|













|
 |
 |
Click
above images for high-res download
Photo credit: Jeanne Shaw
|
SHAW/BLADES
Press
Release, October 12, 2007
Press
Release, March 28, 2007
Press
Release, February 5, 2007
Press
Release, January 4, 2007
Press
Release, October 31, 2006
(Biography)
Truly brilliant songs become classics not because they’re
timepieces, but because they’re timeless, a characteristic
that rings true through every track Tommy Shaw and Jack Blades pay
homage to on INFLUENCE.
The sophomore release
from Shaw / Blades, INFLUENCE is the duo’s first album
since their recently re-released 1995 debut, HALLUCINATION.
Like the debut – and unlike their history-carving decades
as icons in the more hard-rock minded Styx, Night Ranger and Damn
Yankees – the latest release is rooted in acoustic guitar
and organic production, harvesting a decade of musical influences
into 11 tracks. From the Mamas and the Papas’ 1963 classic
“California Dreamin’,” to Orleans’ 1975
breakthrough “Dance with Me,” INFLUENCE offers
a track-by-track chronology of the musical era that helped define
modern rock.
“You can always
tell a brilliant song, whether it was written 30 years ago or yesterday,”
says Blades, who’s the bassist in Night Ranger and Damn Yankees,
but along with Shaw played all the music on the album except for
drums and the occasional keyboards. “Every song we picked
is identifiable in its own right, and they’re all immediately
recognizable. What does that tell you? That the songs are the stars.
That’s what we wanted to do on this record, we wanted the
songs to be the stars. I think that’s what we accomplished.”
Whether the songs are
delivered in faithful tribute, as is the case with Simon & Garfunkel’s
epic masterpiece “Sounds of Silence,” or given a modern
rock transfusion, as in the duo’s 1966 folk anthem “I
Am a Rock,” the results are the same, sparkling like a beacon
illuminating the mainstream roots of rock and roll’s formative
years. “I cringe at the thought of Paul Simon hearing our
stuff,” laughs Blades, only half-jokingly. “I honor
his spirit so much, and I’m such a huge fan. As far as I’m
concerned, they invented the word genius to go along with him, and
we just wanted to make sure that we did their songs justice. Tommy
and I have that special symbiotic relationship that doesn’t
come along a lot. Simon & Garfunkel also had it, we have a reverence
to it, and it was something that we just wanted to dig into.”
“As writers, we’re
like two old friends who finish each other’s sentences,”
adds Shaw. “We became best friends as a result of the music
and the experiences we’ve had because of it.” But INFLUENCE
isn’t about the experiences of Shaw Blades, it’s about
the inspiration that helped create the experiences. “This
album has been years in the making,” continues the Styx/Damn
Yankees guitarist. “The recording process didn’t take
years, but the concept had been looming in our conversations for
a long time. We’d always sit around with a couple of guitars
and play songs we both knew from or younger days, spontaneous harmonizing
and all that, and we slowly eased into the idea of making this record.”
One of the most prolific
duos in the history of hard rock, Shaw and Blades have sold more
than 50 million albums amongst their three bands, scored 12 Top
10 singles on the Billboard “Hot 100” chart, debuted
16 albums in the Billboard “Top 200” albums chart, and
share joint songwriting credits for the likes of Ozzy Osbourne,
Aerosmith, Cher and Alice Cooper. Even so, INFLUENCE offered
the pair an invigorating musical freedom. “With Shaw / Blades,
we’re able to take liberties that our respective bands couldn’t
do,” offers Blades. “We need to be Styx-sounding, we
need to fit in that Night Ranger world, and we even need to think
about Damn Yankees, so that’s what’s fun about Shaw
/ Blades -- we get to be our alter-egos when we want to be, yet
we can truly be ourselves. We grew up singing harmonies and songs
with massive vocals, so it’s a wonderful thing to have that
freedom here. This was a complete labor of love.”
Just as remarkable as
the timeless translations of the music, is the transcendent eeriness
of the lyrics, as many of the folk-inspired epics from the peace-and
love-filled late ‘60s make a seamless translation to the new
millennium. Consider the Stephen Stills-penned, Buffalo Springfield
protest anthem “For What It’s Worth,” rooted in
the anti-war sentiments of 1967, ringing just as true nearly 40
years later. The Zombies’ “Time of the Season”
may have been a better thematic fit at the original Woodstock than
amidst the festival’s anniversary line-up, but in stripping
down the progressive stylings that marked the Yes nugget “Your
Move,” the resulting chants of “All we are saying is,
give peace a chance” echo in the chambers of new world politics.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s “Lucky Man” is nothing
short of bone-chilling.
The tracks that constitute
INFLUENCE are more than just the creative core of Shaw Blades,
they speak to the cultural core of America. Like the artists that
pay them tribute, they are timeless.
www.shawblades.com
—Paul Gargano,
08/06
###
[back
to top] |