Hudson, New York, might not come to mind as being the hometown of one of the surf revivalโs brightest guitarists. But think again, hodad: The Columbia County city begat Susan SurfTone (born Susan Yasinski), who graduated from Hudson High School (Class of 1972) and took lessons at the now-gone Osbourne Music store. Before learning her trade with 1980s new wave bands, she soaked up the Beatles, โ60s garage rock, and โ70s punk. In 1993 she consummated her love of instrumental surf music and started Rochesterโs Susan and the SurfTones, which released several albums, toured Europe repeatedly, and placed tunes in MTVโs โReal World: Syndeyโ before crashing ashore in 2011.
SurfTone now makes her home a bit closer to the Pacific: in Portland, Oregon. Those expecting curl-shooting pyrotechnics ร la Dick Dale may at first be thrown off by SurfToneโs cooler, more subdued sound. But, while being perhaps more idiomatically representative, her light โnโ loungey style also recalls the influence jazzers like Johnny Smith and Charlie Christian had on the Venturesโ Bob Bogle and Don Wilson and other early surf players. Producer Steve Kravacโs (Blink 182, Less Than Jake) antiseptic approach often has the instruments sounding demo-ish, as if theyโre plugged straight into the mixing board rather being played live in the room by the band. Nevertheless, cork-bobbing cuts like โJadeโ and โTrainโ have characteristic charm, and the eerie, atmospheric slink through the Doorsโ โRiders on the Stormโ is a must-hear.
www.susansurftone.com.
This article appears in January 2012.









