Showing posts with label Falling Off the Sky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Falling Off the Sky. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28

FOtS on Vinyl - Mini Review

Falling Off the Sky on Vinyl - mini review

The vinyl package includes the 12-track CD 
and a download card to access 5 bonus tracks.
BONUS TRACKS accessible by download card in the vinyl package:

1. Revolution of the Mind
2. Picture Sleeve
3. The Instrumental Adventures of Albatross and Doggerel
4. The Wonder of Love (Ian Schreier Radio Remix)
5. Before We Were Born (Scott Litt "T Rex" Mix)

SO VERY COOL to have the new album on 180-gram vinyl. "Old school is the best school," I thought to myself as I unwrapped the box — and this coming from someone without a working turntable! (I hope to get mine fixed soon or borrow a friend's so I can hear how the LP sounds.)

Did someone say "value for money"?!? For a little under $20, you get the LP, the album art in the "correct" size, a great-looking inner sleeve with full album credits and color photos, the 12-track CD in a cardboard sleeve, and a card with a unique code. Go online to Bar-None's web site, click the Downloads tab at the top, and you'll be taken to a screen where you'll be asked for the code. Type it in, hit the "Get Your Music" button, and after a few seconds' wait, you'll have the 5 bonus tracks, all in high-quality MP3 (@320 kbps).

And what about those bonus tracks? Well, you've probably heard at least a couple of 'em already. There's nothing very surprising to be heard, but I must admit I'm glad to have them. The first 3 previously-released tracks sound great in high-quality sound (for example, most folks have only heard "Revolution of the Mind" in the lower-quality version released via the band's web site). 

To my ears, the mixes for Tracks 1 and 2 sound slightly different than those previously released. In particular, the backing vocals on "Revolution" sound more prominent in this mix, which I prefer to the original. I missed the earlier release of Track 3, "The Instrumental Adventures of Albatross and Doggerel," which at one point was available as a free download on the band's web site. But it may be the best of the bunch. As much as I love the album version, this one removes the lead vocals so you can better enjoy the song's musical dynamics and instrumental interplay. Worth repeated listening.

And what about those final two remixes? Well ... they're cool to have, as I said. But they're not the radical remixes or revisionings of the songs that some might have hoped for. You do hear some extra brass riffs on the Ian Schreier remix of "The Wonder of Love." And Scott Litt used extra reverb on Chris' vocals for the T-Rex Mix of "Before We Were Born." Otherwise, they sound a lot like the album versions. I can imagine, however, that someone out there might like them better than the master versions.

Bottom line? If you've been hesitating to spring for the LP release of Falling Off the Sky, you shouldn't wait any longer. Think of all the ephemeral and disposable stuff you spend $20 or more on and tell yourself the truth, "This week, I'd rather spend it on the vinyl edition of one of the greatest alt-pop albums released in recent memory."

Friday, June 8

Falling Off the Sky - The Review

Disruptive Patterns #43 by Harrison Haynes
The dB’s Repercussion Blog
Review - Falling Off the Sky

      Special thanks to Daniel Coston for this & most of the photos here       
Was it only a dream,
Was it only a dream?
Tell me please, can it be?
All the things that we’ve seen,
All the things we believe:
Tell me please,
Is it only a dream?                     
(The dB’s, 
“Collide-oOo-Scope,” 
Falling Off the Sky)
Chris Stamey is looking through a kaleidoscope.  

No wonder. 

No wonder he gave a similar title to one of the songs he composed for The dB’s new album, Falling off the Sky. He and his band mates seem to know instinctively that you don’t reach the ripe age of 50-something — after experiencing everything they have, separately and together, musically and otherwise — without it shaping and coloring your perspective.

Kinda like a kaleidoscope.

The dB’s have decided not to pretend they’re exactly the same people or musicians they were when they made their last album together — three decades ago. And the music they’ve now created is all the richer for it. Falling Off the Sky is an immensely satisfying collection of alternative pop music. It beguiles you, it draws you in, and sounds better and better the more you hear it.
 
These poor slobs slaved away in the dead of winter to create a great summer pop album for you. 

As with all great bands, there’s some mysterious X-factor at work here. Call it “musical group chemistry” if you like. Or you can adopt Peter’s explanation — the “shared hallucinogenic background” of a band that grew up together in Winston-Salem, N.C. Whatever it is, this extraordinary something makes Falling Off the Sky a far greater achievement than the mere sum of its parts.

When Chris and Peter Holsapple first cooked up the idea of The dB’s getting back together to make new music, they gave themselves a big challenge. Half a dozen years ago, they had little to gain and a lot to lose by recording and releasing another album. Being critics’ darlings meant The dB’s legacy was secure as the great (but popularly unappreciated) link between Big Star and R.E.M. After four albums of stellar music, a lousy fifth collection this late in the game would have prompted many of the same critics to lament, “Why did they have to go and mess up a good thing?”

Not to worry. Some seven years in the making, Falling Off the Sky assures everyone that The dB’s sterling reputation remains unblemished. Really, “unblemished” isn’t the right word. FOtS not only preserves, but extends and improves the group’s well-deserved legacy as creators of uniquely wonderful music. Is the new album “jangle pop”? Is it 1980s “New Wave”? Or, to use my preferred term, is it masterful “alt-pop” music? In the end, it doesn’t matter. FOtS transcends whatever category you might choose.

