Tractor Kings – Guys Worth Pulling For
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For some, music is simply a way to pass the time – a few sound waves slipping through the headphones to entertain their ears. For Jake Fleischli, music is audio nicotine, filling a craving for the hard stuff (Bob Dylan) he’s had since childhood. Music is both therapeutic, addictive and the reason he started the band Tractor Kings in 1998.
Tractor Kings has seen a complicated web of local musicians in its 10-year history. It all began with a two piece. Rebecca Rury played drums and Fleischli was on the 12 string. Their first album Sunday Night was released on Mud Records, a subsidiary of Parasol. The two parted ways, and the band’s second album Gone to Heaven was recorded at Matt Talbott’s infamous Great Western Record Recorders in Tolono and released in 2003.
Fleischli moved to Chicago and started playing at the Hideout with the Chicago version of the Tractor Kings. He moved back to Champaign in 2004 when Aaron “Jibbski” McCallister started playing bass and singing back-up vocals for the band. Ben “Creech” Uchereck began playing drums, and Steve Uchereck of The Living Blue played guitar. Creech left in 2006 to play with The Beauty Shop, and Josh Lucas took over on drums. Tractor Kings added Johnny “Chemical” Davidson, a current member, to play guitar. The band started bouncing around ideas for their spanking new album Homesick and returned to Talbott’s musical haven. After they had finished tracking, Lucas left the band.
Marty “Farmboy” Gray had played with Fleischli in Chicago. He left his lucrative job at Motorola to work on a farm outside Urbana and play drums in the Tractor Kings – proof positive that some people really can throw up a middle finger to society and be happy on their own.
Fleischli’s supremely mellow, friendly and brimming with stories. I learned more about this town from our chat than I have from my own local explorations of the past three years. He’s expecting his first child in February – a son named Caz. “I can’t wait to meet him,” he said with a smug grin. He works sound for shows all over downtown Champaign, and worked at Radio Maria as a dishwasher. Outside the band, Johnny Chemical works at Hobbico, a radio-controlled car and airplane manufacturer, and plays in The Chemicals. Marty Farmboy wakes with the sun and works on a farm outside Urbana, but has high hopes to start a farm of his own someday. Aaron Jibbski works on sound with F & G and also plays in The Chemicals. These guys really know a thing or two about music and its production.
The band hopes their new album, which dropped in mid Oct. on Spur Records, will put them on a more large-scale map. “Jim Kelly over at Parasol is really great to us,” Fleischli explained. “He does a lot of promotion by sending the albums out to Pitchfork _and _Rolling Stone and stuff. Aaron does a lot of work too by making flyers and phone calls.” With a kid on the way, Fleischli hopes the album will get some press and start making some business to support the new little bundle.
When the Tractor Kings perform, it’s a party. A-rock is Johnny Chemical’s brother and the resident dance fiend. He moves and shakes, and close friends cheer, sing and drink PBR. These local favorites really know how to rock out and have a good time. When it comes down to it, they’re just a bunch of laid back guys trying to get by and have some fun along the way.
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Yeah, I’d agree that Transporter Room 3 is the worst house venue I’ve ever seen.
*slow. clap.* Still offering no threat of intelligence…. I know I said I thought you should just write this whole column yourself next year, Isaac, but now that you’ve gone and taken a “part deux” run at it, I’d like to modify my request: Best Music 2013,…
Actually, it’s kind of nice, the quiet. John Heoffleur’s engaging commentary/dialogue is sorely missed, however. In lieu of someone intelligent saying something, I’ve compiled a list of Honourable Mentions: BEST ROCK BAND: Take Care ::these gentlemen have four completely different sets at their disposal right now (which…
That article almost looks like something out of The Onion
Thanks! I’m looking forward to writing even more….
that city center house show was one of those life-affirming things.
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I also got to visit Big Grove Tavern during the soft open and definitely enjoyed the pork belly the most of all the dishes I sampled. The cheesy grits and the vinegary pickled vegetables were a perfect compliment to the rich pork belly.
The Alan Partridge lookalike on the right in the first small photo has nothing to condescend to anyone about. AH HA!
Snell and the little Hitlers of the neighborhood association need to chill out. Legitimate businesses should have the freedom to exist without having to endure the slings and arrows of ignorant and misguided opposition.
Yeah, I’d agree that Transporter Room 3 is the worst house venue I’ve ever seen.
Food trucks are the start-up, small businesses of the future for those unable to afford real estate. No surprise, that merchants who pay rent, utilities, and maintenance on a property would despise the traveling competition. Or developers who build more empty retail spaces would want to close…
Not so much far-right Tea Party as a balanced, moderate viewpoint between letting businesses succeed and protecting society with reasonable regulations. In spite of what the city reps are saying, the interpretation of policy on this issue certainly has changed. Letting a business start up under one…
I think it’s neat that SP has turned rightward, now espousing a Tea Party-style frustration with government regulations & taxes.
This makes me so sad. (Happy to live in Urbana, though!) Crave Truck has been a GREAT addition to the food choices in C-U, and it’d be a travesty to chase them away. This town should be supporting small businesses. I’m glad to hear that they’ll still…
*slow. clap.* Still offering no threat of intelligence…. I know I said I thought you should just write this whole column yourself next year, Isaac, but now that you’ve gone and taken a “part deux” run at it, I’d like to modify my request: Best Music 2013,…
Actually, it’s kind of nice, the quiet. John Heoffleur’s engaging commentary/dialogue is sorely missed, however. In lieu of someone intelligent saying something, I’ve compiled a list of Honourable Mentions: BEST ROCK BAND: Take Care ::these gentlemen have four completely different sets at their disposal right now (which…
This weekend will mark the first appearance of Kayla Brown’s Fire Doll Candle booth at the Market. Check it: http://www.facebook.com/firedollcandles
And without bloodshed. Sounds like the Savoy trustees aren’t as narrow-minded as some of their whiny pants constituents. Do you think quack Snell is already planning an asinine counterattack or is he still laying low after those “threats” against his person?
Okay, almost 24 hours later and I finally got Issac’s Summer joke. I’m an idiot.
Swap the dog for a fire pit and it sounds like you’re writing about my back yard. Very nice.

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represent, Matt.