| |

There's
an old axiom in music that says you have your whole
life to make your first record and under a year to
make your second. This spells disaster for the many
bands that return from touring, find themselves with
nothing left to say and fall prey to the sophomore
slump. But for Vancouver, Canada's Theory of a Deadman,
going back into the rehearsal studio was an opportunity
to experiment and grow into the group they always dreamt
of being.
That doesn't mean it was easy. The band members singer
Tyler Connolly, guitarist Dave Brenner and bassist
Dean Back were so exhausted after playing shows around
the world with artists including 3 Doors Down, Saliva,
Nickelback, and 3 Days Grace that the last thing they
wanted to do when they got home was write new songs,
so they took a few months off and just absorbed life.
I think the songs we did are a lot more credible this
time because they weren't done over a period of six
years, they were done in six months, Connolly says.
They really show where we were at when we did them
and proved to us that we can come up with great material
in a short period of time. We just put our heads together
and did it.
Gasoline, the product of Theory of a Deadman's second
offering, is immediate and urgent without sounding
the least bit rushed. Throughout, the band is inventive
and precise, drawing influence from decades of rock
and recontextualizing them into personal and passionate
songs that range from acoustic-based ballads to electrified
anthems. No Surprise melds electric and acoustic guitar,
a compelling vocal and hum-along vocal harmonies in
a way reminiscent of the best Alice in Chains. Since
You've Been Gone shivers with woebegone strumming and
tearslicked strings, and features some of the most
dramatic vocal work of Connolly's career. Elsewhere,
Say Goodbye blends a folk-based rhythm and enticing
vocal harmonies to a surging main riff and colossal
chorus, Better Off is a dust-kicking blast of crashing
chords and pounding beats that's equal parts Bad Company
and AC/DC, and Santa Monica is a sentient number treated
with strings and delicate arpeggios that underline
the song's heartbroken message. One line, She fills
my bed with gasoline inspired the album's explosive
title.
Gasoline is what it takes to get things moving, Connolly
said. And this is the album that's going to take us
from one place to another. On the first record we wrote
a lot of great songs but I think it was more like a
science project than songwriting. We sat in a room
and said, 'Okay, let's make a song. Here's what it
takes. It has to be three minutes, you have to have
a chorus and a bridge. And this time we were like,
'Okay, well, why can't we just sit here and jam?' So
that's what we did. We could tell right away that the
songs were really coming together, and our sound was
really becoming our own with each song we wrote, Brenner
adds. A lot of times we'd just write one riff and get
excited and want to jam it without having a song together.
The band's time on the road has earned them an impressive
list of jamming partners - rock icons Zakk Wylde and
Randy Bachman (The Guess Who and Bachman Turner Overdrive)
dropped in on the band, adding to their rock and roll
storybook, but not to the new album.
In addition to coming up with colorful, spontaneous
riffs and melodies, Connolly penned his most heartfelt
and narrative lyrics to date. Some songs were culled
from personal experience, including the self-explanatory
Hating Hollywood and the touching family break-up song
Hello Lonely. My mom left our family when I was in
high school, so I write about how my dad felt when
she left, he said. She just took off, so I grew up
with my dad. I think anyone who's had a family split
can relate to that one.
Other new tracks were drawn from experiences of those
close to Connolly. No Surprise sees a naïve boyfriend
whose significant other is fooling around with guys
she hangs out with in a bar, and on Santa Monica a
guy's girlfriend packs up and moves to California.
Whether chronicling his past or creating a work around
situations he observes, writing gives Connolly a cathartic
rush. When he sits down with pen and paper, furthering
his career is the last thing on his mind. He's far
more interested in purging his inner poisons. Some
people get pissed off and get drunk or go get into
fights in bars or punch holes in walls, he says. Instead
of doing that, I just write all the stuff that's in
my head and it makes me feel better.
When writing was completed, the band flew to Bay 7
Studios in Los Angeles to record with producer Howard
Benson and mixer Chris Lord-Alge. The team of Benson
and Lord-Alge is responsible for some of the biggest
rock and modern rock records of the moment, including
Hoobastank, Papa Roach, P.O.D., My Chemical Romance,
Cold, to name a few. Recording with such a seasoned
producer and his team brought out the best in Theory
of a Deadman, who pushed themselves to their creative
limits and beyond. The band used vintage guitars and
amps to get their 'monster' guitar tones, as well as
unique musical elements like sitars, a Hammond organ
and string instruments to embellish some of the songs
on the album. Benson had the band play in a much higher
key than they recorded in last time, giving the songs
a more lively feel, and challenging Connolly to find
new ways to sing. When Howard said we were going to
change the key up a whole step, I said, 'Well there's
no way I'll be able to sing it,' recalls Connolly.
And he looked at me and said, 'Oh, you'll sing it.
I'll make you sing it.' Sometimes I'd have to sit there
for two hours and learn how to sing a chorus way higher
than I was used to. It was really hard, but in the
end it turned out way better.
The members of Theory of a Deadman grew up within
six blocks of one another in the small town of North
Delta, Canada. Connolly and Back went to the same guitar
school and worked in the same restaurant, and Brenner
was the younger brother of one of Back's friends. We
recognized each other at work, and one night, Tyler
asked if I was interested in starting a band with him,
Back recalls. Dave and his band used to play gigs with
us, and he ended up taking the spot on guitar. The
band chose its name from the original title of Last
Song, a track Connolly penned seven years ago about
a man who writes his memoirs before committing suicide.
Theory of a Deadman made a name for themselves playing
live in the Vancouver scene, then one night Connolly
ran into Nickelback frontman Chad Kroeger at a party
and handed the rocker a copy of his demo. Many established
musicians toss such recordings, but Kroeger listened
to the disc, and liked it so much he immediately recruited
Theory for his label 604 Records.
The band released its debut Theory of a Deadman in
2002, and was soon embraced as a new force in articulate,
emotional hard rock. Songs like Nothing Can Come Between
Us, Make Up Your Mind, and The Last Song received strong
rock radio play, and the two years of touring that
followed tightened the group's sound and strengthened
its chemistry. By the time Theory of a Deadman started
writing for Gasoline in earnest, they were firing like
a stock car engine. The only hitch came when original
drummer Tim Hart left the fold. Fortunately, Theory
of a Deadman were resourceful enough to play the drum
parts themselves while writing Gasoline. When they
entered the studio, they brought back Robin Diaz, (who
had played on the bands first record - for every track
but "Santa Monica," which features their
friend, 3 Doors Down drummer Daniel Adair. "We
grew up and went to the same school together, so it
was really great to have him play with us," Connolly
says.
It's difficult to pick a standout track from Gasoline.
The storming Better Off is one of the band's favorites
but Brenner is equally pumped about No Way Out. That
was one of the last songs we wrote before we went into
the studio, he says. When we listened back to it, I
knew right there we were on to something. It got me
excited for the rest of the material. That excitement
shines through the entire album from the Cult-meets-Stone-
Temple-Pilots roar of Hating Hollywood to the twangy,
countrified verse of Me & My Girl. Taken as a whole,
Gasoline isn't your typical contemporary rock album,
where there's one or two strong singles and lots of
filler. It's also not a collection of calculated hits-
though every song is infectiously well-crafted rock
I just think that if you want to be real, you have
to write from the heart, Connolly says. You can't write
a smash hit, you can just write great songs that will
hopefully become smash hits. I always say it's easy
to write a song, hard to write a good song and pure
luck to write a hit. With such a good attitude and
such strong material, Theory of a Deadman don't need
luck. They've just gotta pour out the Gasoline, and
watch it burn. |
|