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Gabe Dixon Band
Profile of
Gabe Dixon Band
Type(s) of Music: Rock
Names of Members of Group:
Gabe Dixon - keyboards & vocals
Winston Harrison - bass guitar
Jano Rix - drums
Place of Origin: Miami, Florida
Year the Act Began: 1998
Musical Influences:
Biography/History of
Gabe Dixon Band
Who turns down a personal offer to play keyboard on
Paul McCartney's world tour? Gabe
Dixon did, and it was probably the best decision of his life. Dixon
respectfully turned McCartney down to focus his energies on his band's
then-yet-to-be-released album.
The first incarnation of The Gabe Dixon Band was born nine years ago as
a jam band with heavy jazz influences, but after a bout of cutbacks and
regime changes at their original label, the band members had a
collective epiphany and decided to reinvent themselves as a song-based
trio. A reviewer for The Nashville Tennessean, Dixon's hometown paper,
called it early in 2005 when he stated unequivocally that the young
artist "deserves to join the ranks of Jackson Browne and early Elton
John in the pop pantheon."
The Gabe Dixon Band cut their self-titled album, due out on August 26th,
live at Nashville's renowned Blackbird Studios with co-producer/
engineer mixer Neal Cappelino (Alison Krauss, Mindy Smith, Jonny Lang).
Dixon wrote all songs on the album and received a little help from
heavyweights like Dan Wilson, Grammy winner for his work on
Dixie Chicks' "Not Ready To Make
Nice." The album embeds vