Tag: American Idol

Mar
17

Spring Thaw 2011 Television Finally Comes to Life

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Spring Thaw 2011 Television Finally Comes to Life

Is April the new September?
To date, the 2010-11 television season has been a disappointing one, with the broadcasters failing to deliver a single new hit and the cable networks creatively under-performing, as well. The bright spots have been few and far between: FX’s smart but sadly short-lived detective series Terriers; HBO’s interesting but somewhat over-praised Prohibition-era mob drama Boardwalk Empire; AMC’s gripping horror smash The Walking Dead; PBS’ grandly entertaining period piece Downton Abbey; Starz’ savage stunner Spartacus: Gods of the Arena, and Syfy’s addictive Face Off (a formulaic but fun reality competition series that belongs alongside genre standouts Project Runway and Top Chef). In terms of raw numbers, the only new broadcast success has been NBC’s legal drama Harry’s Law, though most of its viewers are beyond the 18-49-year-olds over whom networks and advertisers salivate. Thank goodness CBS’ irresistible The Good Wife and ABC’s priceless Modern Family and recently revitalized Grey’s Anatomy continue to prove that broadcast can deliver the same smart, sophisticated, and sometimes sizzling grown-up fare that basic cable does so well.
The official season may have been an only sporadically satisfying slog so far, but suddenly, with just over two months to go until expectations slide and the summer season begins, a host of uncommonly ambitious programs are about to make spring the new fall, or April the new September, as far as the television business

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Mar
11

American Idol Good Show Probably Not a Good Work Environment

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American Idol Good Show Probably Not a Good Work Environment

Last year I got married, and my life changed in innumerable, positive ways. Among the many changes accompanying the evaporation of my bachelorhood, one in particular stands out: I now watch “American Idol.”
Well, that one stands out to me, anyway. Until this season, I’d never viewed a minute of the show, nor did I have any idea which pop singers it had spawned. But the new

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Mar
08

Rating the Top 13 Contestants on Season 10 of American Idol

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Rating the Top 13 Contestants on Season 10 of American Idol

This article was originally published on www.levinovey.com
Season 10 of American Idol is terrific. Whereas previous seasons have lost viewer interest and enthusiasm, I personally think that this might be the best season so far. Why?
In short, the contestants are much, much stronger as a group than in previous seasons. I think a lot of credit should be given to new judges Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez for helping to make this

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Mar
04

HuffPost Exclusive Jim Bianco Sinners Plus a Conversation with The Crystals La La Brooks and PBS Premieres Rock Pop Doo Wop

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HuffPost Exclusive Jim Bianco Sinners Plus a Conversation with The Crystals La La Brooks and PBS Premieres Rock Pop  Doo Wop

photo credit: Greg Cohen
LA Weekly declared that Jim Bianco “…has catapulted himself onto the level of eclectic song craft on par with Elvis Costello and Tom Waits.” Bianco’s album Loudmouth drops April 5th, with “Sinners” as the first single. “The song is not about bad people, it’s about good people who like to do bad things,” says Bianco, who raised over $30,000 from his fans to fund the release of Loudmouth.
Presented here is an exclusive HuffPost premiere of the single, “Sinners,” which just might become your new favorite party anthem.
SINNERS by JIMBIANCO
photo courtesy of TJL Productions
A Conversation with The Crystals’ La La Brooks
Mike Ragogna: La La, let’s first get an official recap of The Crystals’ history.
La La Brooks: I came on board when I was thirteen, I was going to school at PS73 in Brooklyn, and after school, I would have to go back into the building because my mom didn’t like us being on the

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Feb
24

The Apollo Theater and How It Shaped American Entertainment New Exhibit at Museum of the City of New York

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The Apollo Theater and How It Shaped American Entertainment New Exhibit at Museum of the City of New York

Since its inception as a black performance space in 1934, the Apollo Theater in Harlem has been a home to black performers through the years; it eventually became so well-known that it became a shrine to performers of all colors.
In its very early years–before 1934–the theater was a segregated burlesque hall, but the demise of burlesque gave birth to a new type of entertainment that was to have a profound effect on American culture. Nearly all forms of entertainment–comedy, dance, swing, jazz, rock ‘n’ roll, soul, hip hop, and more–were welcomed on the Apollo stage.
Some of the best-known names in entertainment launched and advanced their careers there–dancers Charles “Cholly” Atkins, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Bill “Bojangles” Robinson; band leaders Cab Calloway and Duke Ellington; comedians Redd Foxx and Jackie “Moms” Mabley; and musicians ranging from Louis Armstrong, James Brown, and Lionel Hampton to Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, Nancy Wilson, and the Jackson

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Jan
31

Reality TV Is Not Reality

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Reality TV Is Not Reality

What attracts millions of Americans each week to this cultural phenomenon known as “reality TV?” Where did the purveyors of shows such as “Survivor,” “Jersey Shore,” and “Wife Swap,” get the idea (I know, from Europe!), and why do so many of us buy into the idea that reality TV resembles reality in any way, shape or form? Only in George Orwell’s “1984″ reality can people be watched every moment of the day like on “Big Brother.” Only in William Gerald Golding’s “Lord of the Flies” reality can people “eliminate” one another on a desert island like on “Survivor.” Only in Ira Levin’s “The Stepford Wives” reality are all of the women attractive, shapely, and predominantly white like on the “Real Housewives” franchise. Only in Andy Warhol’s “fifteen minutes” reality do people whose only claim is that they won a reality TV show make them worthy of the fame and fortune of talk show appearances, book contracts, and speaking tours. Yet this is the “reality” of reality TV to which we are exposed and it is the reality that some of us may come to believe can be our reality.
Reality TV promotes the worst values and qualities in people — and disguises them all as entertainment. Reality TV has made the Seven Deadly Sins — pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony and sloth — attributes to be

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Jan
23

Is American Idol Tarnishing Steven Tylers Legacy

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Is American Idol Tarnishing Steven Tylers Legacy

With American Idol back for its 10th season, some music fans are wondering how Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler can fit into the mix at the judges table. Tyler, it was reported this week, was once in contention to replace Robert Plant in Led Zeppelin. The rocker’s role on the Fox singing competition is rightfully being scrutinized – Is he the new Simon Cowell? Or is he the new Paula Abdul? For Tyler, though, listening to so many aspiring singers could lead him back to the stage. “Don’t be surprised if the scores of Idol wannabes have him scrambling for Joe Perry and the boys sooner than later,” says one

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Jan
21

This Weeks Shining Falling Stars Steven Tyler and Holly Madison

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This Weeks Shining  Falling Stars Steven Tyler and Holly Madison

Shining Star – Steven Tyler
Perhaps taking a cue from one of his band’s most famous songs, Steven Tyler is showing some “Sweet Emotion” on “American Idol” – and proving those nasty naysayers wrong.
The Aerosmith frontman made his judging debut this week on FOX’s aging singing competition (full disclosure: I work for a FOX station). And the results, maybe surprisingly, were rock-star worthy.
A headline on ABCnews.com read: “Steven Tyler Clearly the Star as ‘American Idol’ Premieres”. The Palm Beach Post asked, “Steven Tyler, where ya been all my life?” And MTV.com declared: “Steven Tyler Leads a Night Full of

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Dec
30

Top 20 Music Stories of the Year

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Top 20 Music Stories of the Year

Here are TheComet.com’s Top 20 music stories of 2010, plus the 5 worst. We labored over this list. Read, enjoy, share and comment.
1. We Got Our Groupon On
Groupon took the world by storm in 2010 and reached a valuation of $1.35 billion. The discount site gave the music industry some hope by selling tickets to concerts including Bon Jovi and Snoop Dogg and selling music by such acts as Rihanna. Gilt Group also got in the game with an exclusive Bruno Mars show. We only wish the music industry had thought of it first.
2. We all Geeked Out on “Glee”
Who would have thought a TV series about glee club would become primetime gold? Thanks to creator Ryan Murphy, celebrity cameos and high school stereotypes and scenarios everyone can relate to, Fox has a bona fide hit that’s spawning top-selling soundtracks, young-adult novels, games and even “Glee” branded clothing. Finally, show choir kids can join the popular crowd.
3. New ‘American Idol’
How do you save a dying brand? Replace an unlikable judge with another diva and throw in Steven Tyler and do a deal with Universal Music Group. The new “Idol” is yet to air but you don’t need a crystal ball to see where it’s headed. Ratings may initially increase as viewers tune in to see J-Lo’s hair and outfits (Steven’s, too!), but can this karaoke show really survive another round?
4. Ticketmaster/Live Nation Merger
Yes, in January 2010, the Department of Justice cleared the merger of the largest ticketing entity and the largest promoter into one big super company. Since then it’s been one big brouhaha about ticket prices and transparency. Plus, the company’s chief Irving Azoff started tweeting!
5. Taylor Swift
This country/pop ingnue proved that little round things can still sell. Her new album “Speak Now” sold over 1 million copies in its first week. It made the music industry speechless.
6. Eminem
We can’t call it a comeback because to us, he never went away, even though 2009′s “Relapse” was a bit disappointing. His 2010 release “Recovery” was one of the top-selling album of the year and he landed the most Grammy nominations with 10. Go Em!
7. We Want Our iPad
Twas the year of the iPad and iPad apps. Apple sold over 8 million of these tablets in 2010. Another badge for Apple another blow to traditional newspapers and magazines, who keep loosing subscribers to the free interwebs.
8. Bon Jovi Biggest Touring Act
1.5 million Bon Jovi fans can’t be wrong. Even with those scandalous, old photos, the New Jersey rockers were the #1 touring act of 2010. The band’s ongoing “Circle Tour” grossed over $146 million since its February launch. No Jon, you weren’t born to follow.
9. Justin Bieber
What can we say about Bieber mania? Dolls, playing cards, a 3-D movie, sold out shows at Madison Square Garden, stampedes in malls, a cutting edge new hair style for man/boys, Grammy nominations. It’s The Bieb’s world. We just live in it.
10. The Beatles Available on iTunes
After almost a 10-year stand-off, the Beatles’ catalogue was finally made available on iTunes for the first time. The Fab Four sold over 2 million downloads in one week. Long live Beatlemania.
11. Boy Band Reunions
New Kids on the Block, Backstreet Boys, Take That…hey, we all have guilty pleasures! Some of our wildest musical dreams came true, as boy bands around the world finally reformed. Divine providence? Or, was it because these now 30-something males couldn’t find other jobs. Hmm.
12. The Mighty Bret Michaels
Whether you still weep over Poison’s “Every Rose Has Its Thorn” or never really dug the glam rock scene, Bret Michaels stole our hearts this year. Mighty Michaels survived an emergency appendectomy, brain hemorrhage, mini-stroke and hole in his heart to win “Celebrity Apprentice,” release a new record, star in another VH1 reality show and embark on a nationwide tour. After surviving three seasons of “Rock of Love,” he finally asked his longtime girlfriend Kristi Gibson to marry him. He even performed with Miley Cyrus and possibly her mom. This man is awesome.
13. BP Oil Spill/Relief Efforts
As often said, tragedy has a way of bringing people together. With the devastating BP oil spill, musicians – ranging from Korn, Ozzy Osbourne and Trent Reznor to Dr. John, Alan Jackson and Neil Young – rallied for relief. In addition to Gulf Coast concerts to raise money, 90 bands and musicians sent a letter to the White House, urging the President to lend his support in the restoration of the Gulf Coast and help the community get back on its feet.
14. Nashville Flood
Music City was rocked by a massive flood which displaced thousands of residents and flooded hundreds of businesses including extensive damage to the Grand Old Opry, the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, and the Opryland Hotel. But country artists, such as Vince Gill, Keith Urban, Reba McEntire, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, Faith Hill and Dolly Parton, raised millions of dollars for flood relief and put Nashville back on its feet.
15: Record Label Musical Chairs
So let’s see if we can get this straight. Sony Music exec Barry Weiss is going to Universal Music. Universal chief Doug Morris is said to be going to Sony and possibly brining his top lieutenants with him after grooming Lucian Grange to take his spot. Amanda Ghost got blown out of Epic. Tom Whalley got blown out of Warner. LA Reid is not doing X Factor. Rick Rubin did a Josh Groban album. And Clive Davis is still in the building.
16: EMI
Guy Hands, who founded Terra Firma Capital Partners and bid for EMI in 2007, sued Citigroup claiming he was duped into buying the label company. He lost. Now Citi may own the company before the end of the year. People are already lining up to buy the assets. Even Irving Azoff is interested.
17. Michael Jackson Mania
Since his passing, the King of Pop has been the subject of a documentary-concert film, dance video game, virtual world, and forthcoming Cirque du Soleil production, titled “The IMMORTAL World Tour.” Talks of the Discovery Channel airing a reenactment of Jackson’s autopsy left us ill. While “fans” desperately and sometimes creepily hold on to their idol, we can hear MJ sing “Leave Me Alone” from the grave. Is there no rest for the dead?
18. Kanye West’s Rants
Love him or hate him, Kanye West is the PR train wreck viewers can’t turn away from. Some hoped the Taylor Swift debacle would keep West quiet, but a little social networking site called Twitter let the star return to the scene loud and proud 24/7. Matt Lauer, beware, Kanye’s tweets know no bounds.
19. Jailed Rappers
Lil Wayne, Gucci Mane, T.I. – just when you thought they were out, they got pulled back in. It was a jailhouse turnstile this year, with sentence-serving by our hip-hop superstars at an all-time high. And we haven’t even mentioned DMX put in a mental health prison ward. At least most of them remained productive and kept delivering the hits.
20: Things That Didn’t Happen
Spotify didn’t launch in the US. Google didn’t launch music. iTunes didn’t go to the cloud.
TOP 5 WORST OF 2010:
1. Willow Smith Whipped Her Hair
Do we start with the terrible lyrics of “Whip My Hair”? The obnoxious, accompanying music video? Or, that creepy website? Willow Smith proved that with nine-year-olds, sometimes you just have to put your foot down. Perhaps not everyone should follow their musical dreams. Some things are best left for family and friends. And sometimes kids should just be kids.
The only good thing to come out of this song is Jimmy Fallon (as Neil Young) and Bruce Springsteen’s amazing spoof of the song.
2. Lady Gaga Meat Dress
If anyone can make salmonella look sexy, it would be Lady Gaga. Unfortunately, the famous red meat dress turned off the vegan, veggie, omni- and carnivore communities at the MTV VMAs – walking healthy hazards are simply never in style.
3. Bed Intruder Song
Yes, the Gregory Brothers’ “AutoTune the News” remix, now known as the “Bed Intruder Song,” was comedic. But, we also think the video is racist. And last time we checked, attempted rape was not funny. Sadly, it managed to be a top viewed video on YouTube and an iTunes hit. A sad moment in music history for 2010.
4. Black Eyed Peas’ “The Time (Dirty Bit)”
This may be the worst song since BEP went mainstream with Fergie. Not much to say other than Patrick Swayze is turning in his grave.
5. President Obama Interviewed on KISS FM by Ryan Seacrest
It’s just wrong on every level. The President of the United States should not be on Top 40 radio.

Follow Tamara Conniff on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/tamarastar

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
26

Educators and Everyone Should Give Thanks

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Educators and Everyone Should Give Thanks

Thanksgiving means several things.
Lots of birds die.
Gas prices rise because everyone is driving.
Summer is gone and it’s not coming back.
The local news predicts terrible weather so you will tune in to their station (I think they cross their fingers for the year’s first horrific storm).
Football is on and the Detroit Lions are still bad.
Football is on and stuffing is still bad. Don’t email me and say it’s great, because if it was, people would make it more than once a year.
Families get together and talk (although they should stay away from the following topics: politics, race, religion, Sarah Palin, Barack Obama, Dancing With the Stars, American Idol’s new judges, TSA and especially gas prices).
If your family has at least one educator (most have more… and some have a lot more) you shouldn’t speak of the things they aren’t thankful for: NCLB, testing, lack of funds, more paperwork, high-maintenance parents, not enough technology, under-performing schools, meetings, government’s unrealistic expectations and school food.
What all of you should talk about is kids.
We should all be thankful for them.
The next generation (and every one after that) has the opportunity to be our best generation (if adults don’t mess them up).
If you haven’t noticed the kids today aren’t terrible malcontents; they are smart.
Really smart.
Way smarter than we were at the same age (and very likely smarter than we are now).
They have the ability to do more (probably with less) than we ever did.
They will change things, which will make us old people nervous, but it will be for the better.
The world is in good hands and whether you are in education or not, you should be thankful for them.
Happy Thanksgiving everybody!
If you are a turkey, thank a vegetarian.

Follow Michael N. Smith on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/@principalspage

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
19

Kid Says the Darndest Things A Conversation With Kid Rock

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Kid Says the Darndest Things A Conversation With Kid Rock

I love Kid Rock. Okay, I’ve never been married to the man, or even been to a Waffle House with him. Still, I’ve had the pleasure of knowing the Artist Formerly Known As Bob Richie for quite a few years now, and he’s always been a straight shooter with me. At the risk of blowing Kid’s cover, he’s one of the most solid characters you’ll meet in music. Spending some very quality time with him at his home outside of Detroit this year, I could see up close that he’s a good, loving dad too.
Musically, Kid Rock has always been his own man. Who else would ask Lil Wayne to sit in with him at the CMA Awards, and make friends with Jon Stewart and Fox News too? Kid Rock’s latest album, Born Free, is his most moving, accomplished and, yes, mature work yet. This is not the work of a Devil Without A Cause or a rebel without a clue either. Produced by Rick Rubin, it’s an album that comes straight from the heart — and yes, that’s clearly one of his many organs in good working order.
What can you say about a great, soulful rock album with country touches that features Martina McBride and T.I. on one track called “Care” and Kid and Sheryl Crow painting a stunning new musical picture called “Collide” with no less than Bob’s longstanding idol Bob Seger backing them up on piano? Here’s what I can say? Do yourself a favor and buy it — and make a nice Kid happy for Christmas.
So what was it like to be on the bill for “The Rally To Restore Sanity And/Or Fear”?
It was a lot of fun. The Rally was billed as a non-political event, which I liked. Jon Stewart called me and we talked without any managers or anything. He’s a great guy. He sent me a care package from 2nd Avenue Deli in New York. First time I ever had kosher food! That corned beef sandwich on rye was rockin’. I’m a fan of Colbert, Stewart and Megyn Kelly. I like to stay well rounded.
You’re a man with deep roots in rock, rap and country at a time when the music world feels so fragmented. Is it fair to say that you’re a uniter, not a divider?
Rev Run [of Run DMC fame] gave me one of the most meaningful compliments I ever. He said, “I never met anyone who brings people together like you do. That’s what you do.” That’s high praise, especially from a great man like him. So I’m going to try and stay on that path. I just try to stay true to myself, and speak my mind — even when it gets me in trouble, like when I opened my big mouth about Steven Tyler and American Idol. Hey, I gotta be me.
Born Free reminds me of the great Bob Seger albums that I grew up listening to back when I was a kid in the Seventies. Bob appears on the album, along with Sheryl Crow on the track “Collide.” Is it fair to say that Bob Seger help set the template for what you’re doing now?
Absolutely. Not only is Bob Seger a role model for me musically — when I was growing up Bob’s records led me back to all the music that inspired him too. I really discovered the music of Stax, Chuck Berry, and Muscle Shoals through Bob. Loving what Bob does led me to dig back into music history enough to experience some of the amazing music that moved him growing up. Learning that music became my homework. Frankly it’s the only homework that I’ve ever successfully done. My biggest dream is that someday some kid will like what I do enough to dig back through my albums, then Bob’s records and then back into the past just like I did with him.
How was the relationship working with Rick Rubin as your producer on Born Free?
It was a very successful relationship. Hell, who am I kidding, it’s one of the only successful relationships I’ve ever had! Rick’s been a friend and advised me before, and we talked last time about working together on my previous album. But we knew our time would come eventually. So it was like, “Rick, let me get on the highway and then you can drive us both home.” Working with Rick was great.
From the time you played me “Born Free” back in Detroit, I could tell this song and the new album are very important to you.
You’re right. They are. It’s a strange time to be putting music out, and it’s my job to try and get this music out to the people who care. My main goal is to make music that stands the test of time. If I’m honest with myself, what I really hope is that “Born Free” will become a classic. It may never be a big hit, but that’s okay because some of the greatest records of all time weren’t the biggest hits right away. Hell, “Family Tradition” by Hank Williams, Jr. only reached #4 on the country charts and it doesn’t get better than that song. Right before my album came out this week, I was having a bad day. I felt like I had to “Slow My Roll” — to steal a title from myself. So I came into my recording studio and I saw one of the possessions that I most treasure. It’s an album that the great Johnny Cash took the time to send me. On it he wrote, “To Kid Rock, Thanks for keeping the music going. A Fan, Johnny Cash.” That’s what it’s all about now — keeping the music going.

This Blogger’s Books from
He Is . . . I Say: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Neil Diamond
by David Wild

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www.twitter.com/Wildaboutmusic

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
11

Bristol Palins Dancing Success

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Bristol Palins Dancing Success

She’s been one of the worst dancers of this or any season, but Bristol Palin has still made her way to the Dancing with the Stars final four somehow. This follows another week where a contestant with higher scores from judges was sent home as the woman famous for being daughter of a high profile political figure stayed.
While early in the season, judges may have been nicer to her because of her inexperience in the entertainment world, it’s been the viewer votes that have saved Bristol in recent weeks, and there is no secret that there is a campaign out there of Sarah Palin fans saving her.
Pro-Palin blogs, awash in their patriotic bunting, regularly encourage readers to cast multiple votes for the young mother, identified weekly without irony as “teen activist.”
There has been a long Republican voting tradition on the show, dating back to season three, which began ominously with Tucker Carlson first to be eliminated, and included country singer Sara Clark, who had GOP operatives working on her behalf.
It was onetime House Majority Leader Tom DeLay who asked supporters to keep voting for Evans the same year he stepped down from office to avoid a scandal investigation.
The country singer, he said, “has been a strong supporter of the Republican Party and represents good American values in the media.” Citing competition that year from “ultra liberal talk show host Jerry Springer,” DeLay said, “We need to send a message to Hollywood and the media that smut has no place on television by supporting good people like Sara Evans.”
Actually smut was cited in the ugly divorce case that caused Evans, in a surprise, to remove herself from the competition midseason. DeLay himself went on the show in season nine and danced three weeks before, like Evans, taking himself out of the competition. In this case, it was on doctor’s orders due to stress fractures.
But withdrawing rather than being taken out by voters has been a legacy for Evans and DeLay on the show — and Bristol Palin’s mom in her own governership.
Sarah Palin has popped up on the show to cheer her daughter, appearing in the audience one week and this week showing up during a rehearsal of what she was told was going to be a “scandalous” dance. Would it be, mother Palin asked, “lapdancey scandalous?”
It’s been common for reality show voters to carry certain contestants along for fun’s sake, most famously on American Idol with Sanjaya Malakar. Even that “ultra liberal” Springer made it to fifth place on Dancing with the Stars.
But to have someone so unskilled in the final four reflects badly on the judgment of the voters. Just as in that other election Bristol’s mom was out campaigning for last week.

Follow Roger Catlin on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
25

Motown The Hitmen Conversations with Smokey Robinson Jimmy Ryan and Sarah Sample

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Motown  The Hitmen Conversations with Smokey Robinson Jimmy Ryan and Sarah Sample

