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Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Fun facts about 2025 Rose Parade music performers

Background and Fun Facts on 2025 Rose Parade music performers:

Aloe Blacc

The R&B/hip hop singer, born to Panamanian parents and raised in Laguna Hills, graduated from USC. “I Need a Dollar” was an international top 20 single in 2010 across the pond before becoming well-known at home. Three years later, Swedish EDM DJ/producer Avicii got Blacc to co-write and sing on “Wake Me Up,” which topped music charts worldwide. Then the singer landed his first U.S. top 10 single, the platinum certified “The Man.” Upcoming album “Stand Together,” slated for February, contains songs paired with philanthropic causes. Country/pop artist Hunter Hayes is among the collaborators.

Fun facts

“Wake Me Up” currently ranks among the top 50 most streamed songs on Spotify (2.533 billion)

His given name is Egbert Dawkins III.

Songwriting credits on “The Man” include Elton John & Bernie Taupin because it interpolates “Your Song.”

Blacc was featured vocalist on tracks by other EDM artists Tiesto, David Guetta, Paul Oakenfold, and Zedd.

Debbie Gibson

Fun facts

Gibson owns one of the Liberace’s Baldwin pianos.

She starred with Tiffany, another ‘80s teen pop music queen, in the campy 2011 Syfy flick “Mega Python vs. Gatoroid.”

Gibson can be seen briefly in a dinner scene during the first “Ghostbusters” movie.

As the Night Owl, Gibson performed in disguise on “The Masked Singer” in 2023

She is in the Guinness Book of World Records as the youngest female music artist to write, produce and perform a No. 1 single on the Billboard Hot 100.

Gibson appeared in the music video for Michael Jackson’s “Liberian Girl” off 1987’s “Bad.”

Getting to know the other 2025 Tournament of Roses music performers

Kiesza

A multiple Juno Award-winning electro pop singer from Canada, Kiesza had a 2014 international top 10 single with “Hideaway.” The accompanying debut album “Sound of a Woman” also included her cover of ‘90s Eurodance hit “What is Love” by Haddaway. Kiesza’s latest EP is “Dancing and Crying Vol. 1.”

Fun facts

At 17, Kiesza joined her brother in the Canadian navy, where she spent three years as markswoman and code breaker.

The 2015 DreamWorks animated film “Home” contained two Kiesza soundtrack co-writes – for herself and Jennifer Lopez.

She competed in Miss Universe Canada.

Kiesza has been a featured vocalist on songs by Duran Duran, Lindsey Stirling, and Pitbull.

Betty Who

Australian dance pop singer/actress Betty Who (born Jessica Newham) started playing cello at age 4, moved to Michigan for classical studies of the instrument, attended Berklee School of Music and taught herself piano and guitar. During the 2010s, Who scored three Billboard Dance Chart toppers: A cover of Donna Lewis’ Nineties pop hit “I Love You Always Forever,” “Somebody Loves You,” and “All of You.” More recently, Who made her acting debut in the 2020 HBO Max film “Unpregnant” and last year, debuted on Broadway in the Tony Award-winning musical “Hadestown.” Who’s latest album is 2022’s “Big.”

Fun facts

The stage name Betty Who was taken from a song Newham wrote as a teen.

Who hosted the Amazon Prime reality dating series “The One That Got Away” in 2022.

Netflix series “Queer Eye” used Who’s remixed version of Widelife’s “All Things (Just Keep Getting Better)” for its second season theme song.

Brian Culbertson

The smooth jazz multi-instrumentalist once played trombone during a 2 a.m. jam session with Prince during the latter’s Rio Las Vegas residency.

Culbertson was a guest musician on Donny Osmond’s 2004 album “What I Meant to Say.”

He founded the Napa Valley Jazz Getaway festival in 2012.

Since the mid-2000s, Culbertson has had a dozen tracks reach No. 1 on Billboard’s Smooth Jazz Airplay chart.

Chapel Hart

The female country music vocal trio first gained national attention after competing on NBC’s “America’s Got Talent” in 2022 and eventually placed fifth.

Chapel Hart is from Mississippi and comprised of two sisters and their cousin.

After writing and recording “You Can Have Him Jolene,” an answer song to Dolly Parton’s signature 1973 hit “Jolene,” the late Loretta Lynn asked the women to do a similar update to one of her famous tunes. The result was “Welcome to Fist City.”

They contribute guest backing vocals on Darius Rucker’s 2023 album “Carolyn’s Boy.”

Brandon Bennett

In 2008, the Louisiana-bred singer was named “The Ultimate Elvis Tribute Act” during Elvis Presley Enterprises’ annual contest held in conjunction with Graceland.

He spent several years in the long-running Chicago production of “Million Dollar Quartet,” the Tony-winning jukebox musical about Sun Records.

Over the years, Bennett has worked with members of Elvis Presley’s band, such as D.J. Fontana, the Sweet Inspirations and The Jordanaires.

Aloe Blacc photo by Anthony Williams.

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Bonus interview with Debbie Gibson

Here are more excerpts from my recent interview with Debbie Gibson, who is performing at the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif. on New Year's Day...

Q: When it comes to recent past Rose Parade performers, you're in good company with people like Chaka Khan, Sheryl Crow, Jordan Sparks, Fitz and the Tantrums…

A: LeAnn Rimes. A lot of artists who I know and admire.

Q: There’s such a pageantry about it with the Rose Queen and her court, which really makes it stand out from other parades around the country.

A: I know...I love the word ‘pageantry.’ That is true. It has a traditional feeling, but they manage to keep it fresh every year. And again, they're always wanting to top themselves… [there has been some] back and forth on the arrangements. They're already into the choreography. A lot of work and care goes into this, so I'm super excited.

Q: Did you watch the parade as a kid?

A: Oh yeah, I've watched it over the years. I remember seeing Chaka [Khan].

Q: Your "Winterlicious" holiday album came out in 2022. When you were putting that together, did you find it daunting to write your own classic holiday songs?

A: I knew when I started organically writing these songs, probably three years before the album came out, I just felt like, ‘Oh boy, here we go! This is the start of my first ever holiday album.’ It's funny that it took a long time because a lot of times artists would have those few pop hits and the label was like, ‘Quick: Let's churn out a holiday record.’ And I always felt when it was that when it was a label or an artist capitalizing on a moment. 

I knew that I wanted to wait until I really felt like I had inspired songs that...would feel [not only] classic and cozy, but fresh and new at the same time.

Because I think that's what people want from a great holiday song. My friend Sylvia Maccalla wrote a song on the album. I very rarely record new original songs because I write a lot. But I heard her song, “I Wish Everyday Was Christmas.” I was like, ‘I need that if you're willing to part with it.’ And you're like, ‘Have I heard this before? Because it just feels so classic, you know?’ There’s such an energy about it and it does make you want it to be Christmas.

Q: I was pleasantly surprised that you covered the Anthony Newley/Leslie Bricusse hit “The  Candy Man,” famously recorded by Sammy Davis Jr. That was an interesting choice.

A: Thank you...Then songs like “The Gift” were really important to me to have that lush orchestra.I don't really focus on a material presence. I do, in terms of the thought being behind them, but truly, when you can gather with the people you love, it's everything. 

I wrote that song while at my longtime friend Ray Garcia's wedding to his now husband Darren. We were all gathered in Texas, and I remember there was like a fire drill going on in the hotel. So, they stuck a piece of paper with all the instructions under the door. That's what I wrote the song on.

I remember feeling like, ‘Wow, this huge Mexican family in Texas who could opt to be stuck in their old belief system is opting to embrace the love of a same sex couple. That really was a lot of the inspiration for the song. I felt like I felt the love from the two-year old to the 92-year-old that was at the wedding. It was just a celebration of love.

“Illuminate” for me is very special because I felt like there was a shortage of original Hanukkah music. In my shows very often now, I'll bring up everybody in the audience who celebrates Hanukkah, and it's usually not that many people. Again, now more than ever, I feel like marginalized communities need a light shone on them and they're in need of the love and the support that they so deserve.

