Friday, August 31, 2007

Wilco "Yankee Hotel Summerteeth" (live tracks)



The great thing about having your own blog is that you can get as self-indulgent as you want. I think half the reason I have come to truly appreciate Wilco recently is because Jeff Tweedy has made a career out of his own self-indulgence. The more he shifts and changes on a whim, the more his audience loves him. Sure, band members and musical styles may fall by the wayside, but, at the end of the day, Tweedy remains true to the music he hears in his head.

At the end of the day, Tweedy is one dude who can rest assured he did it his way.

That's the essence of being an artist and, while I don't necessarily like everything he's done (the last couple Wilco records, for example), I completely respect his willingness to rip something apart and put it back together in hopes of making it better. In doing so, sometimes the scars remain, which, to me, just makes it that much more beautiful.

Having said that, I have assembled a stack of my favorite tracks from my two favorite Wilco albums, "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" and "Summerteeth". I hope you enjoy them.



Heavy Metal Drummer
I Am Trying To Break Your Heart
Jeff Tweedy Tells Audience To STFU
I'm The Man Who Loves You
War On War (from Letterman)
Jesus, Etc.
My Darling
Radio Cure
Shot In The Arm
Via Chicago

Thursday, August 30, 2007

my little trivia jones



If you guys are anything at all like me, you were sad to see Rock & Roll Jeopardy go off the air before you were personally able to administer a full-on trivia beatdown upon that smugly annoying Mark McGrath guy (seriously, it depresses me that he knows anything more than his own name, but I digress).

Being the completely rock & roll trivia nerd that I am, I've decided to try having a little fun with Blogger's Poll feature and run a trivia question or two every week just for sh*ts and giggles (which you should be able to locate at the top of the right sidebar).

So, basically, you just vote for the choice you think is correct and, come September 4th, I'll take everybody who voted correctly out for pizza. I kid, I kid.

In the immortal words of David Letterman..."this is not a competition, it is only an exhibition — please, no wagering."

Eight reasons to run screaming.



During my quest to find a new label home for my upcoming CD, I figured it would be beneficial to pass along some of the things I’ve learned in the process:

- Your traditional record guys, most with a lengthy track record of success at the major label level “back in the day”, who decide to start their own label are to be avoided at all costs. They are some "out for themselves" MF'ers intent on maintaining a lifestyle well above that of most successful recording artists.

- From the "It Seems Obvious Now" Dept.: Hire your own interpreter when negotiating key contract points with a Japanese label. Though they may have spoken fluent English when telling you how great you were and how much they loved your music, their comprehension of the language will dissipate in direct proportion to the importance of the points being discussed.

- When a UK label flies in to L.A. for the sole purpose of catching your first live show in three years, make sure that more than thirty people show up. Sure, there were over 200 people at the next show, but no record label exec's came to that one.

- Nothing is more rock & roll than a good bidding war between two or more labels (or so I’ve been told). Mine wasn’t over money, but, rather, the number of free copies each label would provide to me up-front at no cost. Back forth it went for what seemed like weeks. The buzz-kill came when I realized that, as each label countered with a higher number of freebies, the cost of purchasing subsequent copies also got higher. I had always dreamt of the kind of bidding war where millions of dollars lied in the balance, each side raising the dollar amount of the advance, or the royalty rate I’d receive. Instead, here we were going back and forth over a couple thousand freebies, which, more than likely, would probably be the only benefit of signing with them anyway.

- Three words: Keep your publishing. Seriously, even the piddly little indie labels want a chunk of your publishing these days, all thinking they’re the next P. Diddy or something.

- I was serious about the publishing.

- Just because the highest level exec at the label is courting you doesn’t insure your album will be a priority. By the same token, guys who act like your “best friend” during the courting and negotiation process won’t even make eye contact once the ink dries.

- Putting the record out yourself may not be as glamorous as entering into a one-sided deal with the Devil, but at least you get to keep your masters.

And your PUBLISHING!

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Boston - alternate "Boston"



I was such a wee lad when the first Boston album came out in 1976 that I remember little else from the time, but I distinctly remember how much an impact the record had on the music world. First, there was the distinctive guitar-shaped spaceship on the cover telling you this was not your everyday rock band. Then there was the sound of the album itself. Aside from some truly stellar songs, Scholz production resulted an album that sounded as if it had been cut twenty or thirty years in the future and then deposited in a time machine set for 1976.

MIT engineering graduate Tom Scholz had been dabbling in music since he was a kid, going so far as to invent some of the amplification that would be used in the recording of the album. Despite being impressed by Scholz home demos, Epic had demanded that the band re-record the album at a professional studio. Aside from recording one song at a California studio with John Boylan, though, the recording budget was spent on beefing up the equipment in Tom’s home studio, where the remaining seven songs were recorded without Epic knowing the difference.

With Boston more a concept than a functioning band up to that point, the classic Boston line-up of Scholz, singer Brad Delp, guitarist Barry Goudreau, bassist Fran Sheehan, and drummer Sib Hashian was hastily assembled and comprised mostly of musicians Scholz had worked with in other Boston-area bands.

The band would soon fracture into separate factions after the release of “Don’t Look Back” in 1978, with Goudreau pursuing a brief solo career before forming Orion The Hunter (with future Boston singer Fran Cosmo) and RTZ (with former Boston singer Brad Delp) in later years.

Critics often reflexively deride Boston as one of the many corporate rock bands that came to prominence in the 70’s, but, truth be told, they were the product of Scholz’ D.I.Y. determination. He got where he was by sticking to his guns, going so far as to deceive the label to maintain artistic control of the album by recording at home. The fact that the album went on to sell millions owes just as much to Scholz’ talents as a songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist as Epic’s considerable clout as THE label for the best American rock had to offer.

Here's a new spin on a classic album, live cuts of each track from "Boston":

More Than A Feeling
Peace Of Mind
Foreplay/Long Time
Rock & Roll Band
Smokin'
Hitch A Ride
Something About You
Let Me Take You Home Tonight

BONUS MATERIAL:

1981 article on Scholz's broken thumb, which would delay completion of third album... (click image to enlarge article)


Video interview of Scholz and Delp from 80's UK TV show, Old Grey Whistle Test:

Snow Patrol - Alternate Eyes Open


I dig Snow Patrol.

