“We’ve built a really great cottage industry out of this somehow,” Schnier said, noting that the band is not by any means dissatisfied with the career it has built with its do-it-yourself approach. “After doing it for so many years, though, the one thing that’s always sort of always eluded us, I guess, was being able to tap into a broader audience or a wider audience or getting some kind of additional exposure. We’ve always flown under the radar.”
And that’s where the band hopes Sugar Hill can help. The last time moe. had a record deal, it was on a larger scale. Formed in 1991 in Buffalo, N.Y., the band started out taking the do-it-yourself route, self-releasing its first two CDs, “Fatboy” in 1992 and “Headseed” a year later, before signing with Sony 550 Records.
The band, which also includes guitarist Chuck Garvey, singer/bassist Rob Derhak, drummer Vinnie Amico and percussionist Jim Loughlin, released two CDs on that label — “No Doy” in 1996 and “Tin Cans & Car Tires” in 1998 — but didn’t get the kind of boost in its popularity that it hoped would come with the resources of a major label.
So moe. returned to releasing its own CDs and had stuck with that approach in releasing its four subsequent studio albums — “Wormwood,” “Okayalright,” “The Conch” and “Sticks and Stones” (not to mention the band’s six-album series of live performances, “Warts & All” and its two three-CD live albums, “Dr. Stan’s Prescription Vols. 1 & 2”).