And it speaks to having faith in the unseen, knowing that that oil that's only supposed to last for one night, to keep that candle burning for one night if it needs to burn for eight nights if you believe, if you have faith, then you will always have what you need. I think it's such a beautiful message in Hanukkah. Being able to record that song too was very special to me.

Q: “Cheers” is New Year’s Eve related to your father as well.

A: Yes. It's a very personal album. I hope that people hear it...It's just hearkening back to a time and a place that was so pure and celebratory.

Q: “The Body Remembers” has been out for a few years now. Are you satisfied with how it was received and how it turned out overall? Did you accomplish what you wanted to with it?

A: I did. I feel like, in the lane that that album’s in, I don't know if I'll ever make an album that I feel as great about again, in that dance [arena] like that, [where] so much attention to detail went into that album.

Being that I did a lot of it during the pandemic, there wasn't a lot of distraction. Right now, I always contemplate how the public wants their artists to live out loud and every minute on social media. It's hard to go deep within and come up with a masterful work that you really want to come up with because you're always having [to] put on this public face every day. I think that time really allowed me to go inward, quiet the noise and do the album the way I wanted it.

To come out with a double album and for it to be received in the way it was by Rolling Stone and by the fans put me back on my touring trajectory. I've been rebuilding my touring career ever since. I'm still thrilled with that album. I love it. I might even do a reissue and include some new tracks before I do the next album.

I feel like I'm not done with that album yet. I want that album to get me overseas. I want people to experience it more overseas. I feel like it has such a European dance flavor and Australian and, has Latin flavors. I feel like that album for me is timeless, but it still feels modern. I'm so thrilled with that album.

Q: I'll bet your fans, with this album and the Christmas one, were really excited about your duets with Joey McIntyre.

A: Yes. I love my pop [music] mate Joey McIntyre. The audiences loved it. I mean, the biggest comment I got was the fans said, ‘It's our idol and our crush together.’ I'm like, ‘Wow, that's powerful.’ That's not wasted on me that he and I could team up in that way. I picture these fans as little girls and little boys with their Bop! Magazine and Teen Beat. We were both up there…he and I are so similar in our work ethic and how we're always wanting to top ourselves with what we're doing. We're both Broadway kids and all that. I know Betty Who is a Broadway baby as well. I'm super excited to meet her.

There's so much in common and that was such a magical thing to collaborate with him and to do Vegas. We did a mini residency in Vegas together. Having Joey on both records really was a thrill for me.

Q: Since you've been doing the “Electric Youth: 35th Anniversary” tours, both stripped and electric, throughout the year, I was curious about your doing those songs again, some of which you hadn't performed in a while. Did you have a new appreciation on some of the songs that maybe you didn't perform in a long time? 

A: I did. On the shows where I did the full band with a lot of the original singers, dancers, and musicians – revisiting songs like “Love Under My Pillow,” which was never released - performing that live on the “Around the World” DVD; VHS. A lot of the fans had a soft spot for that song, and I hadn't performed it in decades. That was amazing.

Then doing the stripped-down version, “Acoustic Youth,” when I'd open the show and I'd sit at the piano and I would do “Who Loves Ya Baby,” you know it's very easy to hear an upbeat song and it could be like a drive by. Everybody's singing and dancing and when you can strip a song down and you know just the lyrics about a busy life and not enough time to look in the mirror, life in the fast lane. It really speaks to how chaotic people's lives can get, the meaning of connection and the meaning of knowing who the real deal people are in your life. And leaning into them and rooting for people.

All the deeper messages in the songs really came to light and I discovered new things about them every night I performed them. I was very in-the-moment with the audiences…it's been a year of feeling very alive, very present, very connected to my audience, very in the moment. And looking back while looking forward at the same time, which is a fascinating place to be.

Q: While singing those “Electric Youth” songs, in the back of your mind, did you ever think, ‘How did I get through that crazy era?’

A: You know, it was definitely fast and furious. I always say to my audiences now, and I tell myself all the time to be sure to take things in now because everything was moving so fast back then. Now I savor every moment and take it all in which is the difference in this era, which is why this era is now my favorite. It really is.

Q: I watched a recent TV morning show interview where you were talking about the 1980s and said something like the reason many people still tend to gravitate toward 1980s music is because a lot of it was so hopeful and people like you, Tiffany and Belinda Carlisle made music that was like a warm blanket wrapped around people.

A: It is. I think now, more than ever, people need their old friends gathered around and those melodies that they held dear. I feel like these songs accompany people on their journey. I constantly get told, people come up to me and they talk about how they had a difficult childhood and how this music and I was there for them. I go, ‘I'm so honored that without actually being in the room, I was in the room, and I was able to provide something for people through my music, which feels surreal because I was just doing what I love to do.

Yes, I do think that the acts of that era, there's a lot of us who are around and…in this new vital chapter. It's really cool to see my contemporaries out there as well [keeping things fresh].

Concert album reviews: Tears for Fears, Eric Clapton's Crossroads Festival, The Blasters

Tears for Fears

Songs for a Nervous Planet

(Concord)

Recorded last year in Franklin, Tenn., Songs for a Nervous Planet is the British synth-pop/rock duo’s first concert album amid a career that spans more than four decades. It was definitely worth the wait. The physical 2CD format comes in a nice three-panel foldout sporting vivid artwork and performance shots. Inside the booklet are lyrics for four new studio recordings. An upbeat, luxurious “Say Goodbye to Mum and Dad” features a whistling motif, while idyllic standout “Astronaut” has billowy keyboards and co-lead singer/bassist Curt Smith’s still-amazing falsetto.

A third of the 18 live tracks were taken from 2022’s outstanding comeback album The Tipping Point. The pair, backed by a six-piece touring band, are in top vocal and musical form here. Co-lead singer/guitarist Roland Orzabal increases the drama on “Sowing the Seeds of Love” and a brawny “Break it Down Again,” while Smith does the same during “Mad World” and “Pale Shelter.” Major Eighties hits “Head Over Heels,” “Shout,” and “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” are especially dynamic. Elsewhere, “Change” gets a subtle EDM-styled makeover.

Info: tearsforfears.com

Various Artists

Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival 2023

(Rhino)

Held over two days at crypto.com Arena in LA, proceeds from the seventh edition of Eric Clapton’s all-star concert (including the pay-per-view broadcast and subsequent home video release) benefit his Crossroads Centre, a Caribbean treatment and education facility for chemically dependent people. 

Besides Slow Hand, the astounding lineup included Sheryl Crow, Santana, ZZ Top, Stephen Stills, Los Lobos, Roger McGuinn, The Wallflowers, Jimmie Vaughan, special guests Stevie Wonder and John Mayer, several blues guitar practitioners and more. The beautiful physical 4CD/2 Blu-ray format comes with a booklet containing various musician collages. 

Among the highlights across 54 tracks: Gary Clark Jr.’s captivating, soulful “Habits”; Crow’s sparsely haunting “Redemption Day” (and an exhilarating “My Favorite Mistake,” assisted by Mayer); The Wallflowers’ ragged, but endearing take on Tom Petty’s “The Waiting”; ZZ Top’s “Gimme All Your Lovin’”; young Southern rocker Marcus King’s spirited selections; H.E.R.’s sassy rock take on Lenny Kravitz’s “Are You Gonna Go My Way”; Clapton’s Bob Marley hit “I Shot the Sheriff” and emotional tribute to the late Robbie Robertson on The Band’s “It Makes No Difference.”

Info: crossroadsantigua.org

The Blasters

Over There: Live at The Venue, London - The Complete Concert

(Liberation Hall)

Available in full for the first time, Over There documents the Downey band’s rip-roaring May 1982 U.K. gig. Dave & Phil Alvin and company plow through nearly two dozen early rock ‘n’ roll and classic R&B-leaning tracks. While listening, you can almost sense the sweat dripping from performances of covers by Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Roy Orbison, and the group’s own “Border Radio,” “Marie Marie” and “American Music.” Future Los Lobos sax man Steve Berlin really elevates “I’m Shakin’.” Esteemed veteran journalist Chris Morris penned the informative liner notes.

