Search ErieReader.com
DonateBest of ErieTicketsAdvertiseDistributionIssuesAboutContactEventsNewsletter
Close
Donate!
Best of Erie 2025
The Reader Beat
Tickets
Newsletter Signup
Erie Reader Business Quarterly
City Guide
Events
Opinion
Features
Issues Archive
Events Calendar
Advertise
More
Arts & Culture
Business
Columns
Community
Environment
Film
From the Editors
Gem City Style
Local, Original Comics
Music Reviews
News & Politics
Recipes
Sports
Theater
Distribution Locations
About Us
Contact Us
Issue Archives
Internship Opportunities
Write for Us
Share:
Spotlight Events

Tesla Ready for a Shock

by Dave Gil de Rubio
View ProfileRSS Feed
April 24, 2019 at 10:15 AM
Ross Halfin

FRIDAY, APR. 26

Not unlike the late Nikola Tesla, the band's scientific namesake, Tesla has often quietly flown under the radar, ever since releasing their 1986 debut album, Mechanical Resonance.

Save for a brief span when the group's cover of 1970s one-hit wonders Five Man Electrical Band's "Signs" that was released on Tesla's own 1990 outing, Five Man Acoustical Jam, got the Sacramento quintet major crossover success, the fivesome has spent much of its career serving its hardcore fan base and getting accolades from the hard rock community.

These approving nods include a number of famous fans, such as the members of Def Leppard, who Tesla has known since officially meeting Phil Collen, the late Steve Clark, and Rick Allen at a club date the latter was playing in 1986. And while the groups have toured together regularly since that time, the relationship has evolved into the studio with Collen producing Tesla's newly released full-length, Shock, which founding member Frank Hannon explained started when the Leps guitarist produced and wrote the song "Save That Goodness," which wound up on Tesla's Mechanical Resonance Live.

"Phil has been a big fan of the band since he sat in and jammed with us when we toured with them in 1987. He was watching our show every night when we were opening for them (in 2016) and he thought to himself that he loved us and wanted to help us," Hannon explained. "So he came into our dressing room and said that he had a lot of energy and passion for Tesla and he wanted to help us. Some of the best artists collaborate and get help from their friends and then great things happen. Johnny Cash did it with Willie Nelson and Jimi Hendrix did it with Bob Dylan. We were really excited to have Phil come in. He showed up with the song and it obviously sounded a lot like something we would write and he was really excited about it. When someone is excited about something, you can feed off of it, so that's what we did."

Having spent most of the past couple of years on the road with Def Leppard and different co-headliners, including Styx and REO Speedwagon, Tesla continues to be road warriors and are currently playing smaller venues, where the group gets to stretch out quite a bit more.

Couple it with the fact that the band recently celebrated three decades since the release of its aforementioned 1986 debut (which was also commemorated by the release of 2016's Mechanical Resonance Live), there's been quite a bit of looking back for Hannon and company that's proven to be fun for fans and the band.

"It was a lot of fun [recording Mechanical Resonance Live] because it was like revisiting my youth. I was 17 years old when I was writing some of those songs," Hannon recalled. "So it brought me back to revisiting that energy of being a young teenager and playing guitar in that fashion. And realizing that some of that songwriting was pretty mature for that age. 'Changes,' 'Before My Eyes' and 'We're No Good Together'—some of that music is pretty mature for a teenager. [For our current tour], we don't just do Mechanical Resonance. We do a lot of everything."

Since Hannon and bassist Brian Wheat formed the band in Sacramento as City Kidd back in 1981, consistency has been the hallmark of the band, with the departure of guitarist Tommy Skeoch in 2006 for Dave Rude being the only lineup change. Over time, the band's path has found them recording for major and independent labels and releasing a string of overlooked records. The hard work paid off when Ronnie Montrose, the late legendary guitarist, took an interest in the band that led to some early success for Tesla.

"When we were young and playing the clubs, Ronnie Montrose saw us playing and was interested in producing and coaching up-and-coming bands in our Sacramento area," Hannon recalled. "He was scouting up-and-coming musicians and bands. He scouted us out and said he had this song he wanted us to record and it was 'Little Suzi.'"

Despite being labeled a hair metal outfit by lazy critics and music fans, Tesla has far more in common with a number of the classic rock acts the band covered on its two-volume 2007 Real to Reel project in 2007, For that outing, Tesla used analog tape and vintage equipment to record myriad classic rock songs originally cut by the likes of UFO, Mott the Hoople, The Temptations, Sly & the Family Stone, Black Sabbath and yes, Montrose. And while Hannon didn't get to record anything with the group by his personal musical heroes, Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson, he tries to incorporate their musical approach into his own songs when given the chance.

"[What I love about Cash and Nelson] are the storytelling and realness and simplicity of their voices, plus the way they tell a story in the song," he said. "They play with a style where they don't care what you think. They are just going out and doing it." — Dave Gil de Rubio

8 p.m. , with opening acts Red Reign and The Cringe // Warner Theatre, 811 State St. // $48 // teslatheband.com

Recommended Event

May
7

Tesla

Music
5/7/2026
{related-item}1:6706{/related-item}
tesla banderie tourtesla band tour datesrock concert erie paevents in erie

Featured Events

Today Tomorrow This Weekend

Magic The Gathering Tournament

Hobbies & Interests
May. 7th, 11:28 AM

WQLN Online Auction Fundraiser

Community & Causes
May. 8th

The Film Industry: An Economic Opportunity For Northwest Pennsylvania

Community & Causes
May. 8th, 11:28 AM to 1:30 PM

Santiago Angel at the Set Closet

Comedy
May. 8th, 11:28 AM

Seth Rudetsky: Divas by the Decade

Performing Arts
May. 8th, 11:28 AM

Submit Your Event   View Calendar

May 2026: Summer Preview
Erie Reader: Vol. 16, No. 5
View Past Issues
In This Issue
Erie Reader Business Quarterly
« Download PDF
View Articles »
Erie Reader Best of Erie City Guide 2023-2024

Popular This Week

COVID-19 Cases Rise Slightly In Erie County, Across Country

xRepresentx, Vice, Counterfeit, Cop Torture at BT

Ludacris Shows Behrend Some Southern Hospitality

Best of Erie 2014 Finalists

Hangin' Out at the South Pier

Related Articles

Comics Santiago Angel and Rebecca Kaplan Headline at The Set Closet

by Nick Warren29 minutes ago
NYC-based alt up-and-comers ascend to comedy genius

Divas by the Decade

by Cassandra Gripp2 hours ago
Seth Rudetsky closes out this MIAC Live season

Tree Talk: Black Chokeberry

by Hannah Rhodes5/6/2026, 10:15 AM
Small and mighty

Mabeline's Poetry Corner: Inclusive Vision

by Mabel Howard, Mabeline "The Artist"4/23/2026, 11:00 AM

Erie Reader Book Club: April 2026

by Ally Kutz4/16/2026, 11:00 AM
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Ashley Brown Steps In Time with Erie Philharmonic

by Thomas Taylor4/16/2026, 10:00 AM
While yogis asana to the violin sounds of Ann Yu
Member of Reporters Shield
© 2026 Great Lakes Online Media
PO Box 10963  //  Erie, PA 16514
Terms of Use Privacy Policy