A Conversation with Smokey Robinson
Mike Ragogna: Smokey, there’s so much to go over, but let’s begin with your new album for Cracker Barrel, Now And Then. Can you tell us about the project?
Smokey Robinson: Well, it’s a combination of six brand new songs and six of my vintage songs, and I made the deal with Cracker Barrel through Time Life. I have my own label now, called Robso Records, and I have teamed up with Time Life’s label, Saguaro Records, and the Cracker Barrel deal was actually made through Time Life. Cracker Barrel is a restaurant, really, but it’s a store at the same time. You can go there, order your food, and go shop for a while until your food is ready. It’s a very, very unique place, and it’s a great place. In fact, I just got back from Nashville–I was in Nashville for the last couple of days meeting and greeting with the Cracker Barrel executives, and going around and seeing the restaurants and getting the feel of Cracker Barrel. It was absolutely fabulous–I mean, they rolled out the red carpet–and we had a great meeting and a great time there and I am the first black artist that Cracker Barrel has ever done a deal with in their history. So, it’s a groundbreaking event, and I’m very proud of that.
MR: Smokey, half the album has live versions of older hits. Were all the of those tracks recorded in ’10?
SR: Yeah, because when I found out that I was going to do the deal with Cracker Barrel, they wanted some vintage material as well as some of my new material because they felt that their clientele would enjoy that and that they would recognize my material to make for a better sales point. So, I recorded three of my concerts this year, live, and those are the songs that I picked from those three concerts to include in the Cracker Barrel album.
MR: Smokey, what were the venues, do you remember?
SR: No, man. I was traveling all over the place. (laughs)
MR: (laughs) I get it. Hey, how did you choose the live material from these concerts?
SR: Well, when you do your songs live, the time changes on them, you know? So, a lot of the other songs that would be some of my more popular songs like “Just To See Her,” “Cruisin’,” and old songs like that, the time on them is so long when we played them in person because we added stuff to them and we have sing-a-longs and stuff like that. The timing is so different, I just picked the ones I thought that people would recognize, and that had a relative time for a CD.
MR: Yeah, and when the band revs up on “Going To A Go-Go,” you know that these concerts were pretty special.
SR: Well, thank you very much man. In fact, “Going To A Go-Go” is our opening number every night.
MR: Nice. You’re still touring?
SR: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah man. Yeah, this year, I bit off a whole lot more than I really wanted to chew. When they called me to talk about the dates, my agent always tricks me because they call me a year ahead and say, “Hey man, for next year, we’ve got so and so…,” and I say, “Oh, that’s fine,” not realizing that when next year comes, it’s going to be jammed up against some stuff that was booked that year. This year, a lot of the stuff that I’ve done was booked last year, so the tour started at the end of February, and just ended two weeks ago.
MR: Oh my.
SR: Yeah. We’re in and out, of course. We’re not out there constantly, but that’s how long the tour was.
MR: I’ve got a couple more questions about the live tour. It seems like you changed a couple of the songs’ basics. For instance, “Ooo Baby Baby” became even more sultry and slowed down further. What gets you to that point where you kind of know where you want to take the song? Is it from wanting to evolve the song or is it just purely by feel?
SR: Well, it’s purely feel, but it happens over time, Michael. I want to say this to you, and I mean this from the bottom of my heart, every night–and I’ve sung “Ooo Baby Baby” thousands and thousands of times, back from the days when I first started singing it with The Miracles–every night, “Ooo Baby Baby” is a new song to me. I’ve never gotten to the point where I say, “Okay, I’ve got to hurry up and sing this, slosh over this and hurry up and get this out of the way because I know people want to here this. So, I’ll just sing this right quick and get that over with.” I’ve never gotten to that point as an artist. Every night, all those songs are new to me. I have a ball every night, man, it’s like I’ve never sung these songs before, I’m having a great time singing them, and they evolve, man. They change with time, and that’s what happened with “Ooh Baby Baby.”
MR: Well Smokey, you are considered one of the greatest artists ever, and everybody who will be reading this in The Huffington Post knows that Smokey Robinson is an American pop culture iconic name.
SR: I love you Michael. (laughs)
MR: And you know what? Bob Dylan loved you. I especially love his quote about you: “Smokey Robinson is the greatest poet that ever lived.”
SR: Well, I love Bob too. Bob’s a friend, man, in fact I saw Bob just recently. We did a show at the White House together, and I hadn’t seen Bob in so many years that it was good to see him. Yeah, Bob’s a friend, man.
MR: So, you played the White House?
SR: Yeah.
MR: What was that like?
SR: Oh, it was fantastic. In fact, I’ve played the White House three times this year. We actually played the White House, got caught in a snow blizzard, and we were snowed in there for three days. Nobody could get out of town. It was for Black History Month in February, and the First Lady did a show for Black History Month and I was there. I was there and Bob was there along with Jennifer Hudson, and a lot of people. It was a wonderful show, and we had a great time.
MR: Did you have any private time with the First Lady and President Obama?
SR: Oh yeah, everybody got a chance to spend a few minutes with them privately.
MR: Nice. I imagine he said complimentary things?
SR: Oh yeah, of course. They’re both Motown fans, man, and they let it be known, you know? They are wonderful, wonderful people, and it was just like sitting there, talking to old friends that you have known forever. There’s no, “I’m the President, and I’m the First Lady,” they don’t have any of that about them. It was a joy.
MR: Well, a lot of the world, I think, probably feels like they have a personal relationship with you because you’ve touched so many through your music.
SR: Well, thank you very much, Michael. I hope so, man.
MR: Let’s take it back to your early days for the readers. Your first hit with The Miracles was “Shop Around.”
SR: Well, that was the first million seller for The Miracles and me, and for Motown, yes it was. We’d had a record that was a hit before that called “Bad Girl,” and that was the record that really started our career. But it was with another label, Chess Records out of Chicago, and shortly after that, Berry started his own label and that was incredible.
MR: What was it like in the early days of Motown?
SR: Well, Berry Gordy is my best friend, and the very first day of Motown there were five people there–Berry Gordy and four others of us. He sat us down and said, “I’m getting ready to start my own record label, and we are not going to just make black music, we’re going to make music for the world. We’re going to make music for everybody, we’re going to make music that everybody can enjoy, and we’re going to make music with some great beats and some great stories.” That’s what we set out to do, and thank God, we accomplished that.
MR: You did. Also, it isn’t just your material from The Miracles that everybody is familiar with. Your songwriting has also been the backbone for other groups, with “My Girl,” “Get Ready,” My Guy,” and you wrote “Ain’t That Peculiar” and “I’ll Be Doggone” for Marvin Gaye.
SR: Yeah, I enjoyed that part of my life too, Michael, because all those people were my brothers and sisters–we were growing up there at Motown, and we were very close. And we still are. For those of us that are still alive, we’re very close. It doesn’t matter how long it’s been since we’ve seen each other because when we see each other, it’s just like we saw each other yesterday. We have that kind of bond, and I’m very proud to have had any kind of positive influence on any of their careers.
MR: I imagine that Smokey Robinson & The Miracles was a closely knit group.
SR: Absolutely.
MR: Was it a difficult decision to go solo?
SR: Not for me because I had no plans to go solo–that was not in my plans at all. When I left The Miracles, I had no plans of ever being on the outer edges of show business again ever in life. I was never going to make any records, I was never going to be on stage, I was never going to do any of that because we were moving from Detroit to Los Angeles, and I was just going to be Vice President. Maybe I would record some other people, write some songs for some other people, but not for myself because I’d been on the road and doing it since I was sixteen years old and I had had it. I said, “That’s it for me.” So, I was going to retire two years earlier than that, but The Miracles were guys that I’d grown up with–I’d known them since I was ten years old, and we had a group in elementary school. I told them I was going to retire, and then “Tears Of A Clown” came out, and that pushed us to a whole other level in our career. So, I waited for two more years after that, and then I retired. I had no intentions of being a solo artists, but then after about three years or so of not doing it, I guess my misery was showing because Berry Gordy, who I told you is my best friend, came into my office one day and said to me, “Hey man, I want you to do me a favor.” I said, “What?” because I thought he wanted me to go do something corporate–make a deal with somebody or something. He said, “I want you to get a band, and I want you to make a record, and I want you to get the hell out of here.” I said, “What did you say man?” He said, “I want you to get a band, I want you to make a record, and I want you to get the hell out of here.” I said, “What are you talking about man?” and he said, “Because you are miserable. When I see you miserable, it makes me miserable, and I don’t want to be miserable. So, I want you to get out of here. That’s why I came back to be a solo artist–I was miserable not being in show business.
MR: And you again released incredible music. I mean, “Being With You”…
SR: Alright, well, when I came back, my debut album for coming back to show business was an album called A Quiet Storm. I always considered myself to be a quiet singer, and I said that if I go back, I wanted to take show business by storm. So, that’s where A Quiet Storm came from. I always want to make quality music, man, because that’s how I was raised by Berry Gordy, and I always want to make quality music, always.
MR: Of course, Barry Gordy is equated with Motown. On the other hand, in the ’80s and on, it seems like you’ve been more of the “face” of classic Motown. Is that because you were also on the corporate side of things, in addition to being an artist, so you had a fuller breadth and depth of knowledge?
SR: Well, I don’t know. Perhaps that could have a great deal to do with it because he was teaching me the business as I was growing up there. I was an intricate part of it–I was there on the very first day. And when we first started, everybody was involved in everything, you know? So, he was teaching my the business aspect of it, so that may have something to do with what you’re saying here. We also were aware that this is show business, you know what I mean?
MR: Yeah.
SR: It’s not just show, it’s show “business.” So, you have to learn to take care of your business if you want to survive.
MR: Now, speaking of show business, in season eight of American Idol they performed a classic Motown night. That wasn’t your first appearance on the show. What was it like being around something like that, where two huge entities that have affected music are now merging to create this “happening” and you’re looking at this from the middle?
SR: It was fantastic. You know, I’ve been on American Idol every season since they started. The first season I was a guest judge because they were doing celebrity guest judges when they first came out. But every season, I’ve been on there doing something. It was wonderful that they decided to do the Motown music because that season Berry Gordy and I took the kids to Detroit and showed them the Motown museum, the paraphernalia and all that, and then I was a mentor. I really enjoyed that, that was awesome because American Idol, as far as I’m concerned, is the greatest visual platform that any artist could ever have in the history of show business. Right away, even those that don’t make the show, when they’re doing auditions, those people are seen by millions and millions of people all over the world. So, that’s a fantastic platform for artists.
MR: You’ve also done some other fun venues. You were on Daryl’s House, with Daryl Hall.
SR: Yeah, Daryl is my brother, man. So, we had a ball that day. You go up to Daryl’s House, eat, sit around and play some music–play some of his, play some of mine–and we just had a ball that day, man. It was great fun, absolutely.
MR: Daryl Hall, to me, is synonymous not only with Hall & Oates, but also with the Philly sound.
SR: Yeah, like I said, Daryl is my brother. He’s a good dude, man.
MR: Yeah, he’s great. Hey, what is your process for creating a song?
SR: There is no process for me, Michael, it just happens. I write part of a song almost every day of my life–a melody or something comes to me, or an idea for a song. I have so many unfinished songs around my house here, I can’t even tell you. It just happens for me. I’m not one of those temperamental writers. I don’t need to go away to the mountains for two months and isolate myself so I can write or rent a hut down by the beach and…I don’t write like that. I write on the plane, the bus, in the bathroom, on the golf course, and wherever it strikes me, man. So, it just happens.
MR: Nice. Do you have any favorite covers? Because, let’s face it, everybody who breathes oxygen and records has recorded a Smokey Robinson song, including this guy right here that you’re talking to.
SR: I love you more, Michael.
MR: (laughs) I don’t know, if you hear my version of “The Way You Do The Things You Do”…
SR: No, no, I would love it, man because I was about to answer your question with that statement. I don’t critique them. There are millions and millions of songs, Michael. There are millions of songs all over the world, okay? Most of the people or a lot of the people who have recorded my songs are songwriters themselves. So, when somebody picks one of my songs to record, I am so flattered by that because as a songwriter, that’s my dream.
MR: It’s so easy to want to record your material because it’s so emotional and smart.
SR: I want to write songs that people want to sing. I want to write songs that, if I had written them fifty years before then, they would have meant something to people, they would mean something now, and they will mean something fifty years from now. So, that’s the kind of song I want to write. When that happens, man, I love it.
MR: You have a body of work that includes The Miracles, Smokey Robinson, and all the people who have recorded your songs. Is there a song or two that charm you more than the others?
SR: Yeah, there are many of those, Michael. Like I said, I write all the time, and I do not have a favorite song. I’m a song lover. If I could tell you what my favorite song was, it would perhaps not even be a song that I had written. I love music, and I love songs–I’ve been hearing songs since I was two years old. So, I love songs. I have no idea what my favorite song is.
MR: Alright. Getting back to Now And Then, which you’re doing exclusively for Cracker Barrel. It takes tracks from your Time Flies When You’re Having Fun album, and it adds some live tracks to it. How did you decide which tracks to take from that album for this new record? Was it hard to choosing them?
SR: It was a hard choice, yes, but I just picked some songs that I felt would fit in with the ones that I picked for the live thing.
MR: For that album and for Now and Then, your new album, you have the song “Don’t Know Why,” which was the Norah Jones song.
SR: Yeah man, that was written by Jesse Harris, and that’s a wonderful song. I love that song–I loved that song the first time I heard it–and I started to record my Time Flies When You’re Having Fun CD about four years ago when that record was out. I heard it and I loved it, so I wanted to record it. See, I recorded all those songs in the studio, live, and we had a great time. I just loved that song, and it’s a familiar song, so that’s why I included that one on the Cracker Barrel album.
MR: Also, didn’t you co-write something with Brian Ray, Paul McCartney’s guitarist?
SR: Yeah, we did a song called “One Heartbeat.” Brian had “One Heartbeat” done, basically, when he brought that song to me. He’s a hell of a guitarist and a great songwriter. That particular song was practically done.
MR: Hey Smokey, do you have any advice for new artists and new songwriters?
SR: Yeah man–love it. That’s my first advice to them because it’s hard. Everybody wants to do it, so the competition is fierce. So, you’ve got to be able to withstand the knockdowns that you’re going to receive and the doors slammed in your face. If you love it enough to withstand that, then go for it.
Tracks:
1. Time Flies
2. Don’t Know Why
3. Girlfriend
4. One Time
5. That Place
6. Love Bath
7. Going to a Go-Go – Live
8. I Second That Emotion – Live
9. Ooo Baby Baby – Live
10. The Tears of a Clown – Live
11. Being with You – Live
12. The Tracks of My Tears – Live
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with Jimmy Ryan
Mike Ragogna: Good day, Mr. Jimmy Ryan, how the heck are you today?
Jimmy Ryan: I’m doing good–or, I’m sorry, I’m doing well.
MR: (laughs) Would you please tell the readers your history in the music business?
JR: Do we have hours and hours?
MR: (laughs) Yes. Yes, we do.
JR: I started off with The Critters. There was a precursor to The Critters called The Vibratones, but that was, like, a high school band. I started off with The Critters, who were, basically, local Jersey guys, and we got lucky in that the first time out, we had a minor hit called “Children And Flowers,” and then a big hit with “Younger Girl.” Then, we had another big hit with” Mr. Dieingly Sad,” and then a moderately big hit with “Don’t Let The Rain Fall Down On Me.” Then, we had legions of bombs. What happened was, literally fifty percent of the band got drafted, and the other fifty percent just couldn’t carry the load without the guys who got drafted. One of the guys who got drafted was Don Ciccone, our lead singer, which really kind of threw a wet blanket on the whole thing. I did not get drafted, I stayed in college, and when I came out of college, I just toured with The Critters for a little while.
When The Critters really couldn’t do it anymore, I briefly took a job in a guitar store called Dan Armstrong Guitars–Dan manufactures those really cool, clear plastic guitars that you ended up seeing The Stones use, and a bunch of other rock stars. Anyway, Dan’s girlfriend was Carly Simon. Carly was a close friend of mine. We used to all go out and double date together, and at one point, about a year after Dan and I parted ways, Carly and Dan parted ways, and about six months later, Carly called me up and said, “Hey, I got a record deal, do you want to play on my record?” I went, “What?” I had no idea that she had the talent to do that–I’d heard her sing occasionally, but it wasn’t really the central focus of what she was doing at that time–she was just Carly, Dan’s girlfriend. When I went into the studio and heard what she was doing, I was absolutely blown away. It was a totally new person and that started a twenty-one year career.
I played on her very first record, and I worked with her right through ’92, when my second son was born and going out on the road wasn’t really an option anymore. At that point, I started scoring jingles, radio commercials, TV commercials, and stuff like that, and I did that for a bunch of years and had some good hits. I did McDonalds, Ford, Chevy–things like that. I got tired of doing that and I really wanted to do film scoring and TV scoring, so then I delved into that and I had really good success on the first try with a movie called My Sergei, which aired on CBS. It was the story of Ekaterina Gordeeva and Sergei Grinkov, two multi-gold, medal-winning skaters. Sergei, in the middle of practice, had a massive heart attack at twenty-six years old, and this was the story of their life and their love and the whole thing. It was a beautiful movie. I’ve done bunches of stuff since then, and that’s, basically, what I’m doing now–still scoring films for TV, promos, and some news themes. Most of the music on CNBC during the financial programs is mine.
MR: So, you got into news programs.
JR: A lot of the CBS, NBC, and ABC local networks across the country have had me do their music via the Gannett Corporation. Gannett owns and broadcasts a bunch of those stations. That’s it in a nutshell, and I occasionally play live like I’m going to do tonight.
MR: Now, people also will remember your guitar lead on “You’re So Vain.” All these years later, that’s one of the most memorable guitar solos ever. How do you feel about having contributed to music culture like that?
JR: It’s one of those things where when you really try to do something like that, I don’t know how successful you are. That solo was…I wouldn’t call it a mistake, but it was kind of a mistake. I was just fooling around, grabbed a bottle neck, and I noticed faces in the control room after I had run off kind of a sketch of what I thought I might do–just the first thing off the top of my head. I went inside and said, “Yeah, something like that. I don’t know.” They’re looking at each other, “Something like that?” I said, “Yeah.” They said, “You’re done.” So, I said, “No, that’s just a sketch. I want to perfect it,” and they said, “You are done, sir. It’s brilliant. Get out of here.” That was it–it was a one shot deal off the top of my head. And if I had sat there to try and create that solo, it would have taken a week and been horrible. It’s just one of those lucky moments where everything lined up, and you just threw something out and it worked.
MR: I love it, spontaneity
JR: Well, spontaneity works when you’ve practiced and your fingers work. Sometimes, you’re spontaneous, but you’re not warmed-up, so there are a lot of mistakes, but I happened to have been playing all afternoon, so I was warmed up. Luckily, it got executed pretty much the way I wanted it to–at least for the sketch. I wouldn’t have picked those notes again because I wanted to change some things and take the slide out for some things, and they said, “Oh, no, no, no.” What I find more fun than doing that was that I got replaced for a while by David Spinoza in her touring band because I was working with another band and couldn’t do it, so she replaced me with David and made him do my solo. David is this incredible guitar player and he does not need me for coaching, I can assure you. But all the same, she made him do my solo, and every muzak version of that song does my solo note for note as well as they can.
MR: And Carly recently revisited the song on her rerecord album, Never Been Gone.
JR: I didn’t have any involvement in that, but I think she did “You’re So Vain.”
MR: I actually interviewed her for that record a while back, though I can’t remember for sure it copped your lead.
JR: I don’t know, I’d have to go back and listen. I haven’t had much contact with her or her music since ’92, really. I briefly run into her now and then, but I haven’t been following her career very closely. I occasionally hear something or see a video on YouTube, but I don’t remember.
MR: By the way, she sent her love to you in the interview I did with her for The Huffington Post. She thinks you’re the bees’ knees.
JR: Oh, that’s great, she’s a sweetheart.
MR: There are a number of other artists that you’ve worked with over the years such as Paul McCartney, right?
JR: Well, yes and no. It’s actually a very funny story. Because of my connection with Richard Perry–who was Carly’s producer–and, at the time, was connected to everybody in the world, when we were doing the No Secrets album, we were in the studio where I was doing an overdub, and I look into the control room because somebody had just walked in. I’m looking and I’m going, “Oh no, I am not seeing what I think I’m seeing.” Paul and Linda McCartney walked into the control room. We were working at George Martin’s studio, AIR, and Paul was there–nobody had any idea he was working there. So, I was like, “Oh my God.” One of my greatest heroes was like twenty feet away. So, he came out into the studio area where everybody was chatting and he said, “So, I got called to do a movie score and I’ve never done one before. I don’t know what I’m doing really, but could I play the song for you, and maybe you can give me some critique on it or something.” Then, he sits down and plays “Live And Let Die” at the piano.
We’re all looking at each other–we’re going to critique Paul McCartney on this song, which is absolutely freaking amazing? No, I think we’re going to tell him it’s absolutely freaking amazing. So, the next day he recorded it, but that evening we were doing vocals for–I can’t remember what it was–and he was still hanging around because they were just prepping, he was going over the charts with George Martin, and he was just hanging out and having fun. So, he saw we were having trouble trying to work it out–the singers were Doris Troy, Bonnie Bramlett, myself, and Carly, and Paul just came out and said, “You know, I think if you do this, you can…” Now, we’re all singing backups with Paul McCartney. So, worked with Paul McCartney? Yes, but not exactly in his band, he just came out and did vocals on our album. It was phenomenal. There is one other story, and you can edit this out because I drink lots of coffee and talk way too much. (laughs)
MR: (laughs) I think the song you were talking about was her cover of James Taylor’s “Night Owl.”
JR: I don’t remember because that was like thirty-nine years ago, I guess.
MR: Right, but you go back further. Didn’t you first appear on the Anticipation album?
MR: For the Anticipation, Carly recorded one of your songs, didn’t she?
JR: Yes she did. Actually, we wrote it together. I came in with an instrumental and a melody and said, “Why don’t you write some lyrics to this?” She did, and we all liked it, so we recorded it.
MR: Nice. Now fork over the other Paul McCartney story.
JR: I was talking about the Richard Perry connection–Richard calls me up and says, “Hey, McCartney is auditioning his new band at the Hard Rock. The Hard Rock in London would actually do that, they’d have bands in there, unlike the commercial Hark Rocks we know here, they really were connected with the rock stars, and the guitars on the wall really were the rock star’s guitars, not faux guitars. Anyway, McCartney chose Hard Rock to debut Wings. His guitar player was Henry McCullough from Stone The Crows–Henry and I knew each other from England, and we used to hang out. Anyway, I go to it, it was kind of good, and Henry looks over to me–I’m very close to him–and he goes, “Jimmy, come take the guitar, mate. I’m f**ked-up and I can’t play.” He was so freakin’ drunk, he could barely stand up. So, he tosses me his Les Paul, I put the thing on, and they were playing a song that was easy enough to pick up, so I started playing…obviously it took a second for me to figure out what I was doing. Then, Paul turned around, looked at me, and goes, “What the…?” and I go, “Hi.” I just started playing and he shrugged his shoulders, “Oh well,” and there I was in Wings for fifteen minutes or whatever it was.
MR: Can you imagine if that had become a more permanent gig?
JR: Yeah, that would have been fun. I actually am friends with one of the guys who did do the permanent gig, Steve Holley, and he said it was fun. They used to hang out a lot, Linda would cook them nice vegetarian meals, and it was a real nice little family.
MR: How do you go back to a normal life after being in that sphere?
JR: I have no idea. I know people still love him. He played Radio City Music Hall a few months ago and brought the house down. He actually did it for the David Lynch Foundation–it was a charity deal, and, apparently, everybody loved it. He ended up pulling about half his songs from the video and only picked the best of the best to show, which is fine. Believe me, he has earned the right to do whatever he wants.
MR: For a time, you were going from session to session in New York, had your own production company, and worn many hats in your career. Now, you’re getting some of your ol’ studio buddies for a band called The Hitmen.
JR: Yes, yes.
MR: What’s the story behind The Hitmen?
JR: The Four Seasons were originally Frankie Valli, Tommy DeVito, Nick Massi, and Bob Gaudio, who wrote all the songs. Nick Massi passed away, Tommy DeVito embezzled, I think three million dollars–it’s all in Jersey Boys, the play. Anyway, he gracefully bowed out and turned over The Four Seasons to Frankie Valli and Bob Gaudio. Bob didn’t want to tour anymore–Bob’s the writer–so, now it was Frankie, and Frankie put this new band together called Frankie Valli And The Four Seasons, and that was Don Ciccone from The Critters, Lee Shapiro, Gerry Polci the drummer, and I forget the guitar player’s name–I’ve never met him and I don’t know him. They toured for a while, Frankie got a lot older, and from what I understand, he had an ear operation that caused some problems with his singing, but I don’t know the whole story.
Anyway, these guys all kind of went their separate ways. Fast forward, they all thought, “Wouldn’t it be fun to put a band together that is a combination of all the people we played with?” So, Don, Lee, and Gerry started to play with the idea, and then they pulled in a guy named Larry Gates, who had played with Carole King and a bunch of stars. But they needed a fifth guy, somebody to fill it out. So, they had somebody, and he didn’t work out because he hadn’t played with anybody and was a pain in the butt, so they dumped him. Lee said, “Why don’t you call Ryan?” Don said, “He’s never going to want to do that. I’ve been trying to get him to put The Critters together since they fell apart, and he’s always said no.” Lee said, “Just give it a shot, you never know.” So, they called me and I said, “Are you kidding me? I’d do it in a heartbeat.” So, we did a rehearsal, everybody got assigned their parts, and I am Frankie Valli in this particular production–I get to sing all of those screeching high parts. Don just does himself because he’s the one who actually sang, “Who Loves You?” Gerry plays himself, he’s the one who sang, “Oh, What A Night.” So, we got the original guys doing their original songs, we will do The Critter songs, Don will do his, and I will do mine.
I worked on Jim Croce’s first album, so I’m going to do a couple of Jim Croce songs. I also did Cat Stevens’ Buddha And The Chocolate Box album, so I’m going to be performing “Peace Train” and “Bitter Blue.” All of them were part of Tommy James And The Shondells for a while–they were all touring with him–so, we’re going to do “Mony Mony,” and I think we might do “Hanky Panky,” although I’m trying to vote against that–not my favorite song. So, the band is going to do a series of the songs that we played on. It’s kind of like the East Coast version of The Wrecking Crew. The Wrecking Crew were all studio musicians, but we actually toured with all these people, and went out on the road to perform with them. So, that’s who they are. We’ve had a couple of rehearsals and it’s really fun. The singing is very strong–that’s the part that usually makes or breaks a band, can they really carry the tunes? Well, these guys can sing, you know? On top of that, they’re great players, every one of them.
MR: So, where will The Hitmen be playing?
JR: We are playing at Mexicali, which is in Teaneck, New Jersey, on November 11th, so if you’re within earshot of this thing please come out and join us. It’s a big place, I think it holds about two-hundred ten people or something like that, and that’s our debut and our test. We all decided that we’ve been doing this for a long time, and the only reason we would do something like this is if it was really good, really fun, and was making a little money. So, we’re going to take it for a test drive on the 11th, and if we like it and people like it, we’ll keep going. If it sucks, we’re out of there.
MR: But it’s official, David Spinoza is not a part of this?
JR: (laughs) David Spinoza is not a part of this. I saw David about a year ago, and he told me he had retired. He’s living up in New England and skis a lot. He was the music director for a couple of Letterman-type shows, and he had a phenomenal career, so I think he’s probably enjoying retirement right now. I know he’s playing every now and then, but nobody is doing much these days–there’s no music business. (laughs)
MR: Let’s talk about that. Having been in the music business, being associated with so many great artists, from your perspective, what does it look like these days?
JR: Well, I’ve had many, many careers in the music business, and I would not say it had so much to do with talent, but had much more to do with survival. (laughs) As things disappear, I quickly morph into whatever I can to stay in the music business, and continue to play, write, and have fun in music. So, it depends on which area you’re talking about, but I think most areas of the music business are suffering, and I’ll talk briefly about the areas I know.
I don’t know too much about the record business at this point because I’m not really in it–I’m doing live performing and TV scoring. The actual making of records has changed a lot because most people make their records at home. The price of equipment has dropped to the point where everybody has Pro Tools and a decent console, and you can really do a phenomenal job with a project in the home studio. But marketing it is another story. I subscribe to an email list of, basically, the movers and shakers in the industry, and to hear them talk about it, the record companies are having such a hard time. They really want to sell hardware and nobody is buying hardware–they don’t want CDs, they want downloads and they don’t want to pay for it. Once something is given away, it’s so difficult to sell it; when the original Napster came out, you could get all your music for free. ITunes has done phenomenally, and I make my kids buy their songs, and I will not let anyone in my family download for free. But you have vast numbers of people who download for free, and it’s very difficult to find a business model that makes it profitable to make records. Playing live–you can’t steal a live performance. So, any bands that have any reputation are doing fine playing live. There are exceptions like Lady Gaga, who will not want for a means ever in her life. But most of the other bands are having trouble.
Like I said, I’m not the expert on that, and I know a lot more about the business that I was in, which was TV promos. Those would be movie previews, shows coming up on Showtime, HBO, Lifetime, ESPN, and things like that, but that business has virtually gone away. What has happened is, the library business–which is just composers writing any kind of music for any reason giving it to one of these big libraries–hope that the library will put it on a massive bunch of CDs and somebody will use it. So, for the music libraries, this is a really good business because they have completely and totally taken over all but the big TV themes. Most of the advertising music–except for big, gigantic clients like McDonalds–is all library music. The reason is library music costs less than ten percent of what it costs to hire somebody like me. So, even if it’s not good, economically, it’s almost impossible for the producers to justify to the stockholders why they’re spending money on original music when this music is okay. It’s not a good fit, but it’s okay and it’s just dirt cheap. So, that business is gone forever, and it will probably never come back because now everybody is trying to write library music, so library music is getting better. News music is the next in line.
Now, companies are coming up with syndicated news packages. I’ve been called twice in the last month and asked if I have a syndicated news package, and I say, “No, I custom make them for you.” I argue, “Do you want to sound like every other station? Do you want something that was written ten years ago to represent you?” and most of them say, “No, but the price is right, so that’s what we’re going to do.” And they wonder why nobody is listening to broadcast news. That business is going away, and that really is what has been financing my boat here. So, who knows where it’s going to go next? Maybe retirement.
MR: (laughs) Uh-huh. I doubt you’d ever give them digits of yours a rest.
JR: No, I will always play, and that’s what I’m doing now. I have several little groups that I play with just for fun, and a little cash. It’s fine–I’m a good saver, and I’m not going to starve. In the good years, I put money away, so it’s not the end of the world. But it is a new business, and I feel bad for young musicians coming up because where there used to be many, many outlets, that business has thinned. Writing for libraries…there are a million writers writing for libraries, and with any business in a situation like that, accurate accounting is just unheard of. All they can keep track of is that money is coming in, and they don’t care from where. When you have three or four-hundred writers and you distribute maybe two-hundred unique CDs to every TV and radio station in the world, some station in London says, “We like cut twelve on CD twenty-seven. Here’s three-hundred dollars for it.” The money goes in and they say, “What did they say? What cut did they want? Ah, who cares? The check cleared.” So, the writer doesn’t get paid, but the library does.
Does it get registered with ASCAP? If you’re lucky. You’re lucky if somebody remembers and keeps a cue sheet, but it’s just a lot of detail that nobody cares about. There are no laws governing it. ASCAP says, “You have to pay us if you play it,” but ASCAP receives the blanket license from one of these stations and there’s no information about what was played, so nobody gets paid.
MR: Having served your country well all these years in the music business, what advice might you have for new artists that want to get started?
JR: Boy, it’s tough. I’ve got two very talented kids, and I’m telling them that a law degree would be really good. (laughs) I don’t know. It’s a new business and it hasn’t formed yet. We’re in a morphing state right now, where it’s not clear where it’s going. I would be the last person to say that if music is your passion, forget about it–I would never say that. If you love music, play music, but be prepared to be hungry. Truthfully, that’s always been the case–a few bad artists make it to the top, but for the most part, the people who really make it to the top had all the stars line up. They had the right connections, the talent, or if they don’t have the talent, they have the looks. Some combination takes them up there, but it’s a number of things, not just the talent. You have to have a look, you have to have the charisma, you have to have a business savvy about you–although in the ’50s, that wasn’t necessary. But in the ’50s, nobody made any money. There are a number of things that are very, very important. You have to be good with people, you have to be a good negotiator, and there are so many things involved that it’s kind of like winning the lottery. Do it, by all means, but have something in your back pocket to feed yourself because it can be a long, hard haul, and you have to be realistic about it.
I actually didn’t go to college for music, I went for electrical engineering. Even not knowing what was coming, I still went to college for a different career. While I was in college I had a hit, so that’s what changed the tide for me, but I wasn’t counting on it. I wanted it to be that way, I wanted to have a hit, and from the time I picked up a guitar, which was eight years old, I wanted to be Elvis Presley. I loved music and I loved performing, but around age seventeen or eighteen, all my friends were going to college and nothing was happening. I wasn’t going to play bars for the rest of my life, so I went to college. I went to Villanova, Don Ciccone was my roommate, and, luckily, in my sophomore year, “Younger Girl” came out, and that was kind of the end of it. I made it through about two months of my junior year; coming home at four o’clock in the morning from being on tour on a Sunday night, and then going to an eight o’clock calculus class didn’t work. So, I dropped out and that was the end of college for me. But I did go to college fully intending to graduate and be an electrical engineer had the music thing not worked out. I would say do that–keep your bases covered–and if it works out for you, it works out, but don’t cut off all your resources to do it. I just don’t think that makes any sense.
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with Sarah Sample
Mike Ragogna: Sarah, let’s catch everyone up on your new album.
Sarah Sample: So, I had released my third album, which was called Born To Fly, and that actually was just an EP that we put out with just five songs. Since then, I have gotten busy writing, touring, and other things, and I decided that I was feeling the urge to write a new album. So, we wrote all new songs for this album called Someday, Someday, which was released on Oct. 12th, and I’m really excited about it. It feels like a first album–I don’t know how to explain how a fourth album can be a first album–but it feels like a first in a lot of ways for some reason. I don’t know if that’s just the progression that my career has had or the saturation time I’ve had making music that has allowed me, for some reason or another, to be able to meet this group of songs at a different level than I have before.
MR: Many artists seem to have a similar experience.
SS: Yeah, it’s interesting because I go to a song school every year. I’ve been going for about nine years, and the community is amazing. It’s held in Colorado, it’s part of the Folks Festival, and you get to hear classes on songwriting from songwriter greats like Darryl Scott, Mary Gauthier, Jonathan Brooke, and kind of on and on. This year, Darryl Scott was talking about finding your true writer’s voice and how important it is to really listen to what the song wants. He talked about how when we’re writing songs and the inspiration comes, that song has its own idea of what it wants to be, and we kind of have to throw the rules out the window and let the song be the judge of what it wants to do. So, I think what I mean by saying “this feels like a first album,” is that it feels like I’ve found my writer’s voice more so than I ever have before. With this album, I feel like I’ve really held true to the integrity of that inspiration. So, I think it’s been a really interesting process to go through this time around.
MR: In the past, labels understood that it takes a little while before an artist comes into their own, that it took a nurturing, maturing process. Also, you’ve gone through more experiences, you’ve got more tools in your kit, and it’s great that you pass through Iowa every few months.
SS: Well, it’s not too often. I generally tour in the West, but with this album release, I started touring more in the Midwest and East Coast in the last two years or so.
MR: Can you go into what you’ve been doing as a creative artist over the last few years?
SS: I feel like the term “wanderlust” kind of encompasses my life. I’ve probably moved twenty-five times, and that really hasn’t slowed down in the last ten years. I’ve lived mostly in the West, but I’ve lived in Austin, Wyoming, Texas, Oregon, Utah, and I’ve been in Seattle for the last three years, then just this Summer, my family moved to Boise, Idaho, for my husband’s job. The great thing about moving around so much is that I tour so much anyway, it doesn’t really matter to me too much where I live. It also allows me to get a taste of different artist communities and seek out the artists wherever I’m at. Seattle was an amazing place to be for music and arts, and I loved living there for the last three years or so. With this new album, Someday, Someday, we hired a filmmaker to document the making of the album and also a little bit of touring. I do a lot of house concerts–about half of my touring is to house concerts or concert series’. I don’t know, I’m trying do things a little differently or up the ante with every album I release, maybe to try to get the word out more about what I’m doing.
MR: Can you go into the venues a bit more?
SS: House concerts, I think, are THE singer-songwriter friendly venue because there are established house concert series’, and then I also do a lot of fan-hosted concerts. I’ll send an email out to my fan list and say, “I’m looking for a show in Iowa–or wherever–on these dates. Does anybody want to host me in their living room?” It’s been a great way to meet people, and I think there’s something really special about hearing music in a home, or in an intimate environment. It also means playing in less noisy bars, the more house concerts I play. So, I play everything from solo shows to full band shows, and as far as the venues that we play, we play everything from house concerts to festivals, so we kind of play it all. I was really lucky to be able to have been an artist on the Cayamo Cruise last February, which is a music cruise that leaves from Florida and it has pretty much every hero I’ve ever imagined on it like Darryl Scott, Patty Griffin, Lyle Lovett, Buddy Miller, Brandy Carlile, Indigo Girls, and on and on. That was pretty amazing, so that was one of my favorite show weeks of the year.
MR: Sarah, Someday, Someday is a fan-funded album which is becoming more popular for DIY artists. Can you go into the details?
SS: Yeah, I have a lot of singer-songwriter peers who I’ve noticed over the last couple of years have done fan-funded albums. It is a lot of work to put together a campaign, and a lot of trust that you’re putting into your fans to put yourself out there and say, “I need to raise this much money, can you help me do it?” At the same time, it became a really fun way for me to get my community and my fans involved for this album because they were involved before I even started recording. I came up with five or six different levels of sponsorship, each level was a different amount of money, and each came with different incentives–from certain numbers of signed copies of the album, all the way up to me flying wherever in the country to play a house concert for however many people you wanted to invite. So, I really liked the idea of involving fans, and there are a lot of websites out there that are kind of already set up to create a campaign to do such a thing. I had a lot of fun with it, I thought it was really great, and I was humbled by the turnout of people who showed up and said, “I want to help you make this album.”
MR: Personally, I think it’s really important for both artists and fans to recognize alternate ways of recording and releasing projects.
SS: I was talking to my producer, and he was saying that recording studios are going under by the dozens because there isn’t enough business. I think that’s because a lot of people are forced to make their own albums because to make a high quality studio album as an independent artist costs anywhere from ten to thirty grand easily. I was in Nashville a week ago talking to a girl who is a manager at a recording studio, and they don’t make an album for less than thirty-thousand dollars. Thirty-thousand dollars is a ton of money for someone who is getting paid in coffee to play coffee houses across America. It’s a really interesting dilemma we’re facing–how do we continue to make a good product and still have it be competitive. The old tradition was, you took out a big fat loan, recorded an album, and then you spent two years paying off that loan, so when you’re ready to record a new album, you have nothing. I think the fan-funded album is a great way to jumpstart the process and not fall so far behind.
MR: Everything is so cost prohibitive. Seriously, how does an artist make money now.
SS: That’s so true. I was reading an article about this local record store and they were just saying at the end of the day that digital music has ruined a lot of the industry because so many people copy or burn things, and they’re not buying physical albums like they used to. Although I’m getting paid to perform, where I really make my money is selling CDs, and the only place I really sell CDs is at live shows. I do sell physical CDs off my website, but in general, I think most people have turned over to this digital age of music, where they’re buying an album for ten bucks on iTunes, and the artist is seeing six or seven dollars of that, compared to the fifteen dollars they would have gotten from the sale of a physical version of it. I’m not against digital music at all, but it does raise an interesting question of how does an artist make money
MR: Nice. Now, with the new album, did you take a different artistic approach than you had with your previous albums? You said earlier that this feels like your first album, so in what ways do you listen to it now and feel that way?
SS: I think, for me, the songwriting is most important. When I listen to a piece of music, I want the song to hold its own weight and be able to stand on its own feet. So, I’m mostly concerned with the quality of the song without any production. I wanted every song on this album to be able to be played with just me and a guitar, or to be able to be played with a full band and still have it be a meaningful interaction. I felt like I did that, and I felt like I was true to that inspiration that the songs were asking for. We recorded this album as a live album, so we had about ten players–some who play with me regularly and some that have played with my on other albums–and we all got into this great, big studio called June Audio with our producer Scott Wiley. We literally just sat down with the songs and spent some time getting to know them, just playing them over and over, and we literally just kind of pressed the record. The caliber and the quality of the musicians that were there was at such a level that we could do that. I know that that’s not an option for some people, or even that some people would want that, but there’s something that feels really dreamy about “what you hear is what you get.” When you listen to my album, that actually happened right there in that moment. I think that’s how a lot of albums used to be recorded in the ’60s and ’70s, and there’s something about a live take that is really appealing to me. Not all of my albums have been like that, and I’m sure in the future they won’t always be like that. But for these songs, I think it really fit the bill.
MR: Would you go into the story behind “I’m Ready”?
SS: “I’m Ready” is just an anthem-y song that I wrote in response to a question from a friend who said, “Are you ready to step into your greatness?” The question kind of made me smile because it sounds a little bit like a hokey question, but I think there is a lot of truth in embracing whatever strength that we’ve been given as an artist and owning that. So, that was an answer to that.
MR: Another song I’d like to hear more about is “Calling Your Name.” You’re calling Elijah in this–would you explain the nuances of that?
SS: (laughs) Yeah, it’s funny because songwriting to me never feels super easy, it generally feels like a lot of work. But that song, I felt, was kind of handed to me–it happened really fast, it came all in one sitting, and I loved singing that song. It’s basically just a song from general humanity’s ability to be lonely, suffer, or have heartache. The first verse says, “Calling, calling, calling his name. I need a friend in a really bad way.” That kind of structure of that verse follows through the whole song to, “Calling a mother, calling a lover.” I feel like I am a really spiritual person, and I’ve always loved any sort of spiritual or Biblical references because even if people don’t believe it, they know the stories. I love the story of Elijah, and when they’re surrounded by the army and someone says to him, “We’re surrounded, we’re never going to escape,” he asked God to open his eyes, and he sees the whole mountainside is filled with chariots of fire. So, that was kind of the call of someone who needs a friend, and what better friend than to have someone who can show you you’re not alone, you know?
MR: Who is singing with you?
SS: That’s my really good friend Paul Jacobson, who sings that duet with me. I really love the idea of duets that aren’t just harmony on the choruses but the whole song. That holds true for this one, “Calling Your Name,” and also there’s another on the album called “Shadows Of A Song.” Paul Jacobson is an amazing songwriter, and he has a great band based out of Salt Lake. He is one of the best writers that I know of, and we co-write quite a bit. There are actually about three or four songs that I got started or got stuck on, and whether he added a lot or a little, he helped me co-write the songs on the album. I hope you guys will check him out because he’s really great.
MR: Continuing the “first album” theme, even the front cover looks like an “Introducing Sarah Sample” concept. Was that intentional?
SS: You know, I have a really talented friend named Ryan Tanner, and he not only plays and sings all over this new album, but he’s a band member of mine, a great songwriter in his own right, and a great film photographer and graphic designer. He’s designed all of my albums, and he took the photos for this album. There was something about that photo–he showed me about five different options for the cover–and I hadn’t really noticed that photo on its own, yet there was something that was just so intimate and revealing about it. It kind of just said, “Here I am.” So, I love the cover of this album, I’ve gotten a lot of compliments on it. I think it’s kind of a brave move to plaster your face on your cover that largely, but at the same time I loved that it was just saying, “Here I am.”
MR: It is a lovely picture of you.
SS: Oh, thank you.
MR: Of course. Another one of the songs that hit me on the album is “Don’t Bury Me.” Can you go into its storyline?
SS: That song took a while to complete, but it started when I was thinking about my grandfather. He was a farmer, he owned a cattle ranch and grew alfalfa, and he worked incredibly hard. I noticed, growing up, spending time in the Summers on this farm, that he never got a day off–there was never a day where he was like, “Well, someone else can do the work” or “Someone else can move the wheel line.” I saw this figure or character come into my head–someone who was a farmer, but it wasn’t the life that they had wanted. So, the premise of the song “Don’t Bury Me” is based on the thought of someone who is kind of tied to the land, but their heart really wants to be a fisherman or be on the sea. Also, I finished that song when I visited Great Britain this Summer. I was up in this area of Scotland called Galway that was right on the ocean. It was amazingly gorgeous, and I was sitting in my hotel room, looking out over this bay, and I literally just started weeping when I played this song because there was something so touching to me about the thought that our lives aren’t always what we want them to be or imagined them to be. The chorus of the song says, “When they lay me down in a box, please sail me out to sea. I’ve spent all my time being tied to this land, please don’t bury me.” This man knows that he can’t really escape whatever his life has led him to, but in the end, he wants at least to know that he’s not going to be forever in the ground, basically.
MR: Yet another touching song is “Texas.”
SS: My family on my father’s side is all from Texas, and my grandparents live in this little town called Ingram, which is kind of near Kerrville, where they hold the Kerrville Folk Festival. I spent my Summers there growing up, going to the Guadalupe River, and there was something so romantic about it, especially during the ages of being a young adult–falling for cowboys and two-stepping on the country swing dance floor. There was something that just felt a little bit like a dream. It wasn’t something that was anything like what I was used to–I grew up in Santa Barbara, California, and there wasn’t really any part of that there. There was something that was so charming about visiting Texas in the Summertime. There’s kind of a joke in the song about how my grandmother, who grew up in Longview, Texas, used to travel with her family in the Summers up to Colorado Springs because they didn’t have air conditioning and it just got way too hot to stay. There’s something in the chorus that says, “Texas in the Summertime, it’s the biggest secret that I know because everybody leaves Texas in the Summertime, leaving Lone Star all to my own.” Even though I didn’t grow up in Texas, it does feel like, when I would spend time there, that there was something about it–you know, first love and being able to experience Texas on a really intimate level. The song starts out, “The first kiss is the one you’ve waited for the longest.” I think a lot of my cousins and their siblings had their first kisses on the Guadalupe River.
MR: Sweet. Where is your tour heading?
SS: From October through December, I’ll be touring through Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, up to Chicago, and then I have a whole week of shows in Nebraska, and then I go to California. Then, in January, we head up to Oregon and Washington. Next Spring, it will probably head more East Coast. That’s kind of the news for now.
MR: Since you’re a recording vet now with four albums under your belt, what advice do you have for new artists?
SS: Hmm. Well, I think we live in a time and day, right now, where there are so many tools out there to help young artists and to help new artists make an album, make a show, build a website on their own, or a million things that really weren’t accessible maybe ten or fifteen years ago. So, I feel like, if you have an inclination to try being a songwriter or if you are a songwriter, there are a lot of things–social networking and such–that can help. I would just say to let it say something that is something sweet in your life. It is an art, and I think it should be valued and treated as such, so I would just say be true to that artist’s voice. Keep writing, keep playing, and always make your decisions from the standpoint of whether it’s bringing more joy into your life or not.
MR: Very Beautiful. As you know, we’re also going to broadcast this interview on Solar-Powered KRUU-FM. Got anything you want to add about good old solar power?
SS: I love it. (laughs) I really feel like I’ve seen a lot more people make an effort to be more environmentally conscious, and I think having solar-powered radio is a huge step in that direction. I applaud it.
MR Thank you. Currently, we’re the only solar-powered radio station in the Midwest, and what’s bizarre about that is that it seems like other places with even more extreme exposure to the sun should logically be running on it. So, would the protagonist of your song “Texas” want to use solar power? Then again, considering its oil industry history, that state probably would be the last state to come on board, all things considered.
SS: Maybe not. Maybe you should plug it to Austin because they’re a pretty forward-thinking group over there,
MR: Yeah, I have a feeling that once people start seeing their electric bills, or lack thereof, it will change a lot of people’s minds.
SS: Yeah, of course.
Tracks:
1. I’m Ready
2. Calling Your Name
3. Every Time I Go
4. Shadows of a Song
5. One Mistake
6. Be My Middle Ground
7. Don’t Bury Me
8. Staying Behind
9. Holiday
10. Texas
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)