Info: bandcamp.com

Hootie & the Blowfish catalog will be collected in the box set, The Atlantic Years 1994-2003, on January 24

Hootie & the Blowfish will release a new box set, The Atlantic Years 1994-2003, on January 24. It will be available in multiple configurations, including 6LP and 5CD. The 6LP version will be available exclusively at Rhino.com, while the 5CD version will arrive in stores nationwide and at Rhino.com. Pre-order/Pre-save HERE.

The box set presents the group’s albums from Atlantic Records in one package. The 6LP configuration has their RIAA 22x platinum-certified debut, Cracked Rear View (1994), as well as the 3x platinum Fairweather Johnson (1996) and platinum Musical Chairs (1998)—both pressed on vinyl for the first time in over 25 years. The Atlantic Years 1994-2003 includes two titles never-before-available on vinyl - covers album Scattered, Smothered and Covered (2000) and the self-titled Hootie & the Blowfish (2003).

Celebrating its 30th anniversary, Cracked Rear View stands out as one of the top 10 best-selling studio albums of all time, “the highest-certified debut album of all-time” according to the RIAA.

Released on July 5, 1994, it reached #1 on the Billboard 200. The album led to the GRAMMY® Award for “Best New Artist” and “Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals” for “Let Her Cry.” With additional songs, including “Hold My Hand,” “Only Wanna Be With You,” and “Time,” the album has generated over 1 billion streams and counting. 

On its heels, Fairweather Johnson bowed at #1 on the Billboard 200 and yielded “Old Man & Me (When I Get to Heaven)” and “Tucker’s Town,” while Musical Chairs saw the band return to the Top 5. Scattered, Smothered and Covered notably comprised covers of everyone from Led Zeppelin, Roy Orbison, and The Smiths to R.E.M., Tom Waits, and Bill Withers. The band’s 2003 self-titled album, Hootie & the Blowfish, marked their final release with Atlantic Records. The album included tracks like “Deeper Side” and “Little Darlin’” alongside “Rain Song” featuring vocals from The Bangles’ guitarist Vicki Peterson and Continental Drifters’ co-founder Susan Cowsill.

Track listings:

CRACKED REAR VIEW
1. Hannah Jane
2. Hold My Hand
3. Let Her Cry
4. Only Wanna Be with You
5. Running from an Angel
6. I’m Goin Home
7. Drowning
8. Time
9. Look Away
10. Not Even the Trees
11. Goodbye

FAIRWEATHER JOHNSON
1. Be the One
2. Sad Caper
3. Tucker’s Town
4. She Crawls Away
5. So Strange
6. Old Man & Me (When I Get to Heaven)
7. Earth Stopped Cold at Dawn
8. Fairweather Johnson
9. Honeyscrew
10. Let It Breathe
11. Silly Little Pop Song
12. Fool
13. Tootie
14. When I’m Lonely

MUSICAL CHAIRS
1. I Will Wait
2. Wishing
3. Las Vegas Nights
4. Only Lonely
5. Answer Man
6. Michelle Post
7. Bluesy Revolution
8. Home Again
9. One By One
10. Desert Mountain Showdown
11. What’s Going On Here
12. What Do You Want from Me Now

SCATTERED, SMOTHERED AND COVERED
1. Fine Line
2. I Go Blind
3. Almost Home
4. Hey Hey What Can I Do
5. Renaissance Eyes
6. Before the Heartache Rolls In
7. Araby
8. I’m Over You
9. Gravity of the Situation
10. I Hope That I Don’t Fall in Love with You
11. Dream Baby
12. Driver 8
13. Let Me Be Your Man
14. Please, Please, Please Let Get What I Want
15. Use Me

HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH
1. Deeper Side
2. Little Brother
3. Innocence
4. Space
5. I’ll Come Runnin
6. Tears Fall Down
7. The Rain Song
8. Show Me Your Heart
9. When She’s Gone
10. Little Darlin’
11. Woody
12. Go and Tell Him (Soup Song)

Genesis' 1974 album 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway' to get Super Deluxe box set in March

In Genesis’ body of work, The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway is frequently considered a landmark album. Originally released on November 22, 1974, at the pinnacle of their early success, it came at a pivotal point in Genesis’ history. It is rated by music critics and scholars as one of the greatest albums of its era and one of the most influential progressive rock albums of all time.

The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway 50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition, due March 28 via Rhino, follows the arc of the album’s creation and tour. With input from all of the band members involved – Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Peter Gabriel, Steve Hackett and Mike Rutherford - it comes in 5LP/Blu-Ray Audio, 4CD/Blu-Ray Audio and Digital (including Dolby ATMOS) formats, and includes the original album mix, remastered at Abbey Road Studios by Miles Showell from the 1974 analog tapes.

A Blu-ray audio disc includes the remastered 96kHz/24-bit high-resolution audio and Dolby Atmos mixes of the studio album done by Bob Mackenzie at Real World Studios under the supervision of Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks.

The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway Live At The Shrine Auditorium from January 24, 1975 is remastered and includes two encore tracks, “Watcher of the Skies” and “The Musical Box.” This is the first time the full live show, including the encore tracks, has been released in its entirety.

Three never-before-released demos from the legendary Headley Grange Session included as part of a digital download card with the full audio from the set.

A 60-page coffee table style book with Alexis Petridis liner notes, who interviewed all five band members to tell the story of The Lamb… – from the writing sessions to live performances – which is believed to be the only time this has happened since its original release.
The book also features images from Armando Gallo, Richard Haines and other noted photographers. A 1975 tour program reproduction, replica ticket and poster. 

Track listing:

1. THE LAMB LIES DOWN ON BROADWAY
2. FLY ON A WINDSHIELD
3. BROADWAY MELODY OF 1974
4. CUCKOO COCOON
5. IN THE CAGE
6. THE GRAND PARADE OF LIFELESS PACKAGING
7. BACK IN N.Y.C.
8. HAIRLESS HEART
9. COUNTING OUT TIME
10. THE CARPET CRAWLERS
11. THE CHAMBER OF 32 DOORS
12. LILYWHITE LILITH
13. THE WAITING ROOM
14. ANYWAY
15. HERE COMES THE SUPERNATURAL ANAESTHETIST
16. THE LAMIA
17. SILENT SORROW IN EMPTY BOATS
18. THE COLONY OF SLIPPERMEN (THE ARRIVAL · A VISIT TO THE DOKTOR · RAVEN)
19. RAVINE
20. THE LIGHT DIES DOWN ON BROADWAY
21. RIDING THE SCREE
22. IN THE RAPIDS
23. IT.

The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway –
Live from the Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, CA (January 24, 1975)

Remastered 2024

1. THE LAMB LIES DOWN ON BROADWAY
2. FLY ON A WINDSHIELD
3. BROADWAY MELODY OF 1974
4. CUCKOO COCOON
5. IN THE CAGE
6. THE GRAND PARADE OF LIFELESS PACKAGING
7. BACK IN N.Y.C.
8. HAIRLESS HEART
9. COUNTING OUT TIME
10. THE CARPET CRAWLERS
11. THE CHAMBER OF 32 DOORS
12. LILYWHITE LILITH
13. THE WAITING ROOM
14. ANYWAY
15. HERE COMES THE SUPERNATURAL ANAESTHETIST
16. THE LAMIA
17. SILENT SORROW IN EMPTY BOATS
18. THE COLONY OF SLIPPERMEN (THE ARRIVAL · A VISIT TO THE DOKTOR RAVEN)
19. RAVINE
20. THE LIGHT DIES DOWN ON BROADWAY
21. RIDING THE SCREE
22. IN THE RAPIDS
23. IT.

Encore

24. WATCHER OF THE SKIES
25. THE MUSICAL BOX

The Headley Grange Demos
Download Card

1. THE LAMB LIES DOWN ON BROADWAY/FLY ON A WINDSHIELD (Take 1)
2. THE CHAMBER OF 32 DOORS/THE LAMIA (Takes 1-2)
3. IN THE CAGE [Strange Vocals] (Take 1)

Blu-ray Disc

The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
Dolby Atmos Mix by Bob Mackenzie at Real World Studios
Studio Album Stereo Mix (24bit/96kHz Uncompressed audio)
Remastered from the original 1974 tapes by Miles Showell at Abbey Road Studios with assistance from Nick Davis

Gary Kemp of Raconteurs podcast and Spandau Ballet readies new album

Rhino Records
British musician Gary Kemp is set to return with his third solo album, This Destination, out on January 31, through East West Records.

