Biography

Band Members  
Bill Nershi acoustic guitar, lap steel guitar, and electric slide guitar
Michael Kang acoustic/electric mandolin, electric guitar, and violin
Michael Travis drums and percussion
Keith Moseley bass guitar
Kyle Hollingsworth piano, organ, Rhodes, and accordion
Jason Hann auxiliary percussion

The String Cheese Incident (SCI) is a band from Crested Butte and Telluride, Colorado formed in 1993. The band is composed of Michael Kang, Michael Travis, Bill Nershi, Kyle Hollingsworth, and Keith Moseley, and, in 2006, Jason Hann.

Their music has elements of bluegrass sounds, as well as rock, electronica, calypso, country, funk, jazz, Latin, reggae, and occasional psychedelia. All members write original compositions and share vocal duties. Nershi has written the bulk of the group’s original songs.

History

1996–2001

After a few years of playing local ski resorts and private functions, the band formed the independent record label SCI Fidelity, on which they released their first album, Born on the Wrong Planet, an album split between originals and covers. The album featured melody-driven music with room for improvisation. Instrumentals and covers constituted half of the album. Many songs from the first album are still frequently played by the band, including “Black Clouds,” “Land’s End,” “Texas,” and “Jellyfish.”

The band’s name come from an incident that occurred when the band was alone in a Colorado bar late at night. After a couple beers the guys got in a big food fight between them involving cheese. They began referring to the night as the “Cheese Incident” shortly after becoming the band name.

Less than a year later, SCI released a compilation of ten songs, including “Land’s End,” on their self-titled live album A String Cheese Incident, which chronicles a single concert from the Fox Theatre in Boulder, Colorado and adds pianist Hollingsworth to the ensemble (he was not in the band during the recording of Born on the Wrong Planet). Despite spanning only one disc and containing only ten tracks, the album clocks in at 72 minutes even (thus, with an average track length of 7:12, displaying their propensity for extended jams), and is widely considered the best CD for new converts to listen to in order to become acquainted to the band’s live sound.

‘Round the Wheel, released in 1998, refined the band’s sound and displayed a marked increase in both musical and lyrical maturity, and added Paul McCandless as a guest player on soprano and tenor saxophone and Tony Furtado on Banjo, but did not earn them quite the level of notoriety that they would achieve in the next millennium. From 1998 through 2001 SCI toured the country extensively and steadily, playing over 500 “Incidents” in hundreds of cities.

In 2001, with the help of guest producer and Los Lobos member Steve Berlin, they released their third studio effort, Outside Inside. This album marked a shift from the band’s traditional bluegrass leanings to a more standard rock sound, thus making it the most accessible album to a mainstream audience to that point. The band did not completely abandon its bluegrass roots, however, sneaking in the short three-minute track “Up the Canyon” at the end of the disc, which has become one of many live favorites along with “Rollover,” “Close Your Eyes,” and others.

2003–2004

In August 2003 SCI’s in-house ticket selling service, SCI Ticketing (now Baseline Ticketing), sued Ticketmaster, which controlled nearly all of the larger venues the band was playing. SCI alleged that by restricting bands from selling directly to fans more than 8% of a venue’s tickets violated the Sherman Anti Trust Act. The suit followed an unsuccessful petitioning by SCI, R.E.M. Pearl Jam and other bands calling for the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate Ticketmaster’s high service fees and anti-competitive practices. The parties settled in 2008, and the band gained a larger allotment of tickets to sell and agreed to not publicize the settlement.

In October 2003, SCI released their fourth studio album, Untying the Not, produced by Martin “Youth” Glover, formerly of the band the Killing Joke. The release continued SCI’s use of electronic music and trance elements.

In the summer of 2004 SCI booked to play the touring festival Lollapalooza; thereby becoming the caravan’s first jam band. But poor ticket sales led to the festival’s cancellation and the band re-routed its summer tour.

2005–2006

In June 2005, the band released their fifth studio album, titled One Step Closer, containing thirteen original tracks with guest songwriting collaborations. In 2004, the band also welcomed percussionist Jason Hann. The album was produced by Malcom Burn at a studio in Boulder, Colorado, where the band is based. One Step Closer was a return to the more roots-based music of earlier String Cheese Incident fare, while still retaining some of the pop sensibility of previous studio albums.

