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"You can sit beside me if the world comes
down/If it doesn't matter than just turn around/You
be the queen and I'll be your clown/You can sit
beside me when the world comes down." (PCM
Interview)
The All-American Rejects front man, Tyson Ritter,
sings the verse to "Mona Lisa" for the
29th time. "All right, nice pass," comments
the voice behind the glass. "Some good stuff
in there." Producer Eric Valentine sits behind
the console in his Barefoot Studios control room
and imparts his bohemian brilliance. On the soundstage
beyond the wall, the band o' Oklahoma brothers track
live a musical masterpiece. Welcome to the womb
of creation where minds meld, riffs congeal, voices
carry, lives alter, skin sheds and a modern rock
multi-platinum success story swing, swing for the
fences.
"I think we're giving away the intensity of
the chords a bit too soon," says guitarist
Nick Wheeler, acoustic in hand, seated on a stool
three feet to Tyson's right. "The one accent
is cool but it should build more methodically so
I'm going to throttle it back a bit." Drummer
Chris Gaylor nods in agreement from behind his kit,
a canopy of twinkling white lights illuminates the
slow, urgent beat of the three-minute ballad. Guitarist
Mike Kennerty is on the floor, manipulating the
bass pedals of an ancient Hammond Organ that Eric
fondly refers to "something your grandma would
play on Sunday mornings." The instrumental
approach results in a warm, sustained 'bottom' that
creates an almost ethereal background vibration.
Ten feet away, behind another pane of glass, seated
at the piano that Stevie Wonder played while recording
his venerable "Songs in the Key of Life' LP
in 1977, a man called Toad adds his ivory two cents
to the magical mix.
"Try a downbeat here," suggests Ty as
the group pauses to focus on the piano part. "Am
I building after the solo?" asks Toad. "Yes,"
respond Ty and Nick in unison. "It sounds too
jerky the other way." They run through the
song, again, from the top, except this time, the
24-year-old singer removes his headphones to get
a different sense of the vocal in the open air.
"Sweet!" cracks Eric. "Yeah, that
was awesome," chimes Ty. "Okay, one more
time."
Those who have witnessed this sacred environment--
where scribbles on notepads and four track demos
laid down on busses and bedroom floors manifest
into the songs (hits) we ultimately hear on the
radio or dig through the headsets of our iPods--
understand that the only method to the madness taking
place within these padded, soundproof rooms is trust
in the process. For The All- American Rejects, the
road to When the World Comes Down, third long form
musical offering, has been anything but a straight
line.
"This record hasn't been smooth sailing,"
confesses Nick, sporting a wry grin across his boyish
face. "After the success of Move Along, we
felt an innate need to challenge ourselves to grow.
And to challenge our fans to grow with us. On the
last record, all the songs were there before we
even entered the studio. We were completely rehearsed.
We just had to show up, play the parts, producer
Howard Benson pushed the buttons and in six weeks,
we were done. The theory with making Move Along
was all about sonic representation. Take every single
instrumental part and double it. Everything gets
compressed and it's not as loud. The process involved
in this record isn't exactly the opposite of Move
Along - a record we are all immensely proud of and
grateful for -- but its far more human, organic,
real. This LP is where we're at as people, not just
artists, here and now. That's why we took the bus
trips and locked ourselves away in remote cabins
to recreate this sense of torture like we had in
the past, before we sold any records."
Bus trips? Cabins? Torture? How divinely placed
are the potholes on the creative road less traveled?
"When we first started working on "Real
World," a pretty aggressive rock song for us,
we all got in a room, jammed it, and it sucked!"
recalls Mike. "So me and Chris went to Florida
to Nick and Ty's place on the gulf coast and hung
out for about a month. Ty has this electric drum
kit, tiny ass little practice amp. We put the drums
through the amp and the song came together really
cool. You'll have to ask Ty and Nick about the cabin
and cross country bus trip."
"'Breakin'" came out of the bus ride,"
says Ty. "I wrote the chorus at Eric's studio
but after several weeks of basic tracking, I had
a meltdown and became totally claustrophobic; lost
my touch. I was going soft on everything, like falling
into this vortex, grabbing things on my way down.
I was depressed and worse, afraid to just let go;
certain doom to an artist. So Nick and me got in
a bus and just headed east on Interstate 10 to wherever
we felt like cruising. And 'Breakin'' came together
along the way, just me and Nick in the back of the
bus, figuring shit out, chords, verses. The song
is so different for us. It's different and weird.
Will it be accepted? We shouldn't apologize, for
the music or the message. The song imposes some
sort of sonic understanding that the clouds will
part and the world will be a better place, like
the opening of The Simpsons. In cartoons, the world
looks better. Blue skies and green grass."
In concert with that thought, consider the perfect
animation, the succinct bitter sweetness of the
lyric, "Breakin's what the heart is for."
It's downright Technicolor.
Tyson Ritter is the son of an auto mechanic dad
and mom who works for the Oklahoma Board of Education.
