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To hear the Goo Goo Dolls' original demo of "Iris," and to watch their video of how they wrote "Iris," please Click Here
John
Rzeznik Talks About The Goo Goo Dolls’ New Compilation Album, Olympics
Song, And Next Album
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| THE GOO GOO DOLLS (pictured l-r): Mike Malinin, John Rzeznik and Robby Takac |
By
Jonathan Widran
While
Goo Goo Dolls frontman/guitarist John Rzeznik and bassist Robby Takac start writing
and recording the follow-up to their hit 2006 album Let Love In, they’re
giving their fans worldwide plenty of new cuts to listen to. They released the
new track “Real” via iTunes to coincide with the start of the Beijing Olympics,
as part of the all-star AT&T Team USA Soundtrack, which is a compilation
benefiting the U.S. Olympic Team.
In
addition, on August 19, the group - which also includes drummer Mike Malinin – released
Greatest Hits Volume 2: B-sides and Rarities, their 12th
overall album and follow-up to last year’s Greatest Hits, Volume One: The
Singles. Among the rarities on the new collection is a demo version of
“Iris,” their twice-nominated breakthrough hit that spent a record 18 weeks at
#1 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart. Volume 2 also features a
brand new mix of Let Love In’s “We’ll Be Here (When You’re Gone)” and
their renditions of the Plimsouls’ “A Million Miles Away,” INXS’s “Don’t
Change,” Fleetwood Mac’s “I Don’t Wanna Know,” and a live take on Tom Petty’s
“American Girl.”
The
accompanying DVD tracks the Goo Goo Dolls’ expansive history of 23 music
videos, including those for “Iris” and their other hits “Name” (from their 1996
album A Boy Named Goo) and “Slide” (from 1998’s Dizzy Up The Girl).
The disc also has clips of their parade of Top 10 singles “Black Balloon,”
“Dizzy” and “Broadway” (from Dizzy Up The Girl), “Here is Gone” and
“Sympathy” (from 2000’s Gutterflower) and “Stay With You” and “Let Love
In.”
Though
the band played a few shows in the U.K. this summer, most notably the O2
Wireless Festival at London’s Hyde Park, they’ve been off the touring treadmill
since concluding their 18-month run after the release of Let Love In
that wrapped in September 2007. Until the Goos get back on the bus, fans can
enjoy six live tracks on the DVD from their sold-out show at Colorado’s Red
Rocks Amphitheatre in June 2007, including “Before It’s Too Late” (from the Transformers
movie soundtrack) and “Better Days,” the lead-off single from Let Love In.
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| THE GOO GOO DOLLS           (photo by Melanie Nissan) |
“The
idea behind the second compilation package was to give our fans a chance to
hear a lot of music they would otherwise not have a chance to enjoy,” says
Rzeznik. “Some of these songs got some radio play but many people didn’t get to
hear them, so we thought it would be fun to give them a second shot. We thought
it would be cool to share all of this to keep ourselves out there while we
start working on the next album. For the past few weeks, I’ve been listening to
a lot of music and collecting ideas, working at home in my garage in L.A. No matter how much success we’ve had, there’s always a lot of anxiety for me as the
time comes to get to work on a new project. I work a lot better when there are
deadlines…so if we don’t get them from Warner Bros., I create some arbitrary
ones myself. Without that, I have the tendency to write the same song over the
course of two or three years, and never finish. It’s much better to create a
point where you have to walk away.”
While
after many years on the road a lot of artists complain about the stress and
crazy lifestyle, Rzeznik enjoys how a tight schedule contributes to this
discipline. “When we’re on the road, I have to get up every morning and go to
work,” he says. “We’re working 12-15 hours a day on tour, running on fumes half
the time, but it’s good to know you’re getting paid at the end of the week. I
have a strong work ethic, and it’s hard to adjust when we’re back home, where
we’re just messing around with songs. It doesn’t feel like I’m doing anything.
