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Even though Cracker has already played
three shows in Colorado this month, they’re not
quite done with us yet, especially Johnny Hickman,
one of the founders of the band since the beginning. Yes,
they come back to play the Beavercreek for the World Cup
Ski Races on Thursday, November 29, but one of their members
actually calls Colorado home.
When I spoke with Johnny earlier this week, he was
in Longmont getting ready to pick up some hay. Not girls.
Hay. As in horses, cows and moo-land. A far cry from
the rock ‘n roll lifestyle. But it seems to suit
Johnny just fine, and in fact, he sounded downright
happy. Living life on the road as much as Cracker does,
he was enjoying this slower pace.
While steering the truck down the road with his father-in-law
as his wing man, Johnny filled me in on how he came
to live here. To no surprise, it was a woman.
Johnny Hickman: I’ve been living
here about two years now. I’ve been wanting
to move here for about 19 years, ever since we first
starting touring here. I’ve always been fond of
Colorado and always enjoyed my time here. I’ve
spent a little of my “off” time here over
the years. I always thought it was a place I would go
and retire someday. Then I met my now-wife seven years
ago. She came out and lived with me in California until
my older son was in college, and then we moved here
two years ago in September.
Kaffeine Buzz: How did you choose Loveland?
JH: That’s where she’s from. I really like
the Loveland-Ft. Collins area and the music scene. There
are a lot of really great, young musicians that I jam
with; sit in with; do projects with. So it’s good
for me that way.
KB: It’s interesting to see that you’re
working with Jim Dalton (Railbenders) on a side project.
JH: Are you familiar with the Railbenders?
KB: Hell yeah. They’re a staple here
in Denver. I always have a good time at their shows.
They have a friggin’ bar and venue here, for God’s
sakes. I live five minutes from Bender’s Tavern.
So yeah, I definitely know about those guys.
JH: When I first moved here, my friend Lynn, she does
publicity for Roger Clyne and other people, said, “There’s
a band you gotta check out. They’re right up your
alley.” She knows that I’m kinda that side
of Cracker. I come from a little bit of a country background…more
alt country. Anything but Nashville. So I went with
her to check them out, and my father-in-law came with
me ‘cause he’s a big music fan and he’s
my drinking buddy. (laughs)
I was hooked. I went to a couple of shows and struck
up a friendship with Jim and found he was a huge Cracker
fan. In fact, they do Cracker songs occasionally with
the Railbenders. So it was a match made in heaven. We
became buddies and started going out to have a whiskey
here and there, and then started writing songs together.
We’ve got enough songs written for a couple of
albums. We put out one, called Volume 1, and Volume
2 is in the works. When we finish touring for Greenland
with Cracker, probably early next year, we’ll
be working on Volume 2 for the Hickman-Dalton Gang.
KB: Who else is in the band with you? Is it
just the two of you?
JH: It’s basically just Jim and I, but our friend
John Massey, who has a great studio in Denver and is
a world-class peddle steel player, he’s playing
on there. And our buddy Jeremy from Big Head Todd and
the Monsters, he plays trumpet and keyboards. He’s
one of those guys that can just pick up an instrument
and just play it. He’s on some tracks. But mostly
it’s just Jim and I on the writing, and then we
trade off on vocals. When we do shows, we can just do
the two of us on acoustic guitar, but I think next year
we’re going to be bringing in some other players
when we do live shows.
KB: Have you heard of Drag the River? They’re
up in Ft. Collins.
JH: Yeah, they’ve come to a couple of our shows.
KB: That’s the thing about the music
community here. It’s pretty close knit and most
everyone likes to work with each other and help each
other out, as opposed to some other areas of the country
like California, where things are a lot more competitive.
JH: When David and I were young, we were both in bands,
both growing up in Redlands, California. We’d
open for each other’s band and help each other
out, and that’s how we became friends…sort
of the do-it-yourself thing before there was even the
term “indie rock” or “alternative
rock.” Then he moved up to Northern California
and invited me to join Camper [Van Beethoven] at one
point, but I had just signed to a label with another
band where I ended up quitting before the record came
out. They were one of the only bands at the time who
were forging new territory. I found that to be really
compelling, aside from the fact that they were friends
of mine.
