![]() ![]() |
I don't have it all figured out," says 21-year-old Lifehouse
singer-guitarist-songwriter Jason Wade. "You learn so many things every day, and
it's overwhelming sometimes trying to see how it all fits together. I'm starting
to realize that each day is a different road and a different journey, and you
don't have to have it all figured out; you don't have to have all the answers to
everything right now."
One of the things Jason hasn't figured out is how
Lifehouse - which also includes bassist Sergio Andrade and drummer Rick
Woolstenhulme - went from playing a few college shows to sharing the road with
Pearl Jam, Fuel, Everclear and Matchbox Twenty and touring all over North
American and Europe.
Perhaps even more incomprehensible is how this once
obscure Los Angles band scored a #1hit on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart,
with first radio cut "Hanging By A Moment," only 10 weeks after the release of
their debut album, the now-double-platinum No Name Face (issued Oct. 31, 2000,
on DreamWorks Records).
Jason, Sergio and Rick were equally incredulous
when the song soared to the #2 spot of the Hot 100 and the Top 10 of the
Mainstream Rock Tracks list, sending No Name Face to #6 on the Billboard 200
album chart. The "Hanging By A Moment" video, meanwhile, earned a place on MTV's
"Total Request Live" and was #1-most-played on VH1 for six straight
weeks.
"Sick Cycle Carousel," the follow-up to "Hanging By A Moment,"
quickly leapt onto Modern Rock charts when it was introduced to radio. The clip
for that track - which Jason calls "part Tim Burton fantasyland, part reality" -
was overseen by acclaimed director Marcos Siega (Blink 182, Papa Roach, Weezer).
The band performed "Sick Cycle Carousel" on "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno," as
they had "Hanging By A Moment." Audiences attending a taping of "The Late Late
Show With Craig Kilborn" had also been treated to a live version of
"Moment."
The members of Lifehouse have even read about themselves in a
Rolling Stone feature (June 7, 2001), and the Boston Globe's Steve Morse called
No Name Face "a stunning debut for a band just out of their teens," describing
it as "a collection of disarmingly open, innocent, questing, melodic rock songs
filled with internal dramas and alternative edges" (March 9, 2001).
Other
print outlets chimed in as well. Remarked Seventeen, "Lifehouse infuses
adrenaline-fueled anthems with life-affirming mantras" (January 2001). The
Philadelphia Daily News opined, "Of this season's young rockers crop, Lifehouse
jumps from the crowd with No Name Face" (Dec. 1, 2000). Billboard commented:
"The potent, guitar-based 'Hanging By A Moment' stakes out a spot on the same
ground as bands like Creed and Pearl Jam, possessing commercial accessibility
without shedding the meaty musical substance that weeds out the poseurs from the
real thing" (Nov. 18, 2000).
"It's all been unbelievable," Jason says of
the band's rapidly accumulating success. "We didn't expect any of this, but
we're so grateful to have so many people hearing our songs. I really can't
explain how it's happened."
In fact, the trio's frontman is hard-pressed
to explain most of the unexpected twists his life has taken. His early years in
Camarillo, Calif., for instance, would suggest an all-American boyhood, but then
his family began touring the Far East, visiting Japan, Thailand and Singapore
before moving to Hong Kong. Moreover, he confesses to having little interest in
music until his parents split up and the songs just started pouring out of
him.
"This record deals a lot with self-discovery and breaking out of
whatever your parents or your boss or whoever thinks you should be, says Jason
of No Name Face. "It's about trying to find out for yourself who you're supposed
to be - your purpose, your destiny in the world."
Reluctant to discuss
his lyrics in detail, Jason feels they are infinitely open to interpretation.
"That's the great thing about a song - a lyric may mean something totally
different for someone else than it does for me and still be just as valid," he
insists. A case in point is album closer "Everything": "We've been playing it on
tour and when kids come up after the show, it seems like they always tell us how
much they love that song. They don't really know what it's about, but they hear
something in it that connects to them personally. That's why you don't have to
tell the whole picture in the lyrics; you give a road to start on that people
can relate to."
Jason understands firsthand how bleak life can seem
without something or someone to relate to. "When I was a kid and we lived in
Hong Kong, we lived in a small village and the people there hated us," he says.
