
MANCHESTER, NH โ When you imagine a rock starโthe Platonic form of a rock starโyou might see sleeves of tattoos and piercings in places that arenโt always intuitive.
You might envision eccentric clothingโleather pants and bolo hats, bright flowing scarves or frayed denim vests.
You might imagine a person who is mysterious and aloof, heavy-lidded from the influence of sundry substances.
And Manchesterโs Chris Howeโwhose band Waterbury will release a new album titled โNowhere Iโd Rather Be/Iโd Rather Be Nowhereโ on Feb. 5โchecks none of those rock star boxes.
The 48-year-old Queen City native and Manchester West alumnus is ordinary in appearance, average height and build with short hair and a trimmed beard, wearing exactly what you might expect a middle-aged man fitting his profile to be wearing: blue jeans and a pullover[1].
But Chris Howe doesnโt want to be a rock star in the ordinary and archetypical sense, and he doesnโt care to measure his success by his fame or record sales. โI donโt self-promote. Success, for me, is writing and then listening to a record,โ he said. โI just love to do it.โ
Image and labels aside, Howe simply loves music. In his home on Manchester’s West Side, he houses thousands of vinyl albums and has set up a recording studio for his various musical projects, which currently includes The Wood Floorsโa band he has kept together with drummer Eric Scheiner since the early-2000sโand Waterbury, a trio that includes drummer Paul Battaglia and guitarist Jimmy Jude, whose self-titled debut album was released on Jan. 1.
A day without music is as unthinkable to Howe as a day without air. โI need a new song,โ he said. โI need it as a release. Itโs always been my comfort zone and my safety valve.โ
Yet in his younger yearsโin the early 1990sโHowe admits to having his eyes on the rock star prize while playing in a rock trio called Laughingstock with Scheiner and bassist Brian Richardsโanother Manchester West graduate.
Laughingstock played some of the most prestigious venues in the Northeast, including CBGBโs, Mama Kinโs and The Living Room, and released two self-produced albumsโโKnocking Off a Pieceโ and โDumbfoundedโโbefore parting ways in 1996.
โI wanted to be a rock star,โ said Howe. โIn hindsight, to do it again would be great. I would change some things and make myself more adaptable to fitting the bandโs sound.โ

After Laughingstock, Howe and Scheiner formed The Wood Floors in 2003 as a side project, and now, 68 releases later, theyโre still forging forward with a new album titled โIn Countless Waysโ to be released on Feb. 3.
The Wood Floorsโ sound is eclectic with a discernible ’90s indie, garage-vibe, and their lyrics are smartโsincere with a dash of the sardonicโand the sound is stripped down to the bare essentials.
However, Howe said that he doesnโt particularly care for the โsterileโ sound produced in studio recordings. โIt is technically very good, but it lacks any spontaneity,โ he said. โI like the warts. I donโt mind that element of rawness. If the demo sounds better to me, then why would I want to mess with it?โ
This emphasis on โspontaneityโ, in tandem with Howeโs unique and somewhat-bohemian writing process, explains the bandโs prodigious output.
Howe โwrites in batchesโ and doesnโt necessarily question where the songs come from or why theyโve arrived at a particular moment. โWhen I pick up a guitar, it either happens or it doesnโt,โ he said. โWhen it happens, itโs amazing to me. I created something that didnโt exist yesterday.โ
Currently, Howe is โecstaticโ to be playing with Waterbury and releasing new music. Waterbury is a โtrue collaborationโ where each of the three band members write songs, said Howe.
โWe feel like weโre 20 years old again, and weโre all almost 50,โ Howe said. โWe feel like itโs the first time weโre making music. But maturity helps. Adult responsibilities and time constraints help. Weโre not insecure anymore. Weโre doing it for fun.โ
Meanwhile, Waterbury is itching to play out again and reliveโor reinventโa rock star vibe. โWeโre dying to play,โ Howe said.
But donโt expect Waterbury to headline at Madison Square Garden, round up any groupies, or toss any televisions nine stories from a hotel window onto a sidewalk. โI donโt have any aspirations in terms of record sales,โ Howe said. โI just love doing it.โ
[1] ย ย I was Chrisโs sartorial twin at our interview, albeit in different muted shades. Perhaps this stemmed from the fact that Chris and I are only a year apart in age. Or perhaps it stems from the fact that I am also not a rock star, but we both share the same affinity for the music of the rock star Billy Squier.
Listen to Waterbury here
Listen to The Wood Floors here