There, I said it.

I liked Snow Patrol back when they were just an Irish band getting some BBC airplay for their first album. In hindsight, the first album sounds pretty embryonic, but, still, there was just something about the singer's voice that connected with me.

Years later, I picked up "Final Straw" at a time when I was going through some upheaval in my personal life (read: chick trouble) and, point blank, that album got me through some tough sh*t. I was working at eHarmony, answering emails from people who were also looking for "the love of their life" and there I was; a guy whose own love life was in shambles. For several months, all I did was show up at work, put "Final Straw" in my PC, and answer emails from hundreds of people who were having troubles of their own. Singer Gary Lightbody's lyrics hit so close to home that it was sometimes a little hard to listen to, but the songs were so undeniable. There was just enough joy amidst the angst to raise my spirits.

With the release of "Eyes Open", we find Gary still lamenting the relationship that crashed and burned just prior to Final Straw and I, for one, couldn't be happier. Just kidding, of course. Again, the songs wear their lyrical heart on their sleeve and one can't help wonder just what the heck poor Gary did to f*** things up so badly that here he is two years later still trying to find his way out of the debris.

In homage to one of the most-played albums on my numerous road trips this past year, I've compiled a sort of alternate Eyes Open, comprised of live versions I've gathered. Even if you've played this CD as often as I have over the past couple years, some of these performances will breath new life into these great, albeit familiar songs. Also note the cool mash-up of "Chasing Cars/Every Breath You Take".

You're All I Have
Hands Open
Chasing Cars
Shut Your Eyes
It's Beginning To Get To Me
Make This Go On Forever
Set The Fire To The Third Bar
Headlights On Dark Roads
Open Your Eyes

Finish Line

Bonus Track: Every Car You Chase (The Police/Snow Patrol Mash-Up)

(note: an alternate version of "You Could Be Happy" was unavailable at press time.)

Friday, August 24, 2007

Complete Idiocy


(what are you lookin' at?)

Today being Friday, I figured I’d keep things a little light and pay props to one of the good guys.

My buddy Jeff over at jefitoblog has long been a source for great music and humor (some of it intentional, some of it not so much, I’m looking at you Steelheart).

Perhaps best known for his Complete Idiot’s Guides on a plethora of artists ranging from Randy Newman to Adam Ant and beyond, I have long enjoyed his talents for making even artists I know or care nothing about interesting.

The greatest honor of my life (aside from having my nuts cupped at the DMV by Bea Arthur, long story) came when Jeff requested that I write a Complete Idiot’s Guide to Cheap Trick. It went on to become the most-read Complete Idiot’s Guide of all-time!

At my house, at least.

But what a lot of people don’t know is that I’ve written a lot of other Complete Idiot’s Guides that Jeff didn’t publish, the bastard. Today, I declassify two of them for your reading pleasure.

Please note: there will be no mp3's to sample, and no links to buy the CD's...you're welcome.

COMPLETE IDIOT'S GUIDE TO DANIEL POWTER


Daniel Powter
self-titled
Warner Bros.(2006)


I admit to liking “Bad Day” for about five minutes back when it was a UK hit. A year later, American Idol and Top 40 radio successfully beat the song into the ground to the point that I change the station the moment I hear the opening piano line. The other nine songs on this album are as unnecessary and random as the items an embarrassed hubby uses as “checkout camouflage” for the tampons his wife sent him to pick up.


Daniel Powter
self-titled – Special Edition
Warner Bros. (2007)


I shit you not. I looked up the definition of "superfluous" in the dictionary. There were no words, just a picture of this CD.

COMPLETE IDIOT'S GUIDE TO ENUFF Z'NUFF


Enuff Z’nuff
self-titled
(Atco) 1989


The hair metal bandwagon was already full of more hangers on than it could hold, but these Chicago boys dove head-first into the Revlon and landed on MTV with not one, but two tie-dyed technicolor yawns that, perhaps more than anything, sealed their fate as Hair Metal Also-Rans™. I remember reading an interview where one of the members of the band described their music as a mix of Beatle-esque psychedelia and early Queen. I stopped reading at that point because it was apparent that he had obviously been listening to a completely different Enuff Z’nuff album than the one Atlantic had pressed up.


Enuff Z’nuff
Strength
(Atco) 1991


I remember this album actually getting some good reviews, or, more accurately, I remember people who liked the band telling me it got good reviews. Why they felt the need to drag the critics into it, I don’t know. Enuff z’nuff fans, perhaps more so than fans of most other hair metal bands, seem overly driven to prove how fucking artistic this band was/is. Whatever artistry there might have been is smothered by a relentless by-the-numbers late 80’s production that shows complete disrespect for nuance or subtlety. I considered giving it another spin, but the snare sound had already set off enough car alarms for one day.


Enuff Z’nuff
Animals With Human Intelligence
Arista (1992)


Clive Davis reportedly courted the band because he was convinced that singer Donnie Vie was the future of rock & roll. It’s true, just ask him (Donnie, that is). The third time was not the charm, though


Enuff Z’nuff
1985
Big Deal (1994)


Collection of pre-Atco demos that tried real hard to portray them as power pop heroes. Didn’t fly high at all, Michelle.


Enuff Z’nuff
Tweaked
Mayhem (1995)


Okay, whoever keeps giving these guys money to put out new records, cut it out.


Enuff Z’nuff
Peach Fuzz
BD (1996)


I'm serious, cock jockey.


Enuff Z’nuff
Seven
Mayhem (1997)


Aw, fucking hell...


Enuff Z’nuff
Live
Mayhem (1998)


Fucking hell with crowd noise.


Enuff Z’nuff
Paraphernalia
Spitfire (1999)


Seriously, who the fuck in that band can even spell “paraphernalia” much less say it?



Enuff Z’nuff
10
Pony Canyon [Japan] (2000)


America drops another bomb on the Japanese.


Enuff Z’nuff
Welcome To Blue Island
Dreamcatcher (2002)


A merciful two-year break between albums.

Jeebus, can’t these guys take a page out of the Tom Sholz playbook and chill the fuck out for a decade or three?


Enuff Z’nuff
? (seriously, that’s the title)
Perris (2004)


?! ...