I really have to discipline myself to take care of what I need to in the
morning and then get to work on songs in the afternoon. I sit in my garage and
formulate chunks of ideas. Then I take the melody lines I’ve been singing and
put music behind it, before getting together in the studio with Mike and Robby
and taking it to the next level.”
The
upcoming project will be the first that the Goo Goo Dolls will write and record
fully at their new Buffalo, NY-based state of the art facility, Inner Machine
Studios. It took a year to build and more months of sonic tweaking before he
and Takac - who now lives full-time in Buffalo - could open it officially early
in 2008. When they’re not using it, they rent it out to musician friends for
their projects. Rzeznik is happy to have a place to call home, so to speak, but
says that running a studio of this size and scope is something of a mixed
blessing.
“We
wanted to have a place where the clock wasn’t constantly running and we could
do things the way we wanted to do them,” he explains. “It seems like it took
forever to get it up and running creatively, but now everything works and we’re
excited about doing our new project there. Still, being a studio owner isn’t
something I’d recommend to anyone. There are just a lot of details you have to
get right before it can become a great creative sanctuary. It’s cool to have
the freedom to be there anytime we want, though, and it saves a lot of money
not having to go to major commercial places anymore.”
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| The CD cover of the Goo Goo Dolls' new compilation album, Greatest Hits Volume 2: B-sides and Rarities, on Warner Bros. Records. |
Recording
the Glen Ballard-produced Let Love In back home gave the Goo Goo Dolls a
certain peace of mind they’re hoping to feel this time around. Before starting
that album, Rzeznik says, “I wasn’t really feeling any kind of inspiration in Los Angeles. I was sitting here just beating my head against the wall trying to write
songs and I wasn’t feeling inspired at all.” He packed his recording gear and
guitars in a U-Haul truck and drove across country to Buffalo, where he hooked
up with Takac and Malinin and set up shop in a 100-year-old Masonic Ballroom.
It’s
no surprise that the band members find their creative juices flowing back
there. The group and its hometown fans share a mutual admiration that inspired
them to play a free gig for more than 60,000 fans. It rained on the outdoor
show, but everyone soldiered on; the show was so memorable that the band
captured it for posterity on The Goo Goo Dolls Live in Buffalo, July 4, 2004
CD/DVD release. “It was awesome,” Rzeznik says. “I remember being up there
playing and going, ‘Sometimes God just cuts you a break!”
The
veteran frontman then offers some interesting parting comments on the changing
music industry and just what it takes for young singer/songwriters to make it
these days: “When we were coming up, you could join a band, play gigs for 20
people in places all over the country and get picked up by a major label. Now
the internet is playing a bigger role in finding artists, there are more
artists being packaged by producers and a lot of celebrities from other fields
making records. But there are some advantages now. I tell kids to get themselves
a ProTools rig or M-Box, figure out how to work it, and make sure you write
good songs.
“That’s
really the key to everything,” he adds, “great songwriting. When we start out
we want to be someone else, but it’s important to let ourselves grow beyond
imitation and develop an original voice comprised of these other voices. I
listen to the radio these days and a lot of bands sound alike. Plus record
companies are changing so fast and you don’t know if they’ll be around in five
years. But instead of being discouraged, dig in deeper and get more out of
yourself and your band. Believe in what you believe and believe in yourself.
And unless you’re getting input from someone who has done more than you, don’t
put too much stock in your critics. The payoff is wonderful, being able to be
part of people’s lives in small ways, finding out that our music has meant a
lot to people and helped them through hard times. It’s easy for rock stars to
whine, but seriously we’re lucky we have such an amazing job. It’s got its
problems and weird things to deal with, but it sure beats getting up and going
to work in a factory every day.”
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 and Video
You can listen to the original demo of the Goo Goo Dolls' smash "Iris," by clicking one the links directly below:
You can watch a new video of the Goo Goo Dolls talking about how they wrote "Iris," by clicking the YouTube link below:
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