|
Out
of the Dark and Into the Light, Fire-Dean Makes His Mark
By Holly Day, MusicDish.com

Singer/songwriter
Fire-Dean (www.firedean.com)
is a natural born storyteller. His second album, Custom
Deluxe, testifies to that fact, with songs drawing on both
his own life experiences and the stories he's gleaned from listening
to others, all lightly seasoned with just enough self-deprecating
humor to keep the album from being too dark.
The
result is an album that can be appreciated in many different ways
- on the one hand, Custom
Deluxe is gritty, urban-feeling, with songs about decay
and deadbeats and the dark side of life, while on the other, the
same album is about taking a step back from all that's dark and
depressing and just looking at it with an objective eye and trying
to find something humorous in it all.
MP3:
Dolla'
"When
I put the album together, I certainly wasn't thinking that way,"
says Fire-Dean about this dichotomy. "I don't write things to be
funny - in fact, sometimes they turn out to be scary, like the song,
'I Love My Cousin More Than You Do,' or 'Paper
Airplanes,' where this guy is clearly interested in a blow-up
doll, but the song's really about emptiness." He laughs. "But I
think sometimes people just don't get the humor in my music, they
don't get that the record's sort of tongue in cheek, and they've
kind of missed the boat. I don't want to tell people that, you know.
It'd be like a comedian prompting people to laugh at the end of
a joke.
MP3:
PaperAirplanePilot
"Early
on, I wrote a lot about living down in Louisiana," he adds. "That
was kind of a tough period in my life. I had a lot of other stuff
going on that wasn't so good - drugs and alcohol, mostly, the usual,
although it wasn't like I was doing the rock thing. This was all
before that, before I got into music, I was really making a mess
of things, that, and simultaneously working in this environment
that was pretty dangerous. The type of people that I would work
next to, if he wasn't in jail, he might have been on his way, and
that was just sort of the MO - these are the guys that I was partying
with, and they were pretty hard core.
MP3:
Truth
"But
anyway, the stories weren't exactly all uplifting, so I had to really
struggle to find something positive to keep them from being just
sad and depressing. The writing I've done in the past five years,
the ones on the CD, most of those, except for maybe 'Caramel,'
are sort of about getting away from a dark past and getting a sense
of humor about it all. Because I really got sick of writing about
a lot of the dark stuff, and I was wanted to have fun. It helped
laughing."
Fire-Dean
was not one of those people who knew since Day One that they wanted
to be a musician. His interest lay instead in writing fiction and
telling stories, neither of which seemed to lead to lucrative careers.
"Me finding music was one of those typical quests for something
that I was really passionate about," says Fire-Dean. "I tried a
lot of different things. I worked on an oil rig for five years,
then I taught myself computers and sold software for some company
in Virginia, then I moved up here to Washington DC. So I kind of
took a long time to find music."
Eventually,
his quest would lead him to perform in informal gatherings and small
nightclubs with his friends' bands. "I would start singing with
friends and stuff that were breaking out guitars, you know, doing
covers, stuff like that, and people would always comment on my voice,
and that gave me a lot of confidence," says Fire-Dean.
MP3:
Custom
D.
"But
I didn't really pursue music seriously, I wasn't sure for a while,
and I tried a lot of other things, too, at the same time. But it
was all sort of a calculated process, if you know what I mean,"
he adds. "I mean, I love writing, I had always been a writer, but
it seemed like my voice was giving me some sort of genetic advantage,
so it was almost a calculated choice to focus on music. I figured
I'd be more likely to get noticed that way than in the other things
I was trying.
"I
kind of have ADD," he says, laughing. "I haven't been diagnosed
for it or anything, but I love so much music that it's been really
hard to focus on what kind of style exactly I want to write music
in. But there again, you know, it was people pointing out my lyrics
as something that had real staying power, because they were good
stories. If you tell a good story, then the song can sort of transcend
anything else that was going on. And since I was a sucky guitar
player, that really helped! It was kind of a conservative choice,
too, to really focus on just the words before anything else."
MP3:
Caramel
Despite
being a "sucky" guitar player, Fire-Dean has an obvious talent for
crafting the musical aspects of his songs as well as the lyrical
aspects. With the exception of the drum loops, which are a collaboration
with NYC drummer Roger Foster, as well as the the song "Irradessencent,"
where he brings in an outside percussionist; Fire-Dean performs
all the music on Custom
Deluxe, which encompasses a staggering ensemble of tape
loops, scratchy phonograph samples, organs, horns, and some pretty
decent guitar work, which leads one to speculate that perhaps Fire-Dean
isn't such a "sucky" guitar player after all. Or perhaps it's just
the fact that he knows exactly what to do with what talent he has,
which is, in the end, even more important that being just another
Steve Vai study with no soul to back up the technical noodling.
Upcoming
Fire-Dean Events
November 28 - Borders Landover, MD
November 29 - Year of the Rabbit - Bowie, MD
(www.firedean.com)
Photo
by April Sauerwine
Provided
by the MusicDish
Network. Copyright © Tag
It 2003 - Republished with Permission. All Rights Reserved.

Return
to Hybrid Studios MAIN NEWS page
|