The dB's - far away & long ago
As I told Peter when I interviewed him recently, FOtS sounds to me like it’s sequenced as an old-fashioned LP. The A-side is a great collection of singles. And the B-side? It’s a stone-cold masterpiece, a six-song sequence that deserves to be savored in its entirety. Years from now, I predict discerning music lovers will rank the second half of FOtS up there with other all-time classic rock and pop albums. It’s that draw-droppingly good.

By now, you’ve heard the lead track, “That Time Is Gone.” It borrows heavily from the garage rock The dB’s knew and loved growing up, with combo organ, bluesy guitar riffs, and a maniacal drummer firing on all cylinders. Lyrically, it’s classic pop music fodder: the guy is trying to forget the woman who keeps occupying rent-free space in his head. Thus, the gotta-getta-hold-of-myself refrain: “You’d better wake up, wake up, wake up — that time is gone.” This Holsapple-penned song announces two things to the listening public: first, the new album is not going to replicate 1980s jangle pop, but use whatever type of music that best serves the songs. Second, the past really is over and done. As much as we might yearn nostalgically for that woman, that vintage musical sound, or our youthful past, this album is about refusing to be “stuck in the 1982s,” to quote a character from Napoleon Dynamite.

            "What'd you call this one, Chris?            
      Pop prog psych rock?"   
Such a determination doesn’t mean, however, that there’s no point in reflecting on the past. In a nutshell, this is the lyrical tension at the heart of these songs: how can a person remember and reflect without falling into a time warp? Is there a way to dream about the past and still stay awake in the here and now?

Track 2 is Chris Stamey’s “Before We Were Born” — a song that’s musically more buoyant and thematically rosier than its predecessor. In his joy, the singer revels in the idea that he and his love knew each other “before we were born.” The music itself is straight-no-chaser pop rock, done to perfection. Mitch Easter, longtime friend of the band and unnamed “fifth member” of The dB’s, shines here on electric guitar as he does on several other tracks.

While the first two songs highlight the delightful sound of Holsapple-Stamey vocal harmonies, the next three let each singer in The dB’s have his own turn in the spotlight. Peter’s “The Wonder of Love,” Track 3, is white boy Philly Soul, complete with shuffle groove and punch-drunk horn section. Though it’s a departure for a dB’s record, this isn’t new territory for Mr. Holsapple: he recorded the similar “Live On Love” years ago with the Continental Drifters. Lyrically, Peter is up to his old self-described “smart-ass” tricks but charmingly so: “It isn’t metallurgy / It’s not rocket surgery / It’s not as hard as you make it sound” and, “Sometimes I wonder if the wonder of love / Is ever enough or always too much / And then I figure that it all levels out / Homeostatic and soft to the touch.” (There’s only one false step here, which is Peter’s use of the now-passé “that’s how we roll.” But I think we’ll forgive him that.)

         Will: "No; it's called a knuckleball!"            
On Track 4, drummer Will Rigby finally gets his own star turn with “Write Back.” Even though he’s been writing and recording music for years, this is the first dB’s song that’s truly his. And it’s a stunner, featuring a great fusion of countrypolitan and pop music. It features appropriately amazing drumming and a Jackson Pollack-esque organ solo*, also courtesy of Will. The song has an intriguingly clever lyric, filled with ambivalence about the narrator’s fateful decision to not write back to his ex love: “I never replied to your reply to my reply to your reply to my reply to your reply to my letter.” If you fall prey to Mr. Rigby’s musical charms here, hurry over to his Bandcamp site and help yourself to the many other musical treasures you can find there.

The other Fab Four
By Track 5, the spotlight turns back to Chris. As another reviewer has already noted, “Far Away and Long Ago” leans heavily on the classically-inclined chamber pop of The Beatles' “Yesterday.” Musically and lyrically, it’s an audacious move. Fortunately for us, Chris has everything required to pull it off, to great effect. His vocal performance strikes a bittersweet balance between wistful remembrance of a past, lost love and rueful recrimination. Musically, he manages to unashamedly incorporate Lennon, McCartney & Martin’s best without making it sound like a Beatles knock-off. “Far Away and Long Ago” also demonstrates the breadth of Chris’ musicianship (did you know he’s also a trumpeter and cellist?). Here and elsewhere on the album, his expert use of string players from North Carolina (some from the chamber folk group Lost In the Trees) provides a sonic depth missing on most other pop albums.

We humbly suggest a format you can touch
Nearly halfway through, now, and Falling Off the Sky is only starting to hit its stride. Track 6, “Send Me Something Real” incorporates all the strengths named above: gorgeous melody, Holsapple-Stamey harmonies, tasteful instrumental flourishes that enhance the song (flute and strings in this case), and words that manage to be honest without falling into cynicism. “Send me something real,” sings Chris, “ ‘cuz I don’t remember how it feels / To be free and pure / And I’ve got to find that door.” The track revels in the musical dynamics that set The dB’s apart from their peers. There’s a pause at the 3½-minute mark that makes you think it’s time for the AM radio fadeout. But then a smidgen of backwards guitar announces “hang on a second” — followed by 75 seconds of pure dB’s bliss, as the four friends sing, strum, pluck and pound away, delightfully lost in the music.