Through Madison House Inc., the company that manages and books SCI, the band organized ‘Big Summer Classic’, a 2005 traveling festival tour across the United States. Seven-person ensemble New Monsoon opened the festival’s shows, which included acts such as Umphrey’s McGee, Yonder Mountain String Band, Michael Franti & Spearhead, and Keller Williams. The band played in medium-size outdoor venues, such as minor-league baseball parks.

In 2005 the band returned to their roots: playing shows at the base of ski resorts, summer festivals, smaller venues, and touring throughout the U.S. Band members announced to their fans that the band would take a break from touring in early 2006. They recommenced in the summer of the same year to play several co-headlining shows with Bob Weir’s Ratdog including a sold-out two-night run at Red Rocks in Morrison, Colorado and a set at the 10,000 Lakes Music Festival in Minnesota with well-known acoustic artist Keller Williams.

2007

The band announced a few shows for 2007, including their annual Winter Carnival (sans 2006), which stopped in Denver and Vail Colorado, and an appearance at the Bonnaroo Music Festival as well as the 10,000 Lakes Festival. The band concluded their reign among the jamband leadership circuit and rode out into the sunset with a series of shows at their favorite places (New York, San Francisco, Oregon), as well as a revival of the Big Summer Classic festival at Camp Zoe, culminating with a last blowout at Red Rocks Amphitheatre during August 9–12.

The band had re-recorded their song “Close Your Eyes” in Simlish, the native language of The Sims to be in the 5th Expansion Pack – Seasons.

2008

All members were present at the Rothbury Music Festival in Rothbury, Michigan, performing with their respective solo projects. The Kyle Hollingsworth Band and EOTO performed on Thursday, Panjea with Michael Kang and Keller Williams featuring Keith Moseley performed on Friday, and the Emmitt-Nershi Band performed on Saturday. Also, at Yarmony grass festival All members except for Keith got together and played a Will it Go ‘Round in Circles together, as well as Pretty Polly.

2009

March 16, 2009 it was announced that the String Cheese Incident would reunite for the second annual Rothbury Festival. This was to be their only show of 2009. The band played an unannounced, invitation-only, “soundcheck” show at the Ogden Theater in Denver on June 24.

In October 2009, Michael Travis told the Colorado Daily newspaper in Boulder: “We are going to be playing some shows next summer and fall. We’re not sure about the dates, but we’re definitely going to be playing. We’re excited to put all we can into this incredible meeting of music, hearts and minds. It’s going to be exciting to reunite for those shows.”

2010

February 2, 2010 it was announced that String Cheese Incident would reunite for seven shows in the summer — the first three being a weekend concert at Red Rocks Amphitheater, then a four-night “Incident” at Horning’s Hideout. The final stop on their 2010 calendar: a “Hulaween” weekend of Incidents on Friday, October 29, with The Disco Biscuits, and a three set night on October 30 at the Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, Virginia.

October 20, 2010 Billy Nershi announced that “[They’re] also planning on doing something next summer at the Rothbury site. That will be a weekend festival with a lot of String Cheese sets. It’ll be different from Rothbury in that it will be more like our thing at Horning’s, where String Cheese plays every night, and it will include bands in [The] String Cheese family with art installations and that kind of thing”

2011

In Spring 2011, String Cheese Incident played a three-night run March 10–12 at the 1st Bank Center in Broomfield, Colorado which they called the “Winter Carnival 2011.” The show featured live acrobatics and a costume contest for the attendees, as well as a Conscious Alliance food drive which offered a special edition 3-panel poster to anyone who donated 25 cans of food.

In Summer 2011, String Cheese played the Which Stage at Bonnaroo Music Festival in Manchester, TN on June 11. Later that summer, String Cheese was featured as a headliner for three out of four nights (July 1–3) of the opening year for the Electric Forest Festival, an event which the band hosted in Rothbury, Michigan.

On September 19, 2011 the band announced that they would be making a tour along America’s East Coast (as well as two cities in the Midwest) entitled the Roots Run Deep 2011 Tour. Currently, over half of the shows have sold out and the other locations are continuing to sell out quickly.