 |
To hear Dan Wilson's new single "Cry," please Click Here
Dan Wilson (formerly of Semisonic) Releases Solo Album, Wins
Grammy Best Song With The Dixie Chicks
 |
| DAN WILSON |
By Jonathan Widran
The October 16
release of Dan Wilson’s long-awaited solo debut album Free Life (on the American Recordings label) caps a
busy and productive year for the veteran singer/songwriter. In February, the
longtime frontman for the popular alt-rock band Semisonic joined his co-writers
the Dixie Chicks in winning the coveted Grammy award for Song Of The Year. “Not
Ready To Make Nice,” an emotional, pointed response to the country music
industry’s shunning of the group after singer Natalie Maines’ controversial
comment about President Bush in 2003, also won Record Of The Year and Best
Country Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocal. The Dixie Chicks’ album, Taking
The Long Way, which featured a total of six co-writes by Wilson, also
received Album Of The Year honors.
Although
Wilson is enjoying new notoriety as both an artist and hit songwriter, his
multi-faceted career extends back some 20 years and includes a previous Grammy
nomination for Best Rock Song in 1999 for writing Semisonic’s hit “Closing
Time.” He joined his brother Matt’s band Trip Shakespeare in the mid-‘80s, and
the group released four albums before disbanding in the early ‘90s. In 1995,
Wilson and the bassist and drummer of that group formed the more melodically
accessible Semisonic. That band broke through to major commercial success on
MCA with 1998’s platinum album Feeling Strangely Fine, which featured
the hit singles “Closing Time,” “Singing In My Sleep” and “Secret Smile.”
Despite
this success, MCA Records dropped Semisonic after their 2001 album All About
Chemistry, putting the band on what has officially become a long-term
hiatus. Wilson then began focusing his energies on recording his solo project
and began writing and producing for other artists. He has produced albums for
Mike Doughty, Epic Hero, The New Standards and Storyville and has written songs
with Jewel, Jason Mraz and Rachael Yamagata. Wilson hooked up with the Dixie
Chicks via Rick Rubin, who produced Taking The Long Way and is the
executive producer of Wilson’s Free Life album.
 |
| Dan Wilson |
“Rick
played [the Dixie Chicks] a few tracks from my album in progress,” Wilson says,
“and they really liked ‘Sugar’ and ‘All Kinds’ in particular. This led to them
discussing the idea of responding to Rick’s suggestion that the four of us
write together. I was excited about the idea and hoping they’d be amenable to
the way I work. Most writers come to the sessions with most of a song written
and then the team fleshes it out together. I’m all about shooting the breeze
with them first and coming up with ideas from scratch that may lead to
something significant later. When I work with other artists and writers, I try
to get myself into the mindset of absorbing who they are and where they’re at,
trying to find something in their speech or storytelling that they might not
even be aware could form the basis of a great song. I’ve got a lot of energy
but for the most part I’m low key and mellow, and I try to make the artists
feel comfortable around me.”
Wilson says
that the first session with Maines, Emily Robison and Martie Maguire went very
well and by the end of the day, they had quite a bit of their first song, ‘It’s
So Hard,’ started. During some of their casual conversations, he was impressed
with the way they were discussing their so-called political misfortunes. In
addition to being completely ostracized by Nashville and the country fans that
made them stars after Maines made anti-Bush comment at the start of the Iraq
War, they also received tons of hate mail and even a death threat. Wilson liked
the fact that despite all this, the Chicks were optimistic and united in their
desire to forge ahead.
“I
suggested we write a song that would express their unity and address the reality
of our country being so politically divided,” Wilson says. “They liked my idea
for ‘Undivided,’ but then Natalie asked if that meant they had to forgive the
people who treated them badly. I said, well, maybe for the sake of the song.
Natalie waved her hand and said nope, and that got me thinking. I woke up the
next morning and had the idea of ‘Not Ready To Make Nice’ in my head. It was
clear they wanted to go in the direction of being defiant, not backing down
just yet and standing their ground. We got together and started tag-teaming. We
brainstormed together, then went off and came up with some ideas individually.
Sometimes we were talkative and sometimes quietly contemplating. Then Martie
had to leave for a time and Natalie and I wrote the bridge that accelerates the
song together.
“We were all involved equally and I felt like we
really accomplished what we set out to do,” he adds. “They needed a song to
address the controversy head on. We could have hinted around and been subtle
but at some point they had to address the elephant in the room. I liked the
song but had no idea at the time what it was going to achieve. In fact, I was
kind of nervous that we might be waving the wrong flag. But their manager said
we’d probably win a Grammy for it, and he was right!”
 |
| The CD cover of Dan Wilson's new album, Free Life, on the American Recordings label. |
Wilson, who
made a strong comeback from lung surgery for a life threatening condition in
2005, has similarly positive feelings about Free Life, which marks the
next chapter in his diverse career. The album features contributions from,
among others, Sheryl Crow, who provides the harmony vocal on “Sugar”; Sean
Watkins (Nickel Creek), who plays the finger picked acoustic guitar on the
title track; and Gary Louris (the Jayhawks), who contributes a guitar solo on
“Cry.”
While he was writing the songs for
what would become Free Life, Wilson was living in a house built in 1903, and the
place served both as a subtle influence on the writing and a perfect setting
for the recording. “The best thing about my album, in my opinion, is the
incredibly intimate feeling it evokes,” he says. “These songs sound like they
already existed, but at the same time, they project the feeling that they’re
about somebody’s life. I found a few books of sheet music from that
era at antique stores and spent lots of time singing the songs at the piano:
chords and melodies the house probably hadn’t heard for a hundred years,” he
says. “‘Sugar’ and ‘Honey Please’ both seem to have that spirit, as though they
were written by the house as much as by me. When the batch became big enough, I
hatched a plan to borrow a recording studio and set it up in the living room
and ballroom of the place.”
Rick Rubin
signed Wilson to his American label based on the tracks Wilson completed at his
home base in Minneapolis. He offered to either release the tracks as they were
or work on some of them and make them even better - an offer which appealed to
Wilson, who felt he could benefit from the legendary pop/rock producer’s
expertise. “Rick was very hands-off on songs like ‘Sugar’ and ‘All Kinds,’ and
he made only a few simple suggestions for improvement. Other songs like ‘Cry,’
however, are very different from what I first recorded. But I felt I had a very
specific gap in my knowledge about recording, particularly when it came to
overdubs, and he instinctively knew how to get a great vibe and performance out
of me, as he’s done with so many others. What’s great about Rick is that he
comes at this as a great music lover with the point of view of appreciating and
loving the artist.
“I called
the album Free Life, Wilson adds, “because I was trying to live a very
free artistic life while making it, with no rules or structure going in or any
expectations as to what it would sound like. I preferred the idea of being
open-ended and open to everything, which is exciting but also scary. Listening
to it now, I’m really proud of the way these songs represent me, and it’s a
dream come true to have the opportunity to launch my solo career in the same
year so many other wonderful things have happened.”
Jonathan Widran is a free-lance music/entertainment
journalist who contributes regularly to Music Connection, Jazziz and All Music
Guide. He can be reached at Few522@aol.com.
Special Feature: Streaming Audio
You can listen to Dan Wilson's new single "Cry," by clicking one the links directly below:
Return to Table Of Contents
Return to Top Of Page
|
 |