
Q: Introduce yourselves – name, instrument, secret shame, day job, odd/fun fact about you.

Mark Britton โ drums
Day job: Marketing director
Secret shame: Shame! Shame! Shame!
Fun Fact: I canโt wrap โ lyrics or presents โ but I like both.
Favorite song we perform: โAll These Things Iโve Doneโ by the Killers.

Frank Barry โ bass
Day job: Supply chain manager
Secret shame: I once listened to and enjoyed โAll About that Bassโ by Meghan Trainor.
Fun fact: As a kid, I collected KISS memorabilia, and the first album I ever owned was โKiss ALIVE II.โ
Favorite song we perform: “Beverly Hills” by Weezer. It really makes people happy, which in turn makes me happy.

Michelle Barry โ backing vocals, percussion
Day job: Public relations director
Secret shame: I know all the words to Taylor Swiftโs โBlank Space.โ And Iโll write your name.
Fun fact: Iโm learning to sing opera.
Favorite song we perform: โSuffragette Cityโ because David Bowie is the greatest, and I feel so sassy when Janelle and I sing, โHey, man!โ
Janelle Jette Douglas โ backing vocals, percussion

Day job: Graphic designer
Secret shame: I can’t whistle with my lips. Only through my teeth! I’m pretty good at it, but not good enough to perform the whistle solo from “Patience” by Guns N’Roses (I’ve tried).
Fun fact: I grew up in a tiny town in Maine, famous also for being the town where Burt the Bee Man, co-founder of Burt’s Bees, was from. R.I.P., Burt Shavitz!
Favorite song we perform: I love gospel music. Those powerful three- and four-part harmonies give me goosebumps, so I love performing “What Makes a Good Man” by The Heavy. Michelle and I get a lot of sound from the two of us, and we get to tap into a Southern Gothic/British rock soul vibe….love it.

Eric Giribaldi โ guitar
Day job: Musician/guitar teacher
Secret shame: I love the song โCrushโ by David Archuleta.
Fun fact: I can solve a Rubikโs cube.
Favorite song we perform: โMr. Brightsideโ by the Killers, because people really love it, and it always goes over great.

Andrew Ross โ lead vocals, acoustic guitar, percussion
Day job: Package delivery driver for UPS
Secret shame: I love Halloween gigs, because itโs an excuse to wear women’s clothing/costumes. It’s not a secret, however.
Fun fact: I have a pair of red underwear my wife hates, so I dance around in them.
Favorite song we perform: I think right now it’s โDancing with Myselfโ by Billy Idol. I feed off and love the energy of the crowd, the musicians playing it, and the song itself. The song makes me want to jump out of my skin.

Jason Spinosa โ keyboards
Day job: International man of mystery.
Secret shame: I did it. With the candlestick. In the conservatory.
Fun fact: Iโm actually having fun on stage. I just have Resting Bitch Face.
Favorite song to perform and why: Suffragette City, because itโs 100 percent pure, uncut Grade-A awesome, from the first note to the last.
Q: What is the evolution of Stunt Double Riot โ where did it all begin, how did you meet, what keeps you together?
Andy: Mark and I have been playing together in cover bands for several years, and with several different lineups. People have come and gone, but Mark and I are constant. We founded The Clones. Weโd started building up a good following in Southern New Hampshire over a few years, when three members of the band left to do other projects. It happens โ itโs part of the cover band process. We auditioned a new guitar player and keyboard player, and thatโs how we met Jason and Eric. We auditioned a few other players and they were fine, but when Jason came in, it was an instant fit. It was the same way with Eric. The minute he started playing, we just knew. With Frank, who came in as our new bass player, it was a little easier. There was no audition. Frank was already family.
Michelle: Basically, I went to him and said, โWill you be our new bass player?โ And gave him the puppy dog eyes.
Mark: Once we had our new lineup in place, we started playing out again as The Clones. That was a little over a year ago. Things were going really well, and then, out of nowhere, we get this cease and desist letter from some guy out in California who had a registered trademark on the name The Clones. We tried to fight it, because we loved the name. But he wouldnโt let up. It didnโt matter that he hadnโt played a gig or put out any new music under the name The Clones since 1992, or that we were on opposite sides of the country. He was relentless. So, we had to come up with another name. We actually played our last gig as โThe Clonesโ at the Queenโs Pub last fall. Weโve been playing under the name Stunt Double Riot since then.
Q: Describe your sweet spot: What can revelers and partygoers expect to hearย you play during yourย May 28ย Queen’s Pub gig?
Mark: We play songs by artists we admire โ but itโs not always the song youโd expect. Theyโre songs you know, but maybe not that artistโs biggest hit. We try to find alternative rock songs we love from the ’70s, ’80s, ’90s and 2000s that are upbeat, danceable, but have some balls to them. Nick, one of the owners of the Queenโs Pub, summed it up perfectly when he said, โYou guys play anthems.โ Thatโs what we do. People who hear us play usually end up staying all night, dancing their asses off to songs that theyโd never expect a cover band to play.

