The Wellmont Theatre
Guster

Guster

Special guest Brett Dennen solo acoustic

Fri, November 25, 2011

Doors: 7:00 pm / Show: 8:00 pm

The Wellmont Theatre

Montclair, NJ

$35.00 Single Show ticket / $50.00 2-Day Pass

Guster
Guster
Guster Easy Wonderful

Pop quiz, no cheating: name a band that, fifteen years on, is operating at the absolute peak of its creative powers, making the most inspired, timeless music and playing to the largest audiences of its career? The answers don't come easily, but we have one: Guster.

Few would have predicted the evolution that Guster has undergone, but then, Adam Gardner, Ryan Miller, Brian Rosenworcel and Joe Pisapia have been quietly confounding expectations since Guster began recording 15 years ago. While critics scoffed that a “college band” with two acoustic guitars and some bongos could never amount to much, Guster steadily evolved into a group that creates smartly crafted guitar pop with ease. Many people might have dismissed them upon first impression years ago, but Guster is the rare artist that demands to be heard with new ears. And with their new album Easy Wonderful, the quartet has made a piece of art that rewards each listen. With the reflective opener “Architects and Engineers,” the pop gem “Do You Love Me,” the optimistic anthem “Bad Bad World,” the wall of sound production of “What You Call Love” and the haunting ballad “Stay With Me Jesus,” Guster have created the best album of their lives.

The four-year gap between their last album, 2006’s Ganging Up on the Sun, and Easy Wonderful was a bit longer than the quartet had anticipated. Miller admits, “I wish that it had taken two months instead of this long, but I feel like we did everything we had to do to make a great album.” Work commenced in 2008 -- which was a big personal year for Miller, Rosenworcel and Gardner, as they all became fathers for the first time. To accommodate their growing families, the band decided upon a different tack in songwriting. Miller says, “Rather than the way it was before where we would live together for four months, this time we would work for like a week or two, break for a couple weeks, work on stuff on our own and then come back. We worked really well that way.”

When Guster started thinking about going into the studio, they decided they wanted to work with an outside producer. Gardner explains, “We did the last record ourselves. But this time we thought, ‘We all now have kids, we’re all going to be fragmented, we’re all going to be coming in and out of this process, we need somebody who’s got their eye on the prize the whole time.’” After trying out a few different people, David Kahne (The Strokes, Paul McCartney) became the clear choice. Pisapia says Kahne impressed him with his ability to get inside their new material. “His notes on the songs were so astute and so attentive. He knew every part of every song and what was special about it. He spent a fair amount of time with us in rehearsal before we even went into the studio and he’d have very specific suggestions about certain parts – even how to play them.

The recording sessions were quick and efficient, but the group’s hands on style often clashed with Kahne’s producing methods. By the time Miller had finished his last vocals on the songs, Guster didn’t feel fully satisfied with the album. Gardner says they made the decision to take a break from the recording process. “We all retreated to our corners. We all had to step away from it to see what we needed to do to improve it.” During this break Miller started writing a couple of new songs by himself, but found he couldn’t recapture the spark which had made the band’s first group of songs so compelling. Miller credits a deep and soul-searching conversation with Rosenworcel in breaking his creative logjam. Miller says, “Brian and I had a conversation and it was like, ‘Right, we can do this.’ And I just kind of let go of everything. I just decided I was going to write music and I didn’t care what it was. And then the floodgates opened, like it never had before for me. It was really amazing.” In an explosion of creativity, Miller penned six songs in a couple of weeks. The band listened to Miller’s demos and were thoroughly reinvigorated by the new material.