Postscript: In all fairness, Chip Z'nuff is a nice guy who deserves any success he's managed to attain. He just has the unfortunate honor of being froever connected to the mess that is Donnie Vie and, thus, the saga of Enuff Z'nuff continues begrudgingly, no end in sight.

While Donnie drifts around Hollywood, his wife paying the rent, Chip is hitting the tour circuit this summer with Adler's Appetite (featuring GNR drummer Stephen Adler) and a Poison tribute band. I'm serious.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

deep thoughts by darren robbins



When you’re young, you have the whole world in front of you. There is hope, potential, and innocence in healthy supply. Of course, most of us don’t realize (or appreciate) this until our youth is seen only in the rearview mirror.

George Bernard Shaw may have been talking about something else entirely when he said, “The joys of youth are wasted on the young”, but his words are no less prescient in this context.

As the sands of the hourglass fall ever so quickly and the hands of the clock spin at an ever-dizzying speed, it seems we each stop doing things that connect us to our youth.

We stop skipping when we walk.

We stop smiling at strangers.

We stop jumping on the bed.

We stop blowing on the white dandelions.

We stop believing in the Tooth Fairy, Santa Claus, and the Easter Bunny.

We stop writing love notes that include the option “yes or no, circle one”.

We stop hanging upside down from the monkey bars.

We stop running just for the heck of it.

We stop asking others if they want to be friends with us.

We stop wearing pajamas with feet in them.

We stop climbing trees.

We stop camping out in the backyard.

We stop waking up early on Saturday mornings to watch cartoons.

We stop taking toys out of their boxes because they’re worth more that way.

We stop pouring out the cereal just to get to the prize.

We stop wearing different color socks on purpose.

We stop trick or treating.

We stop flying kites.

We stop knowing all the words to every Christmas song.

We stop looking forward to our birthday.

We stop jumping into piles of freshly-raked leaves.

We stop taking field trips.

We stop playing cops and robbers.

We stop taking two-month summer vacations.

We stop having as much fun with sparklers as we used to.

We stop thinking the kid in the Mickey Mouse suit is really Mickey Mouse.

We stop trying to catch lightning bugs.

We stop getting as many toys for our birthday.

We stop spending as much time looking up at the stars at night.

We stop wearing mittens.

We stop savoring a good milk moustache.

We stop believing that anything is possible

We stop living as if each day is going to be the most amazing day EVER!

We stop dreaming big, ridiculous dreams.

Song of the day:

The Beatles-Sun King (alternate mix with organ intro)

--I picked this song today because when I hear it, I can see the ten-year-old me running around in slow motion, not a care in the world, with absolutely no idea I'd still be at square one some thirty years later.

Still dreaming big, though! :)


Hope you are, too.

Rock on,
Darren

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Dissecting the Beatles


For me, “Help!” was the album that showed the Beatles to be outgrowing their teenybopper days (for lack of a better term) and heading very quickly toward the groundbreaking experimentation of “Rubber Soul”, “Sgt. Pepper’s” and so on.

Much like the movie itself, "Help!" (the album) came at my ears in FULL COLOR, baby, making everything that came before seem like it was blasting out of a 13" black-and-white TV by comparison.

The reason I mention this is because I thought it’d be cool to post a few mp3’s that detail the recording process. The first of three songs I’ll post today is one that I’ve always felt was their last lightweight “teenybopper” song. It’s still a great song, make no mistake about that, but was proof the fabs hadn't completely abandoned their "black-and-white" days.

The second song is "Yes It Is"; one of my fave tracks from the “Help!” record. Mid-sixties Lennon at his best, with a perfectly atmospheric Harrison guitar line played live while the basic track is being cut.

But Darren, why post several versions of the same song, you ask?

Well, I'll tell you why: the studio banter, flubs and re-starts are all part of the charm of these tracks. You can actually get an idea of what it was like to have "been there".

The third song is an alternate mix of Ticket To Ride that I dig. Hope you do too.

Enjoy!

That Means A Lot (rehearsal)
That Means A Lot (test take)
That Means A Lot (take 1)
That Means A Lot (take 2)
That Means A Lot (take 20)
That Means A Lot (take 21)
That Means A Lot (take 23)
That Means A Lot (take 24)

Yes It Is (take 1)
Yes It Is (takes 2 through 7)
Yes It Is (takes 8 and 9)
Yes It Is (takes 10 through 14)

Ticket To Ride (alternate mix, single-tracked Lennon vocal, no fade)

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Material Issue's Jim Ellison



The very first guy who helped me out when I got to Chicago in ’86 was Jim Ellison. I did not know him as “the guy in Material Issue”. I just knew him as “the guy who booked Batteries Not Included”, a dingy little club that seemingly held about ten people. I remember seeing Green (a band that Jim had been in briefly) perform at the club, the only light in the entire place was a bare light bulb hanging over the stage. The near-darkness just made the band seem that much bigger; the audience a sweaty glow mere inches below them. It was a magical night, one of my first in the big city, and I immediately decided to try getting a gig there.

Within seconds of contacting Jim, he and I were talking about bands we loved. We bonded over early Bee Gees and the Sweet. Without even hearing my band, he gave me a gig opening for, of all bands, Green.

At the show, I remember looking out at the audience from the stage and seeing one guy who, despite being at floor level, was still taller than me. After the show, he sought me out and introduced himself. He told me we put on a great show and that he dug our cover of “Stepping Stone”. Jim explained his plans for a gig, Battle Of The Trios – three bands, each with three members. It would be Material Issue, Urge Overkill (who I hadn’t heard of before), and the other band was still up in the air.

“Do you guys wanna play the gig?”, he asked.

We had just hired a fourth guy to flesh out our sound, but here Jim was egging me on to ditch him so we could play this gig as a three-piece. Knowing a good gig when I saw one, my band was immediately trimmed back down to a trio for the gig. We told our new guitarist (and fourth member) that it would just be for this show, but he was so pissed that he quit the band altogether.

It was an amazing show. My first taste of Urge Overkill was that they were sloppy as hell, but the crowd was going ape-shit the whole time. Material Issue were tighter than Jim’s jeans (if you’ve seen him in person, you know what I’m talking about) and played a revved-up brand of Cheap Trick-meets-Badfinger rock that I dug completely. In hindsight, we must have paled by comparison, but the crowd was intensely supportive and we made a ton of new fans whose faces we saw at later shows.

