Gears ANNOUNCE their new single release, ‘Wasteland’
Rock needs reinvention. It only moves forward when a band pushes it do so. Enter GEARS. Finding a sweet spot between metal, R&B, hip-hop, and alternative, the Miami, FL groupβJimmy Wooten [drums] and Trip Six [vocals] βzigs and zags past all expectations and burns down one convention after another in the process. Racking up hundreds of thousands of streams and views, collaborating with everyone from members of Living Colour to Sevendust, and receiving plugs from Metal Insider and more, they usher in a new era of rock with a series of singles and their forthcoming independent debut album.
βThereβs something for everyone,β observes Jimmy. βItβs heavy. Itβs soulful. Itβs melodic. The bandβs versatility is our strength. Weβll bring R&B and hip-hop into rock, but weβre doing it in our own tight and cohesive way.β
GEARS initially began to grind back in 2014. New York native Trip wound up in Florida and met fellow Northeast transplant Jimmy. Bonding over shared influences such as Prince, Alice In Chains, Deftones, and more, they carefully carved out a singular style. After playing countless shows and dropping the Pride Comes Before the Fall EP in 2015, the band teamed up with Sevendust vocalist Lajon Witherspoon on βTango Yankee.β Meanwhile, Sevendust guitarist Clint Lowery contributed guitar to the latter as well as to the singles βStronger Than Painβ and βKing.β They also collaborated with the likes of Corey Lowery [Seether] and Troy McLawhorn [Evanescence] in addition to dueting with legendary Living Colour frontman Corey Glover on a cover of the classic βCult of Personality.β
Along the way, they crossed paths with producer Chris Dawson [SAUL, Any Given Sin, Seasons After] and found the perfect production partner. Hitting the studio during 2020, they immediately uncovered undeniable creative chemistry.
βIt just hit,β adds Trip. βIt came together really quickly, and we clicked with Dawson on all fronts.β
With Dawson behind the board, they completed their 2021 single βWastelandβ. On the track, airy electronics give way to head-nodding drums and chugging guitars. Tripβs soulful cadence twists and turns through the beats before culminating on the catchy chorus, βSave me, locked in a cage, and I canβt get out.β
βItβs about being trapped in a mindset you donβt see any way out of,β the frontman states.
βIt encompasses a lot of things,β Jimmy elaborates. βItβs easy to become trapped in continuous circles in life where youβre doing the same things over and over again. As a band, you have to reach outside of the box, work with someone new, try something different, and change the sound. Following the Pandemic, itβs like a rebirth for GEARS in a weird way, so we decided to push the envelope.β
They wonβt stop pushing the envelope either. For as much as Gears urge rock to evolve, they also elicit a classic reaction.
βWhen you leave a concert, we want you to feel like it was worth it,β Trip leaves off. βWe want you to bop, jump, yell, scream, and do it all. We try to give listeners this gratification.β
βWe hit you with as many emotions as possible,β agrees Jimmy. βMaybe a song will affect you and connect on a deeper levelβor youβll be able to simply bounce to it. This is meant to spark a physical and emotional reaction.β






















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