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Gavin DeGraw
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Chariot,
Gavin DeGraw's J Records
debut, introduces the world to a vital, magnetic young artist
whose abundant talent and charisma are already well known to
New York clubgoers. The 11-song collection is a remarkably
accomplished and compelling first effort, offering the same
combination of raw emotion and eloquent songcraft that
originally drew hometown fans to the 26-year-old
singer/songwriter/pianist/guitarist's live shows. |
In
a remarkably short time, DeGraw's effortlessly intimate,
emotionally intense live performances have made him the toast of
Manhattan's downtown music scene, building public anticipation for
the release of his first studio album.
Chariot
doesn't disappoint. On such emotionally forthright, melodically
arresting originals as Just Friends, Crush and
Follow Through, DeGraw writes lyrics that muse on life and
love with a hard-won insight that belies his age. And he sings
his songs in a gently raspy, effortlessly emotive voice that
carries a level of emotional depth that's remarkable for one so
young, conveying the elation of love and the pain of heartbreak
with equal assurance.
Gavin
DeGraw has maintained a close and abiding relationship with music for
most of his life. Growing up in a musical family in the Catskill
Mountains region of upstate New York, he was raised to regard music as
part of the fabric of everyday life rather than a remote show-business
ideal. He began singing and playing piano at the age of eight; as a
teenager, he experienced a personal epiphany when he discovered Ray
Charles and Sam Cooke, whose combination of personal charm and emotional
commitment struck a chord in the budding musician.
In his
teens, Gavin played in cover bands with his older brother Joey, and it
was at his brother's urging that he first attempted writing his own
songs. Gavin attended Ithaca College on a music scholarship, but found
himself spending more time in his dorm room writing songs than attending
classes, and dropped out after one semester. He then moved to Boston,
where he attended the prestigious Berklee College of Music while singing
in a rock band and playing solo gigs on the side. Still feeling
restricted by the regimentation of institutional education, he left
Berklee after a year and returned home, where he worked various manual
jobs while hatching plans to follow his muse to New York City.
After
relocating to Manhattan in March 1998, Gavin almost immediately began
making substantial career inroads, gradually and organically laying the
groundwork for a musical career. "I kept having small successes," he
recalls, "just things like applause from small audiences, or people
saying they'd heard about me. Those tiny bits of recognition were fuel
for me to continue, and made me feel like I was on the right track."
Within a
few months of his arrival, Gavin faked his way into an open-mic night at
Wilson's, the noted Upper West Side ballroom, and wowed the audience to
such a degree that the club's owner, Debbie Wilson, signed on as his
manager the following day. Almost immediately, word of the talented
newcomer began to spread through New York's music community, and the
quality of his performances lived up to the buzz. Alternating between
playing solo at the piano and playing guitar in front of a rocking band,
DeGraw augmented his impressive originals with impassioned covers of
classic tunes like Sam Cooke's A Change Is Gonna Come, Marvin
Gaye's Let's Get It On and Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah.
"When I
first heard Gavin perform, after the first song which was More Than
Anyone, I turned to Debbie (his manager) and said I need to sign
this guy right now, “ says Randy Sabiston, Senior Director of A&R at
Warner Chappell. "Gavin is a truly special songwriter and as a publisher
I didn't need to mull it over in my head, it was instant, a no brainer."
Early
on, Gavin was offered a deal by a major label. Rather than succumb to
the obvious temptation, he chose to decline the offer and continue his
development as a songwriter and performer, while paying the rent by
working as a waiter and newsstand clerk. His reputation—and his
audience—continued to grow, and he augmented his club shows with
higher-profile appearances at larger venues like Irving Plaza (where he
opened a special Valentine's Day show for Jonatha Brooke).He eventually
signed a major publishing deal with industry giant Warner/Chappell, and
released a homespun six-song indie CD, Gavin Live, recorded on
stage at his frequent haunt Wilson's.
In the
spring of 2002, following a sold-out showcase at New York's Joe's Pub,
Gavin signed signed with J Records and began work on Chariot with
producer Mark Endert, whose extensive resume includes work with the
likes of Fiona Apple, Tonic and Ours. Recorded far from DeGraw's East
Village stomping grounds at Los Angeles' legendary Sunset Sound studio,
the album finds Gavin fronting a solid, inventive studio band consisting
of guitarist Michael Ward (Wallflowers, John Hiatt), drummer Joey
Waronker (Beck, R.E.M.) and longtime DeGraw cohort Alvin Moody on bass.
Chariot's depth and focus
attest to Gavin's clear vision of his identity as an artist. "I wanted
to create something that was timeless rather than fashionable," he
explains. "I was really concerned with developing a sound that wasn't
disposable. I didn't want to have too much glitter on me."
The
adjustment from the immediacy of the live stage to the discipline of the
recording studio was an educational process that gave DeGraw new insight
into of his own work. "It definitely made me think about making records
differently," he says. "At first I felt out of my element, because you
have to learn the language and the science of making a record. It's a
real process to get to the point where it doesn't sound like it's a
process. We really worked at making it breathe."
Looking
past the buzz that's currently swirling around him, the level-headed
artist is keeping his eye squarely on the big picture.
"I'm not
that interested in being liked for the wrong reasons," he states. "I'm
more concerned with just getting something positive out there. And
hopefully people will recognize that it's honest and respond to that,
rather than feeling like it's something they've been told is supposed to
be cool. I'd rather be judged by how it makes people feel when they
hear it. Writing and playing songs and making a connection with
people—those things make a lot more sense to me than trying to be the
Next Big Thing."
~Courtesy of J Records
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