The guitarist, songwriter and co-founder of Spandau Ballet has been touring worldwide with Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets since 2018, alongside bandmate and fellow host of the podcast Rockonteurs, Guy Pratt.

Outside of music, Kemp, who studied at Anna Sher’s Children’s Theatre, has acted on-screen and stage in a number of TV, Film and Theatre productions - including a starring role in 1990’s British crime thriller The Krays alongside his brother and Spandau Ballet bandmate Martin Kemp. In 1992, Kemp appeared in the Hollywood blockbuster The Bodyguard, starring Whitney Houston and in 2015, he performed in Jamie Lloyd’s West End productions of Harold Pinter’s The Homecoming, Party Time and Celebration.

Kemp's newest work follows on from 2021's Insolo. This Destination is his most personal to date and sees the songwriter channel his thoughts and feelings about the past, present and future through the guise of uncanny storytelling and character work. The album is simultaneously semi-autobiographical and an exercise in empathetic scene-setting.

The singles “Put Your Head Up” and "This Destination" are available to stream now.

This Destination puts on show the culmination of a lifetime dedicated to songcraft. The album features intricate and deliberate arrangements, including strings by the renowned John Metcalfe (formerly of The Durutti Column and more recently string arranger to the likes of Peter Gabriel, Blur and U2).

A special Dolby Atmos mix of the album, created by musician Steven Wilson, will be available alongside the release. Wilson uses spatial audio mixing, which creates an immersive sound by placing audio elements into a three-dimensional space. The effect is a stunning recreation of how we hear sound in the real world.

This Destination features keys and backing vocals by longtime collaborator Toby Chapman, who co-produced the album alongside Kemp at London’s Reformation and RAK studios.

Pratt - who handled rhythm section duties for Pink Floyd circa 1987 onward - was called upon to play bass on some of the songs. Pratt’s previous work includes performances and cuts for Madonna, Roxy Music, The Smiths and Womack & Womack, to name a few. The album’s closer features throat-singing by the Mercury Prize-nominated Sam Lee.

Lyrically, the 11-track offering marks a journey in discovery for Kemp, who, in the years following the pandemic, hit an unexpected wall of anxiety and a lapse in self-belief. This Destination is the soundtrack to the artist navigating his way back to familiar surroundings.

The first song composed for the album was "Take The Wheel" - a piece of music which evokes the vivid imagery of a couple leaning forward against a windscreen trying to see the road through the rain.

Kemp sings, “Is there anybody out there who can take the wheel?”. The lyric is a genuine call for somebody, anybody, to step in and take over.

The symmetry in the writing process came in the form of the very last song penned for the album, its title track, This Destination. Kemp said, “It’s about my relationship with music. Whatever I’m going through, whatever conflict arises, the process of making music is my resolution. That’s my destination.”

Elsewhere on the album, Kemp reflects on his relationship with the city in which he’s spent his life. “Borrowed Town” reckons with the notion that London belongs to no one. The ever-changing cultural hub is something we all inhabit but can never claim ownership over. Kemp says, “London is in constant flux. When you live here, you’re just borrowing it for a time.”

Kemp also recalls a remarkable moment in the album’s conception when a spell of writer’s block was broken by an unexpected intervention by a fellow musician. He’d been sitting by the piano for hours to avail when the phone rang:

“It was Richard Hawley. We chatted for a while and I told him I’d been going round in circles trying to write something that day. He said ‘Okay, here’s what you do. Go over to the piano and sit down’”. Kemp obliged. “‘Put your hands out over the keys. I’m going to go now, and you’re going to write a fucking brilliant song.’”

Sure enough, the encounter led Gary to produce the McCartney-esque “Work” - a semi-autobiographical tune in which he celebrates the unsung heroics of a parent’s everyday life. In “Work,” Kemp embarks on a trip down memory lane in an account of his Mum and Dad’s working life. He says, “I remember going into the factory with my Dad one morning. I have this vivid recollection of the moment he put his brown overalls on over his clothes. To me he was Superman putting on his cape.”

The song's outro builds into an uplift of staccato strings while Kemp repeats the mantra “Got to make it work.” The statement almost takes on new meaning with each repetition - partly summarizing the song’s narrative whilst also acknowledging the pressure we put on ourselves in every aspect of life, from relationships to health issues to career decisions.

It’s on the album’s final track, “I Know Where I’m Going,” that Kemp reaches his resolution. He sings, “I know where I’m going; I plan to take a rest there.” Clearly, Kemp finds his peace of mind on the album’s full circle moment. He said, “It’s the most personal on the record… It had to go last - it just made sense”.

Track Listing:

Borrowed Town
This Destination
Put Your Head Up
Take the Wheel
Dancing in Bed
Windswept Street (1978)
Johnny’s Coming Home
At the Chateau
Work
Giving it Up
I Know Where I’m Going

Deluxe CD b
onus tracks:

Boy
True (live acoustic version)
Through the Barricades (live acoustic version)

Hooray for the Riff Raff news

photo: Tommy Kha
Hurray for the Riff Raff will join Bright Eyes for the second half of their 2025 North American tour, performing in 25 cities across the southern U.S. starting in February. The artists previously toured together in 2022. 

Many of the songs on Hurray for the Riff Raff/Alynda Segarra's latest record, The Past Is Still Alive, began to take shape during that tour; Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst later sang on the album track “The World Is Dangerous,” and Mike Mogis also contributed across the album.

In addition, Hurray for the Riff Raff has recently announced that they will be joining MJ Lenderman & the Wind as special guests for Waxahatchee’s performance at Beak & Skiff this summer on June 21, 2025. Find more information and tickets here.

Since its release in February 2024, The Past Is Still Alive has been nominated for Album of the Year at the 2024 Americana Honors & Awards.

Tour Dates:

(Opening for Bright Eyes)

Wednesday, Feb 26
George's Majestic Lounge
Fayetteville, AR
Tickets

Thursday, February 27
Austin City Limits Live at The Moody Theater
Austin, TX
Tickets

Friday, February 28
The Factory In Deep Ellum
Dallas, TX
Tickets

Saturday, March 1
Aztec Theatre
San Antonio, TX
Tickets

Sunday, March 2
Chelsea’s Live
Baton Rouge, LA
Tickets

Monday, March 3
Florida Theatre
Jacksonville, FL
Tickets

Wednesday, March 5
Jannus Live
St Petersburg, FL
Tickets

Friday, March 7
The Beacham
Orlando, FL
Tickets

Saturday, March 8
Tabernacle
Atlanta, GA
Tickets

Sunday, March 9
The Mill & Mine
Knoxville, TN
Tickets

Thursday, Mar 13
The Orange Peel
Asheville, NC
Tickets

Friday, March 14
The Caverns
Pelham, TN
Tickets

Monday, March 17
Minglewood Hall
Memphis, TN
Tickets

Tuesday, March 18
The Hall
Little Rock, AR
Tickets

Thursday, March 20
Cain's Ballroom
Tulsa, OK
Tickets

Friday, March 21
Uptown Theater
Kansas City, MO
Tickets

Saturday, March 22
The Pageant
St. Louis, MO
Tickets

An interview with Debbie Gibson on the 2025 Rose Parade, working with Joey McIntyre, more

photo: Nick Spanos
When Debbie Gibson was tapped to perform in the Rose Parade Grand Finale on New Year’s Day 2025, she wasn’t just familiar with the world-famous Pasadena event from watching the broadcast.

“I’ve heard about it firsthand for so long from Jimmy Van Patten because he and his late dad, Dick, [attended] together so many times,” said the singer/songwriter/keyboardist/actress, in a phone interview from New York City, where she was preparing for some holiday concerts.

Actor Dick Van Patten (“Eight is Enough”) co-founded Natural Balance Pet Foods, which sponsored previous Rose Parade floats. Jimmy Van Patten, also an actor, is Gibson’s longtime friend and past music theater collaborator.

“I know it has a lot of heart. I've never been involved in a parade before where there is so much care about the detail of creating an arrangement to perform a song in a way that no one’s ever heard it before.”

