Getting into the Grove
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Marisa O’Neil
Local band Garden Grove has graduated from garage-band to
living-room-band status.
Not only has the band, comprised of Newport Beach high school
students, upgraded their practice space, they have their biggest gig
yet tonight. They’re playing at the Galaxy Concert Theatre, opening
for ‘80s band the Romantics -- whose hit “What I Like About You” came
out five years before most of Garden Grove’s members were even born.
“I know that song and it’s a good song,” Garden Grove bassist Eric
Mirowitz, 17, said. “It’s got to be one of the top-grossing songs of
all time, or up there. Everybody knows the song, even if they don’t
necessarily know the band.”
Eric and lead vocalist/guitarist Mikayel Currim, 17, started their
band four years ago as an outlet for their creative rock energies.
Both play in the Corona del Mar High School jazz band.
The name Garden Grove came from the city where Mikayel, who writes
most of the music and lyrics, bought his car.
“There’s no reason we came up with the name,” he said. “I just
thought it sounds cool.”
With bandmates Ryan Ratfield, 17, and Reed McMillan, 18, they
started practicing their indie-rock music in the garage of Eric’s
house.
“His parents are really good about it,” Mikayel said. “It gets
loud, but his parents like our music.”
But their neighbors, in Newport Beach’s port streets, weren’t
always as impressed. As their amplifiers got bigger and their music
got louder, they had a few visits from the cops.
So they moved the act indoors, to the Mirowitzes living room.
After gigs at backyard parties, races like last month’s Spirit Run
and Newport Beach bar Hogue Barmichael’s, they scored the Galaxy gig.
But tonight won’t be the first time a Mirowitz opened for The
Romantics. Eric’s uncle, Sheldon Mirowitz, was in a band that opened
for them back in the ‘80s.
Tonight’s show might be the height of Garden Grove’s career. Three
of four of its members will graduate from high school in a couple
months and go on to college.
Eric is considering Tulane University on a scholarship for
engineering. He wants to minor in music and maybe play in local New
Orleans clubs.
“I want to be on the frontier of combining engineering and music,”
he said. “[People are] making music with computers and doing a lot in
the field of algorithmic music to a generate piece of music that can
sound like Mozart or Beethoven.”
Mikayel, who scored a perfect 1600 on his SAT, is thinking of
following in his parents’ footsteps by going to Stanford. He wants to
keep playing music as a hobby, but plans on going to medical school.
“I’d definitely rather become a doctor,” he said. “A rock star’s
career is short-lived. It might be fun, but very short-lived. I’ve
always wanted to be a doctor.”
Growing up, Mikayel’s parents focused heavily on academics with
him, his mother, Saboohi, said. She and husband, Imran, prefer the
music from their native India and Pakistan, but are proud of
Mikayel’s musical success.
And, she added, Sheldon Mirowitz went on from his gig opening for
The Romantics to become a music professor and Emmy Award-winning
composer.
“So it does help, to open for the Romantics,” she said with a
laugh.
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