"They thought we were witches bringing trouble to their neighborhood. They lit
firecrackers at our door every morning, and they actually stole our cat, cooked
it and ate it! I was totally scared and freaked out and I didn't have any
friends."
After four difficult years, Jason's family moved back to the
U.S., to Portland, Ore. Asked why, he ventures: "My parents had a lot of issues.
But they wouldn't allow me to see the problems in their relationship. Our family
was always peaceful; there was never any fighting or anything. We looked
perfectly happy from the outside. It was like 'Pleasantville.' The worst part
was that I couldn't acknowledge anything was wrong, so I couldn't do anything
about it. I felt completely powerless."
By the time he was 12, Jason's parents had divorced and he'd moved with his mom
to the Seattle area. He spent most of his early days there alone in his room,
pouring his heart out in poetry. "I was experiencing all the pain anyone feels
when their parents get divorced. It opened up all this stuff," he confides. "But
it also opened up this creative outlet for me. It's funny, because I was never a
musical kid - never took lessons, never really listened to the radio. But I
suddenly just started writing lyrics and coming up with melodies. We lived in
the woods, and I'd take these long walks and the songs would just start
happening."
Jason's mother had been musical. "My mom always had a guitar
lying around the house," he recollects. "I finally just picked it up and learned
how to play a few chords." Having found some solace in music, he eventually
began reconciling himself to his new circumstances and settled into his new
home.
This phase of his life ended, however, when his mother decided to
relocate the family to Los Angeles. "I didn't want to move at all," he attests.
"I'd finally made all these friends, and Washington had been a really comforting
place for me during the divorce. I thought it would be home forever."
So,
at 15, Jason moved to L.A., where he hooked up with bassist Sergio Andrade and
began blossoming as a songwriter. "I really didn't know anyone. Serge lived next
door and we had a lot of stuff in common, like playing basketball and running,"
he says. "He'd just started playing bass, so we hung out a lot. We spent all our
time jamming out in the garage, writing songs and helping each other get
better."
Originally from Guatemala City, Sergio left his homeland at age
14 to move to California. He, too, had a musical parent. "My father played
piano," he confirms, "and I ended up playing keyboards." He gravitated toward
rock, pop and Latin styles, also playing trombone and flute in the school
orchestra.
Sergio later switched to drums and then bass, becoming
somewhat obsessed with the instrument - "All I did was play bass," he says. "I
knew Jason was a talented guy, but that wasn't what mattered to me," Sergio
continues. "I was still learning English and really didn't know anyone. I just
wanted to be involved in music and make some friends."
The two paired
with a drummer (who has since left the group) and after honing their sound for a
few more months, inaugurated a Friday-night residency at a local school
auditorium. The gatherings were casual events where the band was afforded
onstage jam time (some of these jams became songs, among them "Everything").
"They had a really good P.A. system there and we could do whatever we wanted,"
Jason reports. "We got smoke machines and lights and basically turned it into
this little club scene. Kids would come from all over, and we started filling
the place up. At one point we were getting, like, 450 people out every week.
That went on for two years."
Word-of-mouth about the band soon reached No
Name Face producer Ron Aniello, who let them make some rudimentary recordings at
his home studio.
Drummer Rick Woolstenhulme also heard about the band
through the grapevine. Born and raised in the Arizona farm town of Gilbert, he
says he was one of those kids who was always pounding on things. "My mom plays
piano, my dad plays piano and guitar and my brother plays guitar," Rick relates.
"I guess they decided I was the next musician in the family, so they got me this
beat-up old kit and I started taking lessons right away." Rick went on to attend
The Los Angeles Music Academy and has played drums and percussion ever
since.
"I was playing with this other group," he says of his earliest,
accidental exposure to Lifehouse, "and Jason and Serge were practicing in the
next room - I'd bump into them in the hallway." A while later, someone suggested
to Rick that he check out a band called Lifehouse, who were looking for a new
drummer. "The name didn't ring a bell for me. Even after I officially met these
guys, we didn't make the connection right away," he recalls. "It was a couple
weeks of 'I've seen you somewhere' and 'You look really familiar' before we
figured it out."