Guster reconvened in Nashville at Pisapia’s brand new Middletree Studios, which the talented multi-instrumentalist built by hand with his fiancée. He says he wanted to make a comfortable place to work where “you could take a record from A to Z.” And his three bandmates agree that he succeeded in creating a work environment that brought Easy Wonderful to the next level. Gardner says, “Physically and emotionally Joe’s studio was so different, we’d been in this basement studio in New York City, cramped in this space with no windows that we jokingly called ‘The Dungeon.’ Joe’s place is totally the opposite--, this stunning open-concept studio that has a great vibe. We found ourselves hanging out there even if we weren’t recording. There was an immense feeling of freedom the moment we left New York and started recording in Nashville.”

The quartet quickly recorded Miller’s new compositions as well as tweaking a batch of songs they recorded with Kahne. The end result of the two recording sessions is what Pisapia calls “the classic Guster pop record. And that’s what I always thought we should do. We had our period where we’ve tried on a lot of different hats and different musical costumes, which is a lot of fun. But this record feels a lot more germane to who the band really is.”

Rosenworcel adds, “When I try to describe our album to people I’ve been saying, we really just honed in on trying to write 12 great pop songs. I think Easy Wonderful is more consistent than anything we’ve done.”

Gardner says that the process of creating Easy Wonderful has been a turning point for Guster. “I feel like we learned a lot and came out of it as stronger players, writers and record makers. We feel more energized about our music and playing together than ever. I think we’ve shot past where we’ve been and we’ve made a better record than we’ve ever made before.”


So how does an album end up being called Easy Wonderful? Miller says his family was driving through Brooklyn one day when his wife spotted a sign that said “Easy Wonderful Corporation.” Miller then told his bandmates about the sign in passing one day. “We had been talking about the album title and I told the guys my wife saw that sign. And Brian immediately said, ‘I like Easy Wonderful a lot.’ And I was like, ‘That wasn’t even a suggestion!’” Gardner feels the title is appropriate for the album he’s most proud of in Guster’s career. “It’s a really accurate description of what making the record at Joe’s was like. It was our best recording process ever. I think we’re in the best spot we’ve ever been as a band working together, and it shows on this album.”
Special guest Brett Dennen solo acoustic
Special guest Brett Dennen solo acoustic
“In many ways this is my first album,” Brett Dennen says of his fourth record, Loverboy, out April 12th,
2011. “On my previous albums I said what I needed to say. I evoked every different mood and sentiment
and emotion. Now I don’t really have anything to prove. I’ve been the new kid on the block and now that
phase is over. I get to start all over again, relax, and refocus.” He pauses and flashes a laidback grin. “And
what I’m focused on is having fun.”

Dennen’s wunderkind rise has been impressive. In 2004 Dennen released his self-titled debut, followed
quickly by his sophomore LP So Much More (2006,) which spent months on the Billboard Heatseeker
chart. The release drew the attention of John Mayer, for whom Dennen opened in 2006 and 2007. In 2008
the artist released his follow-up, Hope for the Hopeless, which debuted at #41 on the Billboard Top 200
and firmly established Dennen as a definitive new voice in modern songwriting. He’s worked with Femi
Kuti, Natalie Merchant, and Jason Mraz; he’s toured with Dave Matthews, Rodrigo y Gabriela, and The
John Butler Trio; and he’s played Bonarroo, Austin City Limits, Coachella, Outside Lands, and Newport
Folk Festival. He’s also become the go-to guy for some of the best and most artfully soundtracked
contemporary TV shows. His songs have appeared on Scrubs, Grey’s Anatomy, Parenthood, Brothers &
Sisters, and House among others.

Considering his bold-name collaborators, association with hot TV shows, and impressive early chart and
radio success, Brett Dennen could be living in the Hollywood hills, gallivanting around with starlets and
hanging out in hotel bars. Nope. The bohemian artist, whose major in college was Community Studies
for Social Change, lives with a roommate in Santa Monica and rides his bike to the grocery store. Dennen
has never been into the ephemeral thrills of the rock star life, he’s after something else: a real career,
and with the release of Loverboy, he’s ready to ascend to his rightful place as one his generation’s most
inspired, authentic, artists. “Neil Young, Paul Simon, Van Morrison, they’re artists, you know? True
artists,” he explains. “And even when they have ups and downs, which is inevitable over a long career,
they’re still playing with passion. They’re still chasing greatness. They’ve let their craft change over time.
Let it evolve. That’s what I want to do.”

