.
.
by Keavin Wiggins
.
From
Soul Asylum to Solo Artist and The Faces and Names In Between.
If you are looking for someone to validate
Darwin’s Theory of Evolution applied to music, look no further than Dave
Pirner. During his twenty-year ride in the music industry he has demonstrated
just how drastically someone can change creatively and yet deliver music
whose source is readily identifiable. Dave’s journey from being a young
punk rock drummer to an underground rock hero to the frontman of a multi-platinum
selling band and ultimately to an R&B rock crooner is the perfect rock
n roll story. Dave Pirner’s tale is one that shows just how far creatively
you can stretch the boundaries and grow both musically and personally.
A teenaged Dave Pirner was first inspired
by the punk rock explosion of the late 70’s. So he took up the drums and
joined a couple of guys from his hometown of Minneapolis to form their
own punk band. The new group that included Pirner and his friends Dan Murphy
and Karl Mueller first called themselves “Loud Fast Rules” when they formed
in 1981. The group caught their first break when a small indie label owned
by Bob Mould (Husker Du) agreed to release an EP from the young rockers.
Although the EP didn’t sell that well it gave the group the assurance that
they were on their way.
Over the next three years the band evolved
from their punk roots to what would later be known as “alternative rock”.
The final transformation came with Dave took over as rhythm guitarist and
vocalist for the group. Since they were no longer strictly a punk
band they felt a name change was in order so they redubbed themselves Soul
Asylum. Dave’s gravely, nasally tenor voice was the missing ingredient
the group needed to forge their own identity against two other twin city
groups, The Replacements and Husker Du who had put Minneapolis on the rock
n roll map. Soul Asylum set out to make their mark, they kept their punk
influence in their stage presentation, many critics complained that the
group was sloppy live but that was the way they wanted it. They would even
occasionally punish crowds that didn’t appear to be enjoying their shows
quite enough, with a strange assortment of cover tunes including "Bad Moon
Rising”, "Sweet Home Alabama" and "Cocaine Blues", not exactly a collection
of songs that would turn on a punk audience. In 1983, they entered the
studio for the first time as Soul Asylum and recording their first EP,
"Say What You Will, Clarence...Karl Sold the Truck," with Bob Mould producing.
The EP was the first inkling that Soul
Asylum was onto something special musically. Their aggressive and distorted
sound, topped by Dave’s unmistakable nasal vocals helped create a buzz.
The music press began singing their praises. The Village Voice called
Soul Asylum," The best live band in the country". Good Times topped that
by declaring the group, "The greatest band on the face of the planet
earth". Musician Magazine added that Soul Asylum were, "The guys to watch
from the Twin- Cities" and Rolling Stone, the holy grail of rock journalism,
described the band as "a young foursome with the makings of an Eighties
punk rock Who”.
Despite the praise for their debut, the band suffered their first major
setback shortly after completing the recording of the EP when drummer Pat
Morley decided to call it quits. Down but not out the band took much of
1984 off before teaming up with drummer Grant Young in 1985. Their next
foray into recording came in 1986 when they entered the studio once again
with Bob Mould as producer to record the album, “Made to be Broken". That
album’s raunchy sound won over fans that began clamoring for more music.
To hold fans over, in July of 86’ the group released, “Time's Incinerator”,
a cassette only collection of outtakes and live recordings that spanned
their entire career to that point, from the early days as Loud Fast Rules
to the rising stars of the mid 80’s Soul Asylum. Even with the release
of “Time's Incinerator” helping fill the fans need for more Soul Asylum
the band didn’t wait long to record a follow-up, they once again entered
the studio to record what would be their second full album release of 1986,
"While You Were Out".
"While You Were Out", showed the subtle
evolution of Dave Pirner’s songwriting skills, which would eventually develop
into a weaving of pensive lyrics, poetic storytelling and off the cuff
humor. Every bit as raw and raunchy as their previous releases, "While
You Were Out", still had a depth to the songs that were missing from the
previous recordings.
Fans would have to wait out 1987 content
with the wealth of material released by the group the previous year. They
returned in January 1988 with a new EP titled, “Clam Dip & Other Delights”,
that showed an even further evolution of their music away from punk rock
into the realm of aggressive alternative. Many fans and critics would later
agree that this EP, which some originally thought was an after thought
to keep fans happy while waiting for a new full length album, actually
turned out to be the musical highpoint of their early career. Among the
tracks perhaps “Chains” was the most telling of what was to come. While
far heavier than the more mainstream and melodic music that would come
in later years, this tune introduces some pop elements to the group’s sound
that would eventually make them superstars.
