Friday night at Room 710, Joey Hartle, frontman for The Warren Buffetts, was spotted buying the entire bar a round of drinks. The bar, nearly filled to its capacity, hosted two other bands who played after Hartle’s.
“We love our fans, and I just want to show them how much we appreciate them coming out early to listen to us. There are so many choices on a Friday night in this city,” says Hartle, a 36-year-old independently employed financial analyst by day. He has been singing and playing guitar with The Warren Buffetts for three years and counts David Bowie among his many musical influences.
Natalie Boushon, a fan and ex-girlfriend of Hartle’s can attest to him having a substantial income. “Joey has always been generous,” she said, while sipping the top-shelf vodka soda she ordered on Hartle’s tab.
“I’m so used to like, no furniture in these band guys’ apartments. Joey’s condo was all decked out in Havertys. He took care of my Orthotricylcen prescrip too, which was sweet.”
Boushon, who is no longer on the pill, was later seen making out with Josh Ahlden, lead guitarist of the last band to play that evening. In addition to playing guitar and singing for The Wee Look Prettys, Ahlden is an oil canvas painter by day and waits tables three days a week at Kerbey Lane. Among the The Wee Look Prettys’ various influences, Ahlden names David Bowie.
At the end of the evening, generous Hartle was seen loading an amplifier into his Lexus RX350, while telling someone on his iPhone, “it isn’t all about the music.”
Prior to his current gig, Hartle lived in San Jose, where he recorded three cds with The Capitalists, a three-piece band, also influenced heavily by David Bowie. The Capitalists split after the bassist brokered a lucrative real estate deal, selling his dead grandfather’s home to a Google executive, and subsequently moved to Costa Rica to run a deep-sea fishing service targeted towards white Google executive tourists with small penis complexes.
Hartle will visit his former bandmate at the end of the month, kicking off a three-month trek from Central America to Tierra Del Fuego on his recently purchased Ducati. Upon his return, The Warren Buffetts plan to record a full-length CD, the production costs of which will be wholly provided for by Hartle.