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Wailing Wizards

Only the 'Harry Potter' series could start its own music genre

Matt Leib

Issue date: 10/18/07 Section: Play
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They do not sell out stadiums. They do not perform wearing headbands and without shirts. There are no pyrotechnics. And there are no groupies (at least no apparent ones).

Instead, bands like Harry and the Potters tour libraries, schools and fan conventions. They wear gray crew-neck sweaters over red and gold ties and sport wire-rimmed glasses. This is the band credited as the progenitor of "Wizard Rock."

Wizard Rock is the musical genre inspired by the works of J.K. Rowling, author of the popular Harry Potter book series.

It has its origins in Norwood, Massachusetts in 2002 when in all the bands coming to a backyard rock show cancelled. Joe DeGeorge, 20, and his brother Paul, 28, who were hosting the show, needed something to give their audience.

Over the course of an hour, the brothers wrote a series of Harry Potter-themed songs to perform for the audience. Later that afternoon, Wizard Rock was officially born.

The DeGeorge brothers, who tour as Harry and the Potters, have said that at the time they had no idea about Harry Potter subculture and weren't even big fans of the series. But their act quickly gained a following, and in turn spawned other similarly themed bands.

These other bands have names that range from the similarly dubbed - Draco and the Malfoys - to the downright absurd - The Basilisk in Your Pasta. Their sounds are as equally broad based, ranging from rock to techno.

At its most basic level, the music of Wizard Rock bands pays tribute to the Harry Potter books, allowing fans of the series to take their love of the stories a little bit farther than just staking out a book store, scribbling a lightning bolt on their forehead and going to the movies.

But perhaps at its most profound, the movement serves as a platform for hundreds of aspiring musicians who might otherwise never have picked up an instrument.

"Half of these bands are populated by kids who are just learning to play an instrument and record music," says Matt, lead singer of The Whomping Willows, a Wizard Rock band based in Providence, R.I. "The beauty of Wizard Rock is that for many of the bands, it's nothing more than a learning experience."
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