Material Issue was Jim’s first love and, truth be told, he was his own biggest fan. This rubbed a lot of people the wrong way, but he always went out of his way to be cool to me. Nine times out of ten, our interaction seemed to involve him offering to help me out in one way or another. Come to think of it, he never asked me for a darn thing. Still, there were people on the scene who thought he was a huge jerk. Turns out that even people who were close to him had very mixed feelings about the guy.

A mutual friend, who had begrudgingly invited Jim over for Thanksgiving when they discovered he had no other place to go, later commented that they'd initially found it odd that Jim wouldn’t just spend the holiday with his parents, who lived nearby. After spending the entire day with Ellison, though, they could understand why he had no other place to go. They didn’t offer specifics, nor did I ask, but it was implied that Jim had overstayed his welcome.

Jeff Murphy, who produced the band’s first two albums for Mercury and was a member of the band Shoes, had this to say about Jim in an interview:

“I enjoyed the music tremendously, but Jim could be difficult to work with and there were times when he and I would argue over things. He was not at all technology based and would not even tune his guitar; I did it for him. He once broke a string during a recording while doing a lead and the guitar went flying out of tune. When I stopped the tape and told him to re-string his guitar he argued that he 'meant' to do that. But that was just Jim. We remained friends and he called me at the studio about something a few weeks before his death [in June, 1996].” (courtesy of PerfectSoundForever)

In ’95, I was playing drums in the Longfellows (led by my longtime friend Jim Allen, who had also been in Montserrat/The Plaids with me). We were playing a gig in support of our pals, The Elvis Brothers at Schuba’s and Ellison came out to the show. I was standing at the bar waiting for my drink when he came up, shook my hand, and told me that he dug my drumming. He then let it slide that he was forming a new band apart from Material Issue, who had been dropped from their Mercury deal, and asked if I might want to play drums in the project.



Turns out he had asked quite a few guys to play drums in the band, but none of them wanted to be in a band with him. My slant is that most of these guys had egos as big or bigger than Jim’s. Me, on the other hand…

He was also doing gigs with The Wild Bunch, a somewhat cheesy bar band that included Gilby Clark, Pat from the Smithereens, and a few others whose names escape me. Between this and some continued work with Material Issue (including a collaboration with Liz Phair), he was pretty busy. We rehearsed a few times, cut some incredibly rough demos, and then I just hit the wall. Sick of Chicago and wanting a change, I split for the postcard panoramas of Colorado.

Months later, Jim Allen called to tell me the news: Jim Ellison had killed himself, supposedly over an ex-girlfriend. I remember being so dumbfounded by the news that my girlfriend thought for a moment that the late-night call might have been about a death in my immediate family.

The local Chicago scene was abuzz over the news. There was talk that drugs were involved and all sorts of sordid rumors were flying around. Most sickening of all was the fact that tapes of phone messages Jim had left on his ex-girlfriend's answering machine were now circulating. A lot of people were all having a good laugh at Jim’s expense. After all, he was the cocky rock star who killed himself over a girl. To them, he deserved it.

Before I’d left Chicago, Jim had given me a tape of new Material Issue demos. I admit that I wasn’t that wowed by the tunes initially and just filed the tape in my huge “box o’tapes”. A few days after his death, though, I dug out the tape and sat on my futon in the dark listening to Jim’s voice, trying to hear something that might have been a clue to why he chose to end it all. The song titles on the cassette were scribbled in Ellison’s own handwriting: “Satellite”, “976-LOVE”, and one called, simply, “Boyfriend” which, when I heard it, chilled me to the bone.

Sample lyrics:

“What if I killed your boyfriend/What if I shot him down?
What if I killed your boyfriend?/Maybe then you’d want me around.”

I thought to myself 'How many months had he been aching for this woman, losing his grip the harder he tried to keep her?' Christ, what must the guys in his band have thought when he brought in a song like this? They had to know something was wrong.

I admit that I was initially very confused by Jim taking his life. He was the one guy I'd have never thought capable of such a thing. He was confidence personified. That Jim would take his life because he couldn’t be with the girl of his dreams seemed absurd.

Then, as luck would have it, I lost the girl of my dreams and spun into the very same abyss from which Jim never escaped. I felt as if I was living one page after another from Jim’s diary.

Complicating matters further, cancer was also having its way with me at the time so I felt attacked from all sides and was just too exhausted to deal with things rationally. I came so close to ending it all, too. I tried. I went so far as to write notes saying goodbye to family and friends, then I realized what an overly dramatic little puss I sounded like and promptly burned them in the fireplace.

Thankfully, a few people who weren’t really even my friends yet showed immense kindness and understanding during that time. They became great friends and showed me that it was possible to start life over again. Thanks to them, the part of me that wanted to live won out over the part of me that didn’t.

Going through that ordeal, though, I gained a completely new appreciation for Jim Ellison as a person. I have him to thank for years of friendship with no strings attached and for kindness beyond reason. I also have him to thank for some great music, some of which I’d like to share with you now.

Intro From The Band
Bad Time
Blockbuster
The Boxer (live)
Bus Stop
I'd Wait A Million Years
Little Willy
Run To Me

(thanks Ginch!)

Begin At The Beginning, Part Two


(cover artwork for my debut CD, "Darren Robbins Steals Your Girlfriend")

Having just had my tune dropped from the Naked Gun flick, my label was momentarily stymied, as they had looked upon the inclusion of one of my songs in “a major motion picture” as a big promotional opportunity.

That’s when the head of the label came up with the idea to promote the CD on TV. I know, I know. It sounds weird, but he was convinced the “Slim Whitman” approach would work, even for an unknown artist, if you advertised enough and the music was good.

We taped a commercial that was more a comedy sketch than infomercial and then started airing the commercials on local cable providers throughout the Midwest. Operators were literally standing by and, during the first weekend the commercial ran, we got only one order. It was from a guy who had lived just down the street from me and had hated my guts. My most vivid memory of the guy was years ago: I was riding my bike around the neighborhood when he and his friends cornered me and he started a fight that he lost in a very big way. From then on, he was much friendlier to me, but our paths rarely crossed. Turns out he was now in college in southern Illinois and had seen the commercial on MTV.