The world should hear "World to Cry"
How much more needs to be said about Track 7, “World to Cry”? What a song; what an arrangement; what great playing! Why can’t we live in a world in which this song gets played all over the radio and climbs to its rightful place, high in the pop charts?!? I don’t know. But this much I do know: it’s one of the catchiest pop songs I’ve heard since … since the last dB’s record. And it’s the perfect song to launch “Side B” of the album.

With Track 8, Falling Off the Sky starts to get pretty weird — in the best, most surprising sense of the word. Chris composed and arranged two songs in the second half of the album with several things in common. “The Adventures of Albatross and Doggerel” and “Collide-oOo-Scope” (Track 10) both have two protagonists, non-linear lyrics, and a mixture of music that’s head-spinningly uncategorizable. One might venture to say they’re pop-prog-psych-rock. But that doesn’t begin to suggest how outlandishly good they are. It’s as if Chris decided, “I don’t care if anyone understands or likes these songs; I’m going to write and arrange these for our enjoyment. If anyone else digs them, so be it.” I hope he does it a lot more often.
Chris, recording songs to please himself & band mates — thank God!



Track 9 is Peter’s “I Didn’t Mean to Say That.” It starts off sounding like an apology in ballad form, but gets more interesting as it reaches the refrain, “So what are we to do? / If only we knew / Oh, I didn’t mean to say that.” To be sure, the mid-tempo song is about forgiveness. The singer/narrator humbly explains to his beloved: “I didn’t mean to call you off / I didn’t mean to call you down / Or out, or anything / Anything.” But it also explores the awkward thought that comes after an apology: OK, what happens now? I don’t think the younger, 1980s-era dB’s would have come up with a song like this. It’s mature, it’s wise — and for those who know what Peter's talking about — it hits pretty close to the bone.

Take a bow, guys. The album's amazing.
Track 10 is “Collide-oOo-Scope,” the second of Chris’ pop-prog-psych-rock tracks. It begins as a sing-along nursery rhyme, “…singing hidey-hidey hey.” Moments later, however, strummed acoustic guitars give way to a clatter of drums, the swell of strings, and the thump of an electric bass. In a few minutes, the song grows in musical complexity until the listener has no freaking idea what he or she is hearing. Which, I might add, is a very cool and all-too-uncommon experience for most pop music listeners.

Lyrically, “Collide-oOo-Scope” might be a veiled account of two friends starting a band. Or it could be about growing older and meeting the Grim Reaper “down the road” one day. Or the reunion of The dB’s. Or it might be all — or quite possibly none — of the above. I really have no clue. But it’s great fun to puzzle your way through lyrics like these: “Walking backwards to cover our tracks / Singing hidey-hidey hey / There’s a fire brigade through a tall Marshall stack / Singing hidey-hidey hey / Trespass the border of fiction and fact / Singing hidey-hidey hey / Reversing the engine without looking back / Hey, hey.”

She won't. But, then again, that's what he's here for.
“She Won’t Drive In the Rain Anymore” (Track 11) is the most swoon-worthy of the bunch for me. Co-written by Peter and Kristian Bush, it’s a compelling, lump-in-the-throat song — a musical short story about a woman scarred by the trauma of surviving a hurricane. It’s one of those unforgettable pop tunes that builds in emotional intensity until the final crescendo. Best of all, it demonstrates a deep appreciation for the silence surrounding the rest of the music. (If you want to read more about the song, and how it’s based on a true story, you can find it here, in Part 2 of my interview with Peter.)

Finally, we come to Track 12, “Remember (Falling Off the Sky)” — the song that pretty much had to close the album. On first listen, it sounds like a litany of memories set to a pretty, straight-ahead rock tune. Give it a few more spins, though, and you might start hearing something else: a meditation on memory, mortality and the finality of death — accompanied by an upbeat, energetically-played melody.

"You gotta use these to appreciate the low end!"
Judge the lyrics for yourself: “I saw you, wearing only white / I saw you in the dead of night / Remember / Then everything went black / Remember? Remember?” Then the refrain: “But I won’t be back again / No I won’t be back again / I will always be your friend / But I won’t be back again.”

Whatever’s it’s actually about (and I bet Chris isn’t telling), the music has a nice twist at the 2-minute mark. I’ve never heard an album’s final song actually speed up midway through, but that’s exactly what “Remember” does. It’s as if the four dB’s are trying to tell us, Age-wise, we may getting long in the tooth; but musically, we’ve never had more fun. So maybe we’ll just keep on playing.

IF ONLY, guys, if only…


*Will’s organ solo in “Write Back,” as described by Chris.


Friday, June 1

Peter Holsapple - The Interview (Part 2)

The dB’s Repercussion Blog
Interview with Peter Holsapple
Would you buy two copies of the same album
from these guys? They (and we) sure hope so.
Daniel Coston photo

No one can accuse Peter Holsapple of being a slacker — especially not after hearing about his "day in the life." 