Gibson confirmed she will “pack a lot in” to the performance. “I get to showcase all my skills in a very short amount of time; in a very dramatic and theatrical way.”

The organizers’ attention to precision extends to her costume design. “I will be donning some roses,” shared Gibson. “I'm used to putting all that together myself, but the parade committee and producers have such a strong vision and high caliber of how they want things presented. I feel so taken care of and I’m just so excited to do this.

“I love sharing the stage with Betty Who and the parade route with Debbie Allen and her awesome dance company to have three generations of women celebrated,” Gibson, 54, enthused.

Gibson was a pop music trailblazer at age 16. She co-wrote, co-produced and performed all the songs on her 1987 debut album “Out of the Blue,” which reached the top 10 and spawned four top 5 singles on the Billboard charts (including the No. 1 “Foolish Beat”). 1989’s “Electric Youth” also went multi-platinum, contained another Hot 100 chart topper (“Lost in Your Eyes”) and a couple more top 20 placements.

Soon after, Gibson segued into acting roles while continuing to release albums. She did 17 musicals in 17 years (notably “Les Miserables” and “Cabaret” on Broadway) and has multiple film/TV credits (“Rock of Ages,” The Hallmark Channel’s “Summer of Dreams,” Netflix’s “Lucifer,” “The Class,” with Anthony Michael Hall).

In 2022, the entertainer released “Winterlicious,” her impressive first holiday album.

“I always vowed, until I have something really spectacular to say musically, I'm just going to stay quiet,” she said, about why now was the right time for it.

Half the songs are Gibson originals, along with covers of Christmas classics, the Sammy Davis Jr.-popularized “The Candy Man” (“it feels festive, like the holidays to me and harkens back to our youth”) and “Heartbreak Holiday,” her second duet with New Kids on the Block’s Joey McIntyre over the past few years. They previously did a mini-Vegas residency together and remade “Lost in Your Eyes” for Gibson’s 2021 studio album “The Body Remembers.” Additionally, Gibson toured with NKOTB in 2019.

She described the McIntyre collaboration as “a magical thing,” recalled how “audiences loved it” and some fans commented, “It’s our idol and our crush together.”

All those positive reactions to the nostalgic pairing made Gibson imagine fans as “little girls and boys with their Bop and Teen Beat magazines” and both singers’ photos plastered on their walls.

Gibson said their connection stems from the fact that “he and I are so similar in our work ethic and how we’re always wanting to top ourselves with what we're doing. We’re both Broadway kids. Betty Who is a Broadway baby as well. I’m super excited to meet her” at the parade.


A version of my interview originally appeared in the Pasadena Star-News and sister newspapers. Photo courtesy of the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association.

Saturday, December 28, 2024

The NAMM Show 2025 News: Yamaha Will Display Innovative Products, Host Grand Plaza Stage Performances

Yamaha, the world's largest manufacturer of musical instruments, will return to The NAMM Show, being held in January at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California.

The company's showcase area on the third floor of the Anaheim Convention Center includes an immersive array of instruments, technology and can’t-miss musical performances. 

An assortment of breakthrough products across categories like guitars, drums and percussion, and keyboards will be on display - notably products such as the newly launched TAG3 C TransAcoustic Guitar, YEV Pro Electric Violin, and SEQTRAK designed for composing and performing electronic music from anywhere. 

In addition to the new products, Yamaha will have custom instruments created for top artists on display. Attendees will also have the opportunity to visit the Yamaha Piano Salon by appointment only, where Yamaha will celebrate the innovation and legacy behind the company’s world-class pianos by showcasing five Bösendorfer and five Yamaha pianos.

“Our Yamaha team is excited to deliver an amazing NAMM Show experience to all show attendees in 2025,” said Tom Summer, president of Yamaha Corporation of America. “We expect to top the record attendance at our display this year, where our guests can experience our fantastic new products and learn about them from the Yamaha experts staffing the booth. Artists will perform using Yamaha gear from our in-booth stage on all three exhibit days. And you won’t want to miss a minute of the Yamaha Grand Plaza Stage concerts.”

Throughout the show, Yamaha will entertain attendees with musical performances hosted at the Yamaha Grand Plaza Stage. The music will be mixed and curated by the company's award-winning commercial audio gear, including the Rivage digital console line. Every note will be articulately amplified through NEXO speaker systems. NEXO is a Yamaha company.

To experience everything Yamaha has to offer at The NAMM Show, visit booth #300DE in the Anaheim Convention Center from January 23 - 25, 2025. For more information, go to usa.yamaha.com/namm/

Monday, December 23, 2024

An interview with the band X

X is among the most influential and critically acclaimed bands to emerge from the Los Angeles punk rock scene during the late 1970s. The original lineup – singer Exene Cervenka, bassist/singer John Doe, guitarist Billy Zoom, and drummer DJ Bonebrake – initially released five albums.

Zoom left in the mid ‘80s and was briefly replaced by Dave Alvin (The Blasters) and then Tony Gilkyson. X put out a couple more albums and delved into the fun, alternative folk side project The Knitters before Zoom returned in 1999. In the interim, X tunes like “Los Angeles,” “White Girl,” the Troggs cover “Wild Thing,” “Burning House of Love,” “The Hungry Wolf” and Alvin-penned “4th of July” became flashback staples at college and alternative rock radio.

The group has toured steadily ever since, performing more than 4,000 concerts across 40+ years. Now the musicians are putting a lid on taxing cross-country club tours (but not ruling out one-off theater gigs or festivals) as it promotes the ninth and final studio album Smoke & Fiction through 2025.

A rousing effort, Smoke & Fiction is definitely one of X’s best. Highlights include “Big Black X,” a reference to the group’s logo on a venue marquee where Cervenka deftly sings about the old days: notably The Masque club, a then-deteriorating H-O-L-L-Y-W-O-O-D sign, Errol Flynn’s abandoned mansion and bikers on the 101 freeway. The hard-charging title track, led by Zoom’s taut guitar work, details the state of the world and recalls past X classics. A fast and furious “Ruby Church” displays Doe and Cervenka’s distinct harmonies and boasts a ripping Zoom guitar solo.

Then there’s the pile-driving “Sweet ‘til the Bitter End” and moody gem “The Way it Is,” where the co-vocalists recall how “we did what we did to get along.” Bonebrake’s drums thrash in all the right places, while Zoom’s frequent tremolo effects are enthralling.

Rock Cellar caught up with Doe for an in-depth chat from his home in Austin prior to the band launching the “Putting the X Back in Xmas” West Coast tour. The interview has been slightly edited for clarity.

Rock Cellar: Does X have anything special planned for the holiday concerts? Will you include any Christmas or New Year’s-themed songs you’ve recorded in the past, such as “Goodbye Year, Goodbye” in the sets?

John Doe: We are doing “Goodbye Year, Goodbye.” We did some Christmas songs; it must have been 10 years ago. Maybe even longer. We recorded a few, and we put them in the set. I didn't think there was a remarkable rendition (among) any of them. [Laughs] They were serviceable.

After we did that for a couple of years, I took an informal poll with the band, asking them, “Did anyone remark about those songs? Did anyone say that they liked it, or they didn't like it or anything?” Everybody, including our crew, manager, and the band, said, “Not really.” I thought, “Well, fuck it. Why should we do this?” If we don’t think it’s particularly amazing, and nobody else does…

Rock Cellar: Have you noticed a change in demeanor among fans who won’t be able to see you perform in a club anymore?

John Doe: Yes, in the smaller markets, there’s twice as many people. When we did Columbia, South Carolina, which I don’t think we’ve ever played, there were about 500-600 people. Then in Albuquerque, there were a thousand. The smaller markets, for sure, are turning out and we’re all very grateful. But there comes a time when you feel like, “We’ve done this a lot, and so maybe we need to do it a little less, and we can continue as a band longer.”

Rock Cellar: Has there been a residual melancholy or wistful feeling after playing some of these small venues for the last time? Last June, for example, X performed at the legendary Troubadour in West Hollywood. Did The Troubadour present many punk rock bands in the early days?

