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by Debbie Seagle
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back to part I
antiMUSIC: Well He seems to be doing a good job in guiding yours!
SC: Yes!
antiMUSIC: Because you are really
taking off. Let’s talk a little bit about your new CD, “Stand.”
How long was it in the making?
SC: That CD, to actually record
the record we went in in April (2002) and I believe I was probably finished,
we tracked everything from April to June. After that, after the initial
tracking was done, the band members all went home, you know, the drummer
and the bassist, and I was really kind of left with doing the vocals and
writing some new songs. Oddly enough, we thought the record was finished
in June and I had written some new songs between the beginning of June
and the first of July. I showed some of the new songs to our producers
so they flew me back out to Canada and to L.A. to record a couple of new
songs. I believe they were “Alone” and “Free” and “Frightened” that
were – those songs weren’t originally on the record at all and I had written
those songs after the record had been finished. So they flew me back
out there and we got some side musicians and we played those songs.
So the record, as a whole, was probably finished about 6 months after April.
antiMUSIC: Well, I’m glad you
went back, because “Free” is one of my favorite songs on the CD.
SC: Yeah, me too actually.
antiMUSIC: How did you get hooked up with Redline Entertainment?
They seem to be treating you pretty well scoring your this great tour and
promoting you.
SC: Right. Well, we
did a showcase in Salt Lake City on August 8th of 2000 at the Vans Warped
Tour and obviously there had been a buzz about us going on because we had
played the EAT’M (Emerging Artists & Technology) conference kind of
sparked a lot of interest in the music industry. And they flew out
along with a few other record labels that I don’t feel very comfortable
talking about, but they flew out as well and negotiations began with some
different labels and with them as well. And at the end of the day,
it was Redline that really turned us on to being the kind of company we
wanted to sign with. So, like I said, they came out August
8th, and the negotiations for them almost began immediately after that.
antiMUSIC: Well they must have
been very impressed.
SC: They’re a good company,
I love em.
antiMUSIC: It seems like they
are doing a great job with promoting you, which doesn’t always happen with
new bands. Do you have any plans of doing any videos for any of the
songs on “Stand?”
SC: Yes we do. There’s
talk of that, right now I can’t really give you an exact date. I
know that the single (“Who Is Me?”) just hit on radio on Tuesday, so I
imagine we are going to see what kind of believers we develop after the
single starts to take off, and then see of course, what song we want to
use as a video. So I imagine its going to be coming up in the next
couple of months.
antiMUSIC: Do you already have
some ideas about what you would like to do with a video for any of your
favorite songs?
SC: Not really, I kind of need to see. I kind of leave
those things up to the experts and then once I’ve got something to work
with, I’ll definitely put in my two cents.
antiMUSIC: Is this your first
big national tour with the bus and the roadies, etc.?
SC: It is, it is.
antiMUSIC: What do you like best
about the tour and what, if anything, do you think is harder than you thought
it would be?
SC: Um, well there’s nothing
that’s harder. If anything, its easier than I thought it was going
to be. And the thing that I love best about touring, I think it comes
down to waking up every day and going my God, I’m living my dream right
now. And I’m 24 years old and I’m playing music for a living and
it’s a pretty amazing thing at the end of the day – for any one of us in
the band. Its like, everybody, when they’re kids, who ever is touring
at this time probably had a dream when they were kids to go on a big tour
bus and play in front of thousands of people. You know, to be respected
because they are a good player, be respected because they are playing at
all. I think my favorite part about it is that, like I said, we’re
building integrity among the music business and every single day I wake
up and I call my mom and I say mom, I’m still here and I’m still doing
it and I love it!
antiMUSIC: There’s just something
about your mom being proud of you that nothing can replace, isn’t that
true?
SC: Yes, that’s very true.
antiMUSIC: You will never forget
this first bus tour.
SC: Never!
antiMUSIC: These are the
giddy days of your youth. You’re just going to love it! So, I understand
that you are the song writer. Which is your favorite track on the
CD?
SC: If I had to say I had
a favorite track, there’s a few that I really love. I love “The Way.”
I love the vagueness of the lyrics and I love the desperation of the song.
I love the hope of “Tomorrow,” the last track on the record. I just
love that you could be driving down the road and you could relate to that
song, no matter what kind of day you’ve had – good or bad. You can
be excited for tomorrow. I love “Frightened.” I really like
the desperation in that song as well. They are very honest lyrics
and its got an amazing guitar line and the drum fill are incredible.