Peter sings in Hoboken
On the night I called him for our planned interview, Peter had just returned from a trip. He’d been performing with the reunited dB’s in Hoboken, N.J., where they were headlining the annual Arts & Music Festival. Peter’s return flight was delayed, so he hadn’t arrived back home in Durham, N.C., until 3:00 a.m. Presumably, he caught a few z’s, but then was off later that morning to a new full-time job. At lunchtime the same day, he went to the funeral of a local musician friend. At the family’s request, Peter played and sang “All You Need Is Love.” Later in the day, he got home in time to put his young son to bed. Just minutes afterward, he got on the phone to talk to yours truly for an hour.

I'd call that a long day!

      Have your copy yet? 'Course you do...     
My wide-ranging conversation with Peter drifted from The dB’s past and present, to the group’s amazing new album Falling Off the Sky, to the wonder of life and music. During the hour-long chat, he struck me as the kind, affable man he’s widely reported to be. It's obvious that he’s a huge fan of music, still in love with the whole weird pop music thing — despite the head-scratching setbacks he and The dB’s have faced over the years. And he’s rightfully quite proud of the new album.

Although I didn’t ask him to address it, Peter’s thoughts frequently turned to the history of The dB’s. Perhaps a backward glance or two is inevitable at this point, given the band’s history. After dB’s founder Chris Stamey left the group in 1982 to pursue his own musical projects, Peter and Will Rigby (and Gene Holder, for much of the time) carried the banner admirably for The dB’s. By 1988, however, the musical life of the band appeared to be over. But in 2005, the release of the free single “World to Cry” and a handful of reunion concerts announced to the world that the group’s original lineup had once again joined forces.
 Reunion music to our ears

Peter says that “to get back together again, we had to do some reflecting — because there was a reason why there was no dB’s.” He describes 1982 as a major turning point for the band: “When Chris left, it wasn’t for any animosity. It was more because he really wanted to experiment with something else. And we always stayed friends. Then when Gene left to go to The Wygals, it was not animosity. He felt like we had done what we were going to do, and he wanted to do something else also.”

Along with the bumps in the road, however, Peter also has been remembering the halcyon days of growing up together in the North Carolina “tobacco town” referenced in Repercussion’s “Ups and Downs.” Asked to describe what makes The dB’s distinctive, Peter talks about “that element that we have, and I don’t even know what it is. I think the element comes from the four of us — four guys who grew up together in Winston-Salem in the ‘60s and ‘70s. We listened to the same stuff; we speak the same language; we talk Winston-Salem. I can just name a landmark there, and everybody will chime in. Or we’ll talk about an old music store or something that happened in high school, and we all remember it. We all have that shared hallucinogenic background. What I mean by that is, sometimes I think we hallucinated all of that growing up, ‘cuz it was all so great.”

Looks like fun: early performance, Little Diesel.
The more Peter talks about the musical environment in those days, the more I understand why he’s still in awe of it. “There was a healthy band scene,” he says. “There must have been 17 or 18 bands going at any given time. This was all with a couple of hundred guys in high school and junior high school! And it wasn’t like everybody was just playing Steppenwolf or Grand Funk covers. I mean, people were covering Spooky Tooth. The band that Chris, Mitch [Easter] and I had did half of Shazaam by The Move. In Rittenhouse Square, the first four songs we worked up were Wishbone Ash songs from their first two records. It was brilliant music, and we loved it.

“I think in our old bands, whether we were conscious of it or not, there was an element of getting our audience to keep an open mind about music and broadening their horizons. I mean, without being ‘high and mighty educators’ — we weren’t lauding it over people with our great and wonderful taste. But we did feel like, ‘OK, I’m glad you like the new James Taylor record, but you might really, really like this record by Mott the Hoople’, you know? We read all the magazines, we read all the rock books — it was great stuff. We happened upon a fortunate time. It was a great time to have a band and a great time to discover all your friends were into it, too.”

Peter and the mighty Ace Tone, c. 1980
Stephanie Chernikowski photo
When I ask Peter to distinguish Falling Off the Sky from The dB’s previous albums, he emphasizes the members’ desire to represents themselves as they are today and avoid becoming a retro-nostalgia act. “Without making it sound like it’s being recorded in 1982, which it isn’t; and because there’ve been events in all four of our lives — marriages, divorces, children, other bands, moving, hurricanes — all this stuff figures in. Hopefully, the songs and the record itself do reflect some of that personal growth and change. If we made it sound like 1982, we’d be treading water. We could’ve done that in 1983, but what would be the point of doing that in 2012? So it was important to make it sound contemporary as well.”

Case in point: can 50-something musicians still sing their older songs of youthful preoccupation — and not sound lecherous or ludicrous? Peter thinks not. “When someone calls out, ‘play Bad Reputation’, I’m like, ‘Ya know, the whole “new girl in school, she looks cool” — at the age of 56, I really [would] sound like a dirty old man.’ So I’m less and less inclined to want to sing something like that. ‘Black and White’ still holds true; the whole miserable girlfriend stuff is as universal as it ever has been. It rears its head in adult ways, too.”