Dennen first started playing guitar and mandolin to amuse the kids while working as a camp counselor.
Once Dennen got the feel for writing his own material, he couldn’t stop. “It was suddenly like, I kind of
need to do this,” he remembers.

Dennen spent the next few years touring, and it wasn’t until December of 2009 that he had a chance to
think about a fourth record. “I had two weeks off from the road, my housemate and I built a studio in our
living room and we made demo versions of a bunch of songs,” he remembers. “The plan was to crank this
album out in early 2010.

Turns out we didn’t end up recording until July of that year.” Dennen was frustrated. He likes to keep
things moving. But the break turned out to be the best thing possible for the record. “Sometimes when
you’re put against a wall you do your best work,” he muses. “While we were waiting to figure out what
we were doing with this album I kept writing new songs. One of them was “Sydney (I’ll Come Running,)”
one of them was “Comeback Kid” and one of them was “Only Rain.” And those are the tracks that will
really pull people in.”

He’s right. Several of the songs Dennen wrote last are the first ones you really hear on Loverboy. “Sydney
(I’ll Come Running)” is a defiant testimony to the endurance of deep love, set to intricate but forceful
guitar and mandolin arrangements and accented by choral call-and-response. “Only Rain” is a delicate,
moody meditation, the sonic equivalent of a pensive rainy day at the beach. And songs like opening
track “Surprise, Surprise” swing with an impressive, easy confidence. That self-assurance comes in part
from Dennen’s half-decade of experience and part from the fact that he’s finally solidified a relationship
with the right musicians. “If you want to have a forty-year career you’d better surround yourself with
people who will take a bullet for you and for whom you’d do the same,” Dennen says. “If you choke you
want to look around and see guys that you trust. You want guys you can fail with. And at the same time,
if you do something triumphant, you want to be able to look around and see people you really want to
share that with too.”

The extra time Dennen took making Loverboy also had another unforeseen benefit; instead of touring
around the world, Dennen was, for the first time in a while, really home in Los Angeles. With no bus to
climb on first thing in the morning, no soundcheck to worry about, he started reconnecting with his most
basic (and precious) feeling about music: joy. “People get this amazing opportunity to play music but after
a while they figure out their routine and they stop going out to see music live, they stop listening to the
radio, they stop exploring music,” he muses. “I go out and I see live music and I love it and I try to jam
with people or just get out and play in a bar somewhere, just to be out and be involved and be a part of
something.”

The chance to retrench and be a part of a local scene inspired Dennen’s overall vision of Loverboy as
one of those classic albums that becomes the soundtrack for our lives. “I want people to feel instantly
attached to a feeling or memory from the music,” he explains. “And ten years from now, they’ll put on
Loverboy and feel like, aww it reminds me of my childhood or of this person in my life.”

Brett Dennen has the right guys backing him up, the right vision for his future in mind, and the right
album to get him where he wants to go. “In college I took this one course in mountaineering,” he
remembers. “And the professor would always say you can’t start counting how many peaks you’ve
bagged until you’ve bagged ten peaks. At the time I was like ‘what the fuck is he talking about!?’ But now
I get it. I used to feel like I had to put everything into every album. Like it was a race. But now I realize
that’s not the point. In these last two years I’ve really been thinking, if this is what I want to do then I
have to do it in a way that keeps me healthy and happy. I need to take care of my body with nutrition and
exercise. I need to take time off, even if I don’t want to, and actually appreciate and enjoy it. And I want
to bring all of that balance to my fans. That’s what this record is really about. I want people to put on
Loverboy and feel good. I want to make people dance!”
Venue Information:
The Wellmont Theatre
5 Seymour Street
Montclair, NJ, 07042
http://www.wellmonttheatre.com/