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dredg
Gavin
Hayes – Vocals
Mark Engles – Guitar
Drew Roulette – Bass
Dino Campanella - Drums
Press
Release, April 20, 2011
Press
Release, April 7, 2011
Press
Release, March 7, 2011
Press
Release, February 22, 2011
Press
Release, July 15, 2009
Press
Release, June, 2009
For a band, longevity
is a double-edged sword. It means that an artist’s music has
the power to sustain over time, but it also means that evolution
is necessary. Sometimes that progression is organic and slow while
other times it’s urged, driven by a desire to change and grow.
That is where we find Bay Area rock band dredg
today, on the brink of releasing their fifth album in over 15 years.
The band’s new album, CHUCKLES AND MR. SQUEEZY, is
a far cry from their 1998 debut LEITMOTIF—and even
from their most recent disc, 2009’s THE PARIAH, THE PARROT,
THE DELUSION—but now, looking back, you can see band who’ve
transformed themselves again and again of their own volition.
For nearly eight months,
beginning last winter, the band members sent songs back and forth
over e-mail, allowing the tracks to slowly build and layer under
individual microscopes. Producer Dan the Automator was brought into
the process early, imbuing the entire development with a distinct
sense of collaboration that married dredg’s
signature style with Dan’s visionary approach. “I had
a deal with them,” Dan says. “I said, ‘I’m
going to make a bunch of tracks for you guys and whatever you do
has to be better than these tracks or they’re going to be
the album.’ I felt like setting a bar for them. dredg
has been a band that’s been around for a long time
and they’re comfortable with each. I wanted to shake them
out of familiar habits and patterns.”
Part of this fresh approach
arrived during the recording process, a relatively short period
of time that forced the band to feel the sensations of their music
rather than spend too much time perfecting them. The group spent
two days at Studio Trilogy in San Francisco and one day at David
Chloe’s art studio in L.A. recording in September and did
the rest of the work at Dan’s home studio in the Bernal Heights
neighborhood of San Francisco. The sessions were casual, focused
on urging emotion from the music, with both spontaneity and rawness
in the recorded takes. The band even used sounds from the demoing
process on the actual album tracks, an extraordinary new method
for them.
“We’re usually
over-thinking everything and being meticulous on every level,”
Gavin says. “We just let this record be what it is and I feel
like that was beneficial to the whole process. We wanted to make
a bunch of songs that we like and not trip out on it. Dan works
that way too. He loves capturing moments rather than perfection.
I think working with him encouraged that idea.”
The resulting album is
almost like opening a new chapter of a book. The players are familiar
and it still sounds like the work of the same artist, but the tones
have shifted and the setting’s changed. There’s no concept
in these songs, no real thread that connects them except that they
capture the same moment in time for a group of individuals. The
disc’s 11 tracks total out to only about 40 minutes, something
that was intentional on the part of the band after Gavin did extensive
research on the length of successful albums. There is no erudite
theme in the lyrics; just Gavin’s personal experiences, which
he extends to the listener in each song.
“I had more impactful
moments in my life recently than when making past albums,”
Gavin says. “More inspiring. Meeting my biological family
was a big deal for me and interesting on many levels. We just decided
to document this moment in time as a band and no make it something
beyond ourselves. It is what it is.”
The tracks on the album
are largely based in rhythm, some of them heavy on loops, an influence
clearly drawn from Dan, who co-wrote three songs with the band—“The
Tent,” “Sun Goes Down” and “Before it Began.”
Although the tones and pacing shift as the album progresses, the
songs all fall under the category of what Gavin calls “dark
pop.” “The Thought of Losing You,” driven by a
surging guitar riff, achieves emotional depth through simplicity
rather than over-complication while “Upon Returning”
pairs rough-edged guitars with Gavin’s ambient vocals that
soar in juxtaposition with the grinding instrumentals. A shadowed
mood hovers under the music, lending a sense of pensive introspection
to the songs, but in the end the album emerges as a beacon of optimism.
“There is a certain darkness to it,” Gavin says. “A
lot of our music is ultimately positive, but can be conceived as
sad as well. It has these two sides that oppose each other, but
manage to reconcile in the music.”
CHUCKLES AND MR. SQUEEZY
witnesses dredg trekking down a new path, in an unexplored direction.
Dan’s influence is palpable. As a producer and collaborator
he is almost the guide on this new path, pushing the band to work
harder and find new aspects of themselves to inspire their songwriting
and playing. dredg’s evolution over the past 15 years brought
them, somewhere unexpected but also welcomed. “For me this
a renewal kind of record,” Gavin says. “It feels different
and in some ways it feels like a new band. That was my goal when
working with the band and with Dan was to make something we’d
never done. Hopefully people can see the band in a new light. We
can mold to different things and there is a future for the band
when it comes to creating.”
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