DON'T compare them to them...
Over the years, fans and favorably-inclined critics have compared The dB’s to The Beatles. The comparison has never been in the “slavish imitators of the Fab Four” category. The commonality lies more in both groups’ creative use of the classic pop elements: melody, harmony and compelling songwriting. With this in mind, it’s funny to hear how careful Peter is to avoid promoting such thinking in regard to The dB’s latest music. “We’ve always felt that our records need to be made so they can bear repeated listening, the way — and this is not to compare ourselves to The Beatles; please don’t think I’m doing that at all, because I’m not!” (duly noted!) — “but I was just listening to Magical Mystery Tour today...” At this point, Peter’s wife interrupts the conversation to apply the famous John Lennon “bigger than Jesus” quote to The dB’s — prompting explosive laughter all around before Peter continues: “It’s the way you should make a record, it’s the way you should write a book, you know? I like to think that we had a real attention to making it a worthwhile listen as many times as you choose to do that.”

Repercussion starts with this one
In the context of The dB’s recorded canon, Peter talks about Falling Off the Sky in the same breath as the much-loved Repercussion, the band’s second album. “We wanted to make sure that this was one of those multifarious dB’s records of yore. Look at Repercussion — that’s a great example: it starts with ‘Living a Lie.’ But it does go all over the map of the dB’s world. And I think that’s good.” For Peter, an element of musical challenge is another good thing. “I don’t want to write the same song over and over again; I don’t think anybody wants to hear that over and over again. I think they long for variance; I think our listeners in particular really long for challenge — that’s why they like us.”

The beautiful and musically challenging Falling Off the Sky is chock full of great playing, gorgeous melodies, and thought-provoking lyrics, all of which made me want to revisit the album many times over. I tell Peter my favorite in the collection is “She Won’t Drive in the Rain Anymore.” It’s a compelling, lump-in-the-throat song — a musical short story about a woman scarred by the trauma of surviving a hurricane. It’s one of those unforgettable pop songs that builds in musical and emotional intensity until the final crescendo. Best of all, it demonstrates a deep appreciation for the silence surrounding the rest of the music. I place it in the upper echelon of Peter’s compositions, with “Lonely Is As Lonely Does,” “Never Before and Never Again,” and “She Was the One.”

After I finish gushing, Peter explains that “She Won’t Drive” was co-written with Kristian Bush of Sugarland and formerly of Billy Pilgrim. He chuckles at the thought of people seeing “K Bush” in the album credits and jumping to the conclusion that Peter had co-written a song with a certain legendary British New Wave chanteuse! The next thing he says goes a long way to explaining the song’s impact on the listener: it’s based almost entirely on a true story.

“It’s about my wife evacuating New Orleans during Katrina. I was on the road with Hootie [and the Blowfish]; my wife had taken my daughter and my baby son and my daughter’s best friend on a train to Birmingham to buy a vehicle up there. She knew the hurricane was coming, and she did all the things you’re supposed to do. We didn’t think too much about it — we certainly didn’t realize it was going to be a 100-year storm. But when she got to Birmingham to get the car, it was very evident there was no turning back, so she drove literally across the storm path to get to her grandmother’s in Little Rock.”

      The diaspora created by Katrina         
Peter goes on to explain the reunion theme in the lyrics. He says his wife “took a day to re-group and then started driving back and she dropped my daughter’s best friend off with her mom in Memphis. And then [my wife took] Miranda, my daughter with Susan Cowsill, to where Susan and her husband were living at the time. Then she made a beeline to where Hootie was playing next, which was Baltimore. She got there 15 minutes before we went on. It had been this incredible, tortuous time, unable to get in touch with anybody. Meanwhile, I’m in this sort of suspended state of touring because I need the money, and I can’t really stop. Where am I gonna go, what am I gonna do? When I saw her, it was the first time in weeks, she and my son pulled up and I was overjoyed just to get to see her. We didn’t really talk very much because we didn’t really know what to say; it was all just so overwhelming.”

After expressing my alarm that LP space limitations mean “She Won’t Drive” will not appear on the vinyl edition of the album, Peter offers the last word about the song: “On this record, it sort of serves in the ‘Moving In Your Sleep’ position [the last song on Stands for deciBels ]. And I hope with today’s short-attention-span listeners, they can get to that point in the record and hear it. Because I do think it’s very worthwhile. Chris worked long and hard on it — we both worked long and hard getting the string arrangement just right.”

The evidence of a successful musical collaboration appears throughout the new album. But that doesn’t mean the writing, arranging, recording, mixing and sequencing took place without any struggle. “We’ve always tried to persuade ourselves into thinking this is a democracy; everybody can have veto power. That’s a good, sensible way to do it,” says Peter, “because you don’t want to put a song on a record that everyone [else] hates. If one person really, really despises it, then it’s going to be hard to make it onto the record.” The down side of this egalitarian approach, however, is that some worthy material can get left out of the spotlight. “There’s one song on the record that probably will not get played at dB’s shows. It’s a beautiful song and it deserves to be heard. It will probably get played somewhere in somebody’s [solo] set, but probably not The dB’s.”

