At around the same time, Sleze moved out of the Bergstrom family basement. According to James Bergstrom, it was Layne’s idea for the band to get a room at a new rehearsal space in Ballard. He thinks the idea was to have a private space with greater freedom to practice, and to be in the scene with the other bands. But there was another issue. Mrs. Bergstrom is described by her son and others as a very religious woman. According to Bergstrom, “My mom prayed for all of us,” he said with a laugh. “She loved everybody.” Layne had a jacket with a pentagram on it, which he would take off and sneak in when he came to the house so as not to offend her.8 Nick Pollock agreed with Bergstrom’s explanation for the move, but also said Layne did not like that Bergstrom’s mother was unhappy about their music.
Thus began Layne’s involvement with the Music Bank.
PART II
1984–1989
Chapter 3
SCOTT HUNT WAS ATTENDING Idaho State University on a football scholarship. NCAA regulations forbid student athletes from holding a taxpaying job, so to get around this, Hunt traveled and performed with his band, Mirrors, in which he was the drummer. “We would travel through the summer and I’d make a butt-load of unreported cash as a musician, which saved my father a great deal of money,” Hunt said.
Around 1983, Mirrors played a show in Twin Falls, Idaho, and stopped by a diner after the gig. The diner had a copy of
If he accepted the job, he would have to quit his band, drop out of college, and move to Seattle. He spent the summer in the Seattle area, rehearsing with Brat at a warehouse, which had live electrical wires hanging from the ceiling, was infested with rats, and had no heating. Hunt had a ten-piece kit with nine cymbals. Every day he had to unload it from his truck, carry it up two flights of stairs, assemble it, play, and then break it down, carry it back downstairs, and load it on the truck. In that state of frustration, Hunt thought to himself, “This is horseshit. This is a major city. Why are we putting up with this?”
Hunt accepted the Brat offer, got a job in construction, and began looking for warehouse space. He and his boss, a drywaller named Jake Bostic, the brother of Brat’s manager, were working for two Swedish land developers named Bengt Von Haartman and Gabriel Marian. Hunt found a forty-thousand-square-foot warehouse in Ballard and had an idea that he wanted to pitch to Von Haartman and Marian. He saved up money to place an ad announcing Round the Sound Studios, which described “24 Hr. Practice Rooms,” and listed his phone number to book rooms, which ran in the September 1984 edition of
After the ad was published, Hunt would come home and find fifteen to twenty messages on his answering machine every night, to the point that the tape was full. “This town was so hungry for this idea,” Hunt said. He wrote down the names of everyone willing to commit three hundred to five hundred dollars, calculated the numbers, and drafted a business proposal. He estimated that renting the warehouse at twenty-one cents per square foot from a private landowner and then rerenting it at $1.60 would bring in twelve thousand dollars a month in revenues. Hunt offered to split the profits with Von Haartman and Marian fifty-fifty but needed them to sign the property lease and to provide a small team of employees to build and maintain the place. Von Haartman and Marian did their due diligence and ultimately agreed to it.