John Doe: No, they did not. We played there once before. And that was when Doug Weston - Rest in Peace - was still active in that club. The place was jammed, 500 people, however many people they could squeeze into that place. That was when I was the one who would go settle [up at the end of the night for our money].

Weston pointed to this sign that said “Capacity: 167” or 210 or something; what the fire marshal would say was the capacity. And he said, “Well, you guys filled the place. So, here’s your $900,” or whatever the hell it was. I said, “That’s bullshit. There were twice as many people. Probably 500 people.” And he goes, “No, that's our capacity. We don't let in any more people than what our capacity is.” Something dodgy like that. And I said, “Cool. See you later.” That was the one and only time we played there, except for this year. I don’t feel wistful.

Exene and I might go back and do a duet thing, or I might play there with my solo band. But you are grateful and then you graduate. I like playing a theater. I don’t mind if people sit down. They’ll figure it out and stand in the aisles on the side. It’s more rewarding to play to a couple thousand people…Hard to say. Sure, you have moments of wistfulness, but then you think about what it smells like when you walk in, and it smells like bleach: “Oh right, that’s why.”

Rock Cellar: I noticed from your recent setlists that X has been playing songs off the exceptional new album Smoke & Fiction and 2020’s solid Alphabetland. How have fans reacted to them?

John Doe: Some people sing along, and some people fake it. And that's always fun too. No one has said, “Boooo! Don't play anything new.” There’s no cold beer cans being heaved at the stage, thank goodness. That’s another thing I don’t miss about the old days. Anyway, people dig it. We do too. I'm proud of the new songs. I'm proud of us making this new record. I feel like we might be going out on a high note.

Rock Cellar: If there are new songs in the sets, it makes everything more interesting for you.

John Doe: Yeah. If it were just up to me, I would play a different setlist every night. But it’s (hard) to get the pacing and everybody on the same page. We end up playing more or less the same 25 or 30 songs, which is OK by me.

Rock Cellar: Turning to the latest album, what was the process like recording with producer Rob Schnapf (Beck, Eliott Smith, Guided by Voices) again and doing it at the Legendary Sunset Sound studio?

John Doe: Sunset Sound is awesome. They have a perfect combination of great gear and an easy vibe. Fortunately, because of the price of the room per day, we only spent five days there. I’d love to have done the whole record there, but that wouldn't be smart. If you have a budget, know the songs, know what you’re going to do, know how you want to record it, and you have a good engineer and producer, you only have to spend four or five days. And that’s like four or five grand. That’s not a lot. We got all of the drums and bass and some of the guitars down. Rob knows the band. He’s willing to work with all of us. Exene and I got our vocals very quickly and he worked with Billy really well. He doesn't put his own stamp on it. He’s done a variety of different kinds of music. Rob’s a great guy.

Rock Cellar: You've said in a recent interview that Smoke & Fiction was a hard album to make and yet it was done quickly. Were you referring to the lyrics, music, or both?

John Doe: Both of them, but more musically. I’ve worked pretty hard at getting rid of my ego. It only limits you if you say, “This is the way that I wrote the song, so we have to make it work” - which I used to do. Nowadays, I'll say, “That doesn't seem to be working. Let’s just make some different music.” You have to learn the song one way, and then learn it a different way. Then we’d be changing the lyrics, and sometimes I'd throw out whole sections of verses.

“Face in the Moon” was completely different. You have to learn it, relearn it and change it to get the best song. If you're a real hard head about it, then you probably spend more time working on it because you're trying to make a square peg fit in a round hole. But this way, you’re constantly fluid and that’s difficult.

Rock Cellar: X road tested several of the new album’s songs last year. Did that make the recording process easier since you knew how they worked live prior to recording them?

John Doe: Yeah. That's a great luxury that most people don't have. Because we had decided well in advance that we were going to make a new record, Exene and I were able to get busy writing the songs. Then, as they developed, we could play them live.

There's a different level of intensity when you play something live and not just in a rehearsal hall. Your adrenaline is higher. You can’t stop and say, “Wait a minute. We messed up that part.” You just keep going. I think we did that for only the first two records. For most bands and artists, singer/songwriters - I don't even know about modern R&B - a lot of that (material is) written in the studio. You have to figure it out on the fly as you rehearse. Then you record it. You don't have the luxury of playing it several times and really getting it under your fingers.

Rock Cellar: Exene has said that she badgered you guys to make a new studio album for 15 years. Why the long wait? Was retaining the rights to your recordings and teaming with Fat Possum Records the impetus for it?

John Doe: [Laughs] That was part of it. Sometimes you have to wait until the time is right. I wasn’t willing to put all the time and effort into something that wouldn't be released. This latest record was difficult because we were touring, rehearsing, and writing - all these things back-to-back-to-back.

Once Rob proved that he knew what the band should sound like after doing the “Live in Latin America” album [released in 2018; recorded on tour with Pearl Jam in 2011], and we signed to Fat Possum, and got our masters back, I realized that I was out of excuses.

And then, we recorded four songs. The only new one was “Angel on the Road” and three older songs. It sounded like us, and it was rewarding. It was like, “Obviously we can do this.” So, then we really got busy writing the rest of “Alphabetland” and rehearsing that.

But we weren’t touring as much, and we only had to come up with five other songs. We had nine or 10 songs. “All the Time in the World” was done in the studio, a spoken word piece that Exene had done. It was a little bit easier. Maybe that’s being opportunistic or capitalistic or something. If you were a true selfless artist, you would just make it just for the expression.

Rock Cellar: That can be costly.

John Doe: Fuck the cost. You can do things pretty reasonably nowadays. It doesn't cost a lot to make a record. It depends on how you want to make it. It was more about time than effort. I did two or three solo records during that time.

Rock Cellar: You also had a starring role in the 2022 film noir “D.O.A.”

John Doe: [Laughs] That movie was a whopping two and a half weeks. It was done on a shoestring and I'm really proud of the fact that it came out as convincing as it did. I proved to myself that I could actually hold a movie; I could be the center of a movie. That was cool.

Rock Cellar: On Smoke & Fiction, a reflective thread runs through several song lyrics. Was that something that evolved naturally while writing?

John Doe: There isn't anything that we've done that's contrived or calculated. Really nothing. It did develop as the songs were written, and then once we were recording. Especially that last song “Big Black X.” That was a piece of prose that Exene had written and showed to me. I thought, “This could make a great song.”

But we had to file it down and edit it and figure out what the rhythm of the lyrics were and how they would fit together. On the original recording, each chord had half the number of measures that it does now. Because Exene would say, “It is changing too fast. I can't get a hold of it.” So, I thought, “What if I played bass for twice as long on each chord? That works.” That (explanation) is a little bit in the weeds, but that helped make the decision this would be a good final record.

Musically, there’s some Bo Diddley that you can hear in it. There’s some “In This House That I Call Home” on certain songs, there’s a bit of doo wop with “The Way it Is.” There’s some early Danger House [Records, the LA indie punk label which released X’s first single “Adult Books” in 1978] sounds on “Face in the Moon,” and stuff like that.

Lyrically and musically, it checks a lot of boxes, but that's also what you can do once you’ve written songs for a particular entity. Either you know who you are individually if you’re a solo artist or you know what parameters or what boundaries the band has or what you do well.

And you can, in the writing of it, and certainly in the rehearsal, tailor things so that it makes sense and fits.

Rock Cellar: Anyone who is familiar with X music could identify the band instantly from listening to this album. It’s not as if you went off on a jazz tangent or something.

John Doe: [Laughs] Actually, we did, but it didn’t make the record. Billy had something that he wrote, and I thought, “This is so cool. We worked on it while we were touring. We recorded it and Billy put sax on it. Exene did some other lyrics, and I was all for putting it on there. This is an oddball thing. And everybody else said, “No, this is bullshit. This isn't us.” I was the one who was saying, “No, let's do it. Let's get crazy.”

Rock Cellar: On “Face in the Moon” in particular, Billy's abrasive guitar shards really make that tune stand out.