 Peter hard at work on FOTS in 2009.  Daniel Coston photo  
See more of Daniel's awesome work HERE
Even when the band reached consensus on the 12 songs chosen for the new CD, more than a dozen others were held back. “There’s a really beautiful song — if I can say that about my own writing — called ‘So Sad About Sam’. It’s about a friend of ours that killed himself. We grew up adoring him. He was like Gene’s best friend. He was, without a doubt, my favorite guitar player in Winston-Salem. He drew so much from Mike Bloomfield, who was my favorite blues guitar player growing up. That’s a song that’s missing a lead guitar right now; we’re trying to figure out what to do with that.” Wait, there’s more: “There’s a song called ‘Lakefront’ that I wrote, that I think Will felt was too personal for a dB’s record. That’s a very New Orleans-centric song of mine; I did that song for years in solo acoustic sets. We cut it, and it’s nice; but somehow, it was too personal. ‘Orange Squeezer’, which is a great song — we’ll probably do that live at some point.”

Will's first dB's album track
One more song that was recorded and released, but will not appear on the album, has an unusual back story. “Picture Sleeve” is the vinyl-only 7-inch single released last April. The B side, Will’s composition “Write Back”, appears on the new album. But the A side will only be available as a bonus digital download for those who purchase the LP. In our conversation, Peter explained that “Picture Sleeve” is an ancient dB’s song that turned into a latter-day Holsapple-Stamey collaboration. “It’s one of the earliest things that The dB’s ever did. But the funny thing is, I’d written the song, [and] we used to play it in, like, ‘81 or ‘82. So, when it came time to get the album underway, Chris said, ‘Do we have anything old that we haven’t done? What about that song “Picture Sleeve” of yours?’ And I was like, ‘Well, that’s great — except I can’t remember how that goes!’ There’s no tape of it anywhere, there’s no cassette. I remembered the tag line of it more than anything else, and Chris took that and ran with it. It ended up being another co-write, but it was sort of by accident.”

     Peter sings George Harrison     
photo by fred babyflo via Flickr
Thinking back to the earlier days of The dB’s, Peter still scratches his head over the band’s relative lack of commercial success. “In 1979 and 1980, when we were struggling to get a record deal, my feeling was always like, ‘are we really that different, are we really that weird? Are we so much more different than The Knack or The Pretenders?’ It never struck me that our stuff was so far in deep-roving left field that it would be unsalable or uninteresting to someone in a record company. But I guess it was.”

Now, with a new album about to be released, Peter sounds like a man trying to learn from past experiences: “Maybe if ‘Neverland’ had been a huge hit, things would be different. But it wasn’t, and that’s OK. Not everybody gets the brass ring that gets on the merry-go-round. You know, it’s disappointing. It’ll take you up and it’ll take you down. You can allow it to make you as miserable as you want. I’ve let it make me much more miserable than it does now. Now, I just try to be as circumspect about it as I possibly can. I don’t want it to take me out of the ballgame; I like this too much.”
 Coulda, woulda, shoulda...

This time, staying in the game will not mean a lengthy tour to promote Falling Off the Sky. No longer a book store employee, Peter’s new job is in the arts, and he sounds very content with his work environment. In fact, his boss knows about Peter’s musical endeavors and has made allowances so he can juggle both interests. The bottom line, however, is that although The dB’s are “a baby band again in many ways,” a full-scale tour is not in the offing. “That’s a big difference between The dB’s then and now: we have to really concentrate on what we have made our lives into. I’m glad we’ve made this beautiful record; I’m really proud of it and I do think it fits into the canon very nicely. The problem I have is that I can’t go out there on the road for six weeks in a van. I can’t sleep on people’s floors anymore; my back won’t tolerate it! Not to sound like a crotchety old man, but I have to try to keep myself healthy, I have to try to keep myself mentally healthy. We all do. And we have to do what’s right for our families.
Shared hallucinogenic memories = big laughs.
“We’re going to do everything we possibly can within reason to make this record happen. At this point, records don’t necessarily happen because you just tour yourself to death, either. I think there are some bands that do that. I’m glad for them. But they are considerably younger than we are. We’re not the freakin’ Lawrence Welk Orchestra, by any stretch of the imagination! But we’re all in our mid- to late-50s, and it changes the cosmetic of what you do at that age.”

So what’s a self-respecting dB’s fan to do? I humbly suggest (along with Mr. Holsapple himself) that you buy at least two copies of Falling Off the Sky. You can think of it as generosity toward the band, and perhaps also the friend to whom you give your extra copy. Or, more selfishly, you can think of it as insurance that we get to hear some more dB’s music in the not-too-awfully-distant future.  
Please guys, don’t wait another 30 years — some of us won’t be around that long!!

Peter H drawing by
Peter Blegvad for Radio Free Song Club
Perhaps I sound a tad more cynical than I should. After all, we’re talking about The dB’s and Peter Holsapple — the man whose optimism and respect for the fans still burns brightly. “We have great, intelligent fans that are willing listeners,” he says. “They’re not fickle people. Good Lord, they've stuck it out this long!”

For all of us who have stuck it out, the rewards just now are sweet indeed. 

THANK YOUChris, Will, Gene — and the decidedly non-slackerish  
Peter Holsapple.