There were other calls, of course, mostly from people calling the 800 number to see if the commercial was "for real" or not.

“We just spent thousands of dollars to sell one CD to a kid I went to school with,” I yelled, trying to talk some sense into the guys at my label. To me, the money going into this add campaign could be better spent lighting cigars or wiping our asses.

They told me that they’d signed contracts to air the commercials through the end of the month in several markets across the country. The money was already spent. There was no going back.

Despite running multiple times daily, the ads did not manage to help sell a single copy over the next week. I was sick to my stomach thinking about how much cash was flying out the door. It wasn’t my cash, of course, but it was cash that was being spent on my behalf by guys who certainly deserved to see some return on their investment.

Then a funny thing happened.

It was like I just woke up one day and the world was different. First, a record store in Chicago that had taken ten copies of the CD on consignment called us to say they’d sold out of all of them in a single day and that they wanted to buy more copies. They’d even pay for them up-front.

There were also messages from a few major newspapers on the label’s answering machine wanting information on “that guy in those crazy commercials”.

When we checked in with the answering service that was providing phone operators and order processing, they told us that sales for the weekend were well over two thousand copies.

Turns out it had just taken some time for the ad to achieve saturation and connect with its audience. Now customers were calling in with credit cards at the ready.

The downside was that many callers were interested in getting the album on cassette, but this label prided itself on being “CD only”. In hindsight, we could have easily doubled sales by embracing the cassette, but what can you do? This was a CD-only label, baby.

Meanwhile, the Rose Records chain, which had initially balked at carrying the CD, but then showed infectious enthusiasm in carrying the CD when we made it known we were willing to pay for print ads in major local publications, was voluntarily promoting the CD via placement in end caps. This is something for which many labels pay retailers like Best Buy (and the now-defunct Tower Records) ridiculous money and here we were getting prime placement in dozens of stores throughout the Chicago area for free.

Did I mention that the CD’s were now flying off the shelf? The same woman at Rose Records who had initially told us to get lost was now leaving messages every hour on the hour trying to get her hands on more copies of the CD. They cut us a check for the purchase of 2,500 units and we gave them the last of our existing stock. With TV ads still running and the CD moving well at retail, we were now backordered.

Then, on my to a friend’s house, I flipped on WXRT and heard one of my songs playing. It was only the last twenty seconds or so, then the DJ broke in and said “That was ‘Travel long My Wandering Heart’ by a local guy here in town, Darren Robbins.”

I was alone and it was over before I could tell anyone. A minute later, there was a part of me still not quite sure it had actually happened.

Of course, WXRT is a real radio station and I was not their only listener. That day, every friend I had (and a lot of people I didn’t realize were my friends) called to say they’d heard my song on the radio.

Over the next several days, reviews of the CD would appear in Musician (written by Trouser Press founder Ira Robbins – no relation, whose work I had long admired) and Rolling Stone magazine. Major labels were also calling the office on a daily basis, expressing interest.

It was an incredibly heady time.

TO BE CONTINUED

Caroline's Sister Desaray (my personal favorite song from the CD)

Love of Another Wave (a song that began as a Montserrat demo, as if my voice isn't chirpy enough, I believe the finished track was sped up a little during mixing)

Friday, August 17, 2007

#1 reason I kinda wish we all had cell phones in 1985 (and shakin' with Stevie Ray Vaughan)


There are few things I loathe as much as cell phones.

In L.A., there are people who can’t go five minutes without making a call, taking a call, or texting somebody. I dread visits to the post office or anywhere else that requires a lengthy stand in line because, inavriably, I'll end up with no other choice but to listen to some yokel bothering everyone he knows with a pointless phone call just so he doesn't have to be bored for a few minutes.

Having said this, there is one moment in my life where such widespread existence of such technology would have come in mighty freakin' handy.

The time is 1985.

There I was one picture-perfect summer afternoon, not a care in the world, just kicking it at home when – suddenly - the phone rang.

A guy from Sunshine Promotions (a major Indiana concert promoter that I had besieged with demo packs and phone calls for months) called, asking if my band could fill the opening slot for that night’s Stevie Ray Vaughan show in South Bend, Indiana. Turns out the scheduled opener’s van had broken down.

“Sure,” I said, barely able to contain my excitement. He then gave me all the necessary details. As I hung up, my heart was beating so hard, I could feel it in my temples.

I figured two calls; one to Jim (guitarist) and one to Mark (bassist), and we’d be burning down the highway towards the bigtime.

In the little town we lived in, push-button phones were still considered a luxury so there I stood winding the rotary dial for what seemed an eternity.

Three rings later, Jim’s mom answers. I explain the situation and she becomes just as excited as I am. The only problem is that Jim and his girlfriend (who would later urge him to give up music after roping him into marriage) are out on a date. She thinks they went miniature golfing. Of course, there are three possible mini-golf courses in our immediate area.

The first one says there are only three customers, none of them answering to the name Jim. I quickly call the second golf course, where my request is greeted harshly. I then explain to them, in no uncertain terms, that this is rock & roll history in the making and that it’s their duty to help. I then ask to speak to a manager, who turns out to be a whole lot nicer and actually walks around to all the golfers on the course, asking if their name is Jim. He returns to the phone and informs me that Jim isn’t there.

Crap.

The third one, a bona fide Putt-Putt golf facility, is my last hope. The girl who answers is friendly and eager to help. Within seconds, she is on the course’s PA system announcing, “If there is a Jim Allen here, please come to the front desk. Your band is opening for Stevie Ray Vaughan!”

Jim, of course, thinks it is a practical joke, but heads to the front counter anyway. She puts him on the phone and I explain the deal to him.

I then call Mark’s house, whose Mom also answers. She tells me he and his pals are out for the evening. She thinks they either went bowling or to a movie.

Sigh. I hang up, not knowing quite what my next move should be.

I figure I’d better get my equipment loaded into my car and head over to Jim’s. We’ll worry about Mark later..

Before I am even down the stairs, the phone rings. I run as fast as I can back up the stairs. I pick up the phone, completely out of breath.

It’s Mark.

