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Jimmy Chamberlin has seen it all. As drummer for
both Smashing Pumpkins and Zwan, there were few places he hadn’t traveled,
magazines he hadn’t been in, and stadiums he hadn’t filled. After being
part of not one, but two great bands, Jimmy Chamberlin was ready to do something
all for himself. Throughout his decade with the Pumpkins, thoughts of a
solo career drifted in and out of Jimmy’s daydreams. Although he may have
occasionally mentioned the idea to his band mates, part of him never actually
believed that those dreams would turn to reality—at least not as quickly
as his solo bow has evolved from casual conversation to finished product.
Through 10 long days in the summer of 2004, he morphed his dream into 11
cinematic, sometimes dark and jaggededged songs composing Life Begins Again,
the debut effort from Jimmy Chamberlin Complex.
With the floodgates open, Chamberlin’s life, at least
professionally and creatively, quite literally began anew. His new label
gave him the one thing that Life Begins Again is all about – freedom, the
freedom to harness musical inspiration as it hits, and preventing it from
being diluted by bottom-line concerns. With that freedom, Chamberlin and
a cast of trusted friends and peers, bounded into an L.A. studio and cranked
out his first solo statement in record pace.
“I’m amazed that we did it. There was a lot of internal
laughing going on while we were making it, just because we were thrilled
at the progress we were making and we were actually pulling it off,” Chamberlin
says.
Ranging from the sweet and lush (the ethereal “Loki
Cat”) to the moody and mean (“Cranes of Prey”), Life Begins Again is the
brainchild of both Chamberlin and friend, colleague and multi-instrumentalist
Billy Mohler, an L.A.-based songwriter who has worked with everyone from
Macy Gray to Fred Durst. The two first met when Mohler, who sings lead on
“Newerwaves,” auditioned for Zwan. While he wasn’t hired for the gig, Mohler
and Chamberlin became quick friends. It was him who Chamberlin called first
after securing a record deal.
The two proved perfect collaborators: “It was kind
of like, ‘Oh, I got this riff,’ or ‘Oh, I got this idea,’ and we would kind
of talk through the parts and write the songs together,” Chamberlin notes.
“His strength melodically kind of tied into my strength as far as “tunesmithery.”
He’s a good part writer, and I’m a good song assembler. So I think in that
respect our relationship really complements each other.”
The two built the disc’s rhythm tracks first. “Once
the bass and drums were done, you could kind of hear the songs finished,”
Chamberlin notes. “It was just a matter of waiting for God to drop the guitar
player or piano player in your lap.” That heaven-sent duo wound up being
Sean Woolstenhulme and Adam Benjamin, respectively. The latter came in at
the 11th hour, lathering the trademark Rhodes organ sound over several Chamberlin
and Mohler creations. Woolstenhulme’s participation, meanwhile, was sort
of a last-minute addition, as well: “Originally, I didn’t want any guitar
on the record,” Chamberlin says. “I just sort of wanted all this distorted
Fender Rhodes all over it. And when Sean came in, he immediately started
playing me stuff that sounded exactly like distorted Fender Rhodes. I thought,
“This is exactly what I want—it sounds nothing like guitar.’”
The varying influences drifting in and out of Life
Begins Again are rooted in a childhood spent being virtually bombarded by
music. Growing up in Joliet, Illinois, an old steel town on Chicago’s
Southside, Chamberlin was weaned on both the Duke Ellington and Count Basie
swing records favored by his father (a clarinet player), as
well as the classic rock beloved by his siblings (one of which was a drummer):
Steely Dan, Rickie Lee Jones, Hendrix, John Mayall, Alvin Lee, Led Zeppelin.
With a musical style landing somewhere between
Gene Krupa and Mitch Mitchell, Chamberlin would alter the alt-rock landscape
as a member of the massively successful Smashing Pumpkins, who he linked
up with through mutual friends/acquaintances. While the last to join the
band, his musical relationship with Billy Corgan would outlast the band
itself, as the two would go on to co-found Zwan, their first post-Pumpkins
project in 2001.
“For me, everything is cyclical,” Chamberlin
says. “If you look at nature, the universe, everything is in circles.
In any person’s life, they can kind of point to where it starts again.
I think Life Begins Again is just the start of another cycle for me musically.”
All of the lyrics on Life Begins Again were written
by Chamberlin (with the exception of “Lullabye” written by Mohler
and Becca Popkin), who makes his debut as a lyricist. While Mohler sings
“Newerwaves,” ex-Catherine Wheel front man Rob Dickinson is
the voice behind the title track and “Love Is Real,” while Rock
n’ Roll Hall of Famer Bill Medley (one-half of the Righteous Brothers)
takes the mic on “Lullabye.” Corgan teams up with Chamberlin
for “Loki Cat.” Chamberlin says, “I played the CD for
Billy and when he heard that song, he immediately asked if I had lyrics.
I told him, ‘No, the song is an instrumental.’ He said,”
I would love to sing on that song! Write me some lyrics and a melody.”
So after a couple of attempts at lyrics, I hit on something we both liked.”
The chemistry and love between these two friends makes for one of the strongest
tracks on the record.
The album’s lyrical concept, Chamberlin says,
is freedom of the spirit: “I think that love and spirituality - and
this cosmic vibration that runs through everybody - is a real thing. For
me, music is a testament that if you acknowledge the vibrations going on
around you, it’s possible to reproduce that in to an art form. To
me, this CD is an acknowledgement of the natural vibrations running through
me. It was just a period of my life where I was able to channel those into
music because I was given the freedom to do so.”
“The song “Love Is Real” has
a lyric that goes, ‘I walked outside tonight with the stars as my
guide, knowing where to go/ it’s my heart that tells me so.’
To me, that line sums up the whole record right there. It was more of a
heartfelt musical adventure than it was a thought-out process. This whole
project was based on intuition and not over thinking anything, just knowing
that when something comes to you, it’s in its most natural form, and
that’s how it needs to be translated musically…. When something
comes to you, use that power to make it great.”
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