He is not a tortured artist. "I didn't relate
to Nirvana, the angst and all. But I do love the
Doors, the lyrical pathos of Jim drunken poet, and
INXS, a band that truly understood mojo. Anger in
rock works sometimes but it's the sexual power I
relate to. 'Come on, come on, come on, come now
touch me babe!" Ty also had a happy childhood,
loves his parents and calls his mom, 'the coolest
chick anywhere." He lauds her sweeping sense
of acceptance and says he shares stuff with her
he doesn't talk about with his closest friends.
"Ty and I know each other so well that two
weeks in the back of a bus, personal shit doesn't
come out," says Nick. "We're in this together.
I've known him since I was 14. We discussed insecurities
but accepted the process. We knew we were growing.
The cabin trip up in Rabun County, Georgia, where
they filmed Deliverance, we'd done like four songs,
two of which are on the record, 'Damn Girl,' and
"Falling Apart.' It was like the 12th day in
close quarters and we're cracking and Ty says, 'give
it one more day, one more day' and he sat down at
his keyboard with his headphones on and I was diddling
some guitar part from another song and he says,
'Okay, I've got it!' and he plays me the chorus
from "Mona Lisa," and I'm like yeah, but
we get back to the rest of the guys and jam it and
there's something not quite right. It sounded like
alt country southern rock but the chord changes
were too quick. Then, completely frustrated, we
played it for Eric and he says, 'what's wrong with
the demo? Just play it like that.' And it worked
and we decided to track it live and now we love
it. A common theme throughout the process of making
this record has been 'what was the initial inspiration
or thought for the song? Less is more has won out
time and again."
Beyond a band, AAR is four friends who discovered
one other and scored the American dream. Tyson and
Nick founded the group and released the EP, Same
Girl, New Songs in the summer of 2001. Mike and
Chris joined in 2002 and the new quartet hit stores
with their self-titled long play debut, The All-American
Rejects on October 15th, scoring commercial success
with the single, "Swing Swing." They toured
tirelessly and in July 2005, presented their fans
with Move Along, a breakout effort featuring three
smash hits, "Dirty Little Secret." "It
Ends Tonight," and the LP's inspiring anthemic
title track. From down home southern boys to multi-platinum
stars, AAR broke through the pabulum of mainstream
pop with a cache of great songs and an authentic
connection to their adoring audience.
While success can often damage the psyche, it just
brought the Rejects closer together. It has something
to do with personality and good breeding. "I
was enrolled at the University of Central Oklahoma,
was gonna be a physical therapist," muses Chris.
"'Til I got this call from Ty. Immediately
deep sixed school and joined the band. I love playing
drums and wish I could do this all the time. More
I get to play, happier I am, less apt to get in
trouble. I felt like I hit the lottery when I was
making 50 bucks a show and not having to work for
a living. Success is relative. When we got our first
gold record, I started thinking 'yeah, I guess this
could pan out for awhile.' The recording process
of When the World Comes Down has united us in a
deeper way. Tyson has really matured in the past
year. We all have."
Evolution. The natural progression from where you
were to where you are. It is not a scientific approach,
especially in making records. It involves an authentic,
courageous sense of trust in something larger, grander,
less definable than the three dimensional world.
When you absorb this new LP in its entirety, as
a complete work, rather than a random collection
of tracks, you feel a return to the essence of record
making. Even the production has an old school feel
with Eric recording the majority of the tracks onto
original master tape and bringing the pro tools
technology in for mainly vocal overdubs.
Songs like "Believe," a breathtaking homage
to a fallen friend that examines why we're here
and where we might go once we cross over, the ambitious
"Another Heart Calls," AAR's first duet
taken to resonant new heights by the hypnotic vocals
of a pair of Alabama sisters called, The Pierces,
the soaring, roaring, antagonizing, "Hope It
Gives You Hell," (written on a road trip to
Vancouver), the bouncy, effervescent 'Falling Apart,'
and the infectious, monster hooked, "Damn Girl,"
illustrate seasoned composition, vintage production
and a fierce, experimental spirit that contemporary
fans beyond the Rejects' passionate base will wholeheartedly
and enthusiastically embrace.
"I want this record to be more than just good
for us, I want it to be good for them, our fans,"
insists Ty. "In the end, we're just a band,
close friends, who care deeply about what we do.
When the bullshit eventually dies, love survives.
I'm no rock star or hometown hero. I'm just a nobody.
And like the song says, you're nobody 'til somebody
loves you."
There's an old adage: You never finish a piece of
art; you abandon it. Or as in the case of a live
performance track, you wait for the right…sensation.
"There's emotion to be captured," adds
Ty. "Like with 'Mona Lisa', yeah, it took 30
or more takes to get the vocal right because it
wasn't. The mechanics might have been right, sound
and all, but it didn't feel right. You know it's
right when it feels right. I knew we had it when
I finally dropped into that first chorus and it
felt like I was on a hammock. 'You can sit beside
me when the world comes down,' it sort of swings,
like a hammock. I'd like to think that this is one
of the best songs we've ever recorded. Simple and
honest."
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Some say Mona
Lisa is one homely gal but millions adore her subtle,
wicked smile. Is the new album by The All-American
Rejects a masterpiece? Who's to say? It is certainly
one fine work of aural art not to mention a disc
that'll sound damn good whether the world comes
down…or not.
For more info check the band's OFFICIAL
site, click here.
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