I quickly give him the 411 and tell him to get over to Jim’s as fast as he can. There’s only one problem; he doesn’t believe me. Mark is convinced I’m kidding around. I am literally hyperventilating as I explain to him for the fifth time that I am dead serious. Out of frustration, I hang up.

As I had never hung up on him before, this is apparently enough for Mark to realize this is legit and that he should probably haul-ass over to Jim’s.

We pulled up to the load-in area of a concert hall I’d been to at least a dozen times as a fan, never as a performer, and gazed at the huge buses and liquid precision with which everyone operated. We, on the other hand, tumbled out of Jim’s dad’s bright yellow pickup truck, unloading our gear with all the coordination and grace of a hillbilly boot-fight.

We were in way over our heads, man. Thankfully, none of us realized it until afterwards.

Instead, we rocked like supreme bad-asses that night, putting on the show of our lives. We had strict instructions from SRV’s tour manager to keep it to forty-five minutes and by the time we got to the last song, I gotta admit, my knees were shaking, I was so tired.

Then, from stage left, I see SRV’s tour manager signaling us to keep it going.

We oblige, rocking the house with continued intensity for what turns out to be another thirty minutes.

He must have really been digging our stuff, I think. Only afterwards did I put two and two together. Jim, who was a big Stevie Ray fan, had gone in to meet his hero after our set. When he came out, he had this stunned look in his eyes. Turns out Stevie Ray was so out of it, he could barely talk. Jim had gone to shake his hand, but saw that Stevie Ray’s hands were already shaking.

The one thing I remember is that we all tried to savor every moment of the experience. None of us had any allusions to this becoming commonplace anytime soon. Still, I can’t help feel I didn’t savor it enough.

Needless to say, having the ability to get ahold of my bandmates via their trusty cell phones would have been freakin' sweet and might have prevented at least a couple of the numerous minor myocardial infarctions this writer suffered that day.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

first taste of rock heaven


When my first CD was released, during the autumn of 1988, cassettes were still the prevailing format. Yet, there I was, an unknown artist signed to a CD-only label, trying to find my way in the world.

With no promotional budget to speak of, we set about getting the CD into stores. Our first few targets were the indie stores that I frequented. Most shops were supportive enough to buy a couple copies outright, while others did so on consignment. We gave them a few posters to hang in the shop as well and, wouldn’t you know it, a few of the shops actually hung them up.

In addition to that, I was playing shows all over the Midwest, starting with crappy early-in-the-week gigs where you and a few other low-rung bands played for the door. We were hitting St. Louis, Champaign, Indianapolis, Cleveland, Columbus, Kalamazoo and any other city in the area that would have us. Meanwhile, I was having zero luck landing gigs in Chicago.

Of course, it wasn’t for a lack of trying. I called each club to which I’d sent a press kit on an almost daily basis. Sometimes the only positive thing I took away from one of those calls was a booking agent or assistant backhandedly complimenting me on my persistence. Then, out of the blue, the Joe Shanahan from the Metro (which was THE place to play in Chicago, as far as I was concerned – in fact, it STILL IS) called me. That’s right, he called me and offered up a Wednesday night gig. Sure, it was mid-week, but who cares? I was gonna play the Metro.

In preparation, the first thing I did was fire my backing band. They’d served me well, following me all over the Midwest no-questions-asked, but I felt I was moving to the next level and, thus, I needed a better band. As luck would have it, a friend of a friend knew of a band that was looking for a singer. I met up with them and after we ran through a few of my songs together, it was agreed that they would back me up for the gigs that I had scheduled, then we’d transition into “a band”. I, of course, had no intention of being in “a band”, as my name was on the goddamned CD that had just come out.

The drummer, of course, could see me coming a mile away and quickly washed his hands of the whole thing. This would have stopped most guys in their tracks, but I played drums, so he was missed for all of two minutes.

Prior to the Metro gig, we played a sports bar on Lincoln Avenue just to warm up in front of an actual audience. We played it fast and loose and, when a drunk woman on the dance floor made numerous boisterous requests for “Moondance”, we looked at one another and dove head first into a basic groove, over which I made up a complete set of absurd lyrics, culminating with the oft-repeated chorus:

“What do I do when I take off my pants?
I do a moondance, all night long”

Everyone in the place was on the dance floor by now, loving every delicious second of our impromptu version of “Moondance”. More importantly, the woman who requested the song loved it, too.

From that point on, we had the room in the palm of our hands. We blasted through another set and then left the stage to thunderous applause. Within seconds, the crowd had started chanting “Moondance! Moondance! Moondance!”

So we encored with a ten minute version of a song that we’d written on-the-fly only an hour before and still left them wanting more.

At the next rehearsal, though, none of us could remember how the doggone song went and it was never ever performed again.

At the Metro gig, we rocked through our 45-minute set to a full house of people who’d come to see the other bands on the bill. I mean, seriously, we rocked them hard and they dug us hard. A girl we’d never met came up onstage and danced for the entire set and when I suggested she take her top off, she didn’t give it a second thought. That had never happened before. The Metro crew treated us like gods, loading us in and out with great aplomb, and there was free beer and a dressing room that actually resembled a dressing room (another first). After the gig , Jim from Material Issue and Nash from Urge Overkill materialized backstage and filled my head with praise. There were women who wanted to do things with us, for us… to us.

I was in rock heaven.

A couple days later, still high on the success of my last couple gigs, I called Joe at Metro. Barely before I could finish my name, Joe was raving about the many compliments he’d received about my show and told me flat-out that my band had completely stolen the show.

“Cool, so give me another gig,” I replied.

Joe paused, then explained that only four of the 500 free tickets he’d given us to spread throughout the city to promote our show had been handed in at the door. In other words, we’d only brought in four people. Despite the fact that we rocked that crowd for all they were worth, making a shitload of new fans in the process, the fact that we brought in only four tickets made us a colossal failure in his eyes.

In my naiveté, I’d failed to grasp that the tickets were the basis for whether I’d ever play Metro again and, thus, I only handed them out to a few friends. The rest sat in a box in my apartment.

I had also used one as a bookmark.