This Blogger’s Books from
Greatest Hits
by Mike Ragogna
Spider-Man: Rock Reflections of a Superhero
Various Artists

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

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Oct
19

Television and America on the Couch

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Television  and America  on the Couch

About one hundred years ago, Sigmund Freud laid the foundation for the development of the projective test, like the Rorschach, as a means of indirectly assessing people’s psyches and identifying their deepest needs and emotions. Though the value of projective tests has been questioned, I would suggest that such formal tests aren’t necessary anymore. We need look no further than television to find out what’s on the minds of Americans these days. So, in the name of increasing our understanding of what makes America tick, I thought it would be interesting to put the television-viewing habits of America on the couch and see what we can learn.
The hot trends in American television these days fall into three general categories: procedural crime shows, shows related to supernatural abilities, and reality TV. The popularity of these types of shows opens a window into the current American psyche that is both fascinating and troubling.
The nature of procedural crime shows, for example, the Law & Order and CSI franchises, is that there are bad guys on the loose — murderers, kidnappers, rapists — and a crack (and very attractive) team of good guys, led by a man or woman of principle and wisdom (is it any wonder that the leaders of several of these teams have names such as Gideon, Jordan, and Horatio?) who persevere against immense odds to solve the mystery and catch the bad guys, all in a neat and tidy 60 minutes.
The fact that these shows dominate the Neilson ratings says something more about America than just that these shows are entertaining. Whether from the threat of terrorist attacks, catastrophic natural disasters, or economic uncertainty, many Americans feel great doubt and fear for their immediate safety and future well-being. It seems as if every time we turn on the television, open a newspaper, or go on line, the bad guys are winning. Whether it’s the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan or the economy, it’s easy to feel unsafe and hopeless in the face of such bad news. More than ever, in this unpredictable and dangerous world, many Americans need clarity and comfort in fantasy where it doesn’t exist in reality. Procedural crime shows offer us this certainty and predictability; viewers know what will happen every episode — the good guys always win! — and isn’t that a relief and reason for hope?
The latest genre of television shows that has gained popularity are those in which the good guys not only win every time, but, to remove any doubt at all of the outcome, they are endowed with special powers that guarantee their triumph over the evil doers, for example, Heroes, Smallville, Medium, and Ghost Whisperer. In such a scary world where many Americans feel powerless and have lost faith in others to protect us, the notion that there are superhumans out there — even if only on television — makes us feel safer and more secure. Children have always enjoyed this sort of fantasy in superhero comic books, but now it’s the adults who need that comfort.
Last, but far from least, reality TV (e.g., American Idol, Dancing with the Stars, Survivor) presents an entirely different projective test with which to diagnose America. Reality TV isn’t reality at all, but rather offers viewers an alternative universe vastly different than the reality in which Americans live. In the real world, many people are old, unattractive and overweight, but on reality TV most everyone is young, attractive, and slim. In the real world, success takes time and comes from talent, hard work, and perseverance, but on reality TV, people can become rich and famous quickly and with little ability or effort. In the real world, life can be routine and boring, but on reality TV, life is a whirlwind of excitement and drama. In the real world, love develops infrequently and in fits and starts, but on reality TV, love occurs often, easily, and between perfect strangers in a matter of days. In the real world, it isn’t acceptable to be dishonest and mean to people, but on reality TV, deception and cruelty is not only encouraged, but admired.
Reality TV transports viewers to a place where life is interesting and exhilarating, and anything and everything goes. Reality TV, with its preoccupation with humiliation and schadenfreude, also makes viewers feel just a little bit better about their own lot in life because their lives — however mundane and insecure they may be — sure are better than being one of those pathetic losers they see on reality TV every week. At the same time, reality TV provides viewers with the hope and possibility that all of their dreams can come true. In sum, reality TV presents a guilty-pleasure fantasy world where all of the winners (which we would be, of course) are young, attractive, sexy, talented, rich, and famous, and the losers are, well, not us, where we are all happy, and where we can treat others any way we want. As Freud might have put it, reality TV is our Id unleashed.
All three of these popular genres of television shows are a projection of anxiety and discontent that many in America experience from feeling insecure, insignificant, unsatisfied, and powerless in their lives. No wonder tens of millions of Americans have such a strong desire to escape to a world in which we are both safe and powerful, and where we can live exciting, noteworthy, and hopeful lives.
Or maybe these three genres of television shows are just fun to watch. Just sayin’…

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Oct
18

From DCs Kennedy Center to East Of Angel Town Conversations with Branford Marsalis and Peter Cincotti

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From DCs Kennedy Center to East Of Angel Town Conversations with Branford Marsalis and Peter Cincotti

Legendary jazz pianist Ellis Marsalis has been accumulating a series of honors with the upcoming NEA’s Jazz Masters Award being one of the most prestigious yet. He and his brood of familial, musical superstars recently played D.C.’s Kennedy Center, and that recording has been released as the album Music Redeems that unites The Marsalis Family with guests such as honorary offspring, Harry Connick, Jr.
The project’s profits will fund The Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, a New Orleans-based organization dedicated to keeping the arts lively for young people. Speaking for the family is genre-versatile saxophonist Branford Marsalis who brings us up to date on the center, his father, the performance, and other topics including Miles Davis.
Also included in this post is an interview with Peter Cincotti who experienced one of the most surprising and best career 180s of the last few years. Originally produced and presented as a light “easy listening” artist and contemporary of singers such as Michael Bubl, Peter empowered himself through his very strong East Of Angel Town, one of the best pop singer-songwriter albums of 2009 in the States (it was released in 2007 overseas). Peter Cincotti is on the same playing field as Billy Joel, his keyboard chops giving The Piano Man a hard run for his money. The album’s most solidly written and best performed tracks include “Lay Your Body Down (Goodbye Philadelphia),” “Cinderella Beautiful,” “December Boys,” “Another Falling Star,” “Broken Children,” and the title track whose dead-on description of the L.A. club scene is like “Zanzibar” on steroids. Peter discusses that project while taking us on a tour of his career and things East of Angel Town and beyond.
A Conversation with Branford Marsalis
Mike Ragogna: Branford, you’re celebrating a certain important event that happened recently. Can you tell us about your live performance at The Kennedy Center?
Branford Marsalis: Oh yes, everybody was on tour. My dad wanted to do this concert, which was going to be a tribute to him at the Duke Ellington Jazz Festival in Washington, D.C., in June of last year, ’09. Because we were all touring, all the conversations about what we were going to play and what we were going to do were going via email, and the concert was all over the place. Wynton and I got to town the night before the concert, and I just said, “Listen, we need to have a meeting because these emails are ridiculous.” So, Wynton comes in and says, “Look, this is what we should do. We know that there are a lot of people coming, and most of them won’t be jazz fans. The music part will be cool, but we need to tell stories about dad and mom, how they raised us, and all that other stuff. They would really like that stuff.” I said, “That’s the best idea that anyone has come up with.” So, we played the music, and we had a great time playing the music, but I think what really made the audience so buoyant in the performance is that we were kind of giving them stories about how we grew up as kids, where we grew up, and how that had an impact on the music.
MR: Right, and this is what became your new live album.
BM: Yeah, it’s released as The Marsalis Family: Live At The Kennedy Center, and Music Redeems is the name of the CD.
MR: And this is a live recording to benefit The Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, right?
BM: Indeed, it is.
MR: Can you go into the story of the new award for Ellis?
BM: Are you talking about the NEA Jazz Masters?
MR: Yeah.
BM: The NEA is the National Endowment of the Arts. It’s part of the government, and they try to use artists of note to bring an international awareness and a domestic awareness to culture. One of the awards that they have every year is called the Jazz Masters award, which is given to people who made outstanding contributions to jazz over an extended period of time, and they wanted to give one to my dad. Then someone came up with the idea of including all of us as a family. I thought it was a great idea because, in our country in particular, people in the media who cover the world for the people who live here tend to like the ideas of families doing things together.
So, there are a lot of people who live in North Carolina, where I live, who had never even heard of the Jazz Masters award. But when they announced that it was going to be the family, a lot of media outlets picked it up and said, “Hey, congratulations on that Jazz Masters award.” It’s ironic for me because I’m fifty years old, but I’m far from a Jazz Master, in my opinion. My youngest brother is thirty-two years old, and he’s definitely nowhere near a Jazz Master, but the honorarium is going directly to my dad, and I’m comfortable with that. We’re all going to be there together, and I guess we’re going to play some tunes, I’m not sure. It’s just going to be a fun night for my dad, it will be great for him.
MR: Nice. Now, the proceeds from the new album are going to benefit The Ellis Marsalis Center For Music in New Orleans, right?
BM: Uh huh. It’s an education center. There’s a constant discussion in urban environments about what you’re going to do with kids. If you live in a rural environment, some of them work on farms, some of them play on baseball teams, some of them do this, some do that, but it’s a problem that every city in our country has–what are you going to do with kids that aren’t athletically gifted? What are you going to do with cities where every school doesn’t have a chess club or a glee club?
One of the things that New Orleans has is a very strong musical presence, and it’s about kids and families in the neighborhood coming to take lessons. There are going to be all sorts of lessons given there–as a matter of fact, we have a unique blend of culture there. One of the interesting items is the tradition of what we call “The Black Indians,” where you have people who are the descendents of slaves who ran away from the plantations and joined Indian tribes, and their offspring often celebrates the marriage of those two cultures, particularly around Mardi Gras time, by making these elaborate feather costumes and using some of the combined chants that are partially African and partially Indian. Donald Harrison is a saxophone player who grew up in that tradition, and his sister Charice is going to be teaching young kids how to maintain that tradition. The same thing will be done for the traditional New Orleans music, for funky brass band, for string quartets, and for everything that reflects the music of New Orleans because it will be there. It’s not for the musicians who are professionals, it’s for the upcoming young people who aspire to it.
MR: It’s always amazing how one of the first things that are cut in schools are arts programs.
BM: Well, it makes sense, especially if you think about things in a larger context. My music teacher in high school used to say, “It’s almost a shame when you think about the fact that if America had been colonized by any European country in the world other than England, our appreciation of art and culture would be completely different; but alas, that was not to be.” (laughs) That’s what he always said. So, I think that, traditionally, culture is really low on the totem pole, as it were, in England, and ostensibly, so it is in the United States. A lot of people value math and science over music and don’t understand the correlation between music and a better understanding of math and science. If education to you is kind of like “No Child Left Behind” which is a zero sum game, and the entire crux of education is test scores, then music really can’t possibly help you.
MR: Right, it’s not surprising that in the context you just put it in, it just seems like we would have more of a heart value by this point.
BM: It’s unfortunate, but it’s really not surprising when you put it in context. I think that we can spend all our time hand-wringing about it, or we can just do what we can to change the environment.
MR: Well, there you go, very nicely said. Harry Connick Jr. joined you on this project too.
BM: Oh yeah, well Harry took lessons from my dad when he was ten. He’s been a part of the family for thirty years. So, every time we’ve done one of these concerts in the States, Harry’s been a part of it. It was cool that he could be there.
MR: Now, when you’re doing an album like this, how do you guys decide on the final track list? Was it a group effort?
BM: I stay out of that process. My job is to play the music. There were a lot of people who wanted certain songs to be in, and I didn’t really have a dog in that race at all. Whatever the song was, I was going to play the hell out of it. I thought that the songs should be fun songs, and it’s been a long time since I’ve written a fun song. My songs are…you know, it’s a different thing, and it’s taken on another kind of intellectual bent. It’s fun for me, but they go in directions. Sometimes casual listeners prefer things that sound like the old Blue Note Records, where it’s a catchy melody and it’s swinging. I though that, given the venue, this would be a more appropriate direction for the music to go in than playing some of the crazy crap that I play for a living. I thought that with my dad being seventy-five, let’s play songs that dad can play, and let’s play songs that are fun and the audience will like. That’s what we did.
MR: Branford, you’re considered and I always have considered you, an innovator. That crazy crap is the stuff that I look forward to.
BM: Well, I’m glad. I like it too, but if you look at the music from a business standpoint…there are always articles that come around saying, “Jazz is dead.” They give reasons why, and all the reasons are wrong. Jazz struggles right now because of the musicians, and there’s no other reason. It’s not because we can’t attract eighteen to twenty-five year olds like those articles that you read (say) because the reality is that the average jazz fan is a forty year old, and I’m pretty sure that as long as I live and long after I live, there will always be forty year old people in our country. Those twenty-five years olds are magically going to turn into forty year olds, and they’re going to start listening sometimes to things other than the same pop music they’ve been listening to, and that’s where we come in. So, I just think that we’ve done a really bad job of delivering the music in terms that the average person can really understand.
MR: That’s really interesting, and in my opinion, it’s a generic, safe kind of music that gets perpetuated by shows like American Idol, and things like that. It just seems like we should be pushing a higher bar.
BM: Well, the thing that’s interesting about American Idol, when I’ve watched it a couple of time, is that they know their audience. America is a country that is high on fantasy–that’s why our political discussions denigrate so rapidly into accusations and one-word blandishments…because it’s convenient. When you look at a show like American Idol, for instance, you’re never going to see someone on there like Stevie Wonder, you’re never going to see somebody on there like James Taylor, and you’re never going to see somebody that’s so good that the show is basically over from the first week it comes on because what makes the show work is that people can sit on their couches, and the singers are just good enough to where the audience members can think, “S**t, I can do that.” And they’re right, they can. But if you get somebody coming on there like Luciano Pavarotti they can’t do that, and they don’t watch because the whole point of a lot of these shows is to perpetuate a certain kind of fantasy. Jazz music, at its best, ain’t about none of that stuff–it’s about a high level of musicianship and a high level of playing. We all are weened on popular culture, and we all are brought up on music that has, for instance, a static drumbeat, and jazz has a fluid drumbeat. When you go from a beat that goes (mimics standard, straight drum beat) and everybody knows what that is, to where the drummer goes (mimics jazz drum beat) and he’s all over the place, it’s hard for people to identify with that. You used to be able to get away with that when jazz musicians were brought up in dance culture because they would play that thing with a certain kind of invisible pulse where people would still shake their head to it and know where the beat is. But now that you have the second generation of jazz musicians who have been playing jazz since they were fifteen, which I find to be a communist plot–fifteen year old kids do not need to be playing jazz, they need to be playing rock ‘n’ roll, funk, or something. They don’t need to be playing jazz, it’s too top heavy and too left-brain as it is, you know what I mean?
MR: Nice, yes.
BM: So, they start playing music, and they don’t really have a dance sensibility when they play at all. You talk to them about what the music is about, and where a guy like Gustav Mahler would say that his music is about Springtime or death, you talk to a modern jazz musician about what music is about and they start reeling off chord changes, and that’s the wrong answer. If you’re trying to get regular people to listen to your music, it has to be about something that they can identify with–a boy or girl, a tree, a house, Spring, life.
It’s amazing how many young musicians are intellectually insulated in that way, where the music that they play is so personal and so introspective that it just leaves everybody else out. They barely like instrumental music as it is in English culture because English people didn’t like instrumental music. In Germany they like it a lot, and in France they like it, but you have to give them something more because they’re used to the idea that music and sound can create emotion. So, it’s a complicated thing. I’m trying to stay low on the nerd factor when I’m talking to you just for the sake of the listeners (and readers). But I guess one of the things you could say is that jazz has become really wonky, and it’s to the music’s detriment. The musicians need to rethink and start looking back to some of the older music, when it was more popular, and start figuring out elements of that that they can incorporate into their music.
MR: Beyond your father, who are some of the great musical influences on you?
BM: There’s so many of them man. Duke Ellington’s old bands, Sidney Bechet, Charlie Parker, Ornette Coleman, Louis Armstrong, Frankie Trumbauer, Keith Jarret, and that’s just a handful and just on the jazz side. Then, there’s the classical side, the rock bands–Parliament, Funkadelic, James Brown, King Crimson, Pink Floyd, Hendrix–I could keep going because that’s what I listened to when I was a kid–Led Zeppelin, Elton John, Commodores. Then, I started listening to classical music, and now it’s Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Mahler, Beethoven, Brahms, and it’s an amalgam of all this stuff that you keep listening to. There’s always something to listen to.
MR: In musical “categories,” Wynton is a little more associated with classical, and you’re associated with jazz. Do you consider yourself a jazz artist or something else that’s not in a category, sort of like the area Wynton falls in?
BM: I consider myself a jazz artist when I’m playing jazz. When I’m playing with Sting I don’t consider myself a jazz artist. Having played jazz, it gives me an edge that guys who try to play pop music and have never played jazz don’t have, and they can’t play what I can play. When I’m playing with New York Philharmonic I don’t consider myself a jazz musician because I push away a lot of the sounds and the approach; the jazz approach cannot be in that setting. But then, on the other hand, there’s a certain way I express the music that is definitely the embodiment of what you learn from playing jazz.
MR: What is your advice for someone who is coming on the music scene right now trying to figure out where they fit?
BM: I’ve never really spent any time thinking about where I fit. The whole thing is simple for me–I like being around musicians who like to play music because people play music for different reasons. Take, for instance, there are a couple of saxophone players in jazz who are really, really, unbelievable technical players, but you get the sense from them that they don’t even like jazz. Some people were talking about this one guy, and they said, “Man, he doesn’t even like jazz, why is he doing this?” And I said, “Well, if you’re a saxophone player, what other option do you have?” In the ’70s, you could have played in rock bands because they had horn sections, but now they use keyboards and samplers. So, you can play smooth jazz; a lot of guys want to at least play something that has some level of technical challenge. If you want to have some kind of technical challenge in the career, jazz is the only place they fit, even though technically, when you listen to them, they’re not really playing jazz at all, they’re playing the hell out of the saxophone.
The reason I think that I’m able to succeed in all different forms of music is that I always like the stuff that I’m playing. My first consideration when Sting asked me to play in his band was the musical consideration, not the financial consideration, and because I really do appreciate his songwriting and I really do love the way he approaches music, it’s easy for me to play with him.
MR: Though he kind of has a jazz background too, no?
BM: He doesn’t really have a jazz background. He played acoustic bass in a trad band in Newcastle, but he’s a student of music and I appreciate that. Miles Davis made this record, Bitches Brew, which I never really liked, and he really helped me understand why I should like it.
MR: That’s interesting. What are some of the keys to unlocking Brew that people should be looking at?
BM: Well, he came at it from a rock and roll guy’s perspective, and how it bridged the gap for him and made jazz not so terrifying to him, once he heard Bitches Brew. I have my reasons for not liking it, but it’s a really interesting record because here you have this giant of jazz, who is suddenly a side man on his own records because he is playing this music and he has no idea what it is, which is why you listen to the solos and the solos aren’t really solos at all because he doesn’t know what it is. When you hear him on his early jazz records in the ’50s, he’s in charge, Miles Davis is in charge. Now, they have released basically the original recording in its actual sequence, and they would go in the studio and record one groove for like forty-five minutes, and then Teo Macero would come in and edit it. So, that’s kind of how the music was put together. When I listen to it, it sounds that way, it’s piecemeal to me, but on the other hand, it’s really an interesting style of music, and it would take someone like Miles to put that group together. It’s not something that I would ever envision myself doing.
MR: So, looking at that body of work, with electric Miles Davis, there were just more emphasized “foreign” elements going into the recordings and arrangements? Is that the rub? Or was it due to the genre itself?
BM: Well, the electric Miles Davis was some of the weakest Miles Davis on record, as far as his trumpet playing goes. But Miles was one of those people who always felt that being culturally relevant in terms of pop culture–was more important than just about anything else. That’s why I find him to be such an impressive figure. When Miles got to New York, you can listen to the recordings, he wasn’t a very good trumpet player at all, and he was a lousy jazz musician. But because jazz was the music that was in and because Charlie Parker was his hero, he willed himself to become a phenomenal jazz musician–he did it on his own. He didn’t come with any great natural ability other than his really high intelligence, and he did it. You listen to him in ’47 and he’s horrible, and by ’55 he’s amazing. He found out what worked and what didn’t, and when I listen to all those electric records, I like the groove because the musicians are great on those records, but Miles is not really in charge of that, the project was in charge of him because Miles was in over his head. Miles was born in the twenties, man, and Miles was an old dude trying to stay hip. But because of his jazz background, there’s something kind of cool about it that I didn’t appreciate in my younger years, when I was mostly just studying jazz in a clinical fashion.
When I played with him, he and I had a long conversation about it, and the thing that I was trying to make him understand is that when I was eight years old, I was listening to Otis Redding and James Brown, but when he was eight years old, he was listening to Louis Armstrong. So, the last thing I needed was a sixty-year-old man trying to lecture me about pop music–that’s the s**t I come from. I don’t need him to tell me about pop music, and he kind of backed off after I said that. I said, “I don’t need you to lecture me about pop music, man. You can’t tell me anything about it I don’t already know.”
MR: Let’s go back to your youth a little bit. When you were doing the concert, you were telling stories about your family. Do you have a family story you’d like to share?
BM: Wynton has the best family story, and you should just get somebody to send you the story so you can play it. Nothing I say can top that story.
MR: What about Branford’s story?
BM: I wasn’t as confrontational as he was, so my stories aren’t as good as his. His stories are legendary. I have stories, let me think of one–no man, my stories are boring.
MR: (laughs) Give one anyway, come on.
BM: I’m trying to think of one that’s good. Okay, here’s a good one. We’re ten years old, and me, my boy Fedo, and Eric are throwing rocks at an old depot in Kenner, Louisiana. My dad drives by and sees us throwing rocks, and he says, “What the hell are y’all doing?” I said, “We’re throwing rocks at this old depot,” and he said, “Man, that’s federal property. That’s against the law.” I said, “It’s not even being used,” because that place hadn’t been used in forty years, and it was all falling apart. So, he said, “Look, I’m not going to sit here and jaw with you all day, alright? Do not have the cops bring you home because you know what’s going to happen if they do.”
Cops brought me home. The cops stopped me and said, “What are y’all doing, defacing government property? Get in the car.” I’m crying, and they say, “What’s wrong with you?” and I say, “My dad’s going to kill me. He told me not to…” So, now the cops are loving that. He gets out of the car and goes to talk to my dad first. He says, “Don’t you move.” I’m pretty sure he looked and said, “Hey man, let’s scare the hell out of him. Let’s have some fun with him.” So, he brings me over there and my dad’s staring at me and says, “Well?” I said, “What?” He said, “What did we talk about?” and I said, “I know, I was wrong.” He said, “Now, you’re going to have to go to jail.” I cried, “No, I don’t want to go to jail!” The cop said, “Sorry son, you broke the rules.” I was crying and bawling, and then he comes over to me and says, “Well, I’m going to let you go since you really seem like you’re sorry, but your dad is not happy with you.” I knew the whooping was coming, so my dad played this smart game and basically I walked on eggshells for six days waiting for the whooping, and the whooping never came. I knew it was coming–I had messed up, and I’d have to pay for it. I was saying things like, “Can I wash the dishes? Can I do this? Can I do that?” all trying to avoid that whooping.
MR: Look what he got out of you for six days.
BM: Oh man, it took me six days to realize, “Oh, he’s not going to kick my ass today. Alright.” But I never defaced federal property anymore, you know? Most parents would say, “Get over here right now and get in that car!” But what he would say was, “Okay, here are the options: You can do this, then this will happen. There are repercussions for your behavior, and if you’re willing to risk the repercussions, that’s great man, go ahead and don’t get caught.”
MR: Being in a family atmosphere, it’s really interesting when you turn that corner, become an adult, and deal with your parents as an adult. What’s your adult relationship with your dad like these days?
BM: We never really had the archetypal father and son thing. We never had the “You’re stupid, you don’t know anything, I hate you.” So, our relationship was actually funnier–every time I hear a good dirty joke, I call and tell him and he dies laughing. It’s really not that kind of “Dad, you were so right and I was so wrong, and I was stubborn.” But I didn’t get high, I didn’t grow my hair long, and I just didn’t do the stuff that people tended to do because my dad was so different. I tried that when I was sixteen, and he says, “I don’t think that we understand each other really well. I think I need to make you understand something.” He says, “Man, see this house here? This is the house that I paid for. All of the stuff that you have in here? This is stuff that I paid for.” He says, “You’re about to be a man and go out on your own, and then you will pay for all this shit. But understand one thing; I did not have you so I could use you as a metaphor for my success or failure as an adult. So, if you want to make F’s, make F’s, it brings no shame on me. This brings shame on you, and you will find that out in the coming years if that’s the avenue you choose.” He kind of ripped that whole teenage rationale right out from under me. My mother was like that. “If you make an F, you’re going to embarrass me.” That gives you power because you can kind of negotiate with them, “Well, if you want me to study, then you have to give me this or that.” My father said, “Man, I don’t give a damn, you’re leaving this house in two years. Choose wisely.” It just shuts it down in a way that you go, “Man, that’s cold.” But that whole stereotypical adolescence thing that you see on television?
MR: Yeah?
BM: It’s impossible to have that with my dad. I moved to New York and I’d talk to him, he’d be like, “Yeah, what’s happening out there?” The only thing that was really shocking to me was when we started doing records together, my brother Delfeayo played a tape of me talking to my dad in a session, and I was like, “What the hell are you doing, man? Don’t play it that way,” and my father says, “Well, how should I play it?” I said, “Check this out, try this man. Come on dad, you ain’t thinking.” He played that tape and I said, “Man, can you believe that?” Delfeayo said, “Yeah, what other circumstance in our lives would you dream of speaking to our father like that without having a fist in your mouth?” Even at that age, because I was like thirty-four years old, I wouldn’t talk to my dad like that because you still remember that you get a fist in your mouth. But when the music starts–this is a thing that he sort of taught me intuitively–when the music starts he’s not my father, he’s the piano player, and when we’re trying to make a good record the job takes precedent over rank. He didn’t say, “Mind your tone with me, boy. I’m still your father,” because he’s trying to make a good record too. So, on the bandstand, we’re equals, and that was a strange, but kind of cool feeling.
MR: What a cool family to have grown up in, Branford. Do you have any other additional thoughts on your new album, Music Redeems, the live record whose profits are going to go to The Ellis Marsalis Center For Music in New Orleans?
BM: Nope. It’s a good record, a lot of fun. It’s a very fun record. It’s a lot more fun than records with my name on it even though my records are enjoyable in a different kind of way. This record is a fun record, and my brother Ellis III, who doesn’t play music, wrote a poem in honor of my dad that is absolutely beautiful.
Tracks:
1. Introducing…The Marsalis Family
2. Donna Lee
3. Wynton And Branford Speak
4. Monkey Puzzle
5. After
6. Syndrome
7. Sweet Georgia Brown
8. Harry Speaks
9. Teo
10. The Man And The Ocean
11. At The House, In Da Pocket
12. The 2nd Line
A Conversation with Peter Cincotti
Mike Ragogna: I personally believe your album East Of Angel Town is one of the best albums of ’09, and I really wanted the opportunity to talk to you about that and about yourself. You’re a New Yorker, right?
Peter Cincotti: Yeah, born and raised in Manhattan.
MR: And when you were growing up there, you played in a lot of clubs.
PC: I did, I think I started sometime in junior high school. I started playing, basically, wherever there was a piano–whether it was a restaurant, bar or clubs. I met a lot of musicians that way, and I think that’s how one thing led to another. It was a good education for me.
MR: And that led to you, in ’00 or so, playing at the Montreal Jazz Festival?
PC: Yeah, I think I was about seventeen the first time I went over there. I entered a piano competition, it happened at the very last minute. I just got my tape in on time, I ended up getting accepted, and I participated in the competition there. Then, I went back the following two years for a different event, so I played in a small club the following year, and a slightly bigger hall the next year. I’ve been pretty much going back ever since. But yeah, that first time was part of the piano competition.
MR: I read somewhere that you won with your performance of “Night In Tunisia”?
PC: Actually, I think that’s wrong. Somewhere along the way, the press, I think, got that wrong. There was another song I got an award for, but I didn’t win–I didn’t win the competition. There were a lot of great players there, and I got like third prize or something like that. But it didn’t matter to me because I was very excited to even be a part of it.
MR: How did you get discovered? You hooked up with Phil Ramone at some point, right?
PC: Yeah, I was playing in a club here in Manhattan and Phil came to see my show, and I made my first record shortly after that. I met Phil, and then we pretty much went into the studio and made my first CD.
MR: Yeah, a collection that, basically, was a lot of standards.
PC: Very different from the record you’re familiar with, East Of Angel Town. My first two records were basically jazz records that involved me playing a lot of piano, and basically covering old standards. I wrote some music at that time–I’ve been writing for a while–but it was in the style of the albums I was making then. Then, for my second record I began writing more and more, and then out came East Of Angel Town, which is kind of extremely different from anything I had done prior.
MR: The funny thing about those first two records, good or bad, is that they happened during a time when people like Michael Bubl and Josh Groban were being established.
PC: That’s right, yeah.
MR: So, you were put into that mix, and I guess it’s very hard to poke your head out afterwards.
PC: There’s always a mix, somehow. No matter what, there always seems to be a group of comparisons that shift through the years. I’m experiencing it now. Even after East Of Angel Town, there’s a new set of people, and I can’t even keep track of them all.
MR: Well, I’m going to be guilty of that too because I’m going to compare you to Billy Joel.
PC: That’s okay. (laughs) I don’t mind comparisons. I guess it’s natural.
MR: I bring up Billy Joel because he was one of my favorite artists from the ’70s. Right up to The Innocent Man, I loved every record.
PC: I’m a big fan as well, so I take that as a big compliment.
MR: When I first heard your song “Lay Your Body Down (Goodbye Philadelphia),” I thought it must be one of the most unique approaches to independence, either personal or bigger picture, that I’ve ever heard any artist do.
PC: Yeah, I’m glad you obviously read it that way because what’s interesting with that song is that, basically, since it was created, I’ve been on the other end of hearing all kinds of interpretations of it; and it’s one of those songs that, when it was being written, it was more important to ask questions than to necessarily answer them. If you’re familiar with the rest of the record, a lot of it is pretty direct in either its story telling or lyrical content, but “Goodbye Philadelphia,” for some reason, was always meant to straddle the fence. I haven’t said much, other than listening to people’s reactions to it, which has been all over the map, you know?
MR: I want to hear about your connection with Spider-Man, sir.
PC: Spider-Man…there’s not much to say. I got asked to be in one of the scenes in Spider-Man 2. It was nothing–I mean it was fun to be a part of–but it’s for about a second and a half or two seconds. If you blink, you’ll miss it.
MR: Yeah, but I imagine those were two of the best seconds of your life.
PC: Exactly. (laughs)
MR: You were also a part of–this is a more complicated can of worms I’m opening here–you were part of Daniel Radcliffe’s December Boys and you wrote the theme to that?
PC: Well, yeah, I was given the script to that movie and was asked to write a song for the movie. That was really the only song off of East Of Angel Town that was written for another purpose, and I loved doing it. I loved kind of writing for something else, rather than myself. After it was written, it just seemed to fit into the record, so we left it on.
MR: Yeah, I’m really glad you left it on the record because that was my favorite song until “Goodbye Philadelphia” became an obsession.
PC: Oh, funny.
MR: Would you tell the story behind what could be considered the album’s most controversial song, “Be Careful”?
PC: That went through a series of versions, I think lyrically in the beginning. I went out with some girl that I had never met before, and it was right in the middle of me writing that song. I guess it was close to a blind date kind of thing, but she was really doing all the things that, traditionally speaking, would be the male’s role on a date. She would open the door, pay for the check, and she really went pretty far, you know, as far as, “I’m going to walk you home.” She really took charge, and I remember it was in the middle of me trying to discover what the song was going to be about, and that experience kind of helped me figure it out. There was something to be said about that one way or another, so that’s kind of how “Be Careful” took its shape. In a way, it’s like “Goodbye Philadelphia” in a more fired-up way. I’ve seen a wide variety of reactions to that song.
MR: Earlier I mentioned that I was a fan of Billy Joel’s music, and recently, I found a picture with you and Alexa Ray Joel.
PC: Oh, we did a show together about a year ago, here in New York. Maybe it was from that?
MR: Yeah, maybe. Since Billy is the one I’ve been comparing you to, and since even Alexa in the mix, I guess the question would be does the Piano Man know you’re out there nipping at his heels?
PC: (laughs) I don’t know what he knows. I’ve met him once or twice, very briefly, and then I did that show with Alexa. So, other than that, I cannot speak for him.
MR: Let’s talk about your title track, “Angel Town.” Who is this Mazy chic anyway?
PC: I have no idea. She’s everyone and no one. “Angel Town” was, I guess, written somewhere along the way. I made the record half the time in New York and the other half in L.A., so somewhere along the way, when I was in Los Angeles, “Angel Town” came out, and it ended up becoming the title track. If you spend any time in Los Angeles, it’s clear to see where that song came from.
MR: Yeah, but when I first heard that song, I knew a New Yorker wrote it. Had to be.
PC: (laughs) How funny.
MR: The funny thing about “Angel Town” is that every character type is pretty true. You pretty much see all of them if you frequent the club scene for a while. The wild thing about that song is you have this sinister underbelly going on musically which really paints the picture of your particular storyline even better than you could describe it lyrically.
PC: I guess that was the goal.
MR: For production, you’re together with David Foster on this project, right?
PC: Yes, he produced it along with a guy named Jochem van der Saag and Humberto Gatica, which is basically David’s team.
MR: What were the dynamics like?
PC: It was a great experience. David was really the guy that I signed on with, as far as him hearing the songs and saying, “Hey, I want to produce this record.” I was meeting with a lot of different producers at the time, and given the world that I was coming from musically, there was a departure of some sort to be made. I met with a lot of different people when I was trying to look for that right guy, and then David heard a lot of these songs at some private event that I did in Los Angeles that he was at. And then, since he heard these songs, he kind of became an advocate of mine and we started talking with each other. We said, “Why don’t we do three songs together and see how it goes?” We ended up doing like eleven songs in three days, and it just happened very quickly. A lot of the recording happened very quickly with him. Then, we did a lot of post-production after that, which took some time. The basic tracks happened quickly. I mean, I had been playing a lot of that material for a while on the road, just really kind of wearing it in, So, by the time we hit the studio, most of the arrangements were in shape as far as the bare bones of it. What took time was the post-production, a lot of the sonic elements of it, and the layers of guitars and other instruments that were outside of my band at the time.
MR: Can you remember what those first three songs were?
PC: It’s funny, I can’t even remember. I think “Goodbye Philadelphia” might have been one of the three because we did a demo of it once in his studio on a keyboard very quickly, and that actually ended up being the track that is now on the record. Some of the demo things that I had played when introducing him to some of this music really ended up on the final record, and I don’t know if it’s because they were the best takes or because I got demo-itis or whatever you call it when you get attached to the demos. Either way, a good amount of that stuff ended up on the final product.
MR: Did you already have a sort of game plan as far as entering the next phase of your career following Concord Records?
PC: Definitely, but it was more that my game plan was revealed to me than it was me saying, “Okay, here’s what I’m going to do now.” I was just writing. I wasn’t saying, “Okay, I want to write pop songs now, and make a very different kind of record.” I wasn’t thinking about any of that. I look back in retrospect and see that that happened. But in the moment, I was just writing whatever came out, it ended up being very different, and that was that. It really wasn’t pre-calculated.
MR: Another one of my favorite songs one this record is “Cinderella Beautiful.” I had taken a trip up to Toronto and played “Cinderella Beautiful” repeatedly, so much that my buddy wanted to rip the CD player out of the car.
PC: (laughs) Funny. I got to that point many times during the record making process.
MR: But it is a beautiful song. Hey, our local superstar Theo Shier has a question for you: “What inspired you to do a cover of the dance song ‘Love Is Gone?’”
PC: I won’t say it was a task or anything, but it wasn’t really of my own volition in the sense that I just came up and said, “Hey, I want to do this.” I was doing a promotion in France, and a lot of the French TV shows, one in particular, required that I find a cover to do along with my single, “Goodbye Philadelphia.” So, as you can imagine, there were a lot of pretty ordinary suggestions coming down the pike, and I was trying to avoid them. I was listening to what was on the radio in France and heard “Love Is Gone,” and that was really when I got the idea. I don’t know, I heard something in that song that I knew the French public would like and recognize, and I heard something in the music and the melody that I thought maybe I could do something with. So, I tried to rearrange it and came up with this version that I ended up doing on the show. That’s how that whole things started, then I did it on the show with my song, and that was that.
MR: What’s interesting is, when you look at this album from the perspective of you having added that song you played in France and “December Boys” from the movie with Daniel Radcliffe, East Of Angel Town came together as a real work in progress for a while.
PC: Yeah, I guess you could say that. “December Boys” was always part of it. What happened with “Love Is Gone” is, I finished the record and it was released in Europe, then over a year went by with it not being released here in America. When it was released in America, they needed a bonus cut, and “Love Is Gone” was the natural choice, but “Love Is Gone” was never really part of my original concept of the record like “December Boys” was. I guess you could say it was a constant evolution.
MR: Well, “The Country Life” really does feel like the end of the record, and that comes before your two bonus tracks.
PC: Exactly, that was definitely the intent there, to have it end with “The Country Life.” You know, a bonus cut is a bonus cut, and I just wanted to be sure that the back of the record said, “Bonus Cut- ‘Love Is Gone,’” just so I could protect what I thought was the arc of the record.
MR: And the bonus cuts are very clearly additional treats.
PC: Thanks.
MR: So, when’s the next album coming?
PC: Well, I’m about to start it. I’ve been writing, pretty much, since East Of Angel Town, so I have a lot of new material. I’m probably going to get in the studio within the next month or so.
MR: Cool. Will you be with the same team?
PC: I don’t know, it’s still a little up in the air. I want to kind of follow the songs. I have a lot of material and I want to kind of pick what the record is, which is starting to kind of reveal itself to me, and then follow whatever the songs need, you know? I’ll just do whatever is right for the music.
MR: Nice. It seems like you’ll be a “Man On A Mission,” huh?
PC: (laughs) Nice segue.
MR: Well, thank you very much for your time today, Peter. Much appreciated.
PC: Not at all, thank you Mike.
Tracks:
1. Angel Town
2. Lay Your Body Down (Goodbye Philadelphia)
3. Be Careful
4. Cinderella Beautiful
5. Make It Out Alive
6. December Boys
7. U B U
8. Another Falling Star
9. Broken Children
10. Man On A Mission
11. Always Watching You
12. Witch’s Brew
13. The Country Life
14. Love Is Gone – bonus track
15. Come Tomorrow – bonus track
Check it out, Peter Cincotti’s “Cinderella Beautiful” performed live…
Peter Cincotti’s East Of Angel Town promo…
…and here’s a link to my Solar-Powered KRUU-FM interview with the man:

http://www.kruufm.com/node/8697

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

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Oct
14

The Horror the Horror I Dreamt It Was My Tryout

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The Horror the Horror I Dreamt It Was My Tryout

I waited patiently outside an auditorium door for my turn — then bravely took the stage to work on the song I’d been practicing for months, “My Favorite Things” from The Sound of Music.
Three judges stared silently at me, looking bored and unimpressed, their arms folded neatly in front of them.
I opened my mouth, ready for that first phrase: “Raindrops on roses …”
Nothing. I swallowed, panicked and tried one more time. This time, I sang loudly and clearly, but the judges stopped me after just a few phrases.
“Yo Dawg,” said Randy Jackson, shaking his head and laughing. “What were you thinking?!”
Wait, he was right! How did I get on American Idol? What was Randy doing judging my audition as a vocal major to Fiorello LaGuardia High School? (Or was it Talent Unlimited, Professional Performing Arts or Frank Sinatra High School?)
I woke up in a sweat, then started to laugh with relief. And that’s when I realized my attempts to remain low-key and laid back about New York City public high school admissions in front of my 13-year-old had backfired.
We are in high school hell. My dream went ever further than the aborted song. I was also struggling to put together an art portfolio for admission to a high school art program, even though I’ve never had any artistic talent. The only drawing I could find was the intricate pencil doodles I found on the back of my older son’s chemistry homework recently.
In that very same dream, I had decided to memorize a monologue to perform for a drama audition, just like some eighth-graders who are hitting the tour circuit, preparing portfolios, songs and skits and who may also be getting ready for instrumental auditions on top of interviews, different entrance exams and the SSHAT for the specialized high schools.
All this talk about high school is doing me in. In my suburban hometown, everyone went together to junior high school from grades 7-9, then moved on to high school together in 10th grade.
There was no agonizing about separating from your friends. No tests, tryouts and no choice, although I have to admit, the school system could not match the diversity, sheer variety and excitement offered in the best New York City schools (the same ones everyone wants to get into).
I’m not complaining – we chose to live here and love it. I guess I just never expected to spend so much time thinking and talking about high school again. They weren’t exactly “Glory Days.”
“Anyone who tells you they loved high school and had a good time is lying,” a girlfriend said to me last weekend, after I had trudged up and down the cavernous floors of Brooklyn Tech at the high school fair, my mostly silent 13-year-old in tow.
“Ask questions!” I whispered every now and then, because I was trying to keep my mouth shut, trying not to be that stage mom who showed up in my dreams. I also tried to steer him to some new and interesting schools.
We all had a good laugh in my family when I told the story of my imagined tryout over breakfast, but the judges in my household were unanimous in their opinion that my singing be confined solely to the privacy of my own shower.
With so much hard work and tension around the concept of “getting in” to a top public high school in a city where the supply does not meet demand, I shouldn’t be surprised that there was one scene at the high school fair that left my 13-year-old looking and feeling relieved.
We spoke to representatives from LOMA (Lower Manhattan Arts Academy), a fairly new art school on the Lower East Side. (I stayed out of it, of course, listening respectfully from a distance).
“Do you have to take a test to get in?” came the question to the welcoming and enthusiastic young teacher.
“No, there is no test,” the teacher said.
“What about the tryout, then?” No tryouts, came the reply.
“I think LOMA is going to be my first choice,” my 13-year-old declared, smiling for the first time that day.
Never mind that we have yet to see the school and still know very little about it, although we signed up for an open house next month.
For all I know, LOMA will turn up in my dream tonight — and I can’t help but wonder if that will count as one fewer school we’ll have to visit.
In the meantime, I’d love to know how it’s going in your household. How are you (and your children) handling preparations for multiple tests and tryouts? Does it feel like too much?
Anyone want to go back to high school?
This article first appeared here on Insideschools.org.

Follow Liz Willen on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/hechingerreport

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Oct
13

Lighting Up Lifting Off The Ground Conversations With Shawn Mullins and Chely Wright

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Lighting Up  Lifting Off The Ground Conversations With Shawn Mullins and Chely Wright

A Conversation with Shawn Mullins
Mike Ragogna: Hi Shawn.
Shawn Mullins: Hello Mike, how are you?
MR: I’m pretty good, how are you doing, sir?
SM: I’m doing just great, man, I’m doing just great.
MR: I have to say, I was a fan of your music before The Thorns.
SM: That’s great. Well, I’m just grateful that you even know about The Thorns.
MR: (laughs) The Thorns absolutely was on my radar when it was first issued. Now, you’ve been the songwriter’s songwriter for a long time, care to go into some of the Shawn Mullins story?
SM: Well, I started off in around ’89, trying to write my own songs–I mean, I’ve been doing it since I was in high school, but I started getting a little bit better at it by then. I put my first record out in ’90, and then I kept making records almost every year. There were eight releases, and then Soul’s Core happened in ’98. There were already six studio albums and two live albums before that, and a few of those records are really good too. I’m sure I probably started recording before I should have, but I was just dying to get in the studio and record, you know? I was always wanting to write songs, but I was also interested in recording them and then singing them live for people, so I kind of did all of that. My first real success was in ’98 with “Lullaby,” which started as an alternative hit and crossed into the pop charts. I never had an idea that would happen, but that was cool and it went to #1 on the charts for five weeks. I did another record on Columbia, and then The Thorns happened. Matthew Sweet has always been one of my favorites, and I loved Pete’s work as well. So, when we got together–I think it was around the end of ’02 because I think the record came out in ’03–we wrote all the songs together out on this ranch in Santa Ynez, California, and that was the most fun we had–writing the songs.
MR: Pete Droge and Matthew Sweet, of course, are incredible artists, so it must have been terrific when you got together with them.
SM: Yeah, no doubt. We did that for close to three years–the writing, making the record, and then touring the world a couple of times. We opened a ton of shows for The Dixie Chicks in Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, we did a proper tour of the U.S. with The Jayhawks, which was really a great tour, and then it was time for us all to get back to our individual stuff. I started writing in Nashville shortly thereafter, as well as continuing my own recording career, and I wrote a little bit with Zac Brown on the tune called “Toes.” A couple of years later, he got a deal, and it just went to #1 on the country charts last year. It’s just kind of been fun to have this other thing going, with the professional songwriting in addition to doing my own records and touring. I love both of them a lot.
MR: You also had one of my favorite songs by you, “All In My Head,” featured on Scrubs.
SM: Yeah, I actually wrote it for Scrubs. They were looking for a theme song in their first season, and Jerry and I wrote that song and sent it in. They didn’t use it for their theme song, obviously, but they ended up using it in an episode, and then I ended up putting it on a record several years later. Funny how songs can kind of come back to life.
MR: I know. And they used the demo version, right?
SM: They did, they used our original demo version, which is kind of funny because we just slapped it together really fast to see if they’d like the song. They did like it, and in fact, that used it on TV. We were kind of hoping that we would get to go back and record it properly, but I was still pretty psyched that they used it. It’s always funny when you slip someone a demo because they may like that, but you weren’t giving it to them the best way that you could, you were just doing it fast. (laughs)
MR: You also had a song on Dawson’s Creek.
SM: You know, Dawson’s Creek, Party Of Five, and a bunch of those shows in the late ’90s used a ton of songs. I think Dawson’s Creek used four songs off of Soul’s Core. They used “Shimmer,” and I know they used “And On A Rainy Night” and “Lullaby,” so they used at least three. That was kind of fun, and that really helped, actually. It helped get more and more people to know about my music. What’s weird is that I seemingly disappeared after that, but at the same time I’m doing two-hundred shows a year, and kicking as much butt as I could kick without having a major label or a huge hit. So, it was a weird predicament because I never stopped doing anything, but I’ve had so many people come up to me recently and say, “I’m so glad you’re back.” Mostly, I just think it’s funny, but it’s a strange feeling because you’re like, “Wow, I never really went anywhere. In fact, I’ve been trying to hard to stay on your radar.” It’s hard without some kind of major success, and it’s also hard to top or to keep going after having a hit that was that big. I kind of look at it similar to Aimee Mann’s career with ‘Til Tuesday, where she had this huge pop hit in the early ’80s and then she seemed to go away until the early ’90s, when Whatever came out, which is this unbelievable record that her and Jon Brion did. But I’m sure she was doing shows, writing songs, and performing and stuff. I’m thankful that anyone still knows who I am. It’s always a funny thing to go through that, you know?
MR: I guess it depends on how you measure success and what kind of success you are looking for, huh?
SM: Well, the way I measure success, and probably you as well, is probably really different from the masses out there, you know? They’re watching American Idol every week, and that is kind of the pinnacle of success–to be the winner of American Idol. Hey, big things grow and change, and also they’re cyclical. It’s a very similar thing to Star Search back in the ’80s, it’s just bigger. I’ve never looked at my success in terms of how many people know about it. It’s more of how good I’m getting or not getting, and my trying to become a better songwriter, singer, and a better entertainer live. I look at the masters–people that are just great at being onstage acoustic, like John Hiatt or Lyle Lovett, and Shawn Colvin is another one. There are people out there who are just master singer-songwriter-entertainers, and these are people that I’ve always looked up to and studied. And the more shows I do, hopefully, I’ll get better at it. I think that’s how I measure success, you know?
MR: Nice. You and those names you mention are all in a higher caliber of “artist” that I really wish the masses could hear more of.
SM: Thanks for saying that. Those people are like serious masters, and they’ve been doing it long enough that they just keep getting better and better. John Hiatt is the perfect example of these people who just kind of do what they do, and that grow and change, and their audience grows and changes with them. Yeah, it’s not American Idol, but I think that’s just another thing, you know? It’s TV, it’s hype, and sometimes on American Idol, it’s a great artist that slips through and wins.
MR: Yeah, like Daughtry and Josiah Leming, I said sarcastically.
SM: Yeah, I mean there are some great singers that end up doing that, but typically, they’re not also writers or whatever. Working in Nashville as much as I have in the last couple of years, I’ve seen a lot of really great singers that no one may ever hear about and musicians as well. There’s something to be said for those people who kind of transcend all that, stick with it, and don’t try to change what they’re doing according to whatever fad is happening at the time. I think that’s why John Hiatt, Lyle Lovett, Emmylou Harris…well, Emmylou doesn’t write a lot, but what an interpreter of song, you know? She’s one of the best. Her doing a Townes Van Zandt song is one of my favorite things to hear. But yeah, I think they are classic performers, writers, and singers. It’s just that the audience is not the every day masses, and I think that most great art is like that–the masses don’t get it until years later, and maybe they don’t ever get it, you know?
MR: Yeah, a very good point. When you have a choice between commerce and art, in a lot of cases you have to make your choice.
SM: Absolutely. It’s funny, I’m constantly being asked for my music to be licensed in commercials or things that like, and you know, times are hard. I would prefer to have more of the Bill Hicks mentality, which is that no artist should ever support a corporation with their art. But since we’ve had a kid, all that’s changed for me. Of course, I have to be picky about what I support and endorse; but at the same time, we’ve got to make a living as artists, and, obviously, it’s harder and harder to do that with record sales. So, if you’re a songwriter, any way your song can be worked as a copyright is a good thing.
MR: You downplay your level of writing with regards to being in a class with John Hiatt, Nancy Griffith, and the rest. But anybody who can turn a traffic jam in California into a wonderful love song is amazing. You, sir, did just that with “California.”
SM: Listen, I appreciate that, and I do work hard at it. Also, I have to give Chuck Cannon some credit on that because Chuck and I wrote some of these songs on this record, and “California,” in particular, is one that we wrote together and we really both brought it. Often times when you’re co-writing a song, one person is kind of the leader on it, and the other person is filling in the gaps. “California” and “Light You Up,” both of the songs that Chuck Cannon and I wrote, were truly equal, collaborative efforts. I’m glad you like it, it was fun. We were talking about Prince’s “Little Red Corvette” and how we loved that double meaning of a woman and a car, and the whole rock ‘n’ roll imagery, and then I had mentioned that we had done a video of mine, years ago, in an old El Camino, where I was getting to race it down the desert highways. The next thing we knew, we had the El Camino, and then we had a red Trans Am instead of a Corvette, which you obviously wouldn’t want to do.
MR: I especially love the lyrics, “Her stereo was blaring Dylan, The Bootleg Sessions, and oh ‘The Times They Are A Changin” made a pretty good impression. She looked over and caught him smiling. Under the California setting sun they fell in love on the 101.” Sweet!
SM: The verse before that basically uses two cars to kind of describe the characters. You’re not ever sure which one is driving which, but you can kind of take a good guess at it.
MR: Right. Let’s get into “Light You Up,” the title track of this album. Shawn, you know that if you build a man a fire he’s warm for a day, but if you set a man on fire he’s warm for the rest of his life, right?
SM: (laughs) Exactly. I like that, that’s the old “teaching a man to fish” thing taken a little bit further.
MR: But the title track is another great song, can you go into it a little bit?
SM: Yeah, that’s another one that Chuck Cannon and I wrote together. It started off in weird sort of way that has only happened to me two other times out of all the songs I’ve written, which is about eight-hundred songs at this point. It’s only happened a couple of other times where I dream the song or I wake up with part of a song kind of playing as a soundtrack to a dream, and that’s what happened with “Light You Up.” I woke up one morning and I had all that “I just want to write you a…” It had been kind of playing over and over as the background of whatever dream I had, which I soon forgot about, but luckily the song kind of hung out. I sang it for my friend Chuck, and he said, “Man, are you asking me in on that?” Which is kind of a songwriter’s way of saying, “Are you opening that song up to me? Because that’s great, and I want to be a part of it.” And I was like, “Yeah, man, let’s write it together.” So, we stayed up all night in Nashville–typically that’s how Chuck and I write. We don’t do a three or four hour songwriting session, we kind of do it in a day or two, and it’s a very long, drawn out, concentrated deal. I’ve seen so many other writers try to write with the two of us, and it’s a matter of concentration. You have to take breaks, but you have to stick with it, and you’re not satisfied if the song’s just okay, you just keep working on it. You don’t want to take it too far, where you’ve worked it to death because that’s part of the art too, knowing when to quit. I love that song, and Chuck and I write the lyrics to the verses together just staying up, having a little scotch, and just kind of trying to think of the most random things that we could think of that everybody wants, putting it together in a song, and making it rhyme.
MR: So, no surprise, I’m a big fan of yours. I’m also a big fan of Matthew Sweet’s as well as Pete Droge’s. Now, when the three of you got together, that was a celebration for me, when you guys formed The Thorns on Aware Records. You said that was what, ’03?
SM: Yeah, I think that’s when the record came out. We got together a little bit before that.
MR: What’s the story behind that? How did that all come about?
SM: Well, it originally was a writing exercise. Originally, it was myself, Pete Droge, Marshall Altman–who is a songwriter, producer, and has been in A&R for Columbia too–and Glen Phillips from Toad (The Wet Sprocket). It was the four of us originally writing together, and we wrote “No Blue Sky” together, and a couple others. Then, when we sent those demos in, Aware and Columbia all kind of flipped out over the sound. They were like, “Hey, would you guys be into doing kind of a vocal, acoustic band?” You know, we all had to kind of think about it, and Glen Phillips in particular was like, “Man, I just got out of a band, and I’m trying to solo stuff.” So, he punched out of it, and Marshall ended up having another obligation, but Pete and I were into the idea. So, my manager, Russell Carter, asked Matthew Sweet to join in and see what would happen if the three of us wrote together. So, that’s really how it started, and when we wrote together, it was even more magical than before. It was just like the right combination. I have to give Russell Carter credit because he was a big part of it–he and Greg Latterman who really kind of thought this whole thing up. So, that’s kind of how it started. We wrote a bunch of songs together–we wrote twenty songs in ten days, and eleven of them ended up on The Thorns record, I think. Then, we toured really hard for about two years. That was the hard part, I think, for The Thorns. It was just hard because you’ve got three guys that are used to being their own boss, and now no one is really in charge, but we’re all kind of used to having things the way we want it on the road. So, that was the harder part, I think–the traveling.
MR: Yeah, you were three grownups as opposed to three brothers. When bands start out together really young, it’s a different vibe.
SM: Yeah, that’s totally true. We’re three guys with three different types of successes, but we all produced our own records. We all were songwriters and leaders of our own bands, so it was interesting. Matthew really likes to be ahead of the beat, and Pete actually is the other way, where he likes to be on the very back end of the beat–for all you musicians out there, you know what I’m talking about. So, I was in the middle of them on stage, so there was always this like three beat thing happening. It was the funniest thing in the world, and both of them would be yelling at the drummer–not yelling, but going, “Come on, man, speed up!” And the other guy would be like, “Come on, man, slow down!” (laughs)
MR: (laughs) Nice.
SM: Yeah, it was a blast. I love the songs we wrote, and “No Blue Sky” I always felt like didn’t get it’s proper tracking. I felt like it was done too fast on The Thorns record because they wanted it to be a single and they didn’t want it to be too slow. I think we kind of didn’t do it right because we recorded it too fast, and the production was just too big and slick. So, that’s why I put that song on my new record–to kind of do it like I always heard it, which was really stripped down. You know, my drummer is playing with his hands on the kit, and it’s just a very acoustic-based song that way.
MR: Now, you have a song on Light You Up that you’re not the author of called “The Ghost Of Johnny Cash.” Can you talk about what inspired you to cover that song, and also about the song itself?
SM: Well, first of all, I’ve never been afraid to put a cover song on a record. You have to be careful about what kind of cover song you put on a record if you’re a singer-songwriter. But James Taylor’s biggest songs ever were not his songs, and he’s obviously a great songwriter, so I’ve never had a real problem with it. The trick is to pick one that’s right, and I had first heard Chuck Cannon do this song, he was one of the writers on it, and it just blew me away. I just felt like this was the song that we all needed to hear, that mentions Johnny Cash. This is the one that really describes, from what I know–and I’m pretty good friends with Kris Kristofferson, and he’s told me a lot about Johnny–it just nails the whole deal, you know? So, typically, if I’m going to cover a song on a record, it’s one that I wished I had written. That’s part of it, and the other thing is that it needs to fit. We kind of had a place on the record for something like this, so I felt like it was the perfect song to do, and it hasn’t been recorded other than on Chuck’s album. So, I thought, “Hey, here’s an opportunity to get the song out there, hopefully with a lot more listeners too.” I really wish I had written that one, and I love interpreting it.
MR: It’s a great song, and you give it such a personal spin, it’s as if you had written it. Now, “Tinseltown” is sort of a reflection on the L.A. scene and all that. That had something to do with the thought behind this album as a whole, right?
SM: Well, here’s what happened. As the songs were coming together and being written, they just started being written about Southern California, specifically, Los Angeles and Hollywood. It just kind of happened. I didn’t set out to write a record–I never do that. It would probably be an interesting way to write a record, to go, “Okay, this record is going to be about the Midwest.” I just typically start to have themes that roll in, and I start to notice it. This one was definitely L.A. and Hollywood heavy, and I kept asking myself why. I was like, “Gosh, you’ve never lived out there, and you’ve always had kind of a love-hate relationship.” Maybe that’s it, that I am fascinated by it, and I also kind of don’t want to be there for very long before I’m ready to get back home. “Tinseltown” I wrote with Max Gomez, who is a great young singer-songwriter. He’s twenty-three, and he’s out of Taos, New Mexico. We wrote a few of the songs that are on this record, actually. He just has this fresh perspective that’s very hip, and also very old school–his favorite artist is John Prine. He’s a twenty-three-year-old songwriter, and you just don’t have that a lot, you know? So, Max and I wrote that, and you know who I was thinking about? The character in the song who I was thinking about when singing it was Matthew Sweet because he’s kind of a homebody. He lives up in the canyons, he doesn’t really like getting out that much unless it’s something really special, and I was kind of embodying him a little bit when we were writing that song. I was thinking, “Gosh, if somebody wanted to go downtown, down to Hollywood or whatever, what would Matthew say?” He would be like, “Man, I don’t want to go downtown tonight.” So, that was a little bit of an influence on that song–just knowing Matthew as well as I had in the past.
MR: Nice, I got to work with Matthew on a project called To Understand, which was a collection of all his material up to the A&M stuff, and it included the demos for “Divine Intervention” and “Girlfriend,” which, at that time, I think was called “Good Friend.”
SM: Yeah, and it’s really slow, right?
MR: Yeah, it’s a different vibe, but I know what you’re talking about with the home body thing because I was at his house a couple of times when we worked on his collection together. By the way, one of the many enviable things he has is that old Fender Rhodes.
SM: Oh yeah, he’s got so many things and so many instruments. There are two sitars, a real Fender Rhodes, and a couple of different organs. Was he a collector of the “Big-Eyed Children” paintings when you visited him last?
MR: Yes, I think he was. The animation on his early videos were perfect for him too. He really injects himself into his art personally, and I love that.
SM: It is really cool. He’s definitely kind of multi-canvased that way. There’s a lot going on. He’s an interesting guy to work with, and he’s very fast at songwriting too. I remember him coming up with certain lines with The Thorns where I was like, “How did you come up with that just like that?” I typically have to work kind of hard at the lyric before it’s like I like it, so I was always fascinated by that. Melodies tend to come a lot easier for me, naturally. But yeah, I really like that song “Tinseltown,” and Max Gomez is somebody you guys should check out because something’s going to happen for Max. It’s just a matter of time because he’s so talented and such a good guy.
MR: You’ve got it. Send him our way.
SM: Yeah, I will. Also, he’s from Taos, which I believe may be one of the only other solar-powered radio stations in the whole country. I know there’s you guys, and the one in Taos is a really interesting place too. I don’t know if you guys know each other.
MR: Yeah, we know of them, it’s terrific. Let’s talk about that for a second. I don’t know how into it or not you are, but for me, it’s just a bizarre thing that every business and home isn’t using solar power and getting off the grid, especially in the Southwest. The sun is shining virtually every day of the year.
SM: You’re talking about an energy source that, well, we will probably go before it will. I’ve wanted to do a solar tour, and I’m looking for sponsorship this next year to try and do that. Basically, you put on all the concerts with solar power, you’ve got the panels on top of the bus, you’re going down the highway collecting energy, and then the shows can be powered with it. We have done a few shows solar-powered with a company in Atlanta that is a solar-powered recording studio called Tree Sound. Those guys are really, really hip, and they’re into wind power as well. So, that’s something that I’m kind of looking into doing, and I agree with you. I guess it’s because it’s still kind of expensive. The initial buy I think scares people off.
MR: But in the old days people used to invest in things for their home that were as expensive, it’s just that the concept of solar power is a little more complicated than turning on the TV. There is an expense, of course, but if you have to replace your septic system, well, that’s going to be an expense. You have your daily spending rituals and you have your expenses for your home, and my feeling is that this should just be one of them, you know?
SM: Yeah, and in a lot of states, you can get a break by doing that anyway. Obviously, you’re going to save money, but you can also get a rebate to help pay for that initial cost. It’s an interesting thing, I think it will happen, and I think it’s starting to get more and more into the population. I’m hearing more and more people talk about it, and I feel like the more people like me that can tour around the country talk a little bit about it, and maybe even put it into action, hopefully, the better.
MR: It feels like a steadily building thing. Sometimes “green” issues end up being a ten minute concept. But solar power is always discussed, I guess because of the energy crisis that we always seem to be in–aka manipulated prices at the pump–and the real cost spikes of oil.
SM: Absolutely. I think it’s totally building. I don’t think it’s going to go away. It’s been around. When I was a little kid, my brother was really into the idea of solar power when he was twelve or thirteen and had built this little model home that was solar-powered. It was a really cool thing and that was the late ’70s or whatever. So, it’s been around, obviously, a long time. It’s just going to take a little while, but it’s also going to take the corporations. G.E. is one of the biggest solar power companies in America. They have a huge solar power sector, but they need to start talking about that, and commercials need to start happening related to that because, let’s face it, everyone is sitting in front of their flat screen TV at this point. I’ve got to be the only person in the city of Atlanta who doesn’t have a flat screen TV–we just try not to watch it a lot. I like them and whenever I see them, I go, “Wow, that’s so cool. Look how big.” But we just had our son a year ago, and I got to thinking that I’m not sure if I really want him growing up, sitting in front of this massive screen.
MR: Very smart. When you do that solar-powered tour, you come back and let’s talk again, okay?
SM: That would be great. I’m going to keep working on it. I’m going to keep working on G.E.–they’ve got a pretty big base here in Atlanta, and I’m going to keep working on them, to try to help sponsor this whole thing.
MR: It’s important, it just seems like we had a lot of energy to do something once, and now we’re petering out. Like we said before, I think solar power is building, but I just wish there was a little bit more of a national initiative. So, I have a traditional question which is what is your advice for new artists coming up now?
SM: I always love the story I hear that Tom Waits told some kid. Some guy spotted Tom Waits a few years ago, went up to him, told him he was a fan, and said, “Listen, what is your advice for young, upcoming artists?” Tom was like, “Forget about it kid. Go home. Be a doctor. Be a lawyer.” I don’t know if I would say that though. What’s kept me going this long–being in and out of popularity and having my own definition of success–is kind of always trying to remain true to what I’m doing, and not to change with the times. You’re going to find something that you think is really cool, that you can utilize in the studio–an instrument, a sound, or a recording technique. But for the most part, you just need to do what you do and keep doing it. Those are the people that grow and change over the years, but they’re not doing it to follow trends, you know? So, I think the big thing is to do what you do and do it well. For songwriters, you need to be reading because you’ve got to have words pouring in for words to pour out, and I think people don’t even think about that sometimes. Stephen King talked about that in his book on writing. You’ve got to read, you know?
MR: I love how you phrased that, “You have to have words pouring in before you can have words pouring out.”
SM: Yeah, and old school songwriters that I’ve met within Nashville say the exact same thing. You know, the Harlan Howards and the Hank Cochrans. Those guys were old school and they were great songwriters, and they read a ton, you know?
MR: It does seem like a lot of people are reading still–that’s not going away. It just also seems like there is a lot of video game time and having to go through the complete season of whatever television show you’re watching on DVD to compete.
SM: I played video games growing up, and I went to the arcade whenever I could to play Pac-Man and Battlezone, or whatever. But I also loved to read, always, and my dad really encouraged that. I think, just as a songwriter, you need to be able to take in words to pour them back out. It just taps into another part of the brain that sitting in front of a screen and taking in the images does not.
MR: Very wise advice. Sir, You’re smart as a whip, as they say.
SM: Man, thanks so much for having me on. I can’t wait to come and visit you guys (KRUU) again. Maybe when I do this solar tour we can meet up.
MR: Absolutely. Let’s end with a discussion of one of your favorite songs from your new album. What should that be?
SM: I really like “Can’t Remember Summer,” the Michigan auto worker song.
MR: Nice. What’s the story on that?
SM: Well, basically, when I was watching TV at some point, I was flipping on CNN and I saw a helicopter view of a soup line going into a church in Michigan. It was like scenes from the depression, and I was like, “Oh my God, this is really…”–I kind of tapped-in for a second and got that this is a huge thing. This industry that we once had in our country that was driving the whole thing, to a degree, is for the most part gone, and all those jobs are gone. A lot of these people were counting on a few more years, then retiring. So, this song’s about one of those characters. It’s a song sung from that person’s point of view, and it has a chill about it, and you can kind of feel Michigan in the Winter somehow.
Tracks:
1. California
2. Light You Up
3. Murphy’s Song
4. No Blue Sky
5. The Ghost Of Johnny Cash
6. Tinseltown
7. I Knew A Girl
8. Catoosa County
9. You Make It Better
10. Can’t Remember Summer
11. Love Will Find A Way
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with Chely Wright
Mike Ragogna: First of all, let me pose a question in a rather pointed way. This is 2010, right?
Chely Wright: Yeah, last time I looked at the calendar it was.
MR: Okay. Why is someone’s personal life anybody’s business?
CW: Well that’s a very multi-layered question.
MR: I’m talking about why this would be some sort of a concern anymore, like ever? It’s unbelievable to that your private life is up for discussion.
CW: Well I’m with you, but I can tell you why. I can tell you exactly why–religious beliefs and what people are being told to echo. They’re hearing it in their churches, and they’re being told to tell young people, “Try not to be that. You’re best to not be that.” We tell our kids, “Do your best to not become a drug addict, do your best to not become a thief, and do your best to not become a homosexual.” And we should not be saying all of those three, we should not be telling our young people to not be who they are as God made them to be.
MR: There’s such a disconnect there. I guess there would be a disconnect with people who are blindly following a faith, incorporating whatever prejudices they want to incorporate into their belief systems. I was brought up Catholic, and I know a lot of Christians whose wiring doesn’t go there. Yet prejudice seems to be the political football that’s used by those that want to control others through fear. It just seems like in 2010, why is homosexuality even worthy of a debate?
CW: And those are political waters that are easy. When you get down and dirty, and you just want to get primal and divide people, that’s the easiest way to do it. For politicians that want to divide people in the name of God, this is fodder for them, this is so easy it’s like painting by numbers. When you want to go out and sling daggers of hate and division, this is the easiest one.
MR: And, like you said, It’s been used and it’s still used as a divisive play in order to get people to the polls if they want to defeat something else, some other issue.
CW: It’s a trick. It’s a manipulative trick, and unfortunately, most of the constituents that find themselves manipulated by it, they know not what they do. Most people who find themselves manipulated by this don’t have the time to dissect it. They’re busy working, feeding their kids, figuring out how to pay for three-and-a-half dollar per gallon gas.
MR: There you go. I interviewed Steve Forbert months ago, and we were talking about the oil spill. We were talking about things like how California killed the electric car because of interests that were more greed-oriented than humanity-oriented. It’s almost like no matter where you turn, you’re being manipulated, and you can always follow the buck. Even with what we were talking about earlier, that ignorance always seems to be a financial payoff in the end for somebody.
CW: In that documentary, Who Killed the Electric Car?, the same principles apply to this. I don’t hold parents that responsible for echoing what churches tell them because when you have a baby, you take it to the church and say, “Help me raise this human being. Help me do the right thing.” I feel like we have to stand up as a largely Christian society, that’s why I joined the Faith in America board because of the damage that’s being done to young people since parents are echoing what the churches are saying–”Try not to be gay.” Well, there’s no need to try not to be gay. You really should try not to become a junky, you should try not to shoplift–these are breaches in judgment, and we shouldn’t judge people for these breaches in judgment because we’re all human and sinners, and we all make mistakes. But I don’t have a choice to love a man or a woman, I can’t love a man. I’ve devastated men trying to love them the way they loved me, and I’ve devastated myself trying to love them the way they loved me. It’s not a breach in judgment for me to be gay.
MR: It seems to be an older generation thing, most young people I know don’t even care. This ridiculous type of prejudice seems to be going away culturally.
CW: Well, you’re right. There is a new generation of understanding and young people who really have absorbed the notions of equality and liberty. Now, it’s not as far reaching as you and I would like to believe, I have to say. It hasn’t reached the far corners of small town America like you and I would like to believe. You are an educated man who’s writing for a living, and you’re finely evolved. I’m fortunate enough to make my living in the arts, and I’ve been lucky to travel around the world and hang out with smart and forward thinking people. But my tour bus also makes stops at every small town in America, and I see that we have a long, long way to go. I just got off the phone earlier with the Matthew Shepard Foundation, and I also work with GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network), and today, the statistics are such that young kids who are in transgender identification situations are called, “faggot” or “dike” in nine out of ten school days. Nine out of ten days that they go to school someone calls them that, and that’s nine days too many. I know we have come so far, but we have so far to go, and to go back to your question, “It’s 2010, why are we still talking about this?” You’ve got me. It blows my mind. I thought ten years ago, “I’m never coming out in country music, surely someone else will do it.” It’s staggering to me that no one did it–no one in commercial country music. I just thought someone would come out or be outed before me.
MR: I lived in Nashville for a while, and there were known homosexuals who were stars–you just didn’t utter their names, and, of course, they didn’t come out. It was sort of this “happy ignorance,” and it’s really unfortunate that I would say something to you like, “Gee, it’s really great that you did that.” It should just be understood, period. It’s just mind-boggling.
CW: But you know what? I was one of those who was whispered about; but no one knows for sure until you say it, and whispers don’t make it to the airwaves in Albuquerque. Quite frankly, what if an eleven-year-old kid is being driven to school by his mom, and my record comes on the air and she says, “Oh I love that Chely Wright.” What if that kid is about to go to school and get picked on? What if that is my chance for that mom to turn that radio station up and hear the disc jockey say, “Chely Wright came out as a lesbian today”? I took that chance, I cashed in my public equity, and that did happen on that Albuquerque radio station–that announcement happened. And that mom that says, “Chely Wright is my favorite. What a great American. What a nice lady.” That did happen. And that eleven-year-old kid in the backseat who’s getting picked on? He feels one less person alone. There’s a difference in being a whisper–and you’re right, we get protected in Nashville, although I was more in the closet than anybody I know of in Nashville. I’m not okay to be a whisper, I’m too proud of the steward I’ve been in my life, and at some point, it’s a narrative of who I am as a human being. Am I really going to allow another fourteen-year-old kid to sit in his bedroom and feel like an alien?
MR: I read the Entertainment Weekly piece in which we learn some new facts about you. For instance, you gave Rascal Flatts their start. Let me ask you about that. How did you discover them?
CW: Well, I hired them both. Jay was my piano player, I hired him from a Contemporary Christian background in Nashville. I hired Joe Don sight-unseen out of a club in Oklahoma, and he drove through an ice storm and slept on my drummer’s couch for an audition in Nashville. He kept following me around for an entire day in Nashville saying, “Do you want to hear me play now?” I said, “Just bring your guitar and follow me.” We were just boppin’ around the studio and I finally said, “You know you have the gigs, Joe Don, it’s okay. You don’t have to get out your guitar and play for me, I’ve heard your CD.”
So, then we went to dinner and I knew how much he loved Vince Gill–he just kept talking about Vince Gill and how amazing he was. And I said, “Well, of course, everybody loves Vince Gill. You’re a guitar player who sings high, of course you love him.” So, I happened to get a phone call from Vince that said, “Hey Chely, let’s go listen to the Bluebloods.” They’re great session players that were playing out at a club that night, and I said, “Okay, cool. I’ll see you out there later.” So, I didn’t tell Joe Don that we were going to go hang out with Vince later and I said, “Come with me.” I invited him and my drummer, Chris. So, we walked into this club, and Joe Don is saying, “Oh my God, that looks like Vince Gill in the back.” Then, we’re walking toward Vince’s table and he’s saying, “That is Vince Gill!” Lo and behold, we sat down at Vince’s table. Joe Don and Vince got to have a conversation all night about guitars, and then we ended up touring with Vince.
Now, Joe Don tells everybody, “My first night in town, I got to meet Tony Brown, I got to be at the studio. Chely Wright took me to dinner, I got the job, and I got to meet Vince Gill.” So, we worked together on the road for a couple of years, and I knew that they were working on a side thing–I think they were just trying to make some side-money. Jay said, “Chely, we recorded ourselves, would you mind listening to our CD?” And I said, “I’ll listen to it,” but I was thinking, “Oh no. Another couple of my band guys trying to get together a band, this is going to be awful,” because it had happened before, and it’s usually bad when that happens. So, I was driving to my house, I put their CD in my player, I heard two songs, and I hit stop, picked up the phone and called Jay and said, “Jay, there’s something here.” I said, “This is really, really good.” Shortly after that, they were signed to Lyric Street, played their last few months with me, and the rest is country music history.
MR: (laughs) That is so cool. Now, fact number two from that same Entertainment Weekly piece: Patty Griffin saved your life.
CW: What did I say?
MR: You said, “I became aware of her during my breakdown in ’05, which eventually led to her coming out. I was looking for anything divine. When I heard ‘Living With Ghosts,’ I felt like God was whispering in my ear.”
CW: Yeah, I said it right. That’s the truth. As a musician, I don’t think that I am different than a non-musician. When something amazing happens in my life, I go to music, and when something devastating happens in my life, I go to music. During my breakdown, I sought out–or perhaps music found me in a way that I didn’t even know. I became aware of Patty Griffin during that time, and that album, Impossible Dream, really kind of held me. There were days that I laid on the floor of my bedroom in Nashville. I mean there were entire days, and I don’t want to say they were wasted because I was absorbing that music, but there were days that that’s all I did–lay on the floor and hit repeat on Patty Griffin records. She changed the way I wrote songs, and she freed me from the constraints of commercial songwriting. You understand what I’m talking about. As a music writer, you understand the commercialism of Nashville songwriting.
MR: I’m so over the whole Nashville cheesy pop thing. Where’s Merle when you need him?
CW: Again, there’s a certain craft to it, and I don’t want to begrudge the people who have figured that out. To a large degree, I made my living making commercial country music, and I love that part of my history. But I’m not nineteen anymore, I’m thirty-nine.
MR: Well, I also noticed, by the way, when I put your CD in my iTunes, the “genre” that comes up reads “folk,” not “country.”
CW: Oh, does it really?
MR: Yeah, so, some entity has designated you as folk now. That’s interesting because when I listened to your album–which we should probably get to–one of the things I noticed is that it maintains your country style, but it does feel like it’s embracing more of a Jakob Dylan meets Court Yard Hounds-ish kind of sound.
CW: Wow, cool.
MR: Maybe it has to do with how you approached this, as the person you are now, embracing other things besides needing to have a country hit.
CW: Oh, wow. Thank you. You’ve just given me some very high compliments. I want to stew in those–I want to wallow around in how that felt.
MR: (laughs)
CW: In listening to the music that I did during my breakdown, quite frankly, I had kind of dipped my toe in it on my last record, The Metropolitan Hotel, which really was a low selling record for me, but my most critically acclaimed. To that point, really what I found success in, personally and creatively, was writing what I know and doing my best to suspend my intellect. I made kind of a half-assed attempt to do that on my last record, and on this record, I couldn’t have employed my brain if I had tried. I didn’t even know where it was. I really kind of lost my mind, and that was such a good thing for me, creatively. You read about the great poets, painters, and creative people of legend, and they all were crazy. For once, I finally lost my mind. It was so good for me.
MR: You know, that line, “I lost my mind”? When you think about that, it just means you let your mind get out of the way and let the creative process happen.
CW: Right, and I think I always probably got in my own way. Art meets commerce is always a bad intersection. When you’re trying to make anything for the masses, something has got to give. When you’re trying to make food for the masses, you get fast food, and when you’re trying to make art for the masses, you get fast art. You get what you get.
MR: That’s a really brilliant point. It’s like you’ve got to be in the moment when you’re doing your craft or even every day at work. I mean, the people that are multi-tasking–what are they really getting done, you know?
CW: Right, there’s a point of diminishing return. What I learned through the process of rolling around on my floor, listening to Bob Dylan, which I admit this with a lot of guilt and shame, I’d never really listened to too much. Shame on me. I’d really never explored Tom Petty the way that a singer-songwriter should, but I’ve corrected that.
MR: Let me ask you where you would rate Blood On The Tracks?
CW: Oh, a thirteen.
MR: (laughs) What would you rate as his “one”?
CW: What would I rate as his best one?
MR: Yeah, we’re looking at it differently. In the pecking order of Bob Dylan albums, where would you place Blood On The Tracks?
CW: Oh, gosh. Well, I don’t want to fall in line just because I’m on the phone with you, but it’s really hard to beat that one.
MR: That’s kind of why I threw that one out there. Though Blonde On Blonde and his earlier albums were brilliant, for me, there was something about–wait, I may be wasting our time…
CW: God, no. This could never be a waste of time.
MR: Blood On The Tracks, for me, was like a turning point, where I felt like I could relate totally to everything he was saying on that record, even on lighter tracks like “Lily, Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts.” Even in the wackier, more fun moments, there was still a groundedness…what a brilliant album. It’s probably in my top five albums with Joni Mitchell’s Court And Spark, Paul Simon’s There Goes Rhymin’ Simon, and albums like that.
CW: There’s a reason that so many people who write songs, like you and me, site that as one of their top five records of all time. If anybody has ever squeezed themselves out on tape, it’s that one.
MR: (laughs) That’s a good way to put it. And I’ll never understand why “Tangled Up In Blue” wasn’t a huge hit. I think it’s an American classic.
CW: Well, look at the records that came out during that time. It’s all relative, and it’s so funny to look at the landscape of what came out at that time. You wonder what gets lost in the shuffle, you go back and look at records like this Conway Twitty album that just blows my mind, though the title has escaped me. It didn’t even have one hit on it, but I think it was his best record. But it was the year that the new generation of hit makers came out, and he just got kind of retired. He became the old guy. Now, you mentioned Joni Mitchell. Let me tell you how obsessed with Joni Mitchell I became during this process. I didn’t know much about her either, but I was–do you know who Steve Buckingham is?
MR: Yes.
CW: Steve is a very good friend of mine, and a guy that I confided in early on about not only my breakdown, but the reason for my breakdown. He’d say, “Let me come over and hear your songs and talk to you.” When he got there and listened, he said, “What are you doing on that guitar?” He’s an old session player who has played on a lot of hit records, and he said, “That’s fascinating, what you’re doing with your tunings.” I couldn’t get my fingers to do what I was hearing, so I just started turning my knobs. I’m a piano player, so I just decided on this record that I was going to start turning knobs until I could get the voicings I want. So, I made up these crazy tunings, and he said, “Where’d you get that tuning?” I said, “I made it up,” and he said, “So, you didn’t go to some Joni Mitchell website?” I was like, “No. Did she do alternate tunings?” He said, “Well, she was famous for it. You’ve got to come over and watch this documentary about her crazy tunings.”
So, I watched this documentary about her whacked-out tunings, and I realized that none of my tunings are actually the ones she used, which I was glad about. That way I couldn’t be accused of ripping off Joni Mitchell, but then I started discovering her body of work, which is mind-boggling. So, I really kind of feel brand new about music. I feel like I have this old country past, but when I hear Bob Dylan’s Live At Carnegie Hall album, which is, I think, the best live recording in all of music, it still gives me chill bumps. Then, I hear Joni Mitchell and that crazy tuning stuff she was doing, and it makes me want to just jump off of a building. I feel like two different artists. I feel like before breakdown, BBD, and after breakdown, ABD.
MR: (laughs) I was lucky enough to work with Joni on a compilation of her Geffen and Warner recordings, and I learned so much about her first hand. When people bring up negative things she says, I remind them it’s because Joni doesn’t have a filter, and most great artists were lacking them as well. To me, it seems like since she’s a fountainhead of creativity, that stops her from having a filter because if she had a filter, then it would afflict her creativity with everything else. You know what I mean?
CW: Thank God. I can’t believe you know her. I can’t believe you got to be near her.
MR: It was brilliant, a beautiful period. It was always fun to be eating dinner together somewhere and have folks like Warren Beatty stop by and pay tribute to her. Okay, that was kind of a wild sidebar, let’s get back to the third point from the Entertainment Weekly piece. That is: “She and God have an understanding,” and your quote is, “I felt like there were two Gods, the one they told me about in church that I should fear, and the one that knew my s**t. The one I believe in told me not to lie. When I was on my knees and said, ‘Tell me what to do,’ God said, ‘Tell the truth.’”
CW: That’s true, she quoted me correctly.
MR: You know, you would think that anyone with a functional mind would understand the concept that God doesn’t hate anybody. Isn’t Christianity supposed to be based in love?
CW: Yeah, it just doesn’t make sense to me. God also blessed me with discernment. Even before I knew to pray for discernment, I was given it. I have a spiritual compass that God gave me, but I was being told about this God at church that was going to burn me in the fires of Hell, once I died. That was really scary. Then, when I got home, there was this other God that was on the piano bench with me that was giving me songs to write. And when I’d climb a tree, there was God up there. I never felt alone. I felt the presence of this being or this “something.” So, I thought, “I’m supposed to keep this secret from this being that’s with me?”
MR: That being is supposed to know everything, right?
CW: Yeah, this dude, not a bearded guy in a robe, but this God–this present power that’s with me–I’m supposed to keep a secret from that being? Or am I supposed to run around with this abiding fear of this poster on the wall in Sunday school of this guy who’s going to burn me up and throw me to another guy in a red suit with a pitchfork. I don’t get that, and it didn’t make sense to me. So, the God of love and light won out, and it changed everything for me. It changed the course of everything. I knew I was okay, I just knew it.
MR: My friend’s son once had a nightmare about burning in Hell. Now, he didn’t hurt him, but he pinched the little guy just a tiny bit. The child said, “Ow! Why’d you do that?” My friend asked his son, “You felt that, right?” The boy said, “Yeah, so?” and his father told him, “Well, that’s because you have a nervous system. Now, when you die, do you have a body?” The child answered, “No,” and the father continued, “Okay. Well, your body has these nerves, and that’s why you feel everything. So, if you die and you don’t have a body anymore, are you going to feel like you’re burning up? You don’t have a nervous system!” It sounded like a brutal lesson to me when I heard it, but I realized that it probably saved his son a lifetime of fear.
CW: Well, way to go. Nice job. (laughs)
MR: (laughs) It’s sort of like, if somebody thinks that through for just–how long did it take for me to tell you that story, fifteen seconds? If somebody just takes fifteen seconds to think that through, it sounds as crazy as it is, you know?
CW: Right. We’re supposed to be taught that God’s love is unfathomable. Now, Jeffrey Dahmer’s parents knew that he ate people, and they still went to see him in prison and said, “Son, I love you.” He ate people. And I’m supposed to believe that if I fall in love with a woman, then my God will condemn me to a fiery Hell? He ate people! And his parents went to see him and said, “Son, I love you.” God’s love is supposed to be that kind of love times infinity. This is not adding up, people. Come on, it’s crazy.
MR: Alright, though I’m thoroughly enjoying our tangential conversation, let’s discuss your latest album. Lifted Off The Ground. I wanted to start by talking about the song “Heavenly Days” on which you teamed up with Rodney Crowell. I especially admire the lyric, “Dare to be different, dare to be true.” How did you get hooked-up with Rodney Crowell?
CW: Well, it happened in the most odd way. One would think that I decided to come out, wrote a bunch of songs about freedom, and went and asked Rodney to make my coming out record. You have perhaps read the book, and if you haven’t, I hope you do because the timeline is much more different, odd, and perfect.
MR: Yes, I read it. Very personal.
CW: When I was writing these songs, I had no idea I was actually writing my next record. I was halfway through making this record with Rodney before I decided to come out. Rodney did not, of course, know that I was gay until halfway through the making of this record. I did not approach Rodney about making this record, Rodney approached me. I had sought him out in my pajamas a couple of months into my breakdown, and all I wanted to ask him was, “Am I dying? I need to know if I’m dying.” He wrote on the back of my guitar, that day I showed up at his house in my pajamas, “Dear Chely, I love your broken heart, and someday you will too.” About a week after I went to see him, he said, “Do you have those songs you played for me on tape?” I said, “Well, I have my work tapes that I do each time I write a song. They’re just little home studio recordings.” He said, “Bring them over, and come have a meal.” I said, “No, thanks.” At that point, I was embarrassed that I’d even sought him out just to ask him if I was dying of a broken heart, and I said, “I don’t want to come over and eat.” Then he said, “Well, drop the songs in the mailbox.” So, I did, and every couple of weeks, he’d just email me, “Songs?” and I’d make a pilgrimage to his mailbox and leave songs.
This went on for about nine months. No phone calls, no dinners, no “friend” nothing–we weren’t hanging out. Then, he called me and said, “You have the option to go to dinner with me on Friday night or Saturday night.” I went to dinner with him, we sat down, and he said, “I’m not going to beat around the bush. You need to make a record, and you need to let me help you make it.” I said, “What, a record?” He said, “You do want to make a record, don’t you?” I said, “Well, I hadn’t thought of it. Why would you, Rodney Crowell, want to help me make a record?” He said, “Well, seldom does a producer get to see someone really going through a change and is giving into it. You’re really giving into it. I’m emotionally invested in these songs, and I want to make a record with you.” I said, “Do you need money to…,” and he said, “I don’t need your money. Do you have a label at this time?” I didn’t, so he said, “Fine, when you’re ready to make your record, then we’ll make it.” I said, “I’m not ready now. These songs are still coming to me.” He said, “Great, when you’re ready, we will.” We didn’t start that record for another nine months. So, the next summer, we started the record–that was the summer of ’07, I think May is when we started it.
We were six songs in, and I was realizing, “Holy crap. I’ve written all these songs by myself,” because he and I didn’t write “Heavenly Days” until the record was completely finished, in the can, and then in ’09, we wrote “Heavenly Days” kind of as an addendum and put it on the record. But I realized that I had all these songs, written by myself, and I had to go out there and promote this record, where people are going to ask me, “Who are these songs about?” I talk to journalists when I make a record, people like you, and they were going to say, “Who’s this relationship…” or “Who is this break up about?” As it stood, nobody knew about a relationship I was having. What was I going to do, make up a fake boyfriend from Buenos Aires? I realized my truth was, again, hunting me down. I could see myself back in that dark, dark place. You know, our truth is stitched to our feet, and no matter how hard you try to outrun it, you can’t. I was feeling that layering of my truth, and I felt God continuing to whisper in my ear, “Stand up, stand up, stand up, this is all I expect of you.”
Rodney came to my house one day, flew in from LAX, and said, “I need to land in Nashville, and I need to come talk to you.” He came over, sat on my porch, and he said, “I gossiped about you, and I want to apologize. People have asked me as long as we’ve been making this record. They’ve said, ‘I hear you’re working with Chely. She’s great, what a great gal?’” And he said, “Then they’d always whisper, ‘But isn’t she gay?’” He said, “I always say, ‘I don’t know, we’ve never talked about it,’ but I flew out to L.A. four days ago and I participated in a four hour conversation about your sexuality. I’m here to tell you I did that and that I apologize.” I think that Rodney thought that I would melt into some kind of admission, “Oh, Rodney, I am gay.” But I didn’t. I just thanked him for telling me something I surely would never have found out.
That night, he left, and I thought about it and prayed about it. Then, I called him the next morning and said, “Can you come back over?” He came over, and we sat on that same porch, and I said, “Rodney, I am gay, and I am going to come out.” I said, “There’s one song I held back from you the entire time. Out of all the songs I’ve written in the past couple of years, it’s the musical heart of all the things I’ve written, and I’ve held it back from you because it clearly depicts my being in a relationship with a woman.” He said, “Play it for me,” and I said, “No, I’ll email it to you. Just go home now.” So, I went to my computer, emailed him the song “Like Me,” opened up a word document, wrote the cover page for my book, Like Me, and I started my book on that day.
MR: Beautiful. What was the process like when you were writing it?
CW: It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done, and the most profound experience of my life. I’m really thankful that I have had fourteen years of therapy under my belt. I know myself better than most people I know, but I needed every tool that I possess of self-introspection and self-awareness to write this book. All of the work I’ve done on myself, especially in the past few years, seemed to coalesce during the writing of this book. I wrote it myself, I didn’t have a ghostwriter, which most celebrities who write books have. It was an amazing, profound experience, and hard. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
MR: Another of my favorite songs on this record is “Broken,” although it’s a toss up between that and “Notes To The Coroner”–I love your sense of humor in that one. In “Broken” you have my favorite line: “Why can’t you just believe in me? Not everyone is an enemy.” To me, that says, “I’m doing the best I can, what do you want from me?” I totally relate to it, it’s so reasonable.
CW: That’s the best thing, as a writer, if you can get the listener to take it on as their own. and to see themselves in it. That’s great and that’s a compliment. Really, I’m not a cynical person, but we all find that the older we get, we bring that baggage with us. That song really–I know the title is “Broken”–but it’s really a song about hopefulness. It’s about, “I’m a little beat up, you’ve been a little beat up, but let’s join hands and jump. Let’s give it a shot, love might be waiting for us. I know we’re both broken, but broken can be pretty.”
MR: Nice. What advice do you have for young people?
CW: My best advice for young people, even if you’re going to school and trying to get your masters, or if you’re trying to be a music star, follow that compass within. If it feels too good to be true and it feels like somebody is offering you something that you shouldn’t be getting, you probably shouldn’t. There aren’t a lot of short cuts in life. You know, in school, when you earned your “A” and you know in school when you haven’t earned your “A” because you happened to look at your neighbor’s paper? Your internal compass and your spiritual compass tells you. I guess my spiritual compass told me to do some things that I should have done a long time ago, and I’m finally honoring that compass. I’m so glad I named my album Lifted Off The Ground because it’s how I feel. I guess that’s my advice. Honor that compass within.
Tracks:
1. Broken
2. Heavenly Days
3. Hang Out In Your Heart
4. Notes To The Coroner
5. Snow Globe
6. Like Me
7. That Train
8. Damn Liar
9. Wish Me Away
10. Object Of Your Rejection
11. Shadows Of Doubt
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