The bass line is very sexy. So I just think that to pick one is very
difficult of course, because I wrote them all, but I think those three
are definitely the ones I would show a friend if I hopped into a car and
said hey, here’s what it is.
antiMUSIC: Do you have any special
philosophy for song writing? Are there topics that you steer clear
from or ones that you like better than others?
SC: I don’t really have a philosophy for song writing.
In as much as I travel everywhere I go with a little tape recorder and
a pad of paper and a pen. What I usually do is I just start playing
my guitar and however the guitar line that I’m writing, it just kind of
comes out of me. Whatever emotion it makes me feel, I generally just
start singing words. You know, just kind of brain storming, if you
will, vocally. Usually I pick a few really good sentences that I
like and generally I have a tape recorder on. I kind of just piece
it together after that. Half way through the song is usually when
I really know what I’m talking about. Thankfully, I really feel like
half of these song, they just come out of me and I really don’t know where
they’re going to go until they’re finished. Once they’re finished,
or half way through like I said, I really have an idea of where I want
to continue to go with the song, as far as lyrically, musically, the emotion
of the song. So, I have a pretty easy way of song writing.
The biggest philosophy I have is always be writing. I never, I’ve
written, my second record is probably finished right now. I’m never
going to be that writer who just says well, I’ve got a first record.
As soon as this record takes off, then I’ll start writing new songs.
For me, emotions happen every single day and things happen every day.
You might as well be writing about it if I’m sitting on the back of a bus
for 19 hours. I could watch a movie or I could spend part of that
19 hours in the back lounge and I could be having my tape recorder and
playing my guitar and hopefully trying to find little bits of inspiration
that will help me after this record is over. So my biggest philosophy
is just never quite, you know?
antiMUSIC: So, no writers block
yet, huh?
SC: No, not yet, thank God.
Knock on wood!
antiMUSIC: And the mood that you’re in kind of influences what kind
of a song you’re going to write that day?
SC: Absolutely.
antiMUSIC: Which classic rock
band do you consider as roll models and why?
SC: Well, I love Elvis Presley.
He’s obviously my favorite. I think that he changed rock and roll
for ever. I loved his mannerisms. You know, I love that he
loved music so much that he could take criticism as far as it went and
then turn it into something that was successful. I love the Beatles’
brilliance. You know, I mean, God, they changed rock and roll for
ever as well.
antiMUSIC: Their song writing
was their brilliance.
SC: Yeah they became the first
song writers that really took something to the next level. And I
love Led Zeppelin. I just love the power of Led Zeppelin. They
are the ultimate rock and roll band. From every terrible story you’ve
ever heard to every beautiful love song they ever wrote, you know, I mean
they were just a classic rock band that to this day make 15 year old kids
rock out and I just love that about them.
antiMUSIC: Yeah, every generation
has had the same appreciation for them really, what they had done.
SC: Yep.
antiMUSIC: If you could tell perspective
fans one thing that’s special about your music, something that might turn
them on about it, what would that be?
SC: Like I said, I really think it comes down to we are a band
that they can walk away from and understand and relate to. We’re
a band that hopefully isn’t going to be lost on the radio as far as just
being another one of those bands. But once they pick up the record,
once they see us live, they can walk away and say I relate with that band.
I’ve felt those emotions before. I understand what he’s talking about,
I’m intrigued by his stories. They’re going to walk away and they’re
going to say this is something that’s different than what’s out there.
Its not necessarily ground breaking through their music but its certainly
ground breaking in the fact that they’re tapping into an emotion that every
body has feelings for. And I think that the thing that could turn
them on the most is really that they feel that they can relate to us.
Really that they feel like we’re not super stars sitting up on a stage
singing to make money, but we’re people who are sitting up on stage singing
because we want to touch people and I think that’s really what its about.
antiMUSIC: And your music is fresh
and clean as far as – even though some of the subject matter you might
be talking about in the songs might be sad, its not the angst ridden type
of songs that we just don’t need right now. It is refreshing.
It’s a nice change from what a lot of people are listen to today.
And its uplifting.
SC: Thank you.
If I’ve sufficiently wet your appetite
to hear what Silvercrush has to offer, you can check them out below.
Listen to sound clips, view a short video that sums them up in a nut shell
or head on over to their web site to get to know them better and let us
know what you think.
Check out this Streaming Video of Silvercrush (56K Real Video)
Listen
to samples and Purchase this CD online
Visit
the official website for Silvercrush to learn more about the band
tell
a friend about this article
Photos by Debbie Seagle
Copyright 2002 Groove Quest
Productions
All Rights Reserved
Debbie Seagle is the Special
Features Editor of the iconoFAN Network.
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