John Doe: We did that once in rehearsal. And then we tried to do it again and Billy was never happy with it. He didn't care for what he was doing the one time we rehearsed it. But luckily, I recorded it and so he used that as a template. There's a lesson for any guitar players: Record everything…play intuitively rather than all the tricks you've learned, all the knowledge and all this other stuff that is good and necessary. But is it? Does it just get in the way? I think you can make a case for the fact that sometimes it does get in the way because you just want to be intuitive, extemporaneous, and just try it and see what happens.

Rock Cellar: Speaking of Billy’s famous guitar sound, I was reading an old quote that Dave Alvin said about having to learn Billy’s parts when he joined X. He called those arrangements “almost mathematically perfect, put together like schematics.” Do you think Billy’s technique with the rockabilly elements was something that made X stand out apart from your contemporaries early on?

John Doe: For sure. Billy is a terrific amp builder, and he does draw schematics, so Dave's not wrong. It's interesting: It did make us stand out, however, that wasn't the point of what that whole movement was about. Yes, we knew a little. Exene and I had a sense of songwriting. I had a more traditional idea, but that wasn't the point. The whole point was just to try something, not get caught up in virtuosity and perfection and all that stuff, which had led popular music down a really bland path.

Rock Cellar: I heard your appearance on Dwight Yoakam’s weekly SiriusXM show a few months ago and on it you thanked all the corporate rock acts from the Seventies that spawned X and others into forming punk bands as a reaction against it.

John Doe: It was Exene's son Henry, who first pointed that out and said, “If it wasn’t for the band Boston, you guys wouldn't exist.” You know what? We had other mentors from afar - people like the Talking Heads, the Ramones and Blondie and all the CBGB’s bands. And then of course, all the other people that influenced them, like David Bowie and the MC5 and Stooges. Although I didn't really listen to the Stooges, I came to that later because they just weren't around.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers. Because that record [the acclaimed 1976 self-titled debut album] was so influential. Jonathan Richman is just a wonderful person and character. Talk about singing from your heart and your intuition! He cares very much about what he does. But no one's going to tell him, “Don't do that, play your hits.” He's a true artist. Nothing but respect for him.

Rock Cellar: I was listening to your Make the Music Go Bang! compilation in preparation for this interview and while perusing the liner notes, something that Ray Manzarek said about working with X stuck out. He called yours and Exene’s vocal blend: “vaguely atonal Chinese harmony.” What did you like most about working with him? Were you all Doors fans when that opportunity first came along, and Ray wanted to produce you?

John Doe: Exene and I are huge Doors fans. If one of their songs comes on the radio, I still listen to the whole thing. It was an honor, and it was shocking, and we thought, “Maybe we're onto something” here.

Yes, Billy’s playing and Exene and my harmonies did set us apart. I give Exene all the credit for that and me a little bit of credit for saying, “Sure, let's go for it.” She gets the credit because she hadn’t been in a lot of bands and didn’t learn traditional style harmony. She figured it out.

With The Knitters and other things, she does some very traditional harmony. I also read something about Kris Kristofferson that said he had a “pitch adjacent vocal style,” which is one way of (conveying that) it was unusual. It was a pitch indifferent singing style.

I loved Ray. I miss him, and he was definitely a mentor, a father figure. Because he knew he didn't have to reinvent anything. He just had to get good performances. He was a terrific leader and kept us on track. He was wonderful.

Rock Cellar: Most musicians don’t go back and listen to their old albums unless they absolutely have to, but if push comes to shove, what would be the first X album you would pick from your catalog as a favorite or one you believe still stands the test of time?

John Doe: I would say “Under the Big Black Sun,” because it was recorded better. It’s very dark and sad without being maudlin. A good balance.

Rock Cellar: In recent years, X was honored with official “X Day” proclamations from the cities of West Hollywood and Los Angeles, the band was the subject of a Dodgers night, where you sang The National Anthem and Exene threw out the first pitch, and you had the special Grammy Museum exhibit, “X: 40 Years of Punk in Los Angeles” in 2017-18. Do those kinds of events serve as a validation that X was a vital part of rock history?

John Doe: Yes. Everybody likes to be recognized. I would think I can say that without conflict. It's hard to put competition and art together. When the Guitar Center wanted us to put our handprints in their Rock Walk of Fame, suddenly you want to thank your grandmother for immigrating to the United States [laughs], and say, “Oh, little old me?”

X tour dates:

12/27-28 Santa Ana, CA - Observatory OC
12/30 San Diego, CA - Observatory North Park

Special event:

5/9-13 Miami, FL to Nassau, Bahamas - Little Steven’s Underground Garage Cruise! with Social Distortion, Rocket From the Crypt, Reverend Horton Heat, L7, Old 97’s, Los Straitjackets, Flamin’ Groovies, more, undergroundgaragecruise.com

John Doe (solo) tour date:

2/7-8 Novato, CA - Hop Monk Tavern Session Room* 
*with Jill Sobule

xtheband.com


My interview originally ran at rockcellarmagazine.com
X photo by Gary Leonard.

An interview with Dawes

For the past 15 years, Los Angeles indie folk/rock band Dawes has regularly crafted music with a strong stamp of authenticity. Lead vocalist/guitarist Taylor Goldsmith, 39, simultaneously displays a connection with influential pop and rock artists from the late 1960s-1970s singer/songwriter movement.

While 2022’s ambitious Misadventures of Doomscroller featured a few expansive tunes that broached the 10-minute mark, the group went back-to-basics on ninth album Oh Brother after longtime bassist Wylie Gelber and keyboardist Lee Pardini amicably departed Dawes.

Taylor and his drummer brother Griffin Goldsmith tracked the songs live in a studio shed belonging to co-producer Mike Viola (Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness, Panic! at the Disco, Jenny Lewis) before regular Dawes collaborator Trevor Menear and the guys also added finishing touches.

The second Oh Brother single “Still Strangers Sometimes” reached the top 30 on the Americana Music Association singles chart.

In recent months, Dawes opened for Brad Paisley in Murphys, Calif. (Taylor appeared on “Same Here,” slated for the country superstar’s next album), Paisley sat in with the band on a special video version of “House Parties,” and Taylor was among Joni Mitchell’s guests during two all-star “Joni Jams” at the Hollywood Bowl.

Dawes has a new original holiday song out. In a press release, Taylor said the contemplative piano-based ballad “Christmas Tree in the Window” is “about the spirit of Christmas making someone decide to be a better person…It’s been easy to get cynical about the holiday season as I’ve gotten older, but there are still moments when a song, a decoration, or a special moment can bring all the magic back. This song is obviously a ridiculous example of that feeling, but hopefully still an experience we can all relate to at its core.”

Outside his Dawes work, Taylor Goldsmith played a major role in creating actress/singer/wife Mandy Moore’s last two solo albums, which is how he first met Viola.

Rock Cellar checked in with Taylor Goldsmith, 39, from Knoxville, Tenn., where a six-piece Dawes lineup kicked off its tour, which included a December run before resuming next April. The interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Rock Cellar: The band solicited fan requests on its social media for the tour. Is that common?

Taylor Goldsmith: Yeah. It’s fun to see what people ask for in given cities. It’s not like we’re putting an entire set list together based on it. A lot of times, the songs fans want to hear line up with what we tend to be playing anyway. So, it’s fun to throw that out there.

Sometimes, I know the fans, they’ve been to (multiple) shows, we know the song and we make sure we play it on one particular show.

Rock Cellar: For the first time in years, Dawes rehearsed for a tour. That isn’t something you normally do before hitting the road?

Taylor Goldsmith: No.

Rock Cellar: How do you typically get ready for playing concerts?

Taylor Goldsmith: We would always be like, ‘Here’s what we’re thinking,’ and we would just show up prepared. This time, it was, ‘Let’s actually get together and mark out a few things to be ready.’ I’ve always been confident in how the first shows unfolded. We add new ideas as it goes on and have longer sound checks. This time, it was, ‘Let’s actually get together beforehand and really lock some stuff in.

Rock Cellar: How has the Dawes live dynamic changed with newer players over the last few years?

Taylor Goldsmith: It’s been really strong. We have guys that are learning the material and bringing their own thing to it. I think that’s something that I've always really admired about a lot of live music - whether it’s Dylan, Joni (Mitchell), Neil Young, The Stones with Mick Taylor, Ron Wood or Brian Jones – there are all these eras of players, and the idea of catching them with certain people in tow is so cool.