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Sep
29

Jennifer Aniston Tom Selleck Bill OReilly Sharktopus Ten Things We Learned About Television During the Opening Week of the 201011 Season

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Jennifer Aniston Tom Selleck Bill OReilly Sharktopus Ten Things We Learned About Television During the Opening Week of the 201011 Season

The 2010-11 television season has only just begun and it’s already taking several unexpected twists and turns, resulting in important lessons and interesting observations for all. Here are ten of them.
Prime Time Soaps Need a Strong Female Heroine to Attract an Audience. Why did Fox’s well-produced serial Lone Star so spectacularly crash and burn on the runway? I’d say it’s because everyone involved made the mistake of building its narrative around a dashing young man instead of a beautiful young woman. Strong male characters are essential, but early in the life of successful prime time serials it’s the women who pull the audience in, especially the “good” girls who suddenly find themselves in challenging new environments. Indeed, they are the mandatory points of entry for the female viewers who make up the bulk of the soap audience. I’m referring to Pam (Victoria Principal) on Dallas, Krystle (Linda Evans) on Dynasty, Valene (Joan Van Ark) on Knots Landing, Maggie (Susan Sullivan) on Falcon Crest and Brenda (Shannen Doherty) on Class of Beverly Hills (later Beverly Hills 90210), among others. Of course, strong women who aren’t so “good,” such as Sue Ellen (Linda Gray) on Dallas, Alexis Colby (Joan Collins) on Dynasty, Abby (Donna Mills) on Knots Landing, Brenda after she went “bad” on 90210 and Amanda (Heather Locklear) on Melrose Place, are also critical. Perhaps if Lone Star had put more emphasis on wholesome Lindsay (Eloise Mumford) and vixen Cat (Adrianne Palicki) rather than hunky con man Robert (James Wolk) at the start of its somewhat twisted tale then the new show picked as most promising by most critics might have had a chance. Instead, it shockingly became the first casualty of the 2010-11 season.
Jennifer Aniston is Over-Rated. I can’t recall the last time that Jennifer Aniston successfully opened a feature film, but she sure doesn’t bring much to the television projects of her former Friends co-star and real-life BFF Courteney Cox. Her much-hyped appearance on Cox’s short-lived FX drama Dirt did nothing to help that show, and her guest shot on the season premiere of Cox’s under-appreciated ABC comedy Cougar Town didn’t raise its ratings, either. I was shocked by how spectacularly un-funny Aniston was as a flaky therapist for Cox’s neurotic character. Her comic timing was unsurpassed on Friends. Where did it go?
American Idol is Still in Trouble. Fox confirmed the worst-kept secret in Hollywood ever with the announcement last week that Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez will be joining American Idol to replace the departing Simon Cowell and Kara DioGuardi. I appreciate that the Idol producers want to concentrate on moving forward rather than holding onto the past. But I can’t reconcile the addition of two superstars to the judges table, rather than two authoritative music business professionals who aren’t already giant celebrities and riotously rich. It’s one thing for an aspiring performer to take harsh criticism from an industry professional, the likes of whom he or she will have to impress if they are to succeed in the real world. It’s another to have stars against whom they might eventually compete for consumer support put them down or chase them away. This might be a good time for another network to begin developing a singing competition series that resembles the show American Idol used to be.
Tom Selleck Can Still Draw a Crowd. I thought Blue Bloods would do okay for CBS, but I never imagined it would draw almost 13 million viewers to the 10 p.m. time period on Friday. I wish it were paired with The Good Wife on Tuesday in a two-hour block of unashamedly adult drama. (To make room, I’m sure NCIS: Los Angeles would do just fine on Friday.) But for now I won’t complain. The possibility that CBS might for the first time since the heyday of The Dukes of Hazzard, Dallas and Falcon Crest have a Friday night series worth watching is tantalizing, to say the least. (I hope CBS takes advantage of Bloods’ late time period on a below the radar night and pushes the show’s content into basic cable territory. After all, if Fox can do that with House on Mondays at 8 – as it did last week – surely CBS can get away with it Fridays at 10.)
Scott Caan is TV’s New It Guy. With apologies to Lone Star stud James Wolk, who was anointed the Hot New Actor by several magazines and Web sites and now finds himself without a series, Scott Caan is the new It Guy for this television season. Caan caught fire over the summer as an aggressive talent manager on HBO’s Entourage, often stealing scenes from the veteran stars of that series. Now he’s stealing an entire show as the effortlessly cool Det. Danno Williams on CBS’ Hawaii Five-O.
Viewers Still Love a Good Serialized Mystery. That’s why they turned out in droves on what is now TV’s most competitive night for the premiere of NBC’s The Event. Of course, the story has to live up to that interest, and significant ratings erosion in week two suggests The Event may not be giving the public what it wants. (How could almost twenty percent of its premiere-week audience not tune in to see what happened to the damn plane?) Here’s hoping it gets the chance to prove itself.
Thursday is No Longer the Hottest Night of the Week. The night’s high profile players – CBS’ CSI, ABC’s Grey’s Anatomy, NBC’s The Office and 30 Rock, Fox’ Fringe – are losing their luster, while its new additions — ABC’s My Generation, CBS’ (Bleep) My Dad Says and NBC’s Outsourced – aren’t exactly the stuff of great TV. And whoever thought that an edition of NBC’s The Apprentice featuring unemployed people competing for the blessings of Donald Trump would find an audience while millions of people still can’t find jobs deserves a spot on the unemployment line. The night’s brightest light is CBS’ freshly relocated powerhouse The Big Bang Theory. I can’t wait until USA Network gets its Thursday night game back on with Burn Notice and Royal Pains. Can’t happen soon enough.
Syfy Needs a Host (or Hosts) for Its Saturday Night Creature Features. I have said for years that Syfy should do more to support its trash-tastic Saturday night monster movie franchise. The decision to have Josh Gates of Destination Truth host the premiere of Sharktopus last weekend was a big step in the right direction. (Having the director of the film and one of its stars on hand, too, was also a smart move.) Why not do this every Saturday and turn every cheesy Syfy movie into a mini-event? (Imagine how much attention these movies would get if they were presented every week by groovy hosts like G4′s Kevin Pereira, Olivia Munn, Chris Hardwick, Blair Butler or Chris Gore with guests from the movies and perhaps other Syfy productions? For that matter, it wouldn’t be a bad backup gig for Gates, but his travel schedule might be an issue.) In keeping with recent Syfy tradition I assume Sharktopus will be back before too long to munch on a few more beach-goers and take on Dincroc or Supergator.
Bill O’Reilly and Jon Stewart Should Mix it Up More Often. I don’t give a hang which side of the political aisle you sit on. You have to admit that Bill O’Reilly of Fox News and Daily Show host Jon Stewart were compulsively watchable together when Stewart dropped by The O’Reilly Factor last week to promote his new book, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Presents Earth (The Book): A Visitor’s Guide to the Human Race. Similarly, Reilly juiced Stewart’s Comedy Central show this past Monday when he returned the favor and pushed his new book, Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand in the Age of Obama. Frankly, I’d love to see these two get together more often and expose their ideologically opposed fan bases to different points of view.
It’s More Difficult than Ever to Get Excited about Broadcast Programming. When you’re hooked on such dynamic series as AMC’s Mad Men, FX’s Sons of Anarchy, HBO’s Boardwalk Empire and Showtime’s Dexter and Weeds, all of which are currently in first-run, it’s really difficult to get jazzed about much of what passes for contemporary entertainment on the broadcast networks, even during premiere week. That said let’s hear it for the broadcast veterans that delivered the goods upon their returns: CBS’ NCIS, Survivor and The Big Bang Theory; NBC’s Law & Order: Special Victims Unit; Fox’s House, Glee, Bones and Family Guy; The CW’s The Vampire Diaries, Smallville and Supernatural, and especially ABC’s Dancing with the Stars and Modern Family, the two shows that did more to light up Premiere Week than any others.
This column was originally published in the MediaBizBloggers section at JackMyers.com.

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Sep
24

The Rise and Fall of the Mean British Judge

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The Rise and Fall of the Mean British Judge

When the 10th season of American Idol begins in January, it will be for the first time it comes without a British accent.
It’s been known for nine months that Simon Cowell will be leaving the program. But as the distinctively blunt, acerbic and most opinionated judge on the panel, he was also the show’s star from the beginning, lending a snooty condescending sneer that so well framed by his UK accent from Brighton by way of Hertfordshire.
Cowell certainly seemed to set the standard for reality judges on American TV competitions, as each show scrambled to get its own mean British judge.
On So You Think You Can Dance, it’s been Nigel Lythgoe, himself an on and off executive producer of Idol (he’s back on now). So You Think You Can Dance is also served by a secondary English accent in host Cat Deeley.
On America’s Got Talent, a show produced by Cowell, the mean British judge has been played to perfection by Piers Morgan, who has parlayed his U.S. fame to become the successor to Larry King on CNN. If you add Sharon Osbourne to the list, the mainstays on the America’s Got Talent panel has had a British accent advantage of 2-1 in each of its seasons.
On the just-returning Dancing with the Stars, the grumpy British judge has been Len Goodman. And on the just finished Masterchef, Gordon Ramsay headed the three-chef panel of judges; he was back for another season of Hell’s Kitchen Wednesday.
The announcement of the new panel of American Idol judges Wednesday was anticipated for months with Jennifer Lopez and Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler joining the lone holdover Randy Jackson (but none were planning to play the role of a mean judge, they said at a press conference Wednesday).
But it’s a little bit of a jolt that there will be no dose of the UK from anywhere but behind the scenes on Idol come January.
Not that the new judges come without any accent whatsoever: Tyler can rock the Boston accent; and Jenny from the Block can revert to the Bronx as needed.