Postscript: I played the Metro again, but I learned then and there that it was up to me to promote the fuck out of every one of my shows, no matter where or when. That’s why, no matter what stage my career is at, I will always promote my shows like my next gig depends on it…because it does. It totally does.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Dear Edward Van Halen


Dear Eddie,

As someone who has lived just up the street from you for close to a decade, we've crossed paths numerous times and you've never been less than completely friendly and outgoing. The fact that you offered me a shitload of unused acoustic studio foam and soundproofing some years back was a kind gesture that took me quite by surprise.

So, it is with heavy heart that I write this letter.

Dude, get Michael Anthony back in the band. To ostracize him and prevent him from being a part of the band during this reunion with David Lee Roth is just about as wrong a thing as you can do to someone who has spent their entire adult life being the bass player for Van Halen. Sure, he’s many other things in addition to this, but part of being Van Halen’s bass player has been being there when the band needed him.

How many times has he failed to be there for Van Halen?

None?

That’s more than one could say about you, Ed. With the groundwork already laid for a summer ’07 tour, it was you who ended up being the no-show. Turns out your shit wasn’t as together as it needed to be and a lot of people’s lives got put on-hold. Of course, one could also say the last ten years have been a waiting game for you to get your shit in order. The band has suffered and, most important of all, the fans have suffered.

Anyone who paid money for Van Halen 3 will attest to this.

Sure, you had cancer. That can take a lot out of you, can dominate your life in ways nobody else can imagine. I had cancer, too, Ed. I also never missed a day of work the whole time. Still, I understand you’ve been through a lot. I understand the thinking that nobody else gets you, nobody else can understand, and that whole trip. I went through it and I tried getting away with it, but the people close to me did one of two things; they either walked away, or they called me on my bullshit.

I’m calling you on your bullshit, Ed, because it doesn’t look to me like anyone else has the guts. Come on, Ed. What on earth could Michael Anthony have possibly done - short of tea-bagging Valerie right in front of you - to be deserving of complete banishment from the Van Halen camp?

The fans want to know. The fans deserve to know. Even more important than that, though, Michael Anthony deserves to be forgiven (if the situation warrants it) and welcomed back. I can tell you that I have looked forward to a Van Halen tour with Roth for years, but the machinations resulting in Anthony’s continued absence are such to keep me from buying tickets.

You can still make it right, Ed.

Seriously,

Darren

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Jeff Tweedy, Jay Bennett, Billy Bragg and “a revolting cock!”



The scene: a house party in southern Illinois, summer 1988. With my debut CD's release date fast approaching, I had driven down from Chicago to shoot a video for the first single, “Fire From A Stone”. Along for the ride were my ex-girlfriend (who had agreed to dance provocatively in the video for free) and label head John Kiefner (and his wallet). After shooting the video in what now seems like a breif blur of color and light, we went out to dinner, had some drinks to celebrate. Then things started getting a little fuzzy. The next thing I know, we’re among a crowded throng watching Billy Bragg performing in Jay Bennett’s kitchen.

This, of course, was years before Jay would join Wilco, let alone record two albums with Bragg.

Billy, of course, had already put on a concert earlier in the evening at Mabel’s in Champaign, IL, but here he was still singing his heart, taking requests, with no end in sight. I, of course, was buzzed to the hilt so the whole night seems like a complete hazy dream. There is word of another party elsewhere in town, so off we go. How much did I have to drink that night? Having reached my limit, and before we pile into the car, I lean over the porch railing to, ahem, get some fresh air. The railing gives way and I topple head over heels into the bushes. How I didn’t break my neck, I do not know. Unfazed, I got up, wedged the railing back into place, and squeezed into the car taking us to the next party.

We arrive to the sounds of Soul Asylum’s album “Hang Time” being played at top volume, tons of people everywhere and, surprise, kegs aplenty. By now, I’m feeling no pain and, since I could no longer recall why I had broken up with my ex, I drop the platonic act. Without saying a word, I bring her near, kis her ever so softly, and take her hand in mine. She knowingly obliges and we go in search of a bedroom. In true teen movie fashion, we soon discover every bedroom in the place is at capacity. In a brazen move the result of complete hormonal desperation, we hole up in an upstairs bathroom and begin ripping at each other’s clothing.

As drunk as I’ve ever been, I am filled with a carefree, devil-may-care confidence that, in turn, leads my ex to throw all caution to the wind as well. Without going into detail, let me just say that it was one of the more experimental sexual experiences in my young life. Heck, even now, I’m hard-pressed to top that night, having added many notches to the proverbial belt. Upon reaching a drunken plateau of sexual euphoria, I promptly pass out.

How I got from the bathroom to the couch in the living room, I will never know. Why nobody thought to put some clothes on me in the process is a question I still want answered, though.

As I awaken and take stock of my new (to me) surroundings (mostly co-eds and rocker dudes having quite the laugh at my expense), Jeff Tweedy walks up to me with a restrained chuckle (and a beer in his hand and says, “Talk about a revolting cock!”

What could I say? I was, after all, completely naked except for the Revolting Cocks t-shirt I had managed to somehow keep on during my prior sexual escapades.

To this day, Jeff has never failed to take the opportunity to remind me (and whoever I'm with) of that night.

Begin At The Beginning


(inner sleeve photo from my first solo record, "Darren Robbins Steals Your Girlfriend")

The year was 1986. I was high on life and playing in a little rock band that was going places. We’d landed a demo deal with A&M, which naturally meant (to us) that we were on our way to being famous. We were kings on the Michigan-Indiana club scene (which then was a barren wasteland of cover bars, probably still is), despite playing mostly original material.

We were known then as Montserrat (named after the West Indies home of Air Studios, where the likes of The Police and Cheap Trick had recorded). We hadn't foreseen how potentially problematic such a name could be. Upon showing up at our very first gig, we looked up in amazement to see "Monster Rat" on the venue's marquee.

When A&M came calling, our manager at the time and the execs urged us to brighten up our look and, while we were at it, change our name. As we had prided ourselves as being a band along the same lines as U2, the Alarm, and the Police, we cringed when a designer came to our photo shoot and presented us with a wide array of some of the loudest neon and plaid outfits we’d ever seen.

We shook our heads, but nevertheless dove in with our usual aplomb, flash bulbs popping as we primped and posed. We jokingly referred to ourselves as “The Plaids” and, wouldn't you know it, our manager became immediately convinced it was the greatest name ever. Next thing we know, there are club posters bearing the name and the 2” master tapes at the recording studio have “The Plaids” scribbled on them.

