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One thing every adult dreads are the childhood pictures
and videos so proudly taken by parents, images of who
we once were that come back to embarrass us or reflect
beginnings that led us to where we are now. For Gann
Matthews, singer, songwriter and urban troubadour,
these images take him back to the results of his first
concert at age five, after his parents took him to see
John Denver.
“They have this video of me where I’m holding
this handle to an axe that my dad had broken in the
yard,” Matthews recalls, “and I’m
holding it while a John Denver record is playing in
the background and I’m singing along. I think
I told my mom in the video that if John Denver ever
dies I will learn all his songs and go on tour. Of course,
I’m not gonna do that, right?”
Well, not quite. But Matthews does feel that all his
musical chapters - from playing piano at age eight and
writing songs on his guitar at age 13, to the series
of events during the past few years - have all led up
to where he is supposed to be at this point in his life:
having graduated with a degree in Music Performance,
finished with his EP Silent Sound,
and now moving from Denver to New York where he’ll
finish his second, full length album, Living
Dangerously.
Five years ago Matthews was planning this move when
life got in the way. His roommate backed out, and then
9/11 happened. Matthews decided to do something practical
like, get into film school. “Really practical,
right?” Deciding that wasn’t what he wanted
he moved towards his passion, music, at CU-Denver in
the spring of 2002. New York never left the back of
his mind, but he was encouraged by his mom to finish
school, and he’s now grateful for her persistence.
Pondering for a moment, he concludes that it was all
meant to be, “It’s funny. If I had actually
gone, I wouldn’t have been in music school and
studied and all of that, and I would have just died
out there, basically. I wasn’t ready and it’s
perfect that I didn’t go. Every step led me…I’m
now ready to go to New York.”
Although school was a major focus for Matthews, so
was writing and performing. He’s made some major
strides in Denver during this time, from playing local
venues such as hi-dive, BlueBird, the Gothic, and Larimer
Lounge, to the small coffee houses. His musical discography
started with the EP Trafalgar in 2002, which
led to his first full-length album, The Thin Line
in 2004. These achievements and Matthews’s talent
didn’t go unnoticed, as Westword named him “Denver’s
Best Singer-Songwriter-Male” in 2005.
As a songwriter and arranger, Matthews began to utilize
his music theory knowledge when he wrote Thin Line.
Seeing it as one of his first turning points in his
songwriting, the album consists of both full-band arrangements
and solo acoustic songs, representing the first steps
toward his realization of grand scale production on
the two new releases.
“School took me places I never thought it would
take me,” he says, believing that most musicians
actually resist learning a lot about music from a scholastic
level. “I think if you learn a little bit of [music]
theory it can be dangerous. Before I was in school,
I wrote way more adventurous progressions than the first
year or two I was in school. I would sit there and say,
‘Well, that’s not right because I have to
follow these theory rules.’ People learn a little
bit of theory but not enough to know that they can bend
the rules. It wasn’t until my third or fourth
year in school where I discovered that they were guidelines,
a basis to step off of. I found that I could do more
exciting things quicker. Here’s my bag of tricks,
what can I use?”
Grand scale and magic come into play within his new
material, with a level of diversity from song to song
that stimulates and surprises. On the new EP’s
title track, “Silent Sound,” you can picture
Matthews sitting alone at the piano within an expansive,
Great Gatsby era ballroom as his velvety vocals sing
of abstract characters--the politician who ran out of
lies and is now bored and high, or the tin man falling
into the lake nearby, getting “rusty as hell.”
A huge circus enters the ballroom with flags waving
and drums exploding as harlequin beings twirl and dance
with joy.
The irony is that “Silent Sound” was one
of his other happy accidents. Although the EP was meant
to be all acoustic, stripped down versions of songs
that will be on the Living Dangerously LP,
Matthews wanted to write something new. If he was going
to do it, he needed to knock it out before the recording
session the following weekend. He was forced into a
method that was akin to writing with the opposite hand.
“Usually I wait for something to come to me.
But with ‘Silent Sound,’ I said, ‘I’m
going to sit here until I have a song.’ The process
was completely different than normal. I didn’t
know if I liked it. With the other songs where I was
walking around [in Capitol Hill], it was pure inspiration.
And then I write down this idea that popped into my
head. But with that one, I was pulling it out of me.
When I listened to [it] I thought, ‘What the hell
is this?’ It took me a couple of days to realize
that it was a good thing. I had to trust it.”
He’s also found his own, rich and wondrous vocal
style, which when he began, followed closely to some
of those artists he respected, like Thom York. “The
most interesting thing I’ve found about getting
away from emulating other artists and actually writing
from my own voice is that it takes a lot more faith
in what I’m doing. It’s not, ‘Oh,
I’m going to write a song that sounds like Bob
Dylan so it sounds right.’ I’m writing a
song that isn’t derived from something, so it’s
harder to do.”
The other risk is how those who fell in love with songs
from Thin Line, which carries more rootsy,
folk driven tunes than those of jazz, large orchestrations
or even indie dance, will react to his evolution. This
is something that any true artist will have to deal
with sooner or later, and just comes with the territory
of people’s resistance to change.
The title track to the new LP, “Living Dangerously,”
(which features vocals from Jenny Vail) actually focuses
on this very topic. For Matthews, the lyrical content
touches on stubbornness of sticking to your old ways,
and sees it tied to the risky venture of moving to New
York versus staying in Denver where life could be a
bit more “safe.”
“When we were recording that title, it was meant
to be for the full length because it’s so ambitious
and different. If people said, ‘Oh, this isn’t
like what you did before,’ I’d ask, ‘Did
you listen to the song?’”
He also looks to the king of changing things up, Beck,
and how varied his styles and sounds are from one album
to the other. “He’d say, ‘You liked
Odelay? Okay, I’m giving you Mutations. Suck on
that,” Matthews adds sarcastically, while making
his point, “That’s what creativity is. If
you’re creating a great album, and then you think,
‘Well, I’m going to do part two of that,’
you’re not really being creative at that point.
You’re being a manufacturer.”
Each song on Silent Sound is far from cookie
cutter. “All Things Meant to Be,” which
portrays a smoky horn section, set to a downtown Chicago
night when the streets are wet, the air is crisp, and
steam billows up from the manhole covers. You can almost
here the clang of the L train.
Matthews knew he didn’t want to use samples,
he wanted real horn players. That’s when Gustav
Hoffman (trombone) and Allen Hanuman (trumpet) came
into the picture. The two players learned their parts,
but when they came into the studio they had an idea
to improvise over the recording. For Matthews, it was
yet another unexpected event that had a major impact
on him.
“I’ve never actually been into improvising
or jazz music all that much, but hearing them make up
this solo on the spot was the magical music moment of
my whole life,” Matthews recalls with gratitude,
further explaining,” I write this song and it
has a very specific place that exists. Then I have my
melody and my words and that’s the focal point
for me. Then they took the chords I’d written
and put a whole new spin on things. I’d never
envisioned the song in that way. It just happened. That’s
what’s amazing about music. You can take it in
whatever direction you want to take it.”
“Icarus Wings” is yet another surprise
from Matthews, bubbling with happy, catchy hooks and
a bushel of sugar beats destined to pull any Denverite
onto the hi-dive or Lipgloss dance floor, which is again
in contrast to his previous work.
Unexpected discoveries have also surfaced for Matthews
within his own lyrical writings. “Train Passing”
brought about an epiphany, which occurred months after
a break up and while he was singing his own words at
a show, “And oh I need a change / When I’m
seeing things out the corners of my eyes.”
“It was like my inner subconscious was screaming
to me through the song, ‘You are miserable,’
but I was not seeing what I should be seeing. That’s
what’s always happened to me creatively. My subconscious
takes over. I’m conscious that I’m writing
this melody, but the meaning just comes out of nowhere.”
Now, although he still relates and loves the lyrical
inspirations of relationships between people, his present
day focus leans in a direction of how he relates to
the world as a whole. As much as he has doubted himself
and allowed fears about moving to enter his mind, he’s
dismissed them just as quickly, defying the typical
habit of playing things safe in life and career, “Just
think about how miserable you’ll be if you don’t
try? You wouldn’t even be alive. You’d be
walking around working a job but, so what?”
Matthews refers the book, The Alchemist, which was
recommended to him by his dad, who knew his son was
moving to fulfill his heart’s desire, “It’s
about, whatever your dreams are, whatever you’re
going for, this story is a metaphor for exactly what
you’re doing.”
His penchant for irony is also evident in his song
titles, from “Painfully Painless” to “Silent
Sound” and even his quotes from previous interviews,
where Matthews states his belief in artists staying
in Denver to support the scene, and now he’s moving
out.
“I have a bad habit of having personal jokes,”
Matthews admits, coyly, “I was intending on flip
flopping for a while so people would wonder. I love
Denver and I think there’s an incredible scene
here, it just hasn’t given me what I want. I have
always wanted to live in New York. If I don’t
do it now I don’t know when I would. Hearing about
it, it sounds like my sound would do well there. I’m
excited to see how the city’s energy and the cultural
melting pot rubs off on my writing, which is beyond
anything I’ve ever experienced.”
When Matthews gets to New York he’ll be assembling
a back up band and finishing up Living Dangerously
(which will be produced by Ian Hlatky, who also produced
Born in the Flood, The Swayback, Joshua Novak and Rainville),
while scouting for potential label support. The EP Silent
Sound can now be found at Twist and Shout, iTunes,
from his website and at his last, going away
show in Denver this Friday, March 31 at hi-dive.
www.gannmatthews.com
-Kim Owens, March 28, 2006
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