Saturday, May 26

Peter Holsapple - Exclusive Q & A (Part 1)


The dB’s Repercussion Blog Q & A
With Peter Holsapple

Peter Holsapple: ready for any old thing that might come along...

Pop quiz for fans of The dB’s:  

To which member of the band would you give
the Most Valuable Player award?

Without hesitation, my vote goes to Peter Holsapple.

There would be no dB’s, of course, without founder Chris Stamey. In my book, he will forever have the title The Guy Who Launched the Best American Alt-Pop Band, Ever. More recently, Chris gets major props from me for his songwriting, singing, arranging and production work on the new and most excellent Falling Off the Sky. 

The last 'proper' studio album
When the continued existence of The dB’s came into question, however, it was Peter who stepped up to the plate. Along with founding member and drummer Will Rigby, Peter carried forward the spirit of the band for years after Chris left in 1982 for a solo career. The other founding member of the band, Gene Holder, said good-bye shortly after the recording of the group’s final studio album, 1987’s The Sound of Music. That left Will and Peter to soldier on with Jeff Beninato (who had joined the band for TSOM) and an assortment of musicians who toured with the group in the mid to late 1980s.

In the early phase of The dB’s musical life, Peter shared songwriting and lead vocal duties with Chris. After the latter’s departure, however, these two major responsibilities fell entirely on Peter’s shoulders. So it was an impressive achievement for the Holsapple-led dB’s to retain the same level of respect from music critics — not to mention credibility among dB’s fans.

As you can surmise from this preamble, it was a tremendous honor and thrill for me to spend an hour chatting with Peter recently about the band’s reunion and, in particular, Falling Off the Sky the recorded fruit of The dB’s sporadic 21st century labors.

I’ve split my conversation with Peter into two parts. Part 1 is the Q & A that appears below. Part 2 (coming in a week) will be a longer, more in-depth, and more free form feature story. It will offer further details regarding Peter’s perspective on the new album as well as the joys and challenges of making music again with the same three guys with whom he grew up so many years ago.

Ladies and gentlemen, it's my pleasure to present to you my nominee for MVP of The dB’s — Mr. Peter Holsapple.

Peter Holsapple: sharing the load once again with Chris Stamey.
The dB's, Hoboken, NJ, May 6, 2012 jvdalton photo via Flickr
 
First, congratulations on a great achievement: Falling Off the Sky is a beauty. It stands up to the best of your catalog, as a group and as solo artists. Lots of us will be trying to describe Falling Off the Sky, so let me give you the same opportunity: how do you describe it?
 
PETER: It sounds to me like a dB’s record that’s got all the elements you’ve come to hope for with a dB’s song — good melody and good harmony, there’s interesting guitar. The incredible rhythm section, who’re able to turn anything into something good. We wanted it to sound effortless. It’s the old suspension of disbelief, I guess. They may know it took a million years to make it, they may know it took a thousand vocal takes, but they think it [sounds as if it] took only one. That’s what you want, you want it to all sound like it’s a natural, organic process. I’d like to think that we did succeed in that.

In between recording dates for
Falling Off the Sky, the second Stamey-Holsapple duo album was recorded, and the two of you also worked on solo material. With so many songs available, how did you decide which ones were right for The dB's album?
 
"Santa Monica"  from this album
features Will & Gene
We did spend a lot of time trying to think, “What is this record supposed to sound like? What does a dB’s record sound like?” In fact, there was a point where “She Won’t Drive In the Rain Anymore” was on the chopping block. The feeling was, “Well, is this really a dB’s song?” And, yes, we finally determined that it was. On Here & Now, you’ll notice the song “Santa Monica” features Will and Gene on drums and bass.  We recorded that at a dB’s session, the same session I think that we ended up getting “Send Me Something Real” and “World to Cry” out of. “Santa Monica” is a perfect example: same personnel, but does it really sound like a dB’s song? No, it ended up sounding like something that should be on a record that’s just me and Chris that happened to have those guys on it. As we were recording Falling Off the Sky, it became evident [which] songs really benefited specifically from Will and Gene’s take on them.

I'm intrigued by the running order. I hear a difference between "Side A" & "Side B". The first six songs seem like a great collection of singles. But Side B has this amazing flow, which I think is best appreciated as a whole. Does this reflect your intent?
 
Little Feat's Sailin' Shoes
I honestly couldn’t say we really felt like that. Only when we were talking about the vinyl did it really get down to an A and a B-side kind of thing. We knew the first few songs really had to pull people in; you want people to sit up on their hind legs and like this — make it so it’s undeniable. And I think we did that. Great records [have] that knockout one-two punch. I always think of Sailin’ Shoes by Little Feat; starts with “Easy to Slip” and then “Cold Cold Cold.” That’s a perfect way to start a record.

I assume that recording this album was quite a challenge: squeezing in studio time between all your other commitments and musical projects. How different do you think the album would be if you'd had the old scenario, "We've got just 8 weeks to record & mix this"?
 