Hmm, I guess we’re “The Plaids” then.

Our bass player, Mark went along with it begrudgingly. He came from a prog rock background so anything overly pop or blatantly commercial tended to not sit well with him. The guitarist, Jim and I, however, were into the new wave bands of the time so we weren’t at all alarmed by the sudden integration of styling mousse and snazzy suits into our look. Mark threw his arms up and gave it his best go, donning one of the loudest orange plaid suits ever known to man and playing a few gigs as “The Plaids”.

Then, one day – completely out of the blue – he drove up to Jim’s place, where we had our rehearsal studio, and picked up all of his equipment. The look on Jim’s face when Mark delivered the news that he was out was still evident when Jim relayed the event to me minutes later. We were floored. As a trio, each member of the band is damn important and, while he didn’t sing or write, he was often the voice of reason that kept us from doing anything too ridiculous. He went from being a guy I saw almost every day to someone I didn’t talk to for ten years. In hindsight, that’s pretty damn sad.

I can’t help thinking that if we’d just stuck to our guns, kept our name, gone with the look we had, it wouldn’t have had to come to that.

So, I retreated to a local summer camp as a counselor and rocketry instructor(!), determined to keep the band together. We placed an ad in the local paper and got a guy to play bass for us. He didn’t fit in with Jim and I at all, but we had to have a bass player. There were gigs to be played.

By the fall, I had begun attending DePaul University (which was simply a cover for moving to Chicago in order to immerse myself in the local music scene). Before long, we were playing gigs with the likes of Material Issue, Urge Overkill, Smashing Pumpkins, and a band called The Elvis Brothers that was regarded as one of the best live bands going. I had seen them in ’85 and I took to emulating them in every way possible. Their drummer, the amazing Brad Elvis (who now plays for The Romantics) had played drums standing up so, naturally, I started doing the same.

By ’87, we were recording demos with the Graham Walker from the Elvis Brothers producing. Sure, it was now just Jim and I, but we were convinced we were going places. Or, rather, I thought we were going places. In another one of those out-of-the-blue moments that stops your heart cold, Jim told me he was quitting the band because, well, his new wife didn’t approve of it.

Dented, but undaunted, I took the demos we had, talked a local Chicago indie label called Like Records into funding the recording of another half dozen songs with the Elvis Brothers as my backing band, and released the results as my first solo record, Darren Robbins Steals Your Girlfriend.

Near the end of the sessions, my new manager pulled some strings and the next thing I knew, I was recording a cover of Herman’s Hermits “I’m Into Something Good” for inclusion in the movie "Naked Gun”. The producers wanted an updated version and who better than me (a complete unknown) to pump new life into the song? With the song finished and delivered to the film’s producers, we were excited because we knew having a song in a major film would make for an interesting tie-in with my upcoming album.

Months later, we get the call from the producers of the film, informing us that Peter Noone had found out about the use of the track and had then cut his own updated version. Point blank, the filmmakers had chosen to use his version.

Sigh.

I remember the news hit me pretty hard, but, truth be told, things would soon be looking up for me…

TO BE CONTINUED

"I'm Into Something Good" (my version)

"Try For A Miracle" (one of my favorite tracks from "Darren Robbins Steals Your Girlfriend")

"Travel Long My Wanderin' Heart" (a Montserrat/Plaids demo that ended up on "Darren Robbins Steals Your Girlfriend")

Alternate Beatles: Help! and Abbey Road era


The Beatles were my first love, musically. I remember being a young kid and having my uncle play me a copy of "Help!". I hadn't even heard of the Beatles and, from the first moment they hit the screen, I was transfixed. In the film, the Beatles all share a huge flat and John Lennon sleeps in a bed that's built into the floor. That, perhaps more than anything, captured my imagination. I decided right then and there that the only way to have a bed in the floor like John Lennon was to be a rocker myself. Swear to god, one day I will have a bed that's built into the floor.

So, without further delay, here are a few Help! and Abbey Road-era tunes in a variety of alternate formats:

You've Got To Hide Your Love Away (alternate, Take 5)
You're Going To Lose That Girl (alternate, Take 3)
Golden Slumbers (early take)
Come Together (Lennon '72 rehearsal)
Here Comes The Sun (George Harrison and Paul Simon, Saturday Night Live '78)

Friday, August 10, 2007

To Live And Die In L.A.: A Year In The Life


Today, I signed a one-year lease on a crappy little apartment in a crappy little part of the San Fernando Valley.

No big news, really.

The thing is, I came pretty darn close to just saying adios to L.A. entirely - the music-related reasons for continuing to live here growing smaller every day. Truth be told, I guess I kinda like having the option of wearing shorts and flip-flops in December while most of my friends and family are digging their cars out snowdrifts back east. Now I'd never be caught dead in shorts and flip-flops, I just like having the option.

So, yeah, I've been in L.A. for ten years now. I came out from Chicago with a newly-inked record deal (that disappeared in an early round of merger-mania) and a hope chest of dreams that, to date, are still "mint in box", to coin a collector's term.

Since arriving in Hollywoodland, I've watched the bottom fall out of a once-burgeoning industry, seen executives become the well-paid rock stars and the rock stars - the ones actually doing all the goddamn work - being kicked to the curb with complete disdain.

I've seen talented musicians, hyper-creative songwriters, and people who can sing like freakin' angels reduced to working at Starbucks. One former rocker with five Top 40 hits to his credit, who has become a great friend, makes his living these days performing singing telegrams dressed as a purple gorilla. I kid you not.

Of course, he's still recording and, deep down, he still thinks his best days are in front of him. The gold records on his wall are reminders that he did it once, so why not again? I haven't the heart to tell him that there's very little room on the rock charts for a 52-year-old singing gorilla because I know deep down in my heart that when I'm 52, I could very well be that guy. Minus the gold records from 1987, of course.

My best days are in front of me because, well, there've been very few good days behind me. That's the one edge I've got on those guys.

I'm 41. Did I mention that?

So, basically, here's the drill. For the next year, I've decided to chronicle every single day of my life as I try to forge something resembling a music career. I'll also spill a lot of dirt and reminisce about the crazy up's and down's of my twenty years spent in the rock & roll trenches.