Q: What is the secret sauce to being a successful cover band in the Greater Manchester area, [as in, how do you read a crowd and do you stick to your playlist or will you go rogue if the audience demands it?]
Janelle: We are constantly changing up the set list. We have a few staples that are always on the list because we know that people love them โ for example, every time we think itโs time to retire โBlister in the Sun,โ or โSeven Nation Army,โ we reconsider, because people still lose their minds over those songs, and probably always will. Those kinds of tunes are timeless and have a lot of nostalgia attached to them for many people. But when we are genuinely sick of a tune, we will retire it for a while and bring in something new. We mix up classic, well-known stuff with newer stuff thatโs on the radio now. The secret sauce is finding the right balance of both.
Eric: Occasionally we will go rogue, but thatโs a slippery slope. If you play one request from someone in the audience, the next thing you know, you canโt get through the set list because youโre getting flooded with requests. We like to stick with the tunes weโve practiced because we know they work.
Janelle: Yeah. We know what we do well. And โFree Birdโ and โSweet Home Alabamaโ isnโt what we do well. You can pretty much go anywhere on any given Saturday night and hear that.
Q: Do you do any original tunes or does that nullify the cover band magic?
Frank: We play covers only. Several of the band members are in other projects that write original tunes, so, for those of us who want it, we have that outlet. This band is mostly about the performance aspect โ playing the songs we love that have influenced us as musicians, and creating the soundtrack for peopleโs big night out on a Saturday. Iโve never been in a cover band before Stunt Double Riot. I have to say that it does make you a better player because you have to learn a variety of styles.
Q: How would you describe the current climate for bar bands โ is this a good time to be doing what you’re doing?
Michelle: Itโs getting tougher for live musicians to find places to play. We think itโs because DJs are now considered โlive entertainment,โ and some of them even think theyโre musicians now. The rise of the DJ as a musician/producer is problematic for actual bands. The bar-going public doesnโt know the difference. They just want to dance. Weโve been building out a loyal audience of people who truly enjoy live music, played by actual musicians, on instruments. But that audience is much harder to build than it used to be.
Frank: We like playing at places like Queenโs Pub because the place is set up for live music. They have a pro sound system and a sound engineer on staff there. A lot of bars are not set up for a seven-piece live act with three singers and a lot of layers of sound. The ones that invest in good sound, they get it โ when the band sounds great, youโre going to get more people in the door.
Q: Most memorable gig so far, and why?
Jason: Iโd say the Halloween gig we played last year at The Peddlerโs Daughter in Nashua is a standout. We got to judge a costume contest and some of the costumes were incredible. We learned โTime Warpโ from Rocky Horror, the theme to โScooby Doo,โ and the theme to โGhostbustersโ for that gig. Letโs face it: โGhostbustersโ is a cheesy song that was attached to a great movie. It doesnโt hold up well to the test of time. But we made it sound cool, and the crowd went crazy for it. They were dancing and singing along. Thatโs a true testament to a good cover band โ if you can take a song like that and add some musicality to it.
Q: Do you do private gigs/weddings/reunions, etc?
Mark: We have done weddings and private parties. Weโve never done a reunion but weโd be down for that. We once played a birthday party at The Bounty in Nashua โ that huge pirate ship. We were bummed that it wasnโt a pirate-themed birthday party. We totally wanted to dress like pirates for that gig. Okay, someone needs to have a pirate-themed party there, and hire us to play it.
Q: Direct us to your website/Facebook page/YouTube channel for more info on Stunt Double Riot.
โ Stunt Double Riot Official website.
โ Like us and follow along on Facebook

Queens Pub & Grille, 641 Elm St., is a British themed restaurant and bar at the corner of Lake & Elm streets, across from The Verizon Wireless Arena. Featuring fresh-cooked food and live musical entertainment .

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