Says Jason: "It was one of those weird coincidences. As
soon as we met and started playing with Rick we knew he was the guy. It just
clicked. We'd all go to the beach and Burger King and just do nothing together.
We knew right away it was going to work." Attests Rick: "It was really smooth -
I just sort of snapped on."
Sergio says of the band's collaboration: "Jason would usually have the song
written before he'd bring it to us. Then we all kind of arrange it together. The
way we work on songs feels really natural, which I think has a lot to do with us
being tight as a band and as friends."
Aniello saw the progress Lifehouse
was making but felt the band needed more time to develop before recording an
album. So Jason kept on writing, and the trio continued to rehearse intensively
and play gigs, including some at local colleges. Comments Sergio: "We went
through a lot of phases trying to find our own sound. We learned from our
mistakes. We'd see tapes of ourselves onstage and go, 'This is horrible.' But
we'd just say, 'Okay, we gotta fix it' and go back and practice some
more."
Jason stayed in touch with Aniello. Two years passed, and then he
played No Name Face track "Breathing" for the producer. "He got really excited
about it," Jason says, "and he played it for his friend Jude Cole, who's our
manager now."
"I was blown away by what I heard," says Cole. "Here were
these teenagers skateboarding around their tract-house neighborhood and banging
out this really deep music in the garage. I was totally moved by 'Breathing' -
it was the kind of song that captures a moment in time, the kind you always
remember where you were when you first heard it. Jason was only 17, but he
already had that incredibly resonant voice. I was also impressed by his writing
and guitar work. He had an instinctive understanding of how to create a mood.
Even before Ron started playing me their other stuff, I knew I had to work with
this band."
Cole immediately called DreamWorks Records principal Michael
Ostin, who had been Cole's own A&R representative when Cole was a recording
artist. In 1998, DreamWorks funded Lifehouse's first real demos, which Aniello
produced.
Many of these tracks made their way to No Name Face. "When we
tried to re-record some of the songs for the album, we just couldn't get the
same spirit the demos had," Jason says. "The demos had been recorded right after
the songs were written and even though they weren't perfect, they were so real,
so honest." "Trying," for instance, is fundamentally the same recording Jason
made at Ron's home studio when he was 15, with one significant change: "I had to
go back in and re-record my vocals for the album because my voice had
changed."
The rest of No Name Face was also cut mostly at Aniello's home
studio. "Ron's studio is right down the street from us," Jason says. "If we'd
been working really late, we'd just spend the night there. We'd wake up, have
breakfast with Ron and get right back to it. He's been like a father to me in a
lot of ways, and the whole recording process had this homegrown, family feel
that made it so easy to be creative. I wrote 'Hanging By A Moment' in the studio
while we were finishing some other stuff."
Jason's trust in Aniello
helped make these sessions a learning experience. "I came in wanting it to be
all slick and fancy," he admits. "I was so excited to be in the studio making a
record - I wanted every instrument and every effect on the planet. Ron said
pretty early that he felt the record should sound organic, that the production
should be simple and transparent. I'd have all these ideas, and we did use some
of them, but after a while I realized he was right. The record needed to sound
more raw."
This sonic edge was indeed the right complement to Lifehouse's
emotionally charged songs. Evidence of that can be found in the thousands of
calls placed to Modern Rock stations across America requesting "Hanging By A
Moment" and "Sick Cycle Carousel."
"The best thing about all this is
being able to stay on the road," says Jason. "We've been meeting new fans in
cities all over the country. It's so cool to hear what they think about the
music, and it makes me feel so good when they say that one of our songs has
helped them get through a rough time, that they were able to apply it to their
own life."
To be sure, this is the sort of opportunity only afforded a
band on the way up. But Jason and his mates have had no trouble staying grounded
amid all the hubbub. After all, it's not like they've actually met Pearl Jam.
"We love Pearl Jam," Jason says. "Once we got over the shock of actually being
on tour with them, we went backstage to hang out with them. But security would
never let us through the door. We tried a bunch of times and could never get in.
I'm sure the band didn't even know about it. And, of course, security had no
idea who we were - we were just some fans."
Being "just a fan," a music
lover like any other, is what Jason is and always wants to be. "My ultimate goal
in writing songs is simply to connect with people," he says, "and I hope that
comes across in everything we do."