchbearers of Springsteen & the E Street Band's burning, blue-collar rock sound. The quartet's career-making sophomore album, "The '59 Sound" -- a 2008 year-end favorite for many music critics and No. 1 with eMusic.com subscribers -- is rife with anthemic choruses, top-down-muscle-car guitar riffs and songs with characters named Mary and Bobby Jean. The song "High Lonesome" even lifts lyrics straight from Bruce's "I'm on Fire" to great effect.
The Gaslight Anthem is really not all about the Boss, though, insisted Rosamilia. He backed up that claim, too, as he listed the albums he'd just acquired from Vintage Vinyl near the band's hometown of New Brunswick: Some ABBA, early Fleetwood Mac and one Godflesh record.
New Brunswick is "gray, gloomy and industrial," Rosamilia said, but it's also home to a big college-student population (from Rutgers University) and not 100 percent Springsteen territory.
"I honestly didn't really start listening to him until I was in this band," Rosamilia said. Instead, he points the finger to singer/guitarist Brian Fallon. "He's really integral to Brian as an influence, but not so much the rest of us. Alex [Levine, bassist] was probably most influenced by the Clash, and Ben [Horowitz, drummer] totally grew up in the independent/hard-core punk scene. And then my biggest influences were bands like the Smiths and the Cure."
Before " '59 Sound," the band definitely had more of a punk sound, which earned them a slot on the Warped Tour and other punk-centric gigs. Recently the Anthem toured with Chicago's popular sociopolitical punk band Rise Against, testing the waters for how the Boss-like music on " '59 Sound" would go over in front of a crowd of Rancid- and NOFX-loving youths.
"Actually, the punks like their Springsteen," Rosamilia said. "I was surprised by it myself, but I suppose there's sort of a blue-collar, unpretentious connection to him."