The EP was a turning point for the group,
it helped keep old fans happy and win over new ones but also marked the
end of their career in the grassroots level of rock because short
time later they would enjoy their first major release through A&M records.
The band caught the attention of A&M, who felt they had found the next
big thing in the form of these aggressive rockers from Minneapolis. From
a purely musical standpoint the first A&M record “Hang Time” was a
major triumph. Instead of getting softer, they band took things up a notch
but it was the lyrical content penned by Dave Pirner that set the album
apart from other releases that year. Pirner’s John Lennon’esq knack for
weaving colorful tales and bearing his innermost thoughts with a creative
use of words really started to come to the forefront on “Hang Time” as
Pirner shared his thoughts of the process of growing up with his listeners.
His penchant for storytelling really began to take hold with several tracks
from this album, which is most evident on the opening track “Beggars and
Choosers” that includes lyrics like: “Right before the aftermath, I saw
where it would end / They said it was an accident / I guess that all depends
/ on who you talk to and who you know / and where you come from and where
- where you go / In your crowd of pushers and users, takers and losers
… beggars and choosers”
By this time, Soul Asylum was a certified underground and college music
sensation with thousands of loyal listeners who were won over by the group’s
power and Pirner’s thought provoking lyrics. A&M had high commercial
hopes for Soul Asylum but they just couldn’t figure out how to break the
band into the mainstream. Meanwhile, the band was changing musical direction
that was readily evident with the 1990 release of “And the Horse They Rode
in On”. This, the group’s second and last release for A&M, was a more
songwriting focused album then their previous work, the raw aggression
gave way to structure and melody, yet still remained powerful. Using hindsight,
many musicologist suggest that Soul Asylum were merely ahead of their time
as “And the Horse They Rode in On” gave the world it’s most clear glimpse
of the alternative rock revolution that was to come within a few short
years. Unfortunately, the album didn’t catch on commercially and some older
fans were disappointed in the more melodic path Dave Pirner was taking
with this songwriting. Unable to score a hit, the band parted ways with
A&M records.
Fortunately, someone at Columbia records
saw the writing on the wall and offered the band a deal. Their Columbia
record debut “Grave Dancers Union” proved to be the group’s most ambitious
release to date. The alternative music wave was in full force when the
album hit stores in May of 1992. The first single "Somebody to Shove" was
a bit of a crossroads for the band between their old angst driven power
and their new melody driven alternative rock sound. It caught the attention
of radio programmers and the exec’s at MTV and the single began to enjoy
a fair amount of airplay, which gave Soul Asylum their first hit song.
The second single, “Black Gold” only furthered the band’s success and showed
more clearly the new direction they were headed musically. The lyrics,
which dealt with racism in Dave Pirner’s unique poetic words, touched a
nerve with people in the wake of the “Los Angeles Riots” and scored the
band a second hit single.
But it was the third song from that album
that would help make the band superstars. “Runaway Train”, a song driven
by an acoustic guitar sound helped open new doors for the band. While most
of the album contained some of the power that had propelled the group’s
music through the years, it was this more widely appealing love song that
would put Soul Asylum on the mainstream music map. For the accompanying
video, the idea to include pictures of real missing runaway children with
information on how to contact authorities if the viewer had seen them was
a pure spark of genius. It immediately caught the attention of music fans
and more importantly the programmers at MTV who put the video into heavy
rotation. After eleven years of struggling to make it big, Soul Asylum
hit pay dirt with “Runaway Train” a song that would even win them a Grammy
Award for Song of the Year. The single’s success propelled “Grave Dancers
Union” into a platinum seller. While the singles helped the band become
known world wide, it was one track on the disc, “New World” that never
became a single that foreshadowed the future of the group as well as a
musical movement that would take hold a few short years later in the form
of alt-country. “Runaway Train” and “Homesick” were really stepping stones
for the band but it was the acoustic guitars and somber vocals of “New
World” that would in fact open up a new world for Soul Asylum and Dave
Pirner musically.
Click here for
the Conclusion
tell
a friend about this article
Photos and Album Art Courtesy
of Dave Pirner / Ultimatum Music.
Copyright 2002
All Rights Reserved by Copyright
Holders
Keavin Wiggins is the Editor
and Publisher
of the iconoFAN Network.
|