Obviously, it’s also cool when you choose the same four guys for your entire career. A lot of bands that I love, like Dire Straits, Wilco or The Cure, have had several iterations as the years go on. I like to think for fans that can be exciting too.

Rock Cellar: Since you started recording Oh Brother with just you and Griffin, did you find there were different creative opportunities with fewer people in the studio?

Taylor Goldsmith: Yeah. It really put us and the song in the spotlight. It was amazing having Lee and Wiley in the room (before), but it changes the shape of the sound when it’s just us. There’s no one else to represent and I mean that in the best way.

With ‘Mister Los Angeles,’ we finished the song and there’s not a single keyboard on it. Other songs have more keyboard representation. It was case by case and nice to zoom in on certain flavors and qualities.

Because of the way I play guitar and Griffin plays drums, I feel like our identity is in place and so solid. I don't think people would hear this and think it sounds like a different band. That’s something I’m really proud of – the fact that our essence transcends a personnel lineup.

Rock Cellar: In another interview, you said Griffin’s drums were the most important instrument on this album. Is that because there was more room to breathe sonically this time around and the rhythm came to the forefront?

Taylor Goldsmith: Absolutely. When we recorded each song, I would be singing and playing it. I would do some guitar flourishes, but a lot of that would be after the fact. On ‘King of the Never-Wills’ and ‘Surprise,’ I was so focused on capturing a vocal that I didn't really stray too far from the rhythm guitar part. It gave Griffin the opportunity to fill every hole in a very reactive way. He had a first run of the song where everything else is out of his way. Then everything is placed around that. In that sense, I've joked that I feel like he’s the lead guitar player on the album and I'm really psyched about that.

Rock Cellar: On percolating character study “The Game,” I was immediately struck by the clanging drum bits that reminded me of mid-1990s U2.

Taylor Goldsmith: Yeah. It’s cool to hear you say U2 because it’s so clearly like a folk song - the progression and the melody. But I was thinking about U2 when we recorded that. I was listening to a lot of Achtung Baby.

The way that Griffin's snare drum rings out, how there’s an octave in the vocal and the bass comes in and then disappears - there are some hallmarks of U2 that I wasn’t even really thinking about fully. Obviously, we don’t want any hat tips to be too aggressive. I do take pride in that acknowledgement.

Rock Cellar: Do the vocal harmony blend that only siblings can achieve together help Dawes stand apart from the pack?

Taylor Goldsmith: Absolutely. Our criteria for what are good and right for the songs is locked in. We’re both looking for the same things from a song and as players, even if we don't know how to articulate it. I think in that sense, it's always given us a real clear vision. It’s very rare for him to love the way something sounds and for me to hate it. Typically, if one of us is inspired by something, then for the same reasons, the other one’s going to be too.

Rock Cellar: On upbeat, whimsical tunes such as “House Parties” and “Mister Los Angeles,” you really let humor shine through in the lyrics.

Taylor Goldsmith: When I look at my heroes - Roger Miller, Warren Zevon, Randy Newman, Loudon Wainwright – they’re very funny. But when I look at folks playing arenas, the humor doesn’t play as big of a role. People like Bruce Springsteen or Tom Petty. I’ve definitely been at odds with them and the way I want to go.

I think where I land is ‘This is just who I am.’ It seems like the more I embrace what comes out of me and who I am naturally, the truer the songs feel to people.

Rock Cellar: Does living near Hollywood give you an endless supply of ways to poke fun at L.A. culture as you do on “Mister Los Angeles,” with its insistent groove and Counting Crows vibe?

Taylor Goldsmith: Totally. There were verses to that song that didn’t even make the record. I will say that when you’re related or really close friends with someone, those people that you love are typically the ones that you don't mind teasing. I feel the same way about L.A. I have a lot of pride and love for L.A.

Rock Cellar: How was the experience making the video for that song where Conan O'Brien portrays an eccentric talent manager? Was the video shoot nonstop laughter?

Taylor Goldsmith: Nonstop. He's what everyone assumes. He’s always on. He’s always charming. He’s always kind. When I asked him to do it, I said, ‘I get that this is a little bit out of your league, so please feel no pressure. I know you’re busy.’ He said, ‘No, I want to help. I'm in. Let’s do it.’

Then he got really involved with creative emails with our director. There was a lot of back and forth, and he was just so committed. It meant the world to me because he just didn’t have to go as hard as he did. He fully invested in it. He had to stay a little later than anyone anticipated, and he was happy to be there. It was just so amazing.

Rock Cellar: This past July, Dawes served as backup musicians for Conan O’Brien & Real Musicians at the Newport Folk Festival, where Jack White, Nick Lowe, Nathaniel Rateliff, and others guested. People don’t realize Conan can really play guitar and collects them too.

Taylor Goldsmith: He’s a cool guitar player and has a clear sensibility. He really vibes with rockabilly, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, early rock and roll. That is his stuff, that’s how he plays, and that’s what he drifts towards. It’s really great to see someone who’s so invested in their sound.

Rock Cellar: Over the years, you’ve backed several rock legends on stage and recorded with them too. Did you take anything away from performances with people like Robbie Robertson, John Fogerty and Jackson Browne and apply it to how you interact with an audience?

Taylor Goldsmith: Totally. The stuff you can glean from moments like that are typically the simplest, most obvious things. What is true nonetheless for me is really recognizing that the power of all these artists, the commonality is just this pretty ferocious level of confidence.

It’s never about technical prowess. It’s never the craziest vocal range. It’s always understanding your superpowers and constantly going back to those with a full level of confidence. Robbie, John Fogerty - they weren't the best guitar players, but they had such a sense of themselves.

And they were willing to go back to that each time, and it makes for such an amazing experience. I feel like so many other guitar players fall into this category of: ‘I'll try to sound like this guy. I'll try to do that if that's what’s needed. Or ‘if you need it to be this tone, I can be that.’ Whereas those guys are like, ‘I do one thing; I'm me.’ And I feel like that’s typically what I like about any musician that I fall in love with.

Rock Cellar: Dawes spent quite a bit of time on stage with Phil Lesh, including over the summer at Terrapin Crossroads Presents: Sunday Daydream Vol. 4 in San Rafael, Calif. Since Phil died in October, I was wondering what those experiences were like. Did you grow up as a Grateful Dead fan?

Taylor Goldsmith: [Pauses] I was a fan by the time of my early 20s. Then I was obsessive like anybody. Being with him was a real eye opener as to what it could look like to be committed to creativity above all else. There was no, ‘Let’s make sure we do this hit’ or ‘Let’s make sure we do this song.’ It was, ‘We’ll just get in and out quick, and then get on to the next one.’ It was always like, ‘How do we experience the fullness of each other, of the night, of the audience, of the material, and let it present itself to us, rather than us force it to submit to what we expect?’

By doing so, it always ended up being so euphoric. People love to associate that band and music with drugs. I've never done those drugs, really. And yet I still found myself getting to find and reach these heights because of where Phil would take us. I played with him seven or eight times and it just happened every time we played with him.

Upcoming Tour Dates:

APRIL 2025

9 – Woodstock, NY – Bearsville Theatre *
10 – Ridgefield, CT – Ridgefield Playhouse *
11 – Philadelphia, PA – The Fillmore Philadelphia *
12 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre *
13 – Princeton, NJ – Matthews Theatre at McCarter Theatre Center
16 – Davenport, IA – Capitol Theatre *
17 – Madison, WI – The Majestic *
18 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue *
19 – Columbia, MO – The Blue Note *
21 – Des Moines, IA – Hoyt Sherman Place *
23 – Denver, CO – Ogden Theatre *
25 – Kalispell, MT – Wachholz College Center *
26 – Seattle, WA – Neptune Theatre *
27 – Portland, OR – Revolution Hall *

MAY 2025

8-10 – San José del Cabo, Mexico – Viva El Gonzo ^

* w/ Special Guests Winnetka Bowling League
† Christmas in LA w/ Dawes & Friends
^ Festival Appearance

My interview originally ran at rockcellarmagazine,com.
Dawes photo by Jon Chu.