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Sep
20

Red Velvet Car A Conversation with Hearts Ann Nancy Wilson plus Introducing Theo Shier

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Red Velvet Car A Conversation with Hearts Ann  Nancy Wilson plus Introducing Theo Shier

Ever since their groundbreaking 1976 album Dreamboat Annie debuted, the band Heart–essentially, sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson–have recorded some of the most memorable rockers and ballads to date. Racking up hits like “Magic Man,” “Crazy On You,” “Barracuda,” “Heartless,” “Dog and Butterfly,” “What About Love,” “These Dreams,” and many more, Heart has contributed more than a band’s fair share to the story of rock. Their latest album, Red Velvet Car–featuring future classics such as “Wheels,” “WTF,” “Queen City,” and the title track–is one of Heart’s best releases, and another solid addition to their amazing catalog and legacy.
A Conversation with Heart’s Ann and Nancy Wilson
Mike Ragogna: Can you catch us up on your new album, Red Velvet Car?
Nancy Wilson: Well, Red Velvet Car, our new album, just came out at the end of August, and we heard Friday that it was going up on the Billboard charts, so we’re really happy. We worked for a couple of years writing songs between the touring and getting other musical stuff together. But working with Ben Mink, our producer on this, was just what the doctor ordered, and people are responding so well. After being around for a while and doing this, our thirteenth studio album, we’re really happy to report that it’s debuting stronger than any of our other albums ever did.
MR: When you were writing for this record, I guess you overwrote and you still have a few extra songs?
Ann Wilson: Yes, I think we had about sixteen songs, and there are ten on the album.
MR: You guys are so prolific, and you’re very good at having an album at least every couple of years. You also have Love Mongers material and all sorts of stuff. How do you keep a balance between all of your projects?
AW: Well, one project helps you evolve into the next. I think that you write some songs, and then you move on when you have things that happen in your life. I think all the songs on Red Velvet Car are autobiographical, and all the songs have come from things that have happened in our lives because we always write from our lives. But this time more than ever, it’s just amazing to see these things actually speak.
NW: Yeah.
MR: What’s the story behind the title track, “Red Velvet Car”?
NW: “Red Velvet Car” is a story about unconditional love and trust between two people. That can be between me and my sister, Ann, here, or it can be more of a universal statement about something very personal, where you’re talking about some people that would do that for each other. There’s a wide, wide world of people who would not go rescue anyone, no matter how bad they were. It’s more of a statement of what love is about, and the honor, love, and trust that you will give somebody, and a rescue that you will give to someone because you love them no matter how ridiculous it might be, how bad it might get, or how far it is to go.
MR: Now, I have some favorite tracks on this album, and I know you’re not supposed to ask an artist to pick a favorite among their children, so to speak, but if I were to ask you which of your songs on this new album you would like to hear right now, what would it be?
NW: Well, I like “There You Go.” I think “There You Go” really hits home, and it’s a cautionary, finger-shaking tale written to a young girl like a Lindsay Lohan, Britney Spears, or a Snooki, if you will. But it’s just saying, “Hey, look out kid. Don’t be a fool. It’s a jungle out there.” That’s why it’s done in this really swampy style. That song, by the way, was recorded with all the musicians sitting in one room, with all the strings ringing together sympathetically, and there are no real electric instruments on there, they’re all wooden.
MR: Nice. You’ve done a lot, even going back to your first album, with acoustic instruments. People think of you as a good, rocking act, but you’re such great acoustic artists, too.
NW: Thank you. That’s one thing we’ve always done, as well as big rock songs–they could rock acoustically. You don’t hear acoustic guitar used as a big, fat, rock guitar as much as you do with Heart, usually. I play an aggressive acoustic, as well as a sensitive acoustic guitar, and “There You Go” is a really great example of a big, heavy rock sound with acoustic instruments.
MR: This new album rocks, and it rocks in many different ways. It rocks electrically, and it rocks acoustically. While we were setting up this interview I said, “By the way, we’re a solar powered radio station,” since it also will broadcast. What do you think of solar power?
AW: We’re trying to get off the grid, for sure. This summer, when we’re touring, every time the tour bus pulls in to fuel up, I kind of grind my teeth because we have a multitude of buses, and every time they have to fill up, it’s a tooth grinder.
NW: At home, we do the smallest carbon footprint possible, and we have hybrid cars. We really try to reuse everything, throw everything in the right bin, and we don’t use plastic bottles because we have water filters at home and we use canteens. So, we’re eco-friendly as much as we can get away with, but it would be awesome to be completely off the grid.
NW: We had some wind power and some solar power over at the farm in Seattle for a while, but we’re still upgrading as technology allows.
MR: It’s great to hear that we’re talking with “Eco-friendly Heart.”
NW: Well, we’re sisters, and we’re women, and we’ve had our ear to the ground, listening to Mother Earth for a long time as songwriters, and what Mother Earth is going through right now is pretty drastic, and we’re feeling it too. We need the playground of Mother Earth and the bosom of Mother Earth to still be around for our kids, and the kids of our kids, as beautifully as she was there for is. So, we must be the custodians, harder than ever.
MR: That’s really beautifully said.
NW: That’s our mother! There’s a lot of disrespect to our mother going on.
MR: There really is. So, let’s talk about another one of the songs on this album, which comes to mind?
AW: I’d say “WTF,” you know?
MR: Okay, “WTF” it is.
AW: The song is probably the son of “Barracuda,” not on purpose necessarily, but this song came out of a blast of feeling that happened from looking in the mirror after making a series of repetitive, stupid mistakes.
MR: Like everyone, I guess.
AW: Like everyone, and expecting a different result, but not getting it, and finally just looking and saying, “What…!!” There is a lot of anger in the song, and frustration, but also a very clear message of hope to it because you’re talking to yourself.
MR: That’s wonderful, and no one does hope and anger better than Heart.
AW & NW: (laugh)
MR: Let’s go to the news. Anything interesting on your radar?
AW: Yeah. All of a sudden, there’s a country song that says I don’t know the difference between Iraq and Iran. Did you hear that last night on CNN?
NW: No, really?
AW: That’s igno-licious. And all of a sudden, we’re in Afghanistan because, suddenly, that’s what it’s all about. There are a whole bunch of people that are going to have to have their post traumatic stress dealt with in some way, when they get home, yet we don’t have the healthcare to cover that, really. What else do you want to talk about? It’s a f**king pickle, is what it is.
MR: The interesting thing is that we have smart people that are in charge right now. Of course, everybody is on Obama’s case for everything because he inherited the worst possible conditions, in every field, and we’re kind of impatient with him getting things done. On the other hand, I can see the argument because things really aren’t getting done as quickly as they need to be, in my opinion.
NW: When have they ever been able to get done as quickly as they need to be, though?
MR: You’re right. Doesn’t that go hand in hand with our ADD culture?
NW: Yeah, I think America is kind of the teenager of the world.
MR: That’s pretty interesting. But have we regressed? We used to be adults, I thought.
AW: We thought we were.
NW: Well, people used to go to school, know how to spell and write papers, and were a little more educated, you know? On the world stage we’re getting dumber, and dumber, compared to many of the more well-informed countries, and when people go like, “Iraq, Iran, what’s the difference?” That’s the case in point. We don’t even know what the war is or who we’re fighting and why, or why we didn’t start in Afghanistan.
MR: And didn’t we learn anything from Russia?
AW: That’s a real storm front for me because I’m a real history buff, and it’s just amazing to me how we’ve got this short little span of attention for huge things that have happened in the past, and it’s just not possible now for anyone to remember these lessons from history.
MR: Ann, what is the deal, with the wars especially? The Afghanistan thing was in our face, that was such a humiliation to Russia, so that should have been one of the first obvious things to us. Of course, we went in there at first because of 9/11, but at the same time, every time we step into war in a major way, it’s the corporations that are taking us to war, it seems to me. It’s not even the brain trust that we elected into office, and it’s like we’re being dictated to by, well, the oil companies, and we had an oil administration, so, that made perfect sense.
AW: Yeah, and you can feel that even if you’re just a plebe down here on the street and you watch the news. You can feel the fact that someone else is pulling the strings. You can feel that the strings are being pulled by people who are invisible to us.
MR: Yeah, it used to be the “shadow government,” except they don’t really care about being all that shadowy anymore, do they.
AW: (laughs) Right, I know. I don’t blame people for feeling so powerless, but I’m from a generation that just goes, “Powerless, shmowerless. You have to still mouth off.” You have to continue on.
NW: Try to understand and try to educate yourself enough to know what it is at least. I think the pop culture just takes us down the sheep dip, you know? It’s like, “Okay, all you sheep, we’re going to herd you over here into all this reality television.” The “car crash” television–meaning the television that you just cannot look away from–I think it’s really the dumbing of America. It replaces other information, where people could be preparing themselves to make a better world with less war, and just to know more–how to vote, how to help the administration, how to complain, and how to write their senators.
MR: Exactly, especially these days when you’ve got Fox News representing The Tea Party, and you’ve got Glenn Beck doing all of his nonsense.
NW: Yeah, there’s so much polarization, it’s just ridiculous. And the whole rapture thing? It’s just like, “Wow.”
MR: I was really shocked and saddened by the whole Qur’an burning thing. I didn’t realize pockets of our country could be that stupid.
AW: And suddenly he just changed his mind. It was like, “Oh, some power must have been brought to bear on that guy.”
MR: Yeah, or money.
AW: Or money. He was just selling his furniture on eBay, right, to finance his church? So, it’s like, “Oh yeah, I’m ready to back off of my big thing, but I’m rich now, surprisingly.”
MR: What a surprise.
NW: America just needs to educate.
AW: I agree.
MR: You’re right on, and I just wish education was as high a priority as I remember it being. I’m with you, and I’m in the same age group, so I remember when that was an important thing.
AW: The way we become no longer a super power is if we’re super stupid.
MR: Yeah. Okay, let’s get back into the Red Velvet Car and be happy.
AW: It’s okay, this is life, and we’re all living it. It’s great that we get to talk about it, you know?
MR: I know, and what was sweet was that you were sharing your thoughts so articulately, and you were so right on. I agreed with everything you said, and I wish this country well, but we really have to get our heads out of…
NW: …out of our reality TV!
MR: Nice. Let’s keep this rolling by telling me what track you’d like to discuss next.
NW: How about “Hey You?”
MR: What’s the story behind that?
NW: “Hey You” is a song that I had rolling around in my brain for almost ten years, but I could not for the life of me come up with the “one more thing” it needed. I tried one thing that didn’t work, then I’d try something else a couple of years later that wouldn’t work, and over the years it just wasn’t finished until we ran into Ben Mink and started working on this album. I pulled it out again and I said, “Do you have another part? This song needs a part.” And he definitely had the perfect part.
MR: What’s the working relationship like in the studio?
AW: What an amazing artist and a funny guy and extremely intelligent. He’s intellectual, but also able to tell tall tales from his road, and his past. We were first turned onto his work when he was working with k.d. lang on the Ingenue album, and that really stuck with us. I think we tried to contact him in the ’90s, but we couldn’t get together because he was busy doing other stuff. Then, when I was going to do a solo album several years ago, it worked out that we could work together. Well, we brought Nancy in to work on my solo album, of course, and Nancy and Ben Mink just hit it off. It was like they were siblings, too. They are like total guitar and strings siblings, and to hear them play together is uncanny. It’s almost like they’re cut from the same (cloth), you know?
MR: So, he’s sort of like an unofficial member at this point.
NW: Yes. In Red Velvet Car sessions, we played mostly just with Ben, myself, bass, and drums, and Ann singing, so those were all the basics. That’s how we played everything at once, together, at the same time, and in the same room with eye contact. The conversation of that, you can really hear on the album because it’s definitely not layered, digitally constructed stuff.
MR: That’s pretty important these days, isn’t it? I was just talking with the Goo Goo Dolls the other day, and John Rzeznik was discussed how important it was for that group to sit down in a room, and finally reconnect with each other during the recording process.
NW: How rare that stuff is these days.
AW: Yeah, I never thought I’d live to see the day when the natural process of musicians playing together would be something that you had to try to return to. That’s the core, primal thing, really.
NW: You mean, actually playing and singing?
AW: (laughs) It’s this new thing, actually singing and playing.
MR: Well, with Pro Tools and the like, you can pretty much just throw on a part and say, “There it is.”
NW: You can pretty much construct things out of other things, right?
MR: Right, and you don’t even need to be able to sing because we’ve got a pitch corrector for that.
AW: Oh boy, don’t get me started.
MR: No, let’s get you started.
AW: If I had money for every take I had to redo because I sang something off pitch, (laughs) I’d be rich.
MR: I’m with you, and if a pitch corrector was never invented, I don’t think we’d have a Top Ten right now.
AW: And it’s funny how that pitch correction thing has a digital thing that goes through it, kind of making people sound anonymous.
MR: Yes. It makes them generic, good point.
NW: It’s really hard to distinguish a lot of the singers now.
MR: It’s like a lot of the Disney-ish or American Idol-ish kids who are making records follow this template that have this same three note interval span in the chorus, and you have to include a sixth or a fourth in there so it has a tiny bit of emotion, or I guess that’s what it’s supposed to do.
NW: Interesting, yeah, you’re right.
MR: Then you have, of course, the soulless block vocal that sounds like every other block vocal.
AW: It’s interesting because it’s also affected the sound or the way people sing without pitch correction. If you hear a lot of new singers, the vowels and the way they change notes almost sound pitch corrected already. So, it’s become the new accent of pop music singing.
MR: Wow, people trying to emulate pitch correctors. So, being a fan since Day One, what’s great is that you’ve always got stuff coming down the pike, like your new DVD.
NW: Yeah, there’s a new DVD coming in the Spring of a Seattle show we did at The Sky Church, and that has a few of the new songs, and Ben Mink plays fiddle and guitar on that DVD as a guest star, and Alison Krauss comes out to sing a couple of songs with us as well. So, look for the DVD this spring.
MR: You know, this is a really interesting period for Alison Krauss. There’s that album Robert Plant did with her.
NW: That album was amazing.
MR: I like the cross-pollination.
AW: I like it, too. It’s really great for us because a lot of the time people sort of put us in this box that’s really small. It’s like, “They do rock music.” But we like lots of types of music, and Americana is no exception. Alison is squirming to get out of her box too, so when we met and sang together and became friends and everything, it was a really great stretch for all of us.
MR: Yeah, and with Robert Plant. I couldn’t believe I was listening to that.
AW: He, of course, on that record, is singing so great, and some people are sort of like, “Well gee, he’s supposed to sing like he did in Led Zeppelin, where he’s up there real high, screaming and wailing.” Well, he is more sexy, I think, when he croons, you know? If that’s possible, for Robert Plant to be more sexy than Led Zeppelin? I really think, for instance, on the song “Nothin,” on Raising Sand, he’s just on. There are a couple of moments that are just so amazingly sexy, and they’re great.
MR: Have you reached out to him because, you know, you do have a history there.
AW: Haven’t reached out to him, but we did get to meet. We went to see the Alison Krauss-Robert Plant show at The Greek Theater a couple of years back, and we got to talk with him afterward and hang out a bit. We had a little talk, and it was a little bit stilted because Zeppelin has always been a man’s things, and they heard that we cover their stuff. So, the two of us kind of went, “Oh, hello.” It was so amazing for me to try and forget that he is so amazingly powerful in his presence and just talk to him like a human being. It was a great moment for me.
MR: Right. I feel like what you said earlier is so true about perceptions; people don’t allow artists to grow in a lot of cases. Regarding the Robert Plant thing, none of us should really be surprised by that, just as Heart doing really beautiful acoustic music should not be a surprise. You get to grow in your art, the way you want to grow in it, and I think your fans, for the most part, have come along with you.
AW: They have, and it speaks well because that takes attention span, and Heart people really have it, they really do.
MR: I feel like there’s so much that you’ve gone through over the years that you could probably write a book about life on the road, about music, and about the music industry, right?
AW & NW: (laugh)
NW: It would be like when people ask, “What do you say to people that are coming up?” What is it really? It is a business, even though you don’t really want to think of it as a business. I think without some kind of true calling and dogged determination and survival mechanisms built in, you shouldn’t even try. Turn back, unless you’re really burning up with passion, desire, and a purpose to do this, you know? I think, like probably a lot of things in the world, to do something really well, especially something a little bit outside of the box, there just isn’t a lot of context for it, and it can be the loneliest, most heartbreaking world you can try to do something in. Ann and I, I think, should consider ourselves really lucky because we have each other and we’re sisters and confidants. But there are others–like Sarah McLachlan and Chrissie Hynde–who have sort of done it on their own, and I don’t know how they do that. I don’t know if I could do that. Anyway, becoming an upstart now, with the way the attention span is so short and the pitch correction aspect of music making people kind of anonymous, it narrows the field, and I think it might even be tougher than before.
AW: Yeah, I think it probably is.
NW: With the imaging of everything now, I’d just say that if you have a soulful, poetic ear for doing some music, go underground or go rock, and do all the work.
AW: Do the work. Don’t expect one day be in your bedroom with your hairbrush, looking at the mirror, and the next day be like Lady Gaga. That happens to, maybe, one millionth of one percent of all the people in the world. If you want to spend ten years in the pipeline, forming a musical soul and putting all the miles in, then maybe you’re going to be unusual, and you might stay around a little bit.
MR: Very nice. I always ask artists the question, “What advice do you have for new artists,” and you’ve already answered it perfectly.
NW: Becoming competent takes a little time, and that will give you enough time to figure out whether you’re built for it, too.
MR: That’s good advice because a lot of people go into it without realizing that they’re in it for the long haul once they’ve committed.
NW: Yeah, for better and for worse.
MR: Seriously, the whole fantasy of the American Idol “win” is exactly that, and for people that are getting into this for their art, it’s not going to matter. They’re going to do exactly what you said.
NW: People always ask us, and it always really amazes me because we have some albums that have been “hits” and some that aren’t. So, when we have one that isn’t, people say, “Well, why do you make albums? Are you going to make any more albums?” The answer, of course is, “Yes,” because that’s what we do as functioning musicians. We don’t live and die by our sales. And it’s for the love of music and the way people come back to us and say, “Oh, you saved my life with your music.” It’s so meaningful to people when you can reach them and they can hear your music and you can share your music with them. It’s completely meaningful.
MR: Do you have any information about your tour?
AW: Yeah, it’s been going on now for several months, and it’s going to be going on solidly until the end of September. Then, we’ll be doing a few more dates through the end of the year. We’ll take thirty seconds off for Christmas, and then, ten seconds later, we’ll be back out on the road.
MR: Are you doing any Rockin’ New Years Eves?
AW: I guess not because I can see our manager shaking her head, so I guess not.
MR: I’ll share just one tiny story with you. When I moved on from one of my jobs, I was packing my office and played “Strong, Strong Wind” like it was a loop. That was my “time to move on” song.
AW & NW: Oh, yeah.
MR: That particular Heart recording was very touching to me, so I’ll just throw that out there.
NW: That’s what music does to people, and that’s how it orchestrates our lives and protects us through our lives, as well. The songs that we take with us are our protectors.
Tracks:
1. There You Go
2. WTF
3. Red Velvet Car
4. Queen City
5. Hey You
6. Wheels
7. Saffronia’s Mark
8. Death Valley
9. Sunflower
10. Sand
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
Introducing Theo Shier – “This Old House”
This YouTube video is a live performance by 18-year-old singer-songwriter Theo Shier who is an unsigned artist with a stash of hook-filled and introspective originals plus enough onstage charisma to make whoever eventually signs him look like a genius. Although he plays acoustic guitar in this impromtu performance, Theo also is a terrific electric guitarist who will hopefully show off his chops in future videos.

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
20

Black Velvet Car A Conversation with Hearts Ann Nancy Wilson plus Introducing Theo Shier

by , under NEWS
Black Velvet Car A Conversation with Hearts Ann  Nancy Wilson plus Introducing Theo Shier

Ever since their groundbreaking 1976 album Dreamboat Annie debuted, the band Heart–essentially, sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson–have recorded some of the most memorable rockers and ballads to date. Racking up hits like “Magic Man,” “Crazy On You,” “Barracuda,” “Heartless,” “Dog and Butterfly,” “What About Love,” “These Dreams,” and many more, Heart has contributed more than a band’s fair share to the story of rock. Their latest album, Red Velvet Car–featuring future classics such as “Wheels,” “WTF,” “Queen City,” and the title track–is one of Heart’s best releases, and another solid addition to their amazing catalog and legacy.
A Conversation with Heart’s Ann and Nancy Wilson
Mike Ragogna: Can you catch us up on your new album, Red Velvet Car?
Nancy Wilson: Well, Red Velvet Car, our new album, just came out at the end of August, and we heard Friday that it was going up on the Billboard charts, so we’re really happy. We worked for a couple of years writing songs between the touring and getting other musical stuff together. But working with Ben Mink, our producer on this, was just what the doctor ordered, and people are responding so well. After being around for a while and doing this, our thirteenth studio album, we’re really happy to report that it’s debuting stronger than any of our other albums ever did.
MR: When you were writing for this record, I guess you overwrote and you still have a few extra songs?
Ann Wilson: Yes, I think we had about sixteen songs, and there are ten on the album.
MR: You guys are so prolific, and you’re very good at having an album at least every couple of years. You also have Love Mongers material and all sorts of stuff. How do you keep a balance between all of your projects?
AW: Well, one project helps you evolve into the next. I think that you write some songs, and then you move on when you have things that happen in your life. I think all the songs on Red Velvet Car are autobiographical, and all the songs have come from things that have happened in our lives because we always write from our lives. But this time more than ever, it’s just amazing to see these things actually speak.
NW: Yeah.
MR: What’s the story behind the title track, “Red Velvet Car”?
NW: “Red Velvet Car” is a story about unconditional love and trust between two people. That can be between me and my sister, Ann, here, or it can be more of a universal statement about something very personal, where you’re talking about some people that would do that for each other. There’s a wide, wide world of people who would not go rescue anyone, no matter how bad they were. It’s more of a statement of what love is about, and the honor, love, and trust that you will give somebody, and a rescue that you will give to someone because you love them no matter how ridiculous it might be, how bad it might get, or how far it is to go.
MR: Now, I have some favorite tracks on this album, and I know you’re not supposed to ask an artist to pick a favorite among their children, so to speak, but if I were to ask you which of your songs on this new album you would like to hear right now, what would it be?
NW: Well, I like “There You Go.” I think “There You Go” really hits home, and it’s a cautionary, finger-shaking tale written to a young girl like a Lindsay Lohan, Britney Spears, or a Snooki, if you will. But it’s just saying, “Hey, look out kid. Don’t be a fool. It’s a jungle out there.” That’s why it’s done in this really swampy style. That song, by the way, was recorded with all the musicians sitting in one room, with all the strings ringing together sympathetically, and there are no real electric instruments on there, they’re all wooden.
MR: Nice. You’ve done a lot, even going back to your first album, with acoustic instruments. People think of you as a good, rocking act, but you’re such great acoustic artists, too.
NW: Thank you. That’s one thing we’ve always done, as well as big rock songs–they could rock acoustically. You don’t hear acoustic guitar used as a big, fat, rock guitar as much as you do with Heart, usually. I play an aggressive acoustic, as well as a sensitive acoustic guitar, and “There You Go” is a really great example of a big, heavy rock sound with acoustic instruments.
MR: This new album rocks, and it rocks in many different ways. It rocks electrically, and it rocks acoustically. While we were setting up this interview I said, “By the way, we’re a solar powered radio station,” since it also will broadcast. What do you think of solar power?
AW: We’re trying to get off the grid, for sure. This summer, when we’re touring, every time the tour bus pulls in to fuel up, I kind of grind my teeth because we have a multitude of buses, and every time they have to fill up, it’s a tooth grinder.
NW: At home, we do the smallest carbon footprint possible, and we have hybrid cars. We really try to reuse everything, throw everything in the right bin, and we don’t use plastic bottles because we have water filters at home and we use canteens. So, we’re eco-friendly as much as we can get away with, but it would be awesome to be completely off the grid.
NW: We had some wind power and some solar power over at the farm in Seattle for a while, but we’re still upgrading as technology allows.
MR: It’s great to hear that we’re talking with “Eco-friendly Heart.”
NW: Well, we’re sisters, and we’re women, and we’ve had our ear to the ground, listening to Mother Earth for a long time as songwriters, and what Mother Earth is going through right now is pretty drastic, and we’re feeling it too. We need the playground of Mother Earth and the bosom of Mother Earth to still be around for our kids, and the kids of our kids, as beautifully as she was there for is. So, we must be the custodians, harder than ever.
MR: That’s really beautifully said.
NW: That’s our mother! There’s a lot of disrespect to our mother going on.
MR: There really is. So, let’s talk about another one of the songs on this album, which comes to mind?
AW: I’d say “WTF,” you know?
MR: Okay, “WTF” it is.
AW: The song is probably the son of “Barracuda,” not on purpose necessarily, but this song came out of a blast of feeling that happened from looking in the mirror after making a series of repetitive, stupid mistakes.
MR: Like everyone, I guess.
AW: Like everyone, and expecting a different result, but not getting it, and finally just looking and saying, “What…!!” There is a lot of anger in the song, and frustration, but also a very clear message of hope to it because you’re talking to yourself.
MR: That’s wonderful, and no one does hope and anger better than Heart.
AW & NW: (laugh)
MR: Let’s go to the news. Anything interesting on your radar?
AW: Yeah. All of a sudden, there’s a country song that says I don’t know the difference between Iraq and Iran. Did you hear that last night on CNN?
NW: No, really?
AW: That’s igno-licious. And all of a sudden, we’re in Afghanistan because, suddenly, that’s what it’s all about. There are a whole bunch of people that are going to have to have their post traumatic stress dealt with in some way, when they get home, yet we don’t have the healthcare to cover that, really. What else do you want to talk about? It’s a f**king pickle, is what it is.
MR: The interesting thing is that we have smart people that are in charge right now. Of course, everybody is on Obama’s case for everything because he inherited the worst possible conditions, in every field, and we’re kind of impatient with him getting things done. On the other hand, I can see the argument because things really aren’t getting done as quickly as they need to be, in my opinion.
NW: When have they ever been able to get done as quickly as they need to be, though?
MR: You’re right. Doesn’t that go hand in hand with our ADD culture?
NW: Yeah, I think America is kind of the teenager of the world.
MR: That’s pretty interesting. But have we regressed? We used to be adults, I thought.
AW: We thought we were.
NW: Well, people used to go to school, know how to spell and write papers, and were a little more educated, you know? On the world stage we’re getting dumber, and dumber, compared to many of the more well-informed countries, and when people go like, “Iraq, Iran, what’s the difference?” That’s the case in point. We don’t even know what the war is or who we’re fighting and why, or why we didn’t start in Afghanistan.
MR: And didn’t we learn anything from Russia?
AW: That’s a real storm front for me because I’m a real history buff, and it’s just amazing to me how we’ve got this short little span of attention for huge things that have happened in the past, and it’s just not possible now for anyone to remember these lessons from history.
MR: Ann, what is the deal, with the wars especially? The Afghanistan thing was in our face, that was such a humiliation to Russia, so that should have been one of the first obvious things to us. Of course, we went in there at first because of 9/11, but at the same time, every time we step into war in a major way, it’s the corporations that are taking us to war, it seems to me. It’s not even the brain trust that we elected into office, and it’s like we’re being dictated to by, well, the oil companies, and we had an oil administration, so, that made perfect sense.
AW: Yeah, and you can feel that even if you’re just a plebe down here on the street and you watch the news. You can feel the fact that someone else is pulling the strings. You can feel that the strings are being pulled by people who are invisible to us.
MR: Yeah, it used to be the “shadow government,” except they don’t really care about being all that shadowy anymore, do they.
AW: (laughs) Right, I know. I don’t blame people for feeling so powerless, but I’m from a generation that just goes, “Powerless, shmowerless. You have to still mouth off.” You have to continue on.
NW: Try to understand and try to educate yourself enough to know what it is at least. I think the pop culture just takes us down the sheep dip, you know? It’s like, “Okay, all you sheep, we’re going to herd you over here into all this reality television.” The “car crash” television–meaning the television that you just cannot look away from–I think it’s really the dumbing of America. It replaces other information, where people could be preparing themselves to make a better world with less war, and just to know more–how to vote, how to help the administration, how to complain, and how to write their senators.
MR: Exactly, especially these days when you’ve got Fox News representing The Tea Party, and you’ve got Glenn Beck doing all of his nonsense.
NW: Yeah, there’s so much polarization, it’s just ridiculous. And the whole rapture thing? It’s just like, “Wow.”
MR: I was really shocked and saddened by the whole Qur’an burning thing. I didn’t realize pockets of our country could be that stupid.
AW: And suddenly he just changed his mind. It was like, “Oh, some power must have been brought to bear on that guy.”
MR: Yeah, or money.
AW: Or money. He was just selling his furniture on eBay, right, to finance his church? So, it’s like, “Oh yeah, I’m ready to back off of my big thing, but I’m rich now, surprisingly.”
MR: What a surprise.
NW: America just needs to educate.
AW: I agree.
MR: You’re right on, and I just wish education was as high a priority as I remember it being. I’m with you, and I’m in the same age group, so I remember when that was an important thing.
AW: The way we become no longer a super power is if we’re super stupid.
MR: Yeah. Okay, let’s get back into the Red Velvet Car and be happy.
AW: It’s okay, this is life, and we’re all living it. It’s great that we get to talk about it, you know?
MR: I know, and what was sweet was that you were sharing your thoughts so articulately, and you were so right on. I agreed with everything you said, and I wish this country well, but we really have to get our heads out of…
NW: …out of our reality TV!
MR: Nice. Let’s keep this rolling by telling me what track you’d like to discuss next.
NW: How about “Hey You?”
MR: What’s the story behind that?
NW: “Hey You” is a song that I had rolling around in my brain for almost ten years, but I could not for the life of me come up with the “one more thing” it needed. I tried one thing that didn’t work, then I’d try something else a couple of years later that wouldn’t work, and over the years it just wasn’t finished until we ran into Ben Mink and started working on this album. I pulled it out again and I said, “Do you have another part? This song needs a part.” And he definitely had the perfect part.
MR: What’s the working relationship like in the studio?
AW: What an amazing artist and a funny guy and extremely intelligent. He’s intellectual, but also able to tell tall tales from his road, and his past. We were first turned onto his work when he was working with k.d. lang on the Ingenue album, and that really stuck with us. I think we tried to contact him in the ’90s, but we couldn’t get together because he was busy doing other stuff. Then, when I was going to do a solo album several years ago, it worked out that we could work together. Well, we brought Nancy in to work on my solo album, of course, and Nancy and Ben Mink just hit it off. It was like they were siblings, too. They are like total guitar and strings siblings, and to hear them play together is uncanny. It’s almost like they’re cut from the same (cloth), you know?
MR: So, he’s sort of like an unofficial member at this point.
NW: Yes. In Red Velvet Car sessions, we played mostly just with Ben, myself, bass, and drums, and Ann singing, so those were all the basics. That’s how we played everything at once, together, at the same time, and in the same room with eye contact. The conversation of that, you can really hear on the album because it’s definitely not layered, digitally constructed stuff.
MR: That’s pretty important these days, isn’t it? I was just talking with the Goo Goo Dolls the other day, and John Rzeznik was discussed how important it was for that group to sit down in a room, and finally reconnect with each other during the recording process.
NW: How rare that stuff is these days.
AW: Yeah, I never thought I’d live to see the day when the natural process of musicians playing together would be something that you had to try to return to. That’s the core, primal thing, really.
NW: You mean, actually playing and singing?
AW: (laughs) It’s this new thing, actually singing and playing.
MR: Well, with Pro Tools and the like, you can pretty much just throw on a part and say, “There it is.”
NW: You can pretty much construct things out of other things, right?
MR: Right, and you don’t even need to be able to sing because we’ve got a pitch corrector for that.
AW: Oh boy, don’t get me started.
MR: No, let’s get you started.
AW: If I had money for every take I had to redo because I sang something off pitch, (laughs) I’d be rich.
MR: I’m with you, and if a pitch corrector was never invented, I don’t think we’d have a Top Ten right now.
AW: And it’s funny how that pitch correction thing has a digital thing that goes through it, kind of making people sound anonymous.
MR: Yes. It makes them generic, good point.
NW: It’s really hard to distinguish a lot of the singers now.
MR: It’s like a lot of the Disney-ish or American Idol-ish kids who are making records follow this template that have this same three note interval span in the chorus, and you have to include a sixth or a fourth in there so it has a tiny bit of emotion, or I guess that’s what it’s supposed to do.
NW: Interesting, yeah, you’re right.
MR: Then you have, of course, the soulless block vocal that sounds like every other block vocal.
AW: It’s interesting because it’s also affected the sound or the way people sing without pitch correction. If you hear a lot of new singers, the vowels and the way they change notes almost sound pitch corrected already. So, it’s become the new accent of pop music singing.
MR: Wow, people trying to emulate pitch correctors. So, being a fan since Day One, what’s great is that you’ve always got stuff coming down the pike, like your new DVD.
NW: Yeah, there’s a new DVD coming in the Spring of a Seattle show we did at The Sky Church, and that has a few of the new songs, and Ben Mink plays fiddle and guitar on that DVD as a guest star, and Alison Krauss comes out to sing a couple of songs with us as well. So, look for the DVD this spring.
MR: You know, this is a really interesting period for Alison Krauss. There’s that album Robert Plant did with her.
NW: That album was amazing.
MR: I like the cross-pollination.
AW: I like it, too. It’s really great for us because a lot of the time people sort of put us in this box that’s really small. It’s like, “They do rock music.” But we like lots of types of music, and Americana is no exception. Alison is squirming to get out of her box too, so when we met and sang together and became friends and everything, it was a really great stretch for all of us.
MR: Yeah, and with Robert Plant. I couldn’t believe I was listening to that.
AW: He, of course, on that record, is singing so great, and some people are sort of like, “Well gee, he’s supposed to sing like he did in Led Zeppelin, where he’s up there real high, screaming and wailing.” Well, he is more sexy, I think, when he croons, you know? If that’s possible, for Robert Plant to be more sexy than Led Zeppelin? I really think, for instance, on the song “Nothin,” on Raising Sand, he’s just on. There are a couple of moments that are just so amazingly sexy, and they’re great.
MR: Have you reached out to him because, you know, you do have a history there.
AW: Haven’t reached out to him, but we did get to meet. We went to see the Alison Krauss-Robert Plant show at The Greek Theater a couple of years back, and we got to talk with him afterward and hang out a bit. We had a little talk, and it was a little bit stilted because Zeppelin has always been a man’s things, and they heard that we cover their stuff. So, the two of us kind of went, “Oh, hello.” It was so amazing for me to try and forget that he is so amazingly powerful in his presence and just talk to him like a human being. It was a great moment for me.
MR: Right. I feel like what you said earlier is so true about perceptions; people don’t allow artists to grow in a lot of cases. Regarding the Robert Plant thing, none of us should really be surprised by that, just as Heart doing really beautiful acoustic music should not be a surprise. You get to grow in your art, the way you want to grow in it, and I think your fans, for the most part, have come along with you.
AW: They have, and it speaks well because that takes attention span, and Heart people really have it, they really do.
MR: I feel like there’s so much that you’ve gone through over the years that you could probably write a book about life on the road, about music, and about the music industry, right?
AW & NW: (laugh)
NW: It would be like when people ask, “What do you say to people that are coming up?” What is it really? It is a business, even though you don’t really want to think of it as a business. I think without some kind of true calling and dogged determination and survival mechanisms built in, you shouldn’t even try. Turn back, unless you’re really burning up with passion, desire, and a purpose to do this, you know? I think, like probably a lot of things in the world, to do something really well, especially something a little bit outside of the box, there just isn’t a lot of context for it, and it can be the loneliest, most heartbreaking world you can try to do something in. Ann and I, I think, should consider ourselves really lucky because we have each other and we’re sisters and confidants. But there are others–like Sarah McLachlan and Chrissie Hynde–who have sort of done it on their own, and I don’t know how they do that. I don’t know if I could do that. Anyway, becoming an upstart now, with the way the attention span is so short and the pitch correction aspect of music making people kind of anonymous, it narrows the field, and I think it might even be tougher than before.
AW: Yeah, I think it probably is.
NW: With the imaging of everything now, I’d just say that if you have a soulful, poetic ear for doing some music, go underground or go rock, and do all the work.
AW: Do the work. Don’t expect one day be in your bedroom with your hairbrush, looking at the mirror, and the next day be like Lady Gaga. That happens to, maybe, one millionth of one percent of all the people in the world. If you want to spend ten years in the pipeline, forming a musical soul and putting all the miles in, then maybe you’re going to be unusual, and you might stay around a little bit.
MR: Very nice. I always ask artists the question, “What advice do you have for new artists,” and you’ve already answered it perfectly.
NW: Becoming competent takes a little time, and that will give you enough time to figure out whether you’re built for it, too.
MR: That’s good advice because a lot of people go into it without realizing that they’re in it for the long haul once they’ve committed.
NW: Yeah, for better and for worse.
MR: Seriously, the whole fantasy of the American Idol “win” is exactly that, and for people that are getting into this for their art, it’s not going to matter. They’re going to do exactly what you said.
NW: People always ask us, and it always really amazes me because we have some albums that have been “hits” and some that aren’t. So, when we have one that isn’t, people say, “Well, why do you make albums? Are you going to make any more albums?” The answer, of course is, “Yes,” because that’s what we do as functioning musicians. We don’t live and die by our sales. And it’s for the love of music and the way people come back to us and say, “Oh, you saved my life with your music.” It’s so meaningful to people when you can reach them and they can hear your music and you can share your music with them. It’s completely meaningful.
MR: Do you have any information about your tour?
AW: Yeah, it’s been going on now for several months, and it’s going to be going on solidly until the end of September. Then, we’ll be doing a few more dates through the end of the year. We’ll take thirty seconds off for Christmas, and then, ten seconds later, we’ll be back out on the road.
MR: Are you doing any Rockin’ New Years Eves?
AW: I guess not because I can see our manager shaking her head, so I guess not.
MR: I’ll share just one tiny story with you. When I moved on from one of my jobs, I was packing my office and played “Strong, Strong Wind” like it was a loop. That was my “time to move on” song.
AW & NW: Oh, yeah.
MR: That particular Heart recording was very touching to me, so I’ll just throw that out there.
NW: That’s what music does to people, and that’s how it orchestrates our lives and protects us through our lives, as well. The songs that we take with us are our protectors.
Tracks:
1. There You Go
2. WTF
3. Red Velvet Car
4. Queen City
5. Hey You
6. Wheels
7. Saffronia’s Mark
8. Death Valley
9. Sunflower
10. Sand
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
Introducing Theo Shier – “This Old House”
This YouTube video is a live performance by 18-year-old rocker Theo Shier who is an unsigned artist with a stash of hook-filled and introspective originals plus enough onstage charisma to make whoever eventually signs him look like a genius. Although he plays acoustic guitar in this impromtu performance, Theo also is a terrific electric guitarist who will hopefully show off his chops in future videos.

