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Look Out for The Front
by Judy Wieder
From BLAST! Magazine - May 1990
The
Front are two brothers -- lead singer Michael
Anthony Franano and keyboardist Bobby Franano -- and
three other rockers -- Mike Greene, Randy Jordan,
and Shane -- from Kansas City, Missouri. But,
somehow, there's very little Middle America in the
Front. A little Jim Morrison, lotsa Eric Burton,
some Cult, etc. But not much from Kansas City --
just the boys themselves. Currently opening for
Enuff Z'nuff, after some dates with Bonham, BLAST!
caught up to lead singer Michael in New Haven.
Here's the beginning of his slant on Kansas City,
music, principles, Sebastian Bach and Axl Rose...
BLAST!: Michael, are you the sole songwriter for
The Front?
MICHAEL: Pretty much so, yes. Bobby helped a
little bit with some of the music on the song
"Violent World." But it's pretty much my writing,
yes.
BLAST!: And Bobby, the keyboard player, is your
brother?
MICHAEL: Yeah.
BLAST!: You're all from Kansas City?
MICHAEL: Yeah.
BLAST!: How has Kansas City shaped you, made you
different, made the band different?
MICHAEL: I don't know if Kansas City -- other
than the fact that I grew up there -- has that much
to do with our music. I don't really take my writing
from things like that. It's a little more
introspective than that. Do you know what I mean?
BLAST!: But don't you think there's a certain
tone to any city, that all of the worldly
information filters thorough?
MICHAEL: Oh, yeah, certainly...
BLAST!: I don't know anything about Kansas City,
Missouri.
MICHAEL: Yeah, well, like, Los Angeles has
such a thriving club scene and subculture that's
happening with music and so forth. Kansas City
doesn't have anything like that. So, in reality,
when it comes to music, there's just not a lot to
draw on there. That's why The Front doesn't sound
like your typical Midwestern band. We had to draw on
other places than Kansas City to get our
information. I don't think our music is very
representative of what we would call the standard
Midwestern sound.
BLAST!: Some of the controversy other lead
singers are getting into today -- like Axl Rose and
Sebastian Bach -- is bringing both good and bad
things to the surface of rock 'n' roll. As a lead
singer yourself, what do you think about these
disturbances?
MICHAEL: Well, here's the thing. I have to
sympathize with Axl. The minute you start to
compromise your music, you become mediocre. I mean,
the minute you compromise your feelings or ideals,
you are a candidate for mediocrity. So, I don't
blame him for what he did. Maybe how he handled it!
But I don't know. I'll tell you what my genuine
feeling on Guns N' Roses is. Anybody who says
anything bad about that band -- f--k you! Trade
places with them for a week! Do you know what I
mean? They had a lot of success very quickly. That's
a very difficult thing to handle. I wouldn't know
how to react in a situation like that. So, I can't
say one way or another what I would do. Whether it's
right or wrong??? Because of how quickly they
achieved success, probably has a lot to do with how
Axl handles himself. With Sebastian?? Sebastian is
Sebastian! Anybody can say anything they want about
him, but he's Sebastian Bach 24 hours a day. I like
to think that myself and everyone else in this group
is the same way. We don't run onstage in spandex
pants and yell: "Hey, we're rock stars", and then go
back and put on our Banana Republic shorts and Polos
and play a round of golf. We're not into that. We're
us, 24 hours a day. |