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Hunt and Jake Bostic, along with a framing crew, an electrician, and a laborer, worked to get Round the Sound Studios up and running—aiming to build a room a day. They came very close to that goal. By Hunt’s calculations, they built fifty-two rooms in sixty days. On opening day, every room was rented out, and Hunt had a waiting list of twenty-five bands wanting to get in.

Besides himself, Hunt credits Bostic as a cofounder of the Music Bank. “This was me and Jake’s baby completely. The other guys were just silent partners that were willing to put their name on a piece of land.”

One day in late 1985, an eighteen-year-old who had long spiky hair with a blue streak and was wearing pink jeans walked into Hunt’s office. “I’m Layne from Sleze and I’m looking for a job.”

“Well, Layne, I’m not hiring,” Hunt responded.

Layne continued, “I was in here the other night and I noticed you had this guy that was mopping the back hallway between rooms thirty-six and forty-two. Can you rent that?”

“That’s our fucking broom closet.”

“I don’t care,” Layne responded. “Could I set up a little drum set in there?”

Hunt thought about Layne’s proposition. The small room was not designed for the purpose Layne had in mind. Hunt described it as “barely big enough to hold a small drum set.” He had been looking for more space and figured that if he relocated the cleaning supplies to the back office and rented out the closet, it would bring an extra $150 a month in revenue.

Johnny Bacolas said of this first room, “It could barely fit four of us. It was me, Nick, James, and Layne. And then that room was just too small. It would just kill us in the summer.”

On their first day in the room, they had left their door slightly open. A member of the punk band The Accüsed stuck his hand inside the doorway and gave them the middle finger. Layne got mad and decided that couldn’t go unanswered. He found a piece of dog poop and placed it in front of the door to The Accüsed’s room while they were practicing. They later found out one of the band members stepped on it.

Sleze practiced in the closet until a better room opened up. Hunt put Layne at the top of the waiting list, so they upgraded as soon as one became available. Layne continued pestering Hunt for a job, but he wouldn’t actually work there until about a year later.

*   *   *

After repaying slightly more than half of Hunt’s twenty-thousand-dollar loan from his mother, Von Haartman and Marian stopped paying it. According to Hunt, the reasons for this were that “It was starting not to be profitable. Our rent had gone up. We had been classified as a commercial zone.”

“We were pulling a lot of power. Our power rates went up. A lot of money stuff changed and they decided, ‘This is a promissory note, punk. Why don’t you start paying your mom back out of your money—out of your share?’” Hunt, Von Haartman, and Marian wound up kicking Bostic out, but, because his was the main name on the paperwork, Von Haartman and Marian tried pinning the responsibility for the Hunt loan on Bostic. Hunt, however, refused to renegotiate the original agreement. Complicating matters was that Von Haartman and Marian were the signers on the lease. “They decided to go to war with me, because they didn’t want to make the payment anymore.”

At that point, Hunt approached David Ballenger to take over the day-to-day operations of the Music Bank. “I said, ‘I’m at war with my partners now, because they don’t want to pay my family money back anymore. So I need you to kind of help me run things. This may turn into an ugly fucking deal here.’”

Ballenger had secretly been living in a room, paying rent with his unemployment benefits. Hunt was fine with him doing that and began giving him hours. Ballenger eventually moved into Hunt’s band’s former room and began running keys.

By that point, things had gotten ugly between the Hunt family and Von Haartman and Marian, with the Hunts filing a lawsuit over the unpaid balance of the loan. “In a day, they came and threw Scott out. Scott thought he would be back in two weeks. It was near violence, the experience. They put him up against the wall, up off of his feet,” Ballenger said. “He thought he’d be back in a few, he was like, ‘Dude, I’ll be back and we’ll own it completely in two weeks.’ It didn’t happen. The lawsuit just went on continuously, and so somebody had to run the place.”

Beyond the loan issue, Hunt said there were other reasons they wanted him out. Hunt wanted to expand the Music Bank into the rest of the Ballard Building, which was being rented out to two other businesses. Hunt alleged his business partners wanted him out so they could set up a massive marijuana-growing operation.

Ultimately, the Music Bank was an incubator for the Seattle music scene, with dozens of bands having passed through its doors during the years it was in operation. During this period, Sleze made plans to go in the recording studio.

Chapter 4

We’re the biggest hair band in Seattle!

JAMES BERGSTROM

BY LATE 1985 OR EARLY 1986, Sleze felt confident enough to record a demo. According to Tim Branom, James Bergstrom approached him to ask for help. “I was older and a little more experienced at the time, and I was kind of an upcoming producer in the area.” Branom and Sleze began working on preproduction of the material in January 1986.

Branom said they worked on the material for about three months, “until the songs were right.” Of the band’s overall creative process, Bergstrom said, “It varied. On those demo tapes, I wrote all of ‘Lip Lock Rock’—lyrics and music. Nick wrote all of ‘Over the Edge’—lyrics and music. ‘Fat Girls’—I wrote all of the music, and I think Jim Sheppard might have written the lyrics to that. But I’d say all the other songs were a collaboration, where maybe I came up with an original riff and Layne would write a lot of lyrics.”

When they started recording in the spring of 1986, they worked on “Fat Girls” and “Lip Lock Rock,” with Mike Mitchell on bass. The instrumental tracks were recorded at the Music Bank, while Layne’s vocals were recorded at Branom’s house in Richmond Beach.

“I worked with Layne for months on his vocals. I was able to afford to go to maestro David Kyle for lessons, but Layne wasn’t, so he would come a few times a week to my house, and we would go over the cassette tapes of my vocal warm-ups, and I would make sure that he was practicing. I knew the only way he would do it was if I was standing right in front of him.

“I made copies of my vocal-lesson tapes for him so he could practice at home. After [he had done] this for about six months, the notes just flowed out effortlessly.” In addition to developing his vocals, Layne had a financial incentive to practice: “It would save money in the studio.”

Later on, Layne did study under David Kyle, whose impressive roster of former students includes Geoff Tate of Queensrÿche, Chris Cornell of Soundgarden, Ann Wilson of Heart, and Ronny Munroe of Metal Church. Robert Lunte, a student and protégé of Kyle who now runs the Vocalist Studio in Seattle, remembers seeing a promo head shot of Layne “in full glam regalia” when he was a student at Kyle’s studio, where Kyle kept head shots of all his students. Kyle, who passed away in 2004, told Lunte that Layne had been one of his students.1

Thad Byrd, who would later direct Sleze for a scene in his movie Father Rock and occasionally hung out with the band, said, “Layne was very proud of the fact his vocal coach was the same one as Geoff Tate’s.

“I have a recollection of being at the Music Bank hanging out with those guys. They had just finished practice, and Layne personally telling me. He was all excited that day, because he had either come from a voice lesson … either that day or the day before.