Off the Backburner
By Mark Jordan
MAY 11, 1998:
It was a relatively lazy day in the life of a rock star.
Robin Wilson, the former lead singer for the power-pop quintet
the Gin Blossoms, was in town last week with members of his new
band, Pharoahs, to mix their debut album at Ardent Studios with
John Hampton, the famed local producer who guided the Blossoms
through their two multi-platinum full-length efforts New Miserable
Experience and Congratulations
Im Sorry. But while Hampton
was ensconced in Studio A fiddling with the knobs and computers,
the bands guitarist was playing Super Mario World in another
room. Wilson took time out to talk to journalists. And even Hi,
Wilsons mixed-breed dog named after the Nicholas Cage character
in Raising Arizona, seemed thoroughly bored by the whole thing.
Mixing is mostly Johns work, Wilson says. He works while I
go and play Playstation for a few hours, and then he calls me
back in to play me something and I nod my head one way or the
other.
Wilsons remark seems flippant, but in reality he is doing everything
he can to make every aspect of this project just right from
worrying over the slightest background noises to consulting on
the cover art, in this case commissioned from noted comic-book
artist Geoff Darrow. The obsession with detail is understandable;
after all, the album, tentatively and appropriately titled From
Beyond The Backburner and scheduled for release later this summer,
is the fruition of a 10-year dream for Wilson and bandmates G.
Brian Scott and Dan Henzerling.
Dan and Brian and I used to work at Tower Records in Tempe [Arizona],
and we always talked about putting a band together, says Wilson.
We finally got to the point where we said weve got to do it
now, while were in our prime.
Unfortunately, the price of realizing that dream was the band
that made it possible. Actually, anyone acquainted with the groups
history could have anticipated the Gin Blossoms disintegration
almost from the start of their short ride on the charts. In 1993,
guitarist/songwriter/co-founder Doug Hopkins, the author of such
early Blossoms hits as Hey Jealousy and Found About You who
had been fired from the band two years earlier killed himself
as his just as his former band was achieving chart success.
With new guitarist Scott Johnson on board, the Gin Blossoms chugged
along, producing the hits Till I Hear It From You from the Empire
Records soundtrack and Follow You Down from Congratulations
Im Sorry. But by 1995, when Congratulations dropped from the
charts after only a few months, personal tensions were driving
the band apart, and Wilson was already planning to go his own
way.
I loved being in the Gin Blossoms; it just got to a point where
it was a little stale, Wilson says, emphasizing that the split
was amicable. Were all like Siamese twins whove been separated.
We still feel that connection.
You dont spend 10 years with
a bunch of guys and not have some strong bonds that are going
to last. In some way nothing any of us ever do will ever equal
the Gin Blossoms. We shared a lot of milestones together the
first time we heard a song of ours on the radio, the first time
we saw ourselves on MTV.
Guitarists Jesse Valenzuela and Scott Johnson have gone on to
form a new band, Lo-Watts. And bassist Bill Leen has retired from
music and is living in Mason, Arizona.
Drummer Philip Rhodes, meanwhile, has joined Wilson in Pharaohs.
Not the Pharoahs. Just Pharoahs. And its misspelled on purpose,
Wilson says, explaining that the new band took its name from a
mock gang he and a group of friends formed years ago in Tempe.
The first two guys to go to Hollywood and get drunk and get a
tattoo misspelled it. Hence all other members who get a tattoo
have to misspell it.
Listening to the unmixed tracks for Pharoahs debut, one can detect
a similarity to the Gin Blossoms in, obviously, Rhodes drumming
and Wilsons soaring tenor, probably one of the most distinctive
(and good) voices on the radio today. But Pharoahs is a considerably
heavier band, with the guitars cranked up more Badfinger or
the Smithereens than Tom Petty or the Eagles, two bands the Gin
Blossoms were often compared to.
Its a little different, Wilson says. Some Gin Blossoms fans
are going to think its radically different. Some people are going
to think it sounds the same just because its my voice.
These
songs are more aggressive than the Gin Blossoms. Maybe theyre
more new-wave. I hope theyre more new-wave.
That description works for songs like Now The Change and In
Between Two Worlds, but at least one track on From Beyond The
Backburner seems positively metal. Stinkin Up The Charts sounds
like the Gin Blossoms backing Randy Rhodes of Ozzy Osbourne fame.
Now, Dans going to be some kind of guitar god.
Actually, [that
song] is an attempt to get as close to Cheap Trick as possible,
Wilson says, citing the band with the other famous rocking Robin.
The basic tracks for From Beyond The Backburner were recorded
at Wilson and Rhodes Tempe studio, Mayberry, which the pair inherited
when the Gin Blossoms went their separate ways. (Its the grooviest
little clubhouse a guy can have, Wilson says. John helped us
build it ourselves.
Im so proud of it.) But when it came time
to mix the record, Wilson says he had to come back to Memphis.
John is our mentor and good friend, Wilson says. And right
down to Dan the custodian, everybodys been great.
You know,
when you record in Memphis theres just such a great vibe with
the people and the barbecue and everything. When you record in Memphis,
you know youre part of a rich tradition.
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