DMB: A New Beginning, a Return to the Past
By Team JamBase Jun 23, 2009 • 5:33 pm PDT

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This “adult life” of Lessard’s is one of the more intriguing in the annals of rock & roll. A boy, still of high school age, gets snagged up by a promising singer-songwriter to play in a band of equally promising musicians. In only a few years, that band makes it big – really big – and becomes for some concertgoers the only show they care to see for the entire summer.
But even after watching his band cultivate what has become arguably the most popular live show in the country, Lessard (now 34) on this particular summer afternoon speaks as if things are just getting started for the Dave Matthews Band. And in a way, he might be right. Only a few weeks earlier, the band released the long-awaited record, Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King, which happens to be the first disc the band will tour in support of without saxophonist LeRoi Moore, who died from injuries he incurred in an ATV accident last year. The disc was immediately seen by critics and anyone with a music blog as a sharp departure for the band, which it obviously is, and brought new DMB material back onto the radio waves for the first time in almost half a decade.
“We’ve been sort of lost in trying to find that original spark, but I can tell you, on stage it feels like we just became successful,” says Lessard. “There’s just sort of a giddiness I feel up on stage and I think a lot of it has to do with ‘Roi.”
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“It’s amazing when you think about it that this record contains LeRoi and that you hear him in the moment of these tunes, but then you hear us also on top of that dealing with the tragedy of his loss after the fact,” says Lessard. “So, he really is a ghost on this record, but he’s a very present ghost.”
And there is no more ghostly moment on Big Whiskey than the one minute and eleven seconds that begin the album. Called “Grux” – Moore’s nickname – this opening track is simply Moore’s saxophone and some subtle floor tom fills from Carter Beauford. It’s gorgeously haunting, as if Moore is playing in a theater, or in true DMB style, an amphitheater, and the listener is the only other one there to hear it. The song is slightly dark, but weirdly joyous at the same time. This is the first emergence of the ghost that Lessard says is present on the record, but hardly the last.
Big Whiskey was a long time coming, to say the least. The record was recorded on both coasts and a spot in between and spanned three different calendar years as sessions took place in Seattle and Virginia with the bulk of the recording laid down in New Orleans. In terms of production, it might not be a bad bet to put some cash on the assertion that this was the most ambitious (as well as divergent) recording to date by this band. And when they brought on producer Rob Cavallo, a guy more known for taking punk rock sound and making it arena-sized (as he did with Green Day) than molding the sort of complex rootsy numbers on which DMB has hung its hat for almost twenty years, they were probably feeling pretty damn ambitious.
Continue reading for more on the Dave Matthews Band…
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Expansive is a dead-on summation, but the core of the album is still quintessential DMB, even if a cut like “Time Bomb” could easily be misfiled as a Pearl Jam cut, given that Matthews’ voice gets as rough as we’ve ever heard. Matthews is still imploring the whimsical storytelling he’s included on each and every DMB record and several songs, including the first single from the album, “Funny the Way It Is,” are marked by the band’s penchant for creating poppy hooks out of the most complex arrangements. But what Lessard thinks sets this record apart from its predecessors is that he feels the DMB live emotion has finally made its way onto the album. This is something critics and fans alike have often found absent in DMB’s studio efforts.
“Rob was so great about bringing in what we do live and how we create songs in the moment. He was really good in taking that and transforming them into gems of songs and pretty much finding the songs within the jam,” says Lessard, adding that Cavallo recorded much of the material live in the studio.
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“I’m very proud of the process and I’m proud of the lyrics, I think Dave did a wonderful job digging deep,” says Lessard. “In a way, his lyrics are a little bit simpler on this record, but to me, they’re from a deeper place. Lyrically, this is one of his best works.”
In discussing Big Whiskey, Lessard can’t help but get comparative, laying it up against the band’s long list of well-received records. He is almost nostalgic when he talks about the first three Dave Matthews Band records, recalling how the band was “exploding with a sort of naïveté” when it laid down Under the Table and Dreaming, and continued to do so on the next two albums. He’s tentative to set this record up alongside these albums, but does so anyway… well, sort of.
“I have a hard time saying that this record is better than any of those, but at the same time, I feel that this record is, to date, probably most representative of who we are now,” says Lessard.
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“It’s a new beginning, but it’s also a return to the past.”
Losing a friend will do strange things to people, sometimes good, sometimes bad. From what Lessard says of DMB, it seems that although losing Moore was difficult, in a strange way there has been a new life, or at least a different life, breathed into the increasingly legendary act. The bassist says that he sees the Dave Matthews Band continuing on – playing the summer tours that have become almost religious tradition for its fans and cranking out challenging records – as long as everyone remains in good health. When he talks of the band’s upcoming European tour, where they will be playing to crowds far removed from the Church of Dave that’s present here in the states, Lessard does so with the optimism and eagerness of a fledgling bassist. If you didn’t know the guy, you’d think he was just cutting his teeth in the touring business by the way he welcomes the challenge of playing to new fans. Lessard gives Moore some thanks for this passion, which very well might be the glue that holds DMB together.
“You know, he taught me one thing and that was to play every single note like it was your last note and that’s something I take to the stage no matter what’s going on,” says Lessard. “The most important thing is that everyone loves playing on stage together, which to tell you the truth is kind of rare and after twenty some years we might have had some moments when we weren’t that excited to be on stage together, but those days seem to have moved on.”
Dave Matthews Band is currently on tour in Europe. They kick-off U.S. dates on July 18 at Alpine Valley Music Theatre in East Troy, WI. Complete DMB tour dates available here.
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