Nurse the Hate: Whiskey Daredevils Back To The Studio
We are heading into the studio this weekend to work on the
13th Whiskey Daredevils full length.
It is hard to believe we have made 13 full length records. Tack on the Cowslingers 9 full lengths, and
this will be the 24th time that Leo and I have made a full length
release together. That is either a
really great accomplishment or a sad testament to a couple guys that won’t give
up no matter how much the world shits on them.
It might be both.
I had an original goal of when I got with The Cowslingers to
play out on a stage once, just to say that I did it. After I discovered that a) it was harder than
it looked and b) really fun, I got hooked on it. It also helped that I could write songs fairly
easily. Soon enough we were chasing the
dragon of trying to make a good record. With
24 releases with an average of 11 originals on each one, that means I have been
involved with writing 250+ songs with the various deviants that have been
members of The Cowslingers and Whiskey Daredevils. Please note, they haven’t all been
masterpieces. In fact, there is a friend
of mine that I run into once a year.
Each and every time I see him he says the same thing. “How’s the band going? Hey, what was the name of that one song? Dirty Sanchez? Yeah…
I never liked that one. Do you
still play that?”.
Look, with 250 songs, they can’t all be hits. Cut me some slack. It was 16 years ago when “Dirty Sanchez” came
out. I was playing 110 shows a year and
working a “real” full time job. I didn’t
have time to sleep much less be relied upon to come up with album’s worth of
material with a sliver of depth. There
were song ideas in the van that sounded amazing that didn’t come off exactly
like we had hoped. The drummer from Man
or Astroman? talked some shit about “Hogtied” in an interview once too. I am not saying he didn’t have a valid point
about the song being annoying. Give me a
break. It was the third song I ever
wrote. I didn’t know what I was doing. And
I was trying to please The Chief with it.
I should have followed “my muse”, but I don’t think I had found “my muse”
at that point. Having a “muse” is sort
of like having a really good hair stylist.
You can have a good one, and then suddenly they’re gone without warning. It’s not easy to find a muse. Look it up.
With the sheer repetition of writing and playing, I think we’ve
gotten to be pretty decent at it. Every
once in a while, a really good one comes out and the basement comes to
life. Everyone will exchange glances when
we finish it for the first time and someone will say “Hey… That’s pretty good…” to which Leo will inevitably
say “Yeah man, it’s great! This next
record is going to be our best one yet!”.
A secret insider tip about the Cowslingers/Daredevils in the studio… After each take, Leo will say “Yeah! That sounded perfect. I know I didn’t make any mistakes…” Then someone might say something like “I
think it got a little wobbly on the corners”.
That’s when Leo will say “OK. I
will do it again. I don’t know if I can
do it any better than I just did…” Then
we do another take. Chances are, it
might be better. We all sit on the couch
in the control room and listen to it. Everyone
looks down at the floor absorbed in their own part listening for flaws. There is a silence after the tape stops. Leo will say “This record is going to be
really good. I think it’s our best one
yet!” That’s the key to it. Tricking yourself into thinking the best is
yet to come.
You know what? This
time, I think he might be right. (insert
winking smiley face emoji here)
3 Comments:
You can't go wrong with The Very Best of the Whiskey Daredevils.
The Burro Show still stands tall as testament to high quality song writing.
Way better than over half what has passed for "great" music during that same time. Keep knocking it out of the part cats. :)
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home