When Sense Field comes to the Newport Music Hall with the Mighty Mighty Bosstones Saturday night, singer Jonathan Bunch will be in familiar territory; he spent a part of the summer of 1994 working at Estrada, the Mexican restaurant on King Avenue.’You know those red and orange chairs out there? I painted those,’ Bunch said.Two years later, Sense Field is on the verge of fame. The band recently signed to Warner Bros. Records from Revelation Records, where they recorded their last three albums. Warner has just re-released the most recent, Building.Bunch said the major-label support has helped eliminate part-time jobs like the one he had at Estrada, allowing the band to concentrate on recording and touring.’Being able to be a full-time band has changed us,’ he said. ‘We’ve been able to focus on music all the time.’Signing with a major label has been a dream come true, Bunch said.’When you’re out there in the garage and nobody’s told you you’re good, it’s hard to get out there and feel like you’re good,’ he said.And Sense Field is good. Building is a really tight album. Bunch’s positive lyrics are backed up by Chris Evenson and Rodney Sellars’s powerful guitar playing.The band’s first single off the album, ‘Different Times,’ is hard and melodic at the same time, extolling listeners to ‘learn how to trust there are no wrong colors.’So what’s an Emo punk band doing opening for a ska-core group?’We met on the Warped Tour,’ Bunch explained. The bands had short stints on the tour at the same time, and got to know each other. The Bosstones then invited Sense Field to join them on their tour for a couple weeks, playing between the Bosstones and old-school ska band the Hepcats.’Dickie (Barrett of the Bosstones) was saying that if all three bands have horns and all three have the ska beat… the crowd would’ve been through two hours of ska’ and wouldn’t be as excited for the Bosstones, Bunch said. Sense Field is in there to break up the line-up, he said.’It’s a good mixture,’ Bunch said.The band has gotten mixed responses from the crowds, Bunch said.’Some kids are expecting a ska band and then they’re surprised the Bosstones had taken out a rock band,’ he said.Regardless of what the crowd expects from tomorrow’s show, Sense Field will be delivering some of the best punk rock to come out in a while.