It will be different if you do it like that, without a doubt. Somebody asked me the other day, “How do you know when an album is finished?” And we were laughingly saying, “Well, ask Axl Rose.” The album is finished when the checkbook closes, in a lot of cases. But the winnowing process for us was, I guess, about trying to get as many songs done so we would have enough to choose from. If we’d had 15 songs to choose from, it would have been harder to decide what a 12-song album would be. We tried to get the most intelligent collection of songs that we could put together. We were able to ferret out the ones that made the most sense together.

"Write Back" is Will's first composition and first solo lead vocal on a dB's album. (I love the song, and hope his other solo work gets a wider audience because of it.) Did Will have to endure jokes from the other guys about Ringo or "Octopus's Garden"?!?
 
One of Peter's favorites
No. That Paradoxaholic record [by Will] is one of our family favorites. There are so many great songs on there: “Leanin’ On Bob” is just great. Chris and I at one point looked at each other and said, “Hmm — this may be the best songwriter in The dB’s, ultimately.” I’m really happy that Will has a song on the record — it’s about frickin’ time! The real question is how we’re going to play it live. I love that song, and we love that song. It fit in very nicely.

GET WILL RIGBY SOLO MUSIC (2 albums, 1 EP, 1 single) HERE
 

Lyrically, a lot of these songs revolve around memories, dreams and coming to terms with the past. Some are tinged with regret, while others have a more hopeful tone. Is the thematic coherence something you aimed for?
 
I think, not to quote another song, it was just happenstance that we did happen to find these lyrics [that share some common themes]. It may be a product of our individual experiences, growing and what our lives have been like. It certainly is a reflective record. In order to get back together again, we had to do some reflecting because there was a reason why there was no dB’s. In 1988, when the band finally called it quits, I think at that point the feeling was, “It’s obviously not going to happen for The dB’s.” It’s so different now. You put some time in there, Chris and I do some things [musical projects] together, we hang with each other — we still love each other very much — we still care very much about each others' parents. So the bond is there. I think this record is the product of a certain amount of maturity. I think you have to have lived these lives to have written these songs.

Will and Gene sound so solid on this album, yet they can't have much time to rehearse or play together live. How do you explain the musical telepathy they seem to have?
 
Will Rigby, drums
Gene Holder, bass
They didn’t have a lot of time to rehearse or play together. But Gene’s got a style and Will’s got a style, and somehow or other, whenever they pick up and play together — even if they’re just faffing around — it always sounds great. We launched into “Rice Pudding” by the Jeff Beck Group at rehearsal the other day, and everybody knew all the changes. We just know this stuff. This is the “shared hallucination,” I guess [referring to memories of growing up together]. My wife is constantly amazed that I still have a clutch of friends that I’ve known since third grade.

What will become of the music that didn't make it onto the album?
 
There were a lot of songs. We ended up recording about 30, … but I don’t know what’s going to happen to those. There are a number of others, Chris’ and mine both. Hopefully, they’ll see the light of day. Our whole thing was trying to make this into the best possible presentation we could. We realized that 31 years is a very long time between records with the same band. We tried to pull together the best stuff that we could. We knew we wanted to make an album. We toyed with the idea of, “What about three EPs or four EPs? Downloads, single downloads for each month for a year!” — all sorts of Today’s New Marketing Ideas. But it just didn’t ring true for us. We’re album guys; we’ve always made albums. 
 
All good music collections need it

Chris has said, “We should just have this in the can as another record.” But to my way of thinking, it is not necessarily a record’s worth of songs. It’s a number of songs, but I don’t know that they would hang together as well as Falling Off the Sky does. There’s a reason they didn’t make the final cut — which is not that they’re bad songs. It’s just because they didn’t necessarily seem to fit the emotional flow that this record has.


 

Some of us are salivating at the thought of getting to see The dB's live, especially playing the new songs. (I've already got my tickets for the album release show in Durham on June 9 and your Mountain Stage date later in the month.) Right now, though, it appears that you guys are planning sporadic live dates rather than playing a "tour" per se. Can you offer any more info?
 
Don't call him Pete!  photo by Sean Davis via Flickr
Between my new full-time job and Will’s touring schedule with Steve Earle, we’re just going to have to do live dates when we’re able. Gene’s got two children and Chris has his studio; we’ve all got our various lives.

Describe the future you'd like to see for The dB's.
 
I’d like to see this record bought in duplicate by everybody. The reason being, going back to when you first heard Repercussion — the radio play we got back in those days was not from anybody servicing stations. It was all really nice people who had bought the record and fallen in love with it and had shifts on their college station or local community station. They’d bring their own copy in and play it! Or they’d put it on a mix tape. We lived and died by the mix tape: that’s how we got known, it was by word of mouth. Without actually asking everyone to seriously go out and buy two copies, if you want to give a gift to somebody, it’s a good record to give as a gift. It’s beautiful music, it’s worth hearing. And there’s a limit to how much any record company can do.

Tell the truth: you owe the success of this album to the Reptile Brain Activator
TM, right?!?

You’re gonna have to talk to Chris about that because that’s totally his invention, and it’s a beautiful, beautiful thing!

End note: if you're curious as to what the Reptile Brain Activator is, or why it receives a thank you in the liner notes to Falling Off the Sky, have a look HERE.

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AS TO WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT THIS Q & A !