SOURCE: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1491419/09272004/puddle_of_mudd.jhtml
09-27-04
Puddle Of
Mudd
Puddle Of Mudd Play For U.S. Troops Stationed In Iraq
Pretty much everything
about the concert — from the head-banging guys to the screaming girls begging
to be lifted onstage — resembled a routine Puddle of Mudd show. Except that
the stage was four flatbeds pushed together, and the venue was a soccer stadium
in Tikrit, Iraq.
On September 12, in front of 1,500 U.S. troops, the band
played the ruins of what was once a symbol of Saddam Hussein's dictatorial rule.
"It was kind of weird that this person was holding people down ... at this
stadium," said guitarist Paul Phillips, "and we go back and have this
show and it's all about freedom."
Months prior to Puddle of Mudd's performance, the U.S.
military polled its troops in Iraq to find out which band they most wanted to
see perform there. They chose Puddle of Mudd, and the band immediately accepted
the offer.
"[Our managers]
were like, 'Do you want to go to Iraq?' " bassist Douglas Ardito
remembered. "And me and [singer] Wes [Scantlin] look at each other and were
like, 'Yeah!' We didn't even think twice about it."
Though the soldiers were told about the show three weeks
in advance, most were skeptical right up until showtime.
"They said half the soldiers on the bases didn't
believe them when they said we were coming," Ardito said. "They were
like, 'They're not going to come here,' because so many people have backed out
after saying the right thing."
"I think a lot of it has to do with a lot of these
artists and bands living pretty high on the hog," offered Scantlin.
"It's not luxurious when you're over there. You're breathing sand through
the air. It's like 130 degrees, and it's not for artists that chill in, you
know, super-super-nice houses."
Puddle of Mudd were up for the challenge, heading first to
Germany, where they played two shows for troops stationed there. During that
stop they met a soldier who'd just been wounded in Iraq by a roadside bomb, and
it drove home the reality of the situation they were headed into.
The soldier, who'd lost his eyes and most of his left arm,
was awarded the Bronze Star, which he gave to the band at a meet-and-greet in
Friedberg. "I just cried," said drummer Greg Upchurch.
After flying into Kuwait City, Kuwait, and having a
particularly disconcerting conversation with a security guard in the airport
("Don't let your guard down," he warned Ardito) the band traveled to
Tikrit.
Before a crowd featuring a throng of female soldiers
dancing and tossing their hair, Puddle of Mudd played a set that ended with the
hit single "She Hates Me." During the final song, Scantlin invited
three women wearing "We Want Up" shirts to come onstage. Before he
knew it, he said, 25 to 30 people were behind him. "At the end of the song,
all of the girls, everybody, just stage-dived into the crowd."
Before leaving Tikrit, Puddle of Mudd accepted an
invitation to come back and perform again. "War is scary," said
Upchurch, "but when you're with these people, it's like you're a part of
their family, so they make you feel very comfortable."
"I'm not scared anymore," said Scantlin.
"We met a lot of amazing people, and we all learned a lot about things we
didn't know about, so at the end of the day, I think we'd all go back."
— Alyssa Rashbaum, with additional reporting by Gideon
Yago