Word: rosenworcel
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...band that floats along the periphery of popular music making their living opening for more popular acts at large arenas, headlining at clubs and theaters and putting out really good albums. The trio of Tufts grads, consisting of Ryan Miller and Adam Gardner on guitar and vocals and Brian Rosenworcel on hand drums, Guster has been steadily gaining popularity, moving from recording on their own label while still in college to a major label deal. With each album, Guster evolves into a better band, but they have stayed true to themselves with spontaneous live shows, quality arrangements and thoughtful lyrics...
...definite highlight was “Bury Me” on which Rosenworcel became the centre of attention. Drumming is undoubtedly the visual highlight of Guster shows. Rosenworcel played all of Lost and Gone Forever without using a single drumstick, and at UNH he bounced around behind his impressive set-up of bongos, congas, shakers and other drums, at one point taping his hands to stay the blisters for a while. “Bury Me,” which incorporated bits of the “Beverly Hills Cop” theme and Van Halen?...
...second half of the evening. Perhaps feeding on the randomness of the whole evening, Guster produced a crowd-pleasing rendition of Aerosmith's "Sweet Emotion," complete with full my-life-is-in-your-hands crowd surfing by Ryan. With Adam Gardener on guitar and vocals and Brian "Thundergod" Rosenworcel at the bongos, the Guster trio played a varied set of songs from all three of their albums--the latest and most well known being _Lost And Gone Forever_. As a recent Guster addict, I would say the B.C. show, like the other two Guster concerts I've attended, further proved...
...Guster came into being. Ryan Miller (vocals and guitar), Adam Gardner (vocals and guitar) and Brian Rosenworcel (percussion) discovered each other on the Tufts campus and formed the Boston-area band originally known as Gus. They relied--and still rely--on their reps, fans who volunteer to sell albums and spread the word about their band. Eventually, dissatisfied with the common band name "Gus," the unique band made the switch to "Guster," the band who put on one of the best performances, quite frankly, that I've ever been...