Kowalczyk says he came up with the cryptic album title because "it
just kinda had a zen quality that I liked. I just kind of threw
some words together and said, 'I like that,'" he says. "And then it
started to take on its own life 'cause I started to kind of put it
into context, put this record into our career, where we've been and
where we are now.
"There's all sorts of stuff I wanna say generally about love and
positivity and do it in an intense way," he adds. "And that's
likening itself more back to our first album [1991's Mental
Jewelry], which was very positive, sort of like, 'let's
question everything. Let's burn it all down. Let's figure out what
the hell is going on.' There is more of that energy [on the new
album] but we're better songwriters. We're veteran road dudes. We
play effortlessly. Back then it was much harder." The Distance
to Here will be the band's first release since Secret
Samadhi, released nearly two and a half years ago.
The York, Penn., vets let some of their skills rub off on new
arrivals Michael Railton (Rusted Root, General Public) and Ed's
brother Adam, who contribute organ and guitar, respectively, to the
new album. "He plays just like me, it's weird," says Ed, regarding
his brother, who, with Railton, will join the band on tour,
allowing Ed to roam free on stage.
Kowalczyk says the sound on the new album is "simple but grand."
"[Producer] Jerry Harrison's and my goal was to showcase the four
players stronger than ever and then add things that were simple and
organic but also did exactly what they needed to do," he says. For
Distance the group wrote fifty songs but only recorded
twenty.
Lyrically, Kowalczyk says, "I really wanted a record that harkens
back to the roots of rock & roll. I pulled a lot of influences,
more than ever, from the late Sixties 'cause I really feel like
this time -- even though we don't have Vietnam like they had to
rally around -- we do have psychological warfare in this country
and a sort of existential pain that could use a great rock record
to rally around and a band like Live to shove some love in
everyone's face and keep questioning things."
The Distance to Here's first single, "The Dolphin's Cry,"
will go to radio in late August or early September.
BLAIR R. FISCHER
(June 2, 1999)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.