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
15

Wednesday Windfall Conversations with KISS Gene Simmons Brian Culbertson and The Weepies

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Wednesday Windfall Conversations with KISS Gene Simmons Brian Culbertson and The Weepies

A Conversation with Gene Simmons
Mike Ragogna: Hey Gene, how are you?
Gene Simmons: I’m deliriously happy.
MR: Why didn’t you let your daughter keep her pony?
GS: There are Beverly Hills ordinances that I wasn’t aware of. You aren’t allowed to keep farm animals that poop bigger than a certain size. Do you believe that?
MR: (laughs) No, I can’t believe that.
GS: It’s actually true. Dog poop is a certain size, but once it gets past a certain size, supposedly, there are health hazards. So, we had to move the horse past Malibu.
MR: I’m sorry to hear that. Did the horse live happily ever after?
GS: Oh yeah, happier there than in Beverly Hills.
MR: Sweet. With regards to Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock, is it easy or hard for you to transform yourself from an everyday person into a savior of rock ‘n’ roll?
GS: When you dare dream the impossible dream, then you can unleash the inner rock star inside of you. We all had these kinds of notions when we were kids, especially guys. We all put towels around our necks and tried to fly through the air, or imagined we were Harry Potter if we’re young enough. We all want to sort of defy gravity and scale Mt. Olympus, and very few things enable you to do that. 3-D takes you close, but your body is motionless while your mind takes you. When you sit in those Disney amusement park rides, you get King Kong coming at you, but you’re sitting still. This, for me, is a labor of love. Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock is like this full body experience, where you get to not just imagine what it feels like to be a rock star, but you become the rock star, if you will, within you. Because physically, you’re playing a guitar, you’re trying to keep up with this great music you’re hearing. Visually, you’re trying to keep up with what’s going on onstage, and there’s an evolution, kind of a metamorphosis; the musician becomes a demi-god. I saw a close to finished version of it and it rocks.
MR: Now, you held a press conference at Pop Sound Studios about your part in the game. Were people amazed at the end result?
GS: Yeah. People think, “How does he have time to do this?” because tomorrow, I’m physically in Toronto, and today I’m in Los Angeles. Tomorrow, I’m playing onstage with KISS, and here I’m talking about Guitar Hero. But you know, life is short and you should make time for the things that you think are cool. I don’t know how else to put it, but Guitar Hero rocks.
MR: What KISS song is featured in the game?
GS: “Love Gun.” Also you’ll be able to hear Offspring, Queen, and a whole slew of artists. But everything from A to Z is all rock–there’s not a rapper, there’s no cowboy hats…
MR: So, where is rock and roll heading?
GS: It’s going to depend on who’s going to carry the mantle. It’s like, “Who’s going to wear the crown, and are you worth it?” It’s going to depend on that next fifteen-year old kid, guy or girl, in a garage. Do they have something to say and do they know how to say it? Can you spread your legs wide enough to hold that rock star, Jesus Christ pose?
MR: (laughs) I thought you were going elsewhere with that. What bands do you currently think are great rock bands?
GS: I like The Envy, which is about to come out with their first record on Simmons Universal (laughs). We believe in that band, and that’s going to happen big. I’m also a fan of The Muse. If you haven’t heard of them, they’re big in England and starting to make headway here–by the way, they’re in Guitar Hero. For those that don’t know, they’re sort of Queen-like and a combination of other things. There are a lot of really good new bands, but it’s going to depend on them and whether they’re willing to pick up the challenge and go where no band has gone before. That’s the only way they’re going to be able to make any mark.
MR: You mentioned Simmons Universal. You have a label coming through Universal, right?
GS: Right.
MR: And what kind of acts are on it?
GS: It doesn’t matter, it’s just got to work. Mostly there has to be guitars in the band. I don’t want a synthesizer band. You can have a synth in the band, but it’s got to be driven by guitar. The heartbeat of all of it started a long time ago with Chuck Berry and Little Richard. Unless you’re singing stuff that connects with the joys of life–good food, sexy people, living life to its fullest–then it’s just kind of dreary. I don’t want to do Seattle music. I’m actually happy to be alive.
MR: What are your thoughts on music video games in general, you know, like Guitar Hero?
GS: Well, I think Guitar Hero is head, hands, and feet above the rest simply because it allows you to kind of, not morph, but metamorph or evolve into the inner rock star in you. My favorite thing about it, though, is that it’s a full body experience. Your imagination goes, you hear the music that surrounds you, the visual surrounds you, and you become a part of it.
MR: Can the case be made that somebody who plays Guitar Hero might be inspired to pick up a guitar and learn how to play the actual instrument?
GS: The answer is yes. More importantly, it self empowers you, and you are in control of your own destiny. How many places in life do you get to do that?
MR: What are you listening to right now, what’s on your iPod?
GS: I don’t listen to iPod; I find it insulting because bands, and I’m in one, spend so much time and money making sure that it sounds great, and then you hear it through the asshole of a fly. It’s such an insulting way to do it. It’s like watching movies on your handheld devices, what a f**king insult to the movie makers, and the sound guys, and technicians who spend so much time lighting stuff so that their stuff can be squashed to the size of a potato chip. I use handheld devices for communication, not for looking at art or listening to music.
MR: Wasn’t that the same complaint when we moved from analog to digital, from records to CDs?
GS: Yeah, I don’t like it. Just because something is easier doesn’t mean it’s better. I also like leftover food as opposed to fresh food because the spaghetti gets to talk with the meatball, and it’s just more scrumptious. That’s what marination is, “Oh, I just put some fresh wine on it.” I’ll say, “No, let it soak, it’ll taste better.”
MR: Now, you’re no stranger to games. I remember you had one of the most popular pinball machines of all time.
GS: It is the most popular one of all time, the KISS Bally machine was the biggest.
MR: They came to you and asked you to be a part of Guitar Hero, right?
GS: Yes they did.
MR: What was your first reaction?
GS: First reaction was, “Cool.” To be quite honest, they’re not going to be able to make me rich, it’s too late for that. So, the only reason for doing stuff is if you think it’s cool. I don’t know how to describe it other than saying Guitar Hero rocks.
MR: And it’s so involved, with all the different levels, pods, all that.
GS: There are one thousand variations, can you imagine? One thousand variations of where you can go, where you can wind up, and where you can fall flat on your face, and the musical choices and the physicality of it really makes it a full body experience.
MR: Gene, are you good at it?
GS: I’m horrible, that’s why I want to keep playing it. Before I whip it out, as the phrase goes, at a party or an event I want to be good at it. So, that’s why I’m getting one of the first ones that are coming out. We’re just doing the last vocal, and the PR campaign stuff, but I’m getting one of the first ones off the racks to quietly go over in a corner and practice. I can’t say, “That’s me. That’s the voice. I’m the demigod.” “Well, how do you play?” “Umm, not so good.”
I can’t do that. I’ve got to win, got to be cool. That’s what I suggest to everybody: Get yours, and get your free Soundgarden album because the nice folks at Guitar Hero, believe it or not, are giving the whole album free, as an extra. I would go off, if I were you, and practice on your own, so, when you’re at a party and someone says, “How did you get so good?” You can say, “You know, some people are just born with it. Some people are just born rock stars.”
MR: KISS is on tour?
GS: We’ve been on tour for two-and-a-half years, pretty much, on and off.
MR: Are you working on a new KISS project?
GS: Oh, God, there are so many. Go into a 7-11 or a supermarket, or drive down the highways of America and you’ll see us.
MR: Okay. More specifically, is there a new album in the works?
GS: There will be, we just need time to breathe.
MR: Right. Now, we started out talking about something that happened on your show, Family Jewels. Are there any more seasons?
GS: Season six starts shooting next month. We’re the longest running reality series, we’re in eighty-four countries, (sings) and a partridge in a pear tree.
MR: (laughs) Nice. Is the show going to feature you playing Guitar Hero in any of the episodes?
GS: Am I going to feature Guitar Hero in our TV show?
MR: Yes.
GS: It depends, if they buy on, yes.
MR: (laughs) Leaving aside the iPod, what are you listening to, music-wise, right now?
GS: You know, I listen to more new music than almost anyone I know because I get one thousand demos, on average, per month. So, I really do listen to new music…in fact, newer music than the people who listen to music because I get it before it winds up on a label.
MR: Are you listening in the context of finding bands for Simmons Universal?
GS: Yes.
MR: Do you have a roster that’s already set?
GS: The Envy is our first act, but we’re closing in on three more. You can go to simmonsrecords.com and get the lowdown.
MR: KISS has been one of the biggest franchises of all time.
GS: No other music franchise touches it. We outsell The Beatles and Elvis put together.
MR: I know somebody interested in buying a KISS casket with the fireworks.
GS: The next generation of that is coming out. The first generation sold out, you can’t find them.
MR: (laughs) Yeah?
GS: The KISS condoms are coming back, too. The condoms were sold out as well. Did you ever notice that it says made in Jamaica? Oh, yours doesn’t roll out that far? See, that was a joke.
MR: (laughs)
GS: That was a joke.
MR: (laughs) Yes, yes, and a fine one. You were on Shatner’s Raw Nerve, right?
GS: Yes, I did one.
MR: What was that like?
GS: Well, Bill asks people questions that are sometimes surprising, and he actually got me. He asked about my mother, and what the immigrant experience was like coming to America, and where I came from, and stuff that you usually don’t talk about in interviews.
MR: I was just curious about that.
GS: Trust me, I’m fascinating.
MR: You are, sir. I’ll say you were fascinating even as a sea monster in SpongeBob SquarePants.
GS: Yes, I did SpongeBob. We also did The Fairly OddParents one hour premier, KISS did two Family Guys, where KISS saves Santa Claus. I think I did Mrs. Claus. Anywhere, anytime, all places, all things for everybody.
MR: Once you’re a cartoon character, how do you go back?
GS: Well, I also created My Dad The Rock Star, which was on Nickelodeon, and around the world for twenty-six episodes. How do you go back? You try to be all things to everybody.
MR: It’s clear you’ve got acting chops. Where did they come from?
GS: I have no clue. I think there must be a loose screw someplace because the tendency for most people is to throw up when they get up onstage because they get judged. I think I’d throw up if I wasn’t on stage and I wasn’t getting judged.
MR: Which takes us to what advice do you have for new artists?
GS: There’s no advice you can give because every artist is unique. There’s no paint-by-numbers road to success, and no ten easy steps to follow that will make you succeed. First, it will start with you, and what you’ve got. Then, the other three are the right thing, at the right place, at the right time.
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with Brian Culbertson
Mike Ragogna: So you named your album XII.
Brian Culbertson: I’m bringing back the Roman numeral.
MR: And you’re doing it in a fine way. XII features artists such as Chuck Brown, Kenny Lattimore, Brian McKnight, Avant, Faith Evans, Earl Klugh, and Ray Parker Jr. Why?
BC: Why? You know, I always love collaborations. To me, making music is about being in a studio with other great artists and musicians. So, I always get together to write with people and to record with people. I just love that feeling of collaboration, when everyone is in there having a great time. Some of the songs are even like a party. There were probably seven or eight of us in the studio during the making of “Feelin’ It,” for instance.
MR: Sounds like a party. Sinbad is on there too, right?
BC: Yeah. Sinbad, Ray…everybody is on that song. It was so much fun.
MR: You’re classified as “jazz,” but you’re more than that. You’re funk, you’re R&B, you’re pop…
BC: I think my new bio says, “…R&B, jazz, soul, funk, pop, mulit-instrumentalist.” It’s just kind of a mouthful.
MR: What was the recording process like?
BC: Well, this one was done like most modern pop records are done these days. You know, we went into the studio, we started writing, we went into pre-production, and we started making the tracks. A lot of this record was programmed, and I programmed everything–a lot of the drums, and synth bass, and a lot of the keyboard parts were programmed. Then, we started layering the live instruments on top of the programmed parts, which is why it’s a very modern sounding, current record. After everything was layered on, we added the singers, adding their vocal layers, and then the last thing I did was put my piano on it to fill in the holes. After that, we started mixing it and added cool effects and reverb, and EQ-ing. I don’t want to get too technical, but we make it sound good.
MR: I’m very familiar with the practice of filling in the holes at the end, but usually it’s done with the lead vocalist or sweetening. I am very surprised to hear that the piano came last.
BC: Yeah.
MR: Normally, you’d record the rhythm section first, then replace the piano later.
BC: I do demo the piano first.
MR: Oh, you mean you record the piano as a guide so the players know what’s coming, then you replace it in the end as a sort of final overdub.
BC: Yeah, they know roughly where it’s going to be, but in terms of the little soloistic parts, I will fit those all in later. I don’t want to get in the way, and impair anyone else who is going to potentially play in that spot.
MR: Right. Obviously, this is your twelfth album, right?
BC: Yeah.
MR: How long have you been recording?
BC: Oh, geez. Well, my first record came out in ’94. So, it’s been a few years now.
MR: You’ve accumulated quite a Facebook friends list for the album, but some of these musicians are old pals, right?
BC: Oh yeah, a lot of the people that I work with, I’ve worked with on many of my records over the years. A lot of the great studio musicians like Lenny Castro, Alex Al, Paul Jackson Jr., and Eric Marienthal are all guys that have played on many of my records. Even Ray Parker Jr., I’ve been working with for several years now. He lives nearby me, and loves playing guitar.
MR: And you’ve contributed to other artist’s albums, such as Peter White’s and Dave Koz’s.
BC: Yeah, over the years, I’ve done a lot of different things. Most recently, I just worked on the new Avant record, and the new Faith Evans record. So, I’m always meeting new people, and getting new relationships. I just, like I said, love working with different people. It’s always a learning process for me. Every time I work with someone new I might learn something that I’ve never done before.
MR: Speaking of learning something, how much do you attribute your musical chops to being the son of famed trumpeter, Jim Culbertson?
BC: Ah, yes. I got all my music from my parents, growing up. My dad–being a great trumpet player and a band director for, now, thirty-eight years–had music flowing in our house ever since I was born. So, I was destined to become some kind of musician, and I started classical piano lessons when I was eight, picked up a lot of different instruments along the way, and here we are.
MR: One of your albums that people may be most familiar with is It’s On Tonight.
BC: Yes.
MR: That debuted at number one on Billboard.
BC: It did, and it stayed up there for a few weeks too.
MR: You’ve had many albums with the Warner family, and many with the Universal group, right?
BC: Yes.
MR: How do you keep your head in your art as opposed to dealing with business aspects of your career?
BC: I’ve got to tell you, I’m not thinking about that. I’m thinking about, “What kind of music do I want to make now?” That’s all I’m thinking about. I let my manager deal with label situations, wherever we are at that point, and whoever we’re dealing with. It’s my job to make music, go in the studio, and deliver a product that they can get excited about trying to make some money off of. Ultimately, for me, it’s all about the music and the creativity.
MR: While growing up, who were some of your influences besides your dad?
BC: Well, around the house, I really listened to what my dad was listening to. He was listening to Earth, Wind & Fire, and Chicago, and Blood, Sweat & Tears, and Tower Of Power. Then there was the fusion stuff like Chic Corea, Yellowjackets, Brecker Brothers, and then David Sanborn and that whole thing. So, that’s what I grew up on.
MR: David Sanborn is one of my favorites. He appeared on a lot of old pop records as the big sax break.
BC: He was at the perfect time because sax was such an integral part of pop music in the ’80s.
MR: Right, and the ’70s. Who is your favorite traditional jazz artist, and who is your favorite contemporary jazz artist?
BC: Definitely, my favorite is John Coltrane. I never, never get tired of listening to his records. My favorite contemporary artist is harder to pick because there are so many. David Sanborn is right up there, but I also love George Duke. I don’t even want to play in the same room if he’s there. I’m just in awe of his talent and his musicianship, and I tell him that too. He’s like, “Ah, man. Come on.” (laughs)
MR: Do you see reality shows like American Idol continuing as strongly as over the next few years?
BC: Well, I think, like anything, it has a limited number of years. That, right now, is the fad I guess, and I personally don’t see that lasting forever, just like any pop star. Obviously, there are always exceptions, but it’s having a good run right now.
MR: I expected American Idol to last about as long as a game show, but it outsmarted me.
BC: I must admit, I don’t personally watch them. I actually don’t even watch television because I don’t have TV at home. I cancelled my service five years ago, and I haven’t watched it since.
MR: So, how do you watch How I Met Your Mother?
BC: I have iTunes and there’s Hula. There are many ways that, if you need to watch something, you can watch something.
MR: I haven’t had a television in about year. Not missing it. I only cared about a handful of shows, and that’s it.
BC: Yeah, the only thing you get screwed on is you can’t watch live sporting events. So, if you’re a huge sports buff, it’s probably not a good move for you. I used to be into sports when I was in Chicago. Obviously, I was there during the Bull’s dynasty, so we had to watch every single game. Now, I’m like, “Eh.” I’ve kind of lost interest. So, now I just kind of focus on music, which is a good thing.
MR: Live versus studio recording, which is your preference?
BC: Well, it used to be studio hands down. When I was first starting out, I was a total studio rat or studio nerd or whatever you want to call it. I loved being in the studio, and I still have a studio tan, by the way. To me, I really like the control aspect, how every little part gets put in its place. Then, when I first started touring, I was very uncomfortable up on the stage. I hadn’t done it a lot; in fact, I had never actually performed on keyboard live because I was mainly a trombone player back in those days. So, when I first started touring as myself as an artist, all of a sudden, I’m out front having to talk to this audience that doesn’t know me because I’m brand new, you know? I was a nervous wreck, man.
Over the years, as I became more popular and songs started playing on the radio, people started coming to actually see me. So, I think when you see that people are coming to see you, and know the songs already, all of the sudden you get more confident. At this point, I absolutely love touring; I love performing live. It’s just an amazing thrill to be out there on that stage and just command that audience right from the start. I just love having them right on every note. It’s a blast.
MR: What do audiences cheer for most at your concerts?
BC: I think people like when you are really just seriously into it. I’ll go nuts on a couple of songs, and people will lose their minds, it’s crazy. Then, on the other side of it, I’ll do a ballad, and I use a keyboard live, so, I’ll step around to the back of it and play it backwards. That blows people away, too. Sometimes, I run around with my trombone because I still play trombone in my shows. Now, I’m playing drums in my show. I always try to flip it up and do something different to throw people off a little bit.
MR: You’ve worked with Barry Manilow, right?
BC: Yes. Actually, at this point, I would say I’ve done over thirty shows opening for Barry when he goes out of Vegas to do arena shows. We did the Staples Center in L.A., the United Center in Chicago, and obviously, many other places throughout the country. That’s been an amazing, amazing experience. I still remember the first show I did for him–I think it was in Philadelphia. He hadn’t had an opening act in, I believe, almost ten years. So, everyone was very prompt and got there right at eight o’clock when I went on because they thought he was about to come out. They’re chanting, “Barry, Barry,” and I’m thinking they’re going to crucify me, right? So, I run out, and they realize it’s not Barry. I’m looking at random people in the front row putting their arms up and looking at their watches, but during my whole set, I slowly started to win them over, and by the end of the show I had the whole audience on their feet, and we had an amazing time. Barry was so gracious, he even had me come out and perform with him on some of his stuff. So, it was definitely a great thing.
MR: And you had a career in jingles?
BC: Oh yes. Back in Chicago, I actually wrote and produced thousands of commercials. We did everything from United Airlines (hums theme), to McDonalds with the Fry Guys, if you remember that. So, that was a really cool musical training for me because I was in my early to mid-twenties at that point, while I was also doing records on the side.
MR: How did you get your jingle gig?
BC: A guy that owned the company was a guy that I took private lessons with when I was in high school, and then he was a teacher at DePaul University, kind of an adjunct professor there who taught one class. So, I continued private composition and arranging lessons with him, and a couple years later, his partner left, and he asked me if I wanted to work with him. I was like, “Oh my God, yeah.” So, I was literally thrown into sixteen-hour days doing jingles; it was insane. I kind of got burned out and quit that to move to L.A. and make records full time, and I’ve been a happy guy since.
MR: Although, kids, the lesson here is do take your piano lessons.
BC: Oh, yes. I tell all the kids that, in the beginning, it really sucked and I hated it myself. But there is a threshold that you eventually get over, and all of a sudden, it becomes fun and enjoyable. Like learning anything, it’s very difficult. But you’ve just got to stick with it, and eventually, it’s going to be cool.
MR: What advice do you have for up-and-coming artists?
BC: What I tell people is a lot of people think they need to make a whole record in order to get a record deal, and my opinion is you don’t really need a full record. You need three really well done, great songs–written well, produced well, and mixed well. A lot of people kind of forget to spend the time and the money to make it sound as good as it can possibly get because today, you’re competing against everyone. So, you really have to spend as much time, money, and energy as you can. You really have to throw your entire self into it if you want it badly. Also, get out there and use those social media outlets. Make sure you have YouTube videos of yourself performing live, go do club dates, and get a band together. There are so many things you can do. Go get a million hits on YouTube, good luck.
MR: All it takes is a treadmill, apparently.
BC: (laughs)
MR: I bet OK Go sure they were as surprised as anyone by the phenomenon.
BC: I’m sure everyone was shocked.
MR: So, what does the future bring for Mr. Brian Culbertson?
BC: Right now, I’m about to embark on a lot of tour dates this Fall. We’re going to do a whole tour on the East coast coming up very soon. We’re probably doing a bunch of shows in the Midwest and the South, and then I head out on a cruise ship. We’re doing a weeklong jazz cruise in the Caribbean. Then, I’m going out on a Christmas tour with Dave Koz, Kenny Dilfer, and Jonathan Butler, and that will be twenty-some dates in the month of December. It’s just going to be a busy fall, so, I’m looking forward to getting out there, and you know, promoting the record.
Tracks:
1. Feelin’ It
2. Another Love
3. It’s Time
4. Out On The Floor
5. Waiting For You
6. Stay Wit It
7. Skies Wide Open
8. Forever
9. Don’t U Know Me By Now
10. That’s Life
11. I Wanna Love You
12. I Don’t Know
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with The Weepies’ Steve Tannen and Deb Talen
Mike Ragogna: Steve and Deb, I’m a little shy introducing two people in the same group who are married because the last name thing gets tricky.
Steve Tannen: Definitely. No, Deb Talen was Deb Talen when I met her, and she will ever be Deb Talen. You know, if you’re marrying Joni Mitchell or Bruce Springsteen you’re not going to be like, “Oh, take my name too.”
MR: Joni Springsteen.
ST: Exactly, and I’m Steve Tannen.
MR: How are you guys? Are you doing well?
Deb Talen: Doing well, thanks.
ST: We’re doing great.
NR: So, let’s get to the new album. I think one of the best and subtlest lines on the record is in the first song “Please Speak Well Of Me”: “Don’t say words you don’t mean.”
ST: Thanks, that was one of the first songs we wrote for the record. I don’t know, it just set up the emotional balance of, “everything is good, but there’s a lot of longing going on.”
MR: Nice. An alternate way of looking at it is people fill up a lot of space with a lot of words, kind of like what I’m doing right now.
ST & TD: (laughs)
DT: But you have to, it’s your job.
MR: Hey, I have a sweet job today, talking to The Weepies for The Huffington Post here at solar powered KRUU-FM. Did you know we were solar powered?
DT: No, that’s so cool. What does that mean?
MR: (laughs) That means we’re running off of solar energy, and we’re the only ones in the Midwest doing that.
ST: Aren’t you in Iowa?
MR: I am in Iowa.
ST: How does that work during the winter?
MR: There’s still a sun.
DT: That’s amazing. Both of us used to live, separately, in Colorado, and we were amazed at how much sun there was. It was like three hundred days a year, or something.
MR: Well, the interesting thing is if it’s functional in the Midwest, then there’s no excuse for anyone on the West coast, right?
DT: Los Angeles has almost an offensive amount of sunshine.
ST: There’s a song on the record called “Hope Tomorrow’s A Sunny Day,” and originally it was “Bet Tomorrow’s A Sunny Day.” It was sort of a cynical view of how many sunny days in a row you have in California.
MR: I moved here from California, I know exactly what you’re talking about.
ST: Wow.
MR: I think there’s such a thing as being too happy.
ST: Did you fall in love or something?
MR: As in what am I doing in Iowa?
ST: I love Iowa. That’s just an unusual path.
MR: (laughs) So far, I’ve had a beautiful here in Fairfield, so I’m a-lovin’ the Iowa.
DT: We’ve really loved our time we’ve spent in Iowa too, though it’s just been passing through, playing shows and things.
MR: Where do you play when you pass through?
DT: We’ve played in some really tiny places. A little place in, what is it, Cedar Rapids. Kind of a coffee house type place that’s run by these two guys. We’ve played there a couple of times.
ST: And I think we’re going to be at the Englert Theatre in Iowa City. We visited Iowa City last time, and we were looking at housing prices when we were there thinking, “Gosh, look what you can get. That’s awesome.”
MR: Wait till I tell you about Fairfield.
ST: (laughs) Oh my gosh, I bet.
MR: We’re going to get a real estate agent here in a moment or two.
ST: (laughs) Get ‘em on the line.
MR: I hear some good things are happening with Be My Thrill. It’s already topping charts, and there is much celebration in the land.
ST: You know, to be perfectly honest, we don’t follow it at all. The little we do is the label telling us what’s happening and we go, “That’s weird. That’s great.” A friend of mine said, “Hey, did you know you’re ahead of Eminem?” And I was like, “You know, I’m not.” It was never our intent to be ahead of Eminem, and we don’t even pay attention. We are now preparing for the road. We’re home, going through the last four records, and a couple of the solo records, deciding what we’re going to play this time through since we’ll only have two hours every night.
MR: Time to whip out the medleys.
ST: You know, I did that a while back and I was like, “That was cool.” But no.
DT: He was kind of playing and making fun of himself, right?
ST: Seeing how many songs he could play in the key of G.
MR: I guess when you do medleys, you have to be a Bacharach or a Jimmy Webb.
ST: Fair enough. We’re going out on the road with a huge bus and a full band, and we’re going to take the next five weeks here and really get this show on its feet. We’re really excited to be heading out on the road.
MR: Where are you heading?
DT: All over the place. We’re heading to thirty-six cities around the country. We’re starting with going up the West coast, then over and around.
MR: Nice. I remember getting turned on to The Weepies because one of your songs was on One Tree Hill.
DT: Sure, yeah.
MR: Which song was that?
DT: They’ve used a few at this point.
MR: After I heard it, I was like, “Whoever they are, I need my fair share of Weepies.”
ST: Thanks. We’ve had a lot of support from film and TV. It’s a little inexplicable. I don’t know, it just seems to fit. We’re involved in many of the decisions that go on there. They show us the movie or the TV show it’s going to happen in, and in most cases, it’s really cool, beautiful stuff. There’s no commercial radio to speak of for indie artists, so, it really helps get the music out there too. You discovered it through a TV show…crazy, right?
MR: Yeah, and what’s interesting is that even though the intention of your song was probably not acted out by the actors, it perfectly conveyed the mood the scene needed, whatever that was, don’t really remember specifics. It was One Tree Hill, what can I say.
DT: Hopefully people are interested enough that their ears perk, and they can make their own associations in their own lives.
MR: So, what did you get that musical director for Christmas?
DT: (laughs)
ST: Again, this is so embarrassing, we don’t really know him. We do meet them once a year or something at an event, but mostly, we are so boring. We sit at home and write and play, and then we play out, and that’s all we do.
MR: Well, I have to tell you that I have shouted the virtues of The Weepies far and wide, and actually, I’ve turned my transcriber and his girlfriend onto it.
ST: Thanks very much, that’s how we survive.
MR: Let’s go back to the record. The title track to the album is an up tempo, flirty song, is that your single?
DT: It’s, I guess, one of them.
MR: Okay. What is your “single”?
DT: I don’t know what that means anymore. They send it out on it’s own, to bars around town, and see if they can hook up with anybody. The first one was “I Was Made For Sunny Days.”
ST: An artist named Colbie Caillat sang background on it, and I think that’s why they chose it as the single.
MR: Colbie had a hit with Jason Mraz.
DT: She’s certainly well established in her own right, I mean good gosh.
MR: Yeah, and the hit was “Lucky.”
ST: We’re hilariously ignorant about all that. Colbie is just like a nice woman from down the block with a great voice.
MR: About those singles…
ST: The second single was “Be My Thrill,” which the record company also really liked, and is another up tempo. So, they called it the second single, which just means that Deb did some more artwork for it, as far as I can tell.
MR: Right, because servicing these days is really just a digital link.
DT: Yeah. For singles, certainly that’s what it’s been.
MR: Your first single, “I Was Made For Sunny Days,” pretty much describes all of us.
ST: There’s a line there, “…and the streets filled with umbrellas, and we all look the same.” I think that was kind of a spark for the whole song.
MR: Nice, like a Magritte painting.
ST & DT: Very good.
MR: Are there a couple of songs on here that have interesting stories that the public is not privy to?
ST: Absolutely. One of the things that we do is write together, and write for each other. Some of these songs started off as slow, depressing, low songs that I was singing, and ended up as really poppy ones that Deb sings, and that sound really happy. One of those is “Be My Thrill,” which at some point, really had this dark…
DT: …a little Tom Waits and Leonard Cohen.
ST: Exactly, but if you listen to it, you can hear how it ended up.
MR: Speaking of Tom Waits, I prefer the Asylum years, though most hipsters prefer the Island years. I separate the period in that way because during the Asylum years, he was merely swallowing a glass of broken glass a day…
DT: (laughs)
MR: …but then he hits the Island years.
ST: It’s funny, he goes through these phases, but it’s all the same guy, and that’s what keeps him interesting.
DT: And probably keeps him interested still in what he’s doing.
MR: I love him. “Waltzing Matilda” is one of my favorite songs of all time. It’s such a gin soaked song.
ST: Absolutely, did he write that?
MR: Well, “Waltzing Matilda” is the nickname of a song that he wrote called “Tom Traubert’s Blues (Four Sheets To The Wind In Copenhagen),” in which he incorporated a tag from the folk song “Waltzing Matilda.”
ST: I think my favorite Tom Waits is The Heart Of Saturday Night. That’s my favorite record of his.
MR: Dude, that’s one of my favorite albums of all time. Every song on that record kills.
ST: It is such a whole. You can put the whole thing on and it just never breaks the mood.
MR: It’s like one big song cycle. “San Diego Serenade,” “Shiver Me Timbers,” the title track, “New Coat Of Paint.” How do you do better than that? That’s just an incredible record.
ST: It’s gorgeous. I read an interview with him, and he was talking about sort of moving on from there, and how he felt. I don’t know if this is true or not, but the interview said that he felt like he had sort of done what he had set out to do as a singer-songwriter at piano. So, it was like, “Yeah, I did that. Now I’m trying something else.”
MR: Joni Mitchell is one of those people where everybody wants another Court And Spark or Blue or For The Roses, and she had no intention of ever doing those records again.
ST: They’re all awesome. Strangely enough, Larry Klein, who produced a bunch of Joni Mitchell’s albums and was married to her, plays on our record.
MR: Nice.
ST: On a bunch of the tunes. Obviously, Joni Mitchell is amazing, but Larry Klein is also an amazing hero of ours. We got his contact info and sent him a note, and he just called us back. He said, “Come on down.” Talk about a generous soul, and an amazing talent.
MR: Look at all the people he’s worked with like Madeleine Peyroux, Julia Fordham, many others. His style of production works inside out. He doesn’t gloss; he understands what’s at the root, and then he accents.
DT: Yeah.
ST: We’d love to work with him on that level, and we talked about maybe doing that down the line. This one, he literally just played bass for us. It was really sort of magical.
MR: He’s such a great producer that you forget he’s also a really amazing bass player.
ST: Incredible. The other guy we were able to hook up with was a guy named Tony Levin.
MR: I’ll always associate him with Paul Simon, but he’s done so much more.
DT: Peter Gabriel.
MR: Exactly.
ST: Another tremendously generous guy, and an amazing player.
MR: There are some really great humans that we could be spouting off about for the next hour, but let’s get back to The Weepies. The Weepies have a certain amount of popularity, as we know from all this chart action you’ve been having lately. But I think you might be influencing others now. How do you feel about that?
ST: Seriously, when Colbie Caillat contacted us and was like, “Listen, I really listen to your records.” That was really amazing.
DT: Amazing and surprising. I think we feel like we’re sort of a part of a songwriter milieu, a generation of songwriters. There’s sort of influence and counter influence that goes on, and inspiration by listening to each other. It definitely does feel like that.
MR: That’s fair. It is feeling like the singer-songwriter community is a giant cooperative right now.
DT: It feels pretty cooperative, yeah.
MR: Can I ask you an embarrassing question? This is like “let’s whip out the naked baby pictures” time.
ST: Uh oh.
MR: Can you talk about how you met in Cambridge?
DT: Yeah, Steve and I had each been doing the singer-songwriter life, I was in Cambridge and Steve was in New York City. A mutual friend said to both of us, “You need to listen to this other person.” We were both in very intense up-and-coming artist circles, hearing to a lot of music and listening to a lot of other people playing. It was really rare, for me anyway, to hear someone that I was really excited about; it happened, but it was few and far between. I put Steve’s CD on, and I became an instant fanatic. I heard that he was coming to Cambridge to play from someone at another show I was at, and I wrote it on the back of someone’s business card they had given me, “February 12th, Steve Tannen.” I went down to Club Passim where he was playing, and it was really exciting to meet him, and really frightening.
ST: Now can I tell what really happened?
MR: Uh oh.
ST: Deb Talen, in ’00, was a very up-and-coming, hot–in all senses of the word–songwriter. I had heard about her, and then somebody said, “You have to listen to her CD.” Like Deb said, you listen to a lot of CDs, and I was like, “Yeah, I’ll listen to her.” Then I saw her picture and I was like, “You know what, I’d better listen to her, she’s cute.” I did, and I felt a real kinship. I would sing along with her in the car all the time, I’d share her with everybody, I tried to do a cover of her with my band, then I went up to do a show in Boston and she freaked me out. She came and sat right in the middle of the show and I was like, “That’s Deb Talen, don’t screw up. That’s Deb Talen right there.” I literally don’t remember the rest of the show, I was so overwhelmed. We started writing together almost immediately, started playing shows together, and now we’re married and have two kids, it’s crazy. That’s a true story, an absolutely true story.
MR: I like stories like these. I want one of my own.
DT: Well, we want one for you, Mike.
MR: Aw, thank you. Is there anything in the news that you’re concerned about?
ST: Are you kidding?
ST & DT: Everything.
ST: Everything in the news is concerning us, and everybody.
DT: The state of healthcare, the fact that we’re still at war…
ST: Listen, here’s what I’m going to say: Everybody out there, be nice. Love one another because this is the only shot you’ve got.
DT: And drive safely.
ST: And drive safely.
MR: And buckle up.
ST: And take a jacket.
DT: Drive safely and respectfully. Don’t cut people off. It might make you feel a little rush of power for a moment, but don’t do it.
ST: You’re not going to get there very much faster.
MR: Having been a former Californian, it’s the only state I know where if you signal to change lanes or to get out for an exit, it’s a sign of weakness.
DT: (laughs)
ST: Yeah, people will speed up and hit you, it’s true.
MR: What is that? I don’t understand, I’ve never seen that in any other state.
DT: You’re right, it’s a very unique driving system out here.
MR: I hate it, I miss it.
DT: Sure.
MR: Out here in Iowa, we are much more refined than that. Or we don’t exactly have a lot of highways, so there’s not a lot of major freeway freakishness.
DT: Yeah.
ST: We can’t wait. We’re going to experience it when we come to Iowa in October.
MR: Please, would you?
ST: We are, we’re coming to Iowa City, Iowa, and we’re driving. So, we’ll experience the roads for ourselves.
MR: Come for the music, stay for the roads. One more question, got some advice to new artists that are jumping into this ring?
ST: That’s easy.
DT: Just keep doing what you’re doing…
ST: …every day, it doesn’t matter what your job is. Both of us had horrible, horrible jobs, and some not so bad jobs. But write every day.
DT: If you are doing work, and you’re enjoying the work, that’s it. If the world allows you to have a career at it, then that’s fantastic.
ST: Nothing has changed in the way we work other than I don’t have to get up and go to Starbucks to work. I can go get a coffee.
DT: I was the professional barista, thank you very much.
ST: Fair enough.
MR: You worked at Starbucks? Really??
ST: No, it’s true, it’s true.
DT: Insurance after six months, dude. For half time.
MR: I was addicted to Signature Hot Chocolate, and then they took it away. They pulled the rag right out from under me.
DT: How rude.
MR: And now I’m decaffeinated.
DT: Oh, that’s so sad.
Tracks:
1. Please Speak Well Of Me
2. When You Go Away
3. Red Red Rose
4. I Was Made For Sunny Days
5. They’re In Love, Where Am I?
6. Add My Effort
7. Be My Thrill
8. Be My Honeypie
9. Hummingbird
10. Hard To Please
11. Not A Lullaby
12. How Do You Get High?
13. Hope Tomorrow
14. Empty Your Hands
(transcribed by new Weepies’ fan Ryan Gaffney)

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
13

Monday Will Never Be The Same Conversations With Goo Goo Dolls John Rzeznick David Gray and Josiah Leming

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Monday Will Never Be The Same Conversations With Goo Goo Dolls John Rzeznick David Gray and Josiah Leming

A Conversation with The Goo Goo Doll’s John Rzeznick
Mike Ragogna: Is it true that you almost finished your new album Something For The Rest Of Us in ’09, but then decided to work on it a little more?
John Rzeznick: Yeah, we got the final thing and we listened to the mixes, but we kind of got the feeling that it wasn’t right yet. So, we went to the record company, and they were like, “Yeah, take some more time. Make it better.” So, we went back in the studio and tightened things up. We wrote another song, recorded some things, and remixed the whole album, and this is what we’ve got.
MR: Has the band done that with any previous albums?
JR: Not to the extent we did with this one. We really went in and tried to do the whole Bionic Man routine. We went in and worked with a couple of more producers and a different mixer. I just wanted to make a record that I thought would age well. We went back to a lot more classic guitar tones, and we really dug through old albums, listening for great sounds and trying to recapture some of those.
MR: This album reminds me of your older projects. Was that intentional?
JR: I don’t think it was intentional, but I think it did kind of come out that way. I think that had a lot to do with the guy that ended up mixing the album because he mixes us live. He’s our live sound guy, and we put him in the studio and let him go. I think it helps when somebody who mixes you live every night mixes your album because they know how you sound, and they put your stamp on it.
MR: That’s a good point because, although it’s not live, it has the energy of a live performance.
JR: Yeah. We used to go in the studio and stand in front of a big microphone, and have to stand three feet away from it. You can’t move, and it’s really emotionally restrictive, you know? So, I just grabbed a regular, hand-held microphone, and just sang all of my lyrics into that. I could actually kind of perform while I was doing it, and it felt really comfortable.
MR: So, essentially, you captured a true “performance.”
JR: Yeah, you can throw a lot more emotion into it, you know?
MR: Yeah. Now, “Home” is your new single?
JR: Yes.
MR: And it comes with a video.
JR: I’ve got to be honest, man, I don’t really like the video. They kind of wanted to do this sort take off on Lost In Translation, and I’m doing a hundred things, and I’m like, “Sure, okay, that’s fine. Let’s do it.” You know, there’s another video out on YouTube that the fans made. They sent in little video clips and some woman edited them together, and I think it captures a lot more emotion than the official video did.
MR: Often, fans do know what’s best.
JR: They do, they always do.
MR: And they’ve been following you for a while. This is your ninth album, right?
JR: Yes.
MR: Now, you’ve had many hits and have been nominated for a few Grammys, especially for “Iris.” How did you feel about that level of success?
JR: I don’t know, man. I just hope that the music we put out is still relevant and relatable. We’ve accumulated a lot of stuff over the years, a lot of nominations.
MR: Something For The Rest Of Us also is released as a deluxe version with a digital download of “Home,” a signed lithograph, and three bonus tracks–Flesh For Lulu’s “Postcard From Paradise,” Pete Townshend’s “Rough Boys,” and the Kinks’ “Catch Me Now I’m Falling”?
JR: Yeah, yeah.
MR: What inspired the covers?
JR: Well, I love that Flesh For Lulu song. It’s such a great song, and I was looking through the old CDs and stuff trying to download it online. Actually, I have to confess that I went to Limewire and found a copy of the original song because I couldn’t find it on iTunes. So, if I ever run into the guys from Flesh For Lulu, I promise I’ll give them a buck (laughs). It’s just such a great pop song, and people don’t write songs like that very much anymore.
MR: I remember when Pete Townshend’s “Rough Boys” came out on his album Empty Glass. At the time, that was a real landmark record.
JR: Yeah, that was a big one; Robby sings that one. The Kinks’ song, I couldn’t believe it, I was listening to the lyrics and I was like, “Wow, this song is really relevant today.”
MR: Yeah. That’s one of my favorite Kinks songs. “Now I’m calling all citizens, from all over the world. This is Captain America calling. I bailed you out when you were down on your luck, so will you catch me now I’m falling…”
JR: Yeah, yeah, it just feels like we’re falling. Sometimes it feels like we’re falling apart.
MR: Yeah, it’s hard. It just seems like an impossible task to get over the economic aftermath of a long period of, to be kind, strange decisions.
JR: Very strange decisions, and very screwed up priorities. I guess Obama’s trying, I’m sure he’s trying, but the right-wing attack machine is, like, in overdrive. I’m really kind of getting over politics. I have my opinions about it, but the thing that worries me is that I wonder, “What the hell has been going on in Afghanistan? What is the end game?” Why are we putting people’s lives in danger? Is it really going to advance the cause of democracy or whatever? Why don’t we worry about our own democracy here at home, and let people make up their own minds without having a boot put to their neck.
MR: Do we really know what the end game is in Afghanistan?
JR: Well, if you look at history, that’s where empires go to die.
MR: Very interesting. You’d think we would have learned a lesson from the old Soviet Union’s defeat in that region.
JR: I don’t think we have. I never thought I’d say this in my life, but I think American foreign policy is definitely dictated by the privileged in this country, and the fact that we have an all volunteer army plays a very big role because I think there are corporate elitists and very wealthy people who are perfectly willing to sacrifice a poor kid’s life. If there was a draft–and no matter if you were the President’s son, a senator’s son, or a garbage man’s son, you’re going–I think that would definitely rationalize our foreign policy more. It’s just not fair. If your parents have money, you go to college and go to keggers. If you don’t have money and you want to go to college, you go fight in the army.
There is an increasing chasm between the rich and the poor in this country. I live in Los Angeles, and I’m really starting to see pockets of third-world poverty. When I go back to Buffalo to the neighborhood I grew up in which is a working class, Polish neighborhood, it really looks like somebody has been fighting a war there, literally. The buildings are burnt out, falling down, and boarded up. I’m being really bottom line about this; we can’t afford to fight these wars. It’s a huge contributing factor to destroying our country.
MR: I would say they absolutely destroyed our economy, combined with a few other factors. And we had layoffs, bank and corporate bailouts…there’s only so much money in the piggy bank.
JR: The funny thing about the bank bailout, which is really bizarre, is that the institutions that were too big to fail just got bigger by buying other banks and not giving anybody credit, loans, or anything. It’s just like, “What are you supposed to do?” Sometimes, I really think it was Bush’s last, big cash grab for his buddies.
MR: It was beyond obvious, then President Obama got stuck with the aftermath.
JR: Yeah, we definitely went through the looking glass for eight years, and I just don’t get it. Now it’s Obama’s responsibility to get us out of it, but you just can’t keep borrowing money and cutting taxes, it’s wrong. You don’t do that at home, you can’t do that with a country. How the hell are we going to dig out of this debt? And in Iraq, we pulled out fifty thousand combat troops?
MR: I think so.
JR: But there are fifteen thousand new, private mercenaries going over there. What are we doing, are we privatizing a war? If you want to run a private war then go to the people that are going to make money off of it.
MR: Well, we did that with Blackwater.
JR: What is the world coming to when corporations start fighting wars and expect tax payers to pay for it.
MR: Well, now they’re considered citizens, thank you, Supreme Court.
JR: Someone might want to think about that when they’re trying to get rid of the fourteenth amendment or change it.
MR: Exactly. Now, getting back to Something For The Rest Of Us, there’s been an evolution in the band’s sound over your nine albums.
JR: We were a band from ’86 to ’95, and we were these indie darlings. Then we had our first “hit,” and our manager said, “Look, don’t let this go to your head. Now you have to work twice as hard. Just keep your head down and keep working.” We’ve done that, and we just poked our heads back up and it’s like, “Oh my God, it’s fifteen years later.” It’s insane to think about it, and so much of it is just a blur.
MR: Are there any specific events that occurred where you’ve thought, “Oh my God, if it wasn’t for that, then this wouldn’t have happened”?
JR: Well, we had a really bad record deal that we had to get out of. In my opinion, it was a really bad record deal. The one thing that this band is really, really good at, is that in times of crisis, we know how to circle the wagons and stick together. We grew up in Buffalo, and there’s a certain blue-collar mentality of how we live our lives and work. You’ve got to get up and go to work, and you keep going until the work is done.
MR: There are some acts that don’t really seem to care about evolution or longevity. In fact, there are weeks when if there were no such thing as pitch correction, we wouldn’t have a Top Ten.
JR: Yeah, it’s kind of interesting.
MR: There seem to be two main routes to success now: Be an indie band that works the Internet and gets a huge fan base that’s loyal and supportive, or let a major entity with deep promotional pockets who becomes a partner in your image and sound.
JR: I feel for these kids because, you know, they’re talented, but I think one of the things with the whole American Idol deal is that they grab a hold of you and you do what they tell you. I wrote songs with David Cook for his last record, and he’s talented, man. That kid can sing, he can play guitar, he knows what he wants to do, and he’s constantly fighting for his identity and his right to be an artist. I respect him a lot.
MR: Me too, and you have to admire Daughtry or Josiah Lemming because they shake up the generic sound that’s applied to virtually all American Idol graduates.
JR: I worked on a TV show called The Next Great American Band. We had some time off, and I needed some money, so I was like, “Sure, okay, I’ll do it.” It was actual bands, and the people all played and they were insanely talented. It just turned into this thing, where it was like, “Wait a minute, what about the original music?” It kind of turned into the same thing. The show got canceled, and I’m really grateful that it did because I don’t want any part of this anymore. The complexion of it changed because the first couple of weeks, the bands got to play their own music. Awesome bluegrass, and crazy big band stuff, I was like, “This is really cool.” Then it sort of turned into, Beatles week or Elton John week, and it started to turn me off.
MR: You’re on tour right now?
JR: We’re going to do a run of small towns in America, then we’re going off to the U.K., then Canada, Japan, and Australia.
MR: Touring with anyone?
JR: The opening act on this run is going to be a really great band called Spill Canvas. They did part of the summer tour opening for us, and they’re just a great rock band. They go out there and they don’t mess around, man.
MR: As you know, in addition to being on The Huffington Post’s entertainment page, this interview also will be broadcast on solar-powered KRUU-FM. What do you think about solar power?
JR: You know, I live in California, and every time I look at my electric bill I’m like, “Uh, maybe we should look into these solar panels?” I think it’s amazing that you guys do that.
MR: I’m amazed that we’re the only ones doing this in the Midwest and that more stations aren’t jumping on it. What’s wrong with that picture.
JR: I don’t know. I think you guys are really kind of blazing a trail here, and you’re showing that it’s feasible. You guys should be really proud of yourselves.
MR: Thanks John. Do you have any advice for up-and-coming acts starting out right now?
JR: Yeah, just be yourself. Don’t be afraid to be yourself. And don’t worry about getting famous because that means nothing. There are a lot of really useless people in this world that are famous. Do something good, do something you’re proud of, speak your mind, and do it fearlessly.
Tracks:
1. Sweetest Lie
2. As I Am
3. Home
4. Notbroken
5. One Night
6. Nothing Is Real
7. Now I Hear
8. Still Your Song
9. Something For The Rest Of Us
10. Say You’re Free
11. Hey Ya
12. Soldier
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with David Gray
Mike Ragogna: You have a new album called Foundling, and when I spoke to you just this last Fall, you had released your previous project, Draw The Line. These albums are coming fast and furious, so I guess you’re going through a major creative period.
David Gray: I’ve changed my pace. Enough of the jokes about my quiet years or my years off; I’m back now, and it’s like every year, there’s one coming out. People will be sick of me within months.
MR: (laughs) No, no. Hey, I remember Draw The Line had some very cool guests. You had Jolie Holland, and Annie Lennox on “Full Steam.” The vibe of that record was kind of personal in comparison to some of your previous albums. How did you approach Foundling from a production standpoint?
DG: It is very stripped down. The band is playing live, and I’m singing live. That’s what I’m after, really, capturing a moment. That became the thing that I was most interested in, and it’s really the way my career started. So, I’ve kind of gone back to my earliest principles. Foundling takes the idea further than Draw The Line does in that the songs are quieter and there’s really nothing going on at times. It’s just about as quiet as I’ve ever recorded, and I think it sounds sweet because of that. That’s what I was striving for, anyway. “Less is more” is a rather overused phrase, but elements of the song and the arrangement sing out so clearly that you don’t need to embellish with much at all. Where instruments are added, it’s kept to a minimum, and that’s my basic philosophy on both of these records, but particularly Foundling.
MR: Are you going on tour to support this record in the States?
DG: The tour that I’m doing is really the end of the Draw The Line tour. To represent this record, I’ll need to put a different kind of sound together for live, and a different kind of band. So, I’ll be doing that next year. I’m going to leave a little pause, then I’m going to come back and play some shows to support that record separately.
MR: Let’s get into some of the music on Foundling. As you mentioned earlier, it sonically has more in common with material you recorded early in your career. “Gossamer Thread,” for instance, seems like a nod to that period than most of the other tracks. Am I off base there?
DG: No, I think everything bares a relation to something else familiar, for sure. They’ve all got cousins or distant relatives on other albums. In “Gossamer Thread,” it’s just executed to a different level. It’s just a band take–with bass, acoustic guitar, drums, and that’s it. There’s just one overdub on there, which is the piano at the very end. There is the story of the song itself, then there’s an outro, where it spills over into a different section of music until it goes to a final outro, which is again, different. It’s a kind of journey song, something I’m slightly preoccupied with, like a song that changes its face several times. It’s not necessarily lyrically linked together in any particular way, but somehow, it’s all part of the same picture. It’s a bit like the song called “Dream Gerard” by Traffic, which is really inspiring, and does just that. You can look at most of the songs on Astral Weeks, and they also move off and then expand in different directions and follow a kind of stream of consciousness. So, that’s an idea I was pursuing with that. But yes, the instrumentation is basic, rugged, and it just is what it is. Hopefully, it fills up the track. I’m particularly pleased with that because it was a difficult take to get. It was a long take with a lot of complicated changes, and we managed to pull it off.
MR: You talked about stream of consciousness, and “Davey Jones’ Locker” has lyrics like, “At the edge of consciousness, where logic starts to fade. Where the spirit goes unchecked…” By the time you hit “Davey Jones’ Locker”‘s chorus, are you talking about transcendence or evolution?
DG: I’m talking about slipping through one of the side doors, and down. Take me out of my conscious mind, and take me down into dreams, into sleep, or into imagined worlds that are just as big as the real one. That’s what it means to me. Strip off the artifice and take me away from my tiresome construct that I toss up. I want to be free of my logical, conscious thought process. It’s a yearning to just go down into the kingdom of the drowned.
MR: Beautiful. I’ll bet there are those who will hear this song and say, “Woh, he’s speaking my language.”
DG: To me it’s just an alternative. Take me somewhere that isn’t here, and that’s what music does for me, and that’s what writing does. It allows me freedom to go places without getting on an airplane, which as we all know, is pretty tiresome these days. It’s an alternative form of travel, music.
MR: There’s also the very subtle “In God’s Name.” What is the exact instrumentation on that? I was hearing all sorts of things, and then later on, I started second guessing myself.
DG: It’s basically a baritone guitar, upright bass, and drums. Then there’s a hurdy-gurdy and some piano, and there’s a bouzouki, and then you hear an electric guitar as well.
MR: “The Old Chair” reminds me, thematically, of a Neil Diamond song called “Morningside,” where he talks about a table that has been in the family for many years. Everybody treasured it because it was where everybody gathered, ate, talked, and grew together. There was a lot of sentimental attachment by the parents, but when the kids inherit the table, they get rid of it. Then there’s the song “Forgetting” which ties in thematically. You’re discussing the blessing of forgetting with some great imagery, especially emphasized by the sirens…well, the musical equivalent of sirens. Then you close the song with that very dramatic string section. Do you have any thoughts about all this?
DG: Well, the lyric doesn’t really need unraveling. I think the concept is there to be understood as it stands. We forget, don’t we? Everything disappears. I remember when my dad died, and somebody rather callously said, “It’s amazing how quickly you forget what they look like, and everything about them.” It’s so true. I think without a visual prompt like a picture or some video footage, memory gets very hazy very quickly, and it’s hard to distinguish whether it’s some projection or what, anyway. I think when you get old, it becomes even more so, and also you’re living in the past, which is weird. The idea is about fleetingness of everything. The song is self-explanatory, and I don’t want to make it sound more clumsy than it already is.
It’s the only thing I’ve recorded in a long time where I’ve done the lyrics first. So, I had this writing scheme, and I thought, “This works. I could write like this all day.” And I did write about twenty verses for it. Then I just sat there at the piano on a sort of quiet day, and I picked out some chords and kept the foot pedal down to sustain them so they would blend into each other, which is kind of in keeping with the idea of the song. That was it, it just sort of clicked. I recorded two versions of it, and the one you hear is the second one. It all just came together, and I’ve never recorded so quietly. I was barely hitting the chords on the piano, and the vocal was just a whisper, really. I didn’t get above thirty percent on the singing for the whole track, and it sort of blossoms on the mic in a really lovely way. Then I added the idea of a static string line that just sort of comes from nothing and grows, then the fall on the cello, with all the notes just bleeding into itself.
We had beautiful playing for our production from Caroline (Dale) on the cello, and from Iestyn on the knobs. It really came together very simply, there was hardly anything to it. My guitarist, Neill (MacColl), put this really eloquent acoustic part to it, and it didn’t really need much, but it’s just a little bit of flavor to help the song come to a crescendo around the lyric. That’s really it, it’s as simple as possible, but I guess the ingredients were right, and the writing was strong, and the whole thing just holds together and has a real tension about it. So, yeah, it’s a bit of walled off, and it’s not like I can really follow that with another song called “Remembering” or “Walking.” It’s a “one of,” but I really love that track, it came out really good.
MR: It reminds me a lot of the old singer-songwriters, Randy Newman especially comes to mind.
DG: Yeah, we we’re talking about things like “I Think It’s Going To Rain Today,” and that kind of stuff. “Broken windows and empty hallways…” That’s a stupendous bit of string arranging there.
MR: Are you familiar with Randy’s album Sail Away, Good Old Boys, and maybe some of his older stuff?
DG: To go from a world where everyone is emoting hell for leather to that dry, calm, ironic, understated delivery, I love it. Weighty things dealt with without this sort of super emotional delivery. So, you’ve hit the nail on the head there with the Randy Newman reference.
MR: Thank you. Now, most people in the States caught on to you, in a large way, through your hit “Babylon.” But how would you guide us through your earlier records?
DG: Well, it’s weird. Listening back to your stuff is kind of embarrassing. I don’t listen back to that stuff, it sounds nothing like I sound now, in a way. Yet, there’s obviously a cause, a voice behind the song that’s mine. I think my first record came out well. I had time to prepare for it, I had a record company that gave me a budget, it was all very structured and well organized; I had a producer who was respectful of my music and made it sound good and allowed me to concentrate on performing the songs live in the studio, which is what I wanted to do. It was all done in a week or so. We added a bit of mixing, and a bit of overdubbing, and that was the end of it. It has a sort of spirit, so, A Century Ends, I think is a good place to start.
MR: Nice.
DG: I really like my very first single, “Birds Without Wings.” It’s a three track EP, and you can buy this record, which has all my early EPs together on it. These are just record company creations. Once I started selling units, all these strange records began to crop up with like Best Of The Early Years, and all this. It’s all just the same stuff, generally, packaged together differently.
MR: Is that any surprise, really?
DG: Nowadays you can buy track by track, and there’s a song called “L’s Song” on my first single, a b-side. I still hold that song very dear. Moving on, it sort of gets patchy because my career got very patchy. I knew I wanted to steer the ship, but I didn’t know quite how to do it, so, I took on a bit of water there for a while. I needed to refine my ideas for each record. There’s a slight schizophrenia between aggressive music, and quiet, sort of contemplative stuff. Not that those two things can’t co-exist, but it doesn’t always segue very smoothly–I’m covering Flesh, and Sell Sell Sell. But I do think there were moments on each of them that were worth something. Then, White Ladder came about, and I think from that point, it’s all quite straight forward. I have people coming up to me, and they’re not “weird,” but they say to me, “Oh, my favorite album is Flesh or Sell Sell Sell.” People pick the oddest things, and I’m like, “Yeah?” You never know what people are going to latch onto. There might be something that makes me feel uncomfortable now that they might like. To have a perspective on the early music that was so long ago, I think is up to the people. I think the beauty of the internet is you can go and investigate anything if you want to find out about it enough. It’s all there to be listened to. There are songs like “Shine” from my first album, that really stood the test of time. Certain things seem to last.
MR: Well, also in the U.S., as far as popularity, your music was on virtually every television show. When somebody picks up a David Gray album, there are going to be at least two or three titles that people know because you’ve been on all of these shows.
DG: Okay, well that’s good.
MR: Maybe you’re not aware of how that’s happened.
DG: I’m vividly aware of certain things, like ER used “Slow Motion,” and I think somebody used “Nemesis” recently. If it’s a good moment, in a good show, it obviously has a big effect. It brings people into your music. “Who is this guy? I like that song.” All this stuff is helpful.
MR: Who influenced you, and do you think you’re having an influence on some artists that are out there? Have any come to you and said, “Thank you, David for influencing me musically”?
DG: A few, yeah, you do get that sometimes. For me, so many people have been a big influence, but there’s none bigger than Bob Dylan. That’s really what fired my imagination when I was young. Everything is secondary to that, I would say. I discovered Dylan when I was about thirteen, and I discovered Madness, and The Specials, and all that sort of music when I was about twelve. So, I somewhat pitch between the two, that’s my identity–Dylan, in terms of writing, and just the color of his ideas was like discovering a vast continent of imagery. When I found his music, it was so pared down, and I loved that fact that there was nothing between me and what he was saying. It was all about the lyric, and that’s an appropriate way to close it because that’s pretty much what I ended up with on Foundling. I boiled it down to that again.
MR: I know we’re celebrating the new album Foundling, but are you already looking at your next album.
DG: Well, I’ve got thoughts going through my head and some lines written in my notebook, but I wouldn’t say I’m ready to head to the studio just yet. I’ve got a few songs I’ve written while I’ve been on the road for the last year or so, and obviously, there will always be stuff left over. Even with all the extra tracks that we’ve put out–with the Foundling record there’s a bonus CD that has nine or ten things on it– everybody wants a freebie nowadays. But there’s still stuff left over, things that we didn’t quite catch or I didn’t get the lyrics finished or wasn’t happy about, and there are some good ones that didn’t get on there. I wouldn’t say I’m quite set in my mind on the next album. I need to get the job done first, I need to do this big tour, and then have a few glasses of champagne and chill the f**k out.
MR: What kind of advice do you have for up and coming artists?
DG: I always stumble a bit on this question. I just think, follow your heart, and try to not listen to what the consensus view is. Follow your feelings about music, don’t listen to the media. Just play it the way you want to play it, and try to have faith in that. Stay in the game, you never know when something is going to happen for you. It could seem like nothing is ever going to happen, and then next thing you know, you’ve got a hit on your hands. It’s strange, sometimes, how things can work. Don’t listen to all the nay-sayers because music will always exist, and people need it and thrive on it. So, if you want to make it, you have to have some faith in what you’re making, otherwise you won’t be around for long. It’s a crushed world, and it’s a lacerated industry, but people still have a passion for music, same as ever. You just have to make the music good so that you don’t get sick of it, and everything else will work itself out. It’s a follow your heart business. Don’t try to play what you think someone else wants to hear. That’s really about the only advice I can give.
MR: Well, thank you, David, for coming by. I really appreciate it.
DG: Thank you.
Tracks:
1. Only The Wine
2. Foundling
3. Forgetting
4. Gossamer Thread
5. The Old Chair
6. In God’s Name
7. We Could Fall In Love Again Tonight
8. Holding On
9. When I Was In Your Heart
10. A New Day At Midnight
11. Davey Jones’ Locker
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)
A Conversation with Josiah Leming
Mike Ragogna: You have a new debut album, Come On Kid. But first, apparently, because of the circumstances by which you left American Idol, they invented this wild card thing, right?
Josiah Leming: Yeah, I think so. It’s just kind of like a fail safe, you know?
MR: I can’t imagine being on American Idol, and having all the pressure that comes with it. How did you get discovered for the show?
JL: Well, I went to Atlanta and auditioned. So, you sit in a stadium with thousands of other people and wait until you get your chance to sing, and you give it all you’ve got. There were three or four other processes, but it was all just about going and doing it.
MR: You were just seventeen when you left Tennessee to audition?
JL: I was seventeen when I left home, and then I spent those ten months traveling around, just drifting. Then, at the end of those ten months, I decided to go and give it a shot.
MR: Now, you’re originally from Tennessee, right?
JL: Yes sir, East Tennessee. It’s important to notate the “East” because Tennessee has three specific parts. It’s more like the “Kentucky” Tennessee.
MR: Now, people assume that because an artist is from Tennessee–and where, of course, Nashville is–he or she must be country, but that’s not true with you, is it?
JL: I’ve cleansed myself of that action.
MR: I see. Well, this album, to me, is a really nice pop record. I was really surprised by its high quality because most albums by young artists show the work in progress though this one is pretty solid top to bottom.
JL: I think the whole key to that was that I’m kind of a religious writer, in the respect that I love to write. Also, we really took our time developing it and making the sound. We had EPs come out where we were trying to nail down the sound we were getting, and we were close, but kind of wandering around it. When we got the final tracks on this album, it all came together, and I’m really proud of it. I think we finally nailed down the sound, and I can honestly say I’m proud of every song on the album.
MR: Now, you’ve had some hardships in your life, especially with the passing of your mother.
JL: Yeah, it was about a year ago. I’ve got to say, that has been the whole turning point for everything that is happening now. That happened and I knew I was either going to implode or really get it together. I had trouble writing until finally I wrote “Come On Kid” and the last song on the album, which are two kind of different feelings, but a lot more pure than what my writing was before. I finally kind of figured it out and got on it, and since then there’s been no looking back. Once I wrote “Come On Kid,” I knew that was going to be the title of the album, and I knew that everything was going to fall into place. It’s really almost a self-help song, you know?
MR: Does your writing come from life experience?
JL: That’s the only thing I can write about. I’m a strong believer that if I don’t have something to say, there’s no reason for me to write a song. In order to be completely honest in your songwriting, and I think you have to be, you have to have experienced something. Songs are my way of getting past hard things, and they’re my way of jumping hurdles. Songs are kind of like my coming of age and growing up, and writing is like my vow for all that stuff.
MR: I’ve got to ask you about “Arctic Outcry Wind.” What was the concept of that one?
JL: I was at a mall when I started that song, and sometimes, I just get these really uncomfortable kinds of feelings that come from a million places. Songs like that are like my coming of age things, where I really don’t know how to deal with what I’m going through mentally and internally, you know? So, it’s one of those moments that I didn’t really know how to describe, so, I just gave it my best shot.
MR: Okay, now try to explain “Silly Fly.”
JL: (laughs) “Silly Fly” is probably my favorite one to play and perform. It was supposed to be a throwaway song, and I played it for Warren Huart, who also produced “Song Without A Reason,” and it was just like a complete refreshment song. I think I tell a different story every time I play that song. There are about a million ways to get around describing it.
MR: Is “Come On Kid” your single?
JL: I think it is, yes sir.
MR: Then, the next couple of songs, “Maybe” and “To Run” both sound like equally powerful, I guess in the old days you’d say “follow up singles.”
JL: Yeah, “Maybe” was a song that I really had to tell myself, “This is going to be a hopeful song.” I wrote about twenty pages of words for it. Some were happy, some were sad, some left it hopeful, some left it bad, and I worked on that song for a really long time. I felt that this album needed a happy song or a hopeful song. So, that one and “To Run” are about the same girl, and I feel like they transition nicely.
MR: So, you’ve had some interesting relationships?
JL: Yeah, I’ve had a few, man (laughs).
MR: Nice. And you’ve recently started a new relationship, one with Reprise records.
JL: Yeah, Reprise.
MR: How did you get signed?
JL: Well, after I left the show, the fan response was amazing. So, we were originally going to make the album by ourselves, without a label, and we sent out a feeler for producers. A guy named Perry Watts-Russell happened to stumble across a video I’d done. What struck me was that he was passionate about the songs and about me as a writer. Obviously, there was some advantage from coming off the show, but I think they really honed-in on developing me, and not trying to wring me out for a few quick bucks.
MR: Yeah, it’s refreshing to hear stories like that because you always hear about the nightmares.
JL: You know, it seems that they’re making that switch, and that’s the only way to do it. It’s hard both ways, but that is the way that’s really going to pay off eventually–really developing the artist. I like it better this way, and I feel like I’m building things that aren’t going to go away overnight and that aren’t all based on one song being on the charts because when that song is off the charts, you’re left with nothing, kind of running in place. We’re on the road nonstop, and we’re out nurturing my fan base. I’m writing because that’s important…to keep writing. We’re learning how to do things smart, and for me, music is where it’s at. So, my ultimate goal is to set up something that I can do for the rest of my life, and I don’t think that comes from just throwing me in the studio with a bunch of writers and hit producers and trying to make that one hit song that’s going to make a quick buck.
MR: That’s pretty wise. What do you feel is your biggest personal or creative leap between your appearance on American Idol and now?
JL: You know, every ounce and every step of these last few years has been retardedly frustrating because it’s been a real battle of mental and emotional preparedness and really getting that maturity. So, honestly, the biggest things that happened were the family matters. It was just like three shots of reality, and there was really no way to prepare myself for that. And that’s what it came down to, you know. I’d been in L.A. for a year and a half, and I was signed with a label that still believed, but there was absolutely nothing going on. So, for me, I’d almost lost touch with myself, and it came down to a point where I had to say, “This is what I love, this is what I want to do, and I just have to get it. No one’s going to hand it to me on a silver platter.” I think it took all that wandering around and then that hard dose of reality to just completely put me in my place. Once I realized my place, it was just like I shot forward.
MR: Right. And when did you live in your car?
JL: Well, that was before the Idol thing. For me, that was kind of like a dream come true; nobody telling me what to do or who to be, and if I wanted to go to the gas station and buy a bunch of Doritos, Red Bull, and Cigarettes, I could. So, for me, that was just being a kid.
MR: What’s coming up on your agenda?
JL: Well, right now I’m in L.A., where we’re doing some of this pre-stuff. The album comes out (soon), which is just huge. Then, I set off on October 1st, and we’re doing a two-month Fall tour with Tyler Hilton. We’re actually playing high schools during the daytime, and at night, we’re doing all ages venues. So, I’m just getting out and working it. Like I said, I really believe in this album, and anything we can do for it, we’re going out and kind of nailing it.
MR: And we believe in it here at solar-powered KRUU-FM. What do you think of that?
JL: It sounds awesome. I imagine people running around in silver astronaut uniforms, like you’re in a really hot climate, for some reason. I get a really good mental picture from that name.
MR: (laughs) That’s great. Josiah, thank you for coming by again.
JL: Thank you for having me man.
Tracks:
1. Come On Kid
2. Maybe
3. To Run
4. Arctic Outcry Wind
5. Day and Night
6. Body and Mind
7. Silly fly
8. Joy And Happiness
9. Song Without a Reason
(transcribed by Ryan Gaffney)

Follow Mike Ragogna on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/ragz2008

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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