KB: Absolutely, and I can tell you, especially
from where I was from, like 20 minutes from Santa Cruz,
some of their songs became anthems.
JH: (laughs) Right!
KB: They were real big on the college stations
too. And every time they played Catalyst, the kids went
off.
JH: I remember coming up to see a couple of their shows
and just being floored at the support they had on their
home turf.
KB: Yeah, it was a sad day when it ended.
JH: Well, it was bittersweet for me though. When I
heard that Camper had broken up in the middle of the
tour in Europe, I went, “Oh man, there goes one
of my favorite bands.”
But then I got a call from David saying “Hey,
let’s get together and write some songs.”
When we got together it was just the two of us, but
we had a variety of influences. We listened to everything,
from the Pixies, to Captain Beefheart, to the Beatles,
Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin. When David and I work
with other people aside from Cracker, and I believe
that’s what keeps the band fresh. We come back
to the band with new experiences and new flavors. It
keeps the right vitamins coming into our musical diet.
KB: How do you guys do that, considering you’re
all dispersed all over the country now?
JH: We’re together so much that it doesn’t
really matter where we live. We spend so much time on
tour and in the studio; we still end up spending more
time together than with our friends and almost more
than our family. I’m getting ready to go to Richmond
here in a week or so to hole up in David’s studio
and write for about a week to see what we can come up
with. We’ll probably scratch the surface and come
up with ideas that will end up on an album next year.
It’s time to get back in the lab and start making
some music again.
KB: When it comes to Greenland, at least lyrically,
there seems to be a lot of themes around reminiscing
and looking into the past.
JH: Yeah, it does have that essence. I think it has
to do with where we both are in lives right now, but
with more David than me. This album really was his baby.
He did more of the writing on this one, although he
and I do a lot of writing together. He went through
a lot these past couple of years and had a lot of stories
to tell. It all came out in the songs, which is what
an artist is supposed to do.
KB: If this last record was cathartic for him,
do you have any idea where this next record will be
heading?
JH: It’s hard to tell. I’ve got a bag of
guitar licks, some bits and pieces, and I think David
has the same thing. I think that’s the beauty
of how we start a project. After you scratch the surface,
a song kind of tells you what home it wants. The way
David describes it is, half way through he may realize
that this is more of a Camper thing, or this is more
of a solo thing. And I do the same thing, when they
feel like they’re more of something I should do
myself, more personal.
KB: Even though you’re able to decipher
the style of a song for one project or another, there
is still a variety of styles within Cracker’s
style. You can hear that in this last album.
JH: When you expose yourself to different kinds of
music, it gets into your bloodstream a bit. But David
has such a unique lyrical style that whatever musical
direction it takes, it still ends up sounding like Cracker.
David uses what he calls the ‘unreliable narrator,’
creating a character and letting the character speak.
When you do that you use a lot of irony, which David’s
English cousin says is dangerous to do in America.
KB: I agree. A good portion of our population
tends to take things way to literally, which is really
annoying.
JH: Right. It isn’t necessarily that YOU’RE
a serial killer, it’s what the person in the song
is and this is what he or she would say. Not that people
don’t get it here or anything like that, otherwise
our shows would be empty. They get the sense of humor,
the tongue-n-cheek thing, which brings us to our audience.
Over the course of 18 years together, people ask us
the question, “Who are your fans?” You can’t
pinpoint that any more than you can pinpoint our music,
I’m happy to say. Now we have 19-year old MySpace
people, kids who are half our age, which is fantastic.
And we have college professors and people who are older
than us coming to see us. There’s a common bond
there; an appreciation for the kind of skewed sense
of humor that we have. They’ll sing along to certain
lines in songs, and it’s good to see that they’re
in on the joke, ya know?
The next chapter has to be a Johnny and Jim interview,
and we’ll be bringing that to you here in the
near future. Along with the Cracker show at Beavercreek
this Thursday, Jim Dalton is also playing this coming
Tuesday, December 4 at Walnut Room with Jeremy Lawton
and Ryan Bingham.
crackersoul.com
myspace.com/crackerhatesmyspace
myspace.com/johnnyhickman
-Kim Owens, November 29, 2007 |