Home Read Now Hear This: Highway 61 | Driving South

Now Hear This: Highway 61 | Driving South

Led by the ubiquitous Frank Meyer (Streetwalking Cheetahs, Spaghetti & Frank, etc), the L.A. blues-rockers drop a dynamite debut album — 30 years after they broke up.

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE:Highway 61 are a Los Angeles blues-rock ‘n’ roll band whose debut album was recorded 30 years after the band broke up. And it only took a worldwide pandemic, a near-fatal bout with leukemia, and the death of their mentor to make it happen…

Highway 61 began in the early ‘90s and tore it up on the local scene alongside bands like B.B. Chung King & the Screaming Buddaheads, Burning Tree and The Havalinas, yet never managed to get that elusive major label record deal. “We were young and committed to constantly rehearsing, writing, promoting, and playing stellar shows,” recalls drummer Michael Knutson. “Being one of the first bands to be sponsored by Bud Light allowed us to play larger venues and blues festivals with great backing and support from a legitimate company. We even wrote a theme song and appeared in a TV commercial but eventually we got burnt out, the scene changed, and we split up.”

After the band broke up in 1993, singer-guitarist Frank Meyer went on to form award-winning punk outfit The Streetwalkin’ Cheetahs and play alongside Rock And Roll Hall of Famer James Williamson (Iggy and the Stooges), rock legends Cherrie Currie (The Runaways), Wayne Kramer (MC5), Sylvain Sylvain (New York Dolls), heavy metal hero Thor and many more. But the blues came a-callin’ once again and in summer 2022, Meyer reunited with the original Highway 61 members to record the 10-song album Driving South to.

“Thirty years is a long time, and during that time the music we created still resonated in me,” admits bass player Russell Loeffler. “While continuing to write and play music, I always wondered what the others were doing. We spent an enormous amount of time together, rehearsing, writing, traveling for shows, and becoming a family. When Frank called me in 2022 about finishing what we started, I didn’t hesitate.”

Ultimately, it took an unfortunate event to reunite the band. In 2020, as the pandemic hit, guitar player Andy Medway was diagnosed with leukemia. After a year of chemotherapy, Medway had a bone marrow transplant, which required more than a year of recovery and isolation that was followed by a series of complications and setbacks. “Frank was great about staying in touch with me during my recovery and encouraging me to play music even when I didn’t know if I would ever be able to play again,” admits Medway. “Music truly is the great healer.”

Inspired by the challenge, Medway started firing off ideas. Soon he and Meyer had written several songs, including the Driving South track Black Magic, which led to the reunion with Knutson and Loeffler.

In summer 2022, the foursome reconvened for the first time in decades at Kitten Robot Studios in Los Angeles with producer Paul Roessler (Screamers, 45 Grave, Nina Hagen) to make Driving South, which mixes doses of The Rolling Stones and Tom Petty with dashes of The Black Crowes and Stevie Ray Vaughan. The band ripped through the entire album over a few weeks, finally tracking fan favorites like Baby, Where’d You Stay Last Night and Supernatural Monkey Child, alongside new song Black Magic.

Driving South also salutes Highway 61 mentor Alan Mirikitani, aka blues guitar master BB Chung King, who sadly passed away in 2015. Walk on Water and Breath Away feature unreleased solos Mirikitani recorded with the band in 1992. In an incredibly emotional reunion, Walk on Water also features Mirikitani’s daughter Alana Mirikitani on backing vocals joining the two artists on an album for the first time.

“Alan was a huge influence on the band,” says Meyer. “We played tons of gigs together and he taught us everything from stage presence to amp settings to lead guitar techniques. We are thrilled to be able to bring the sound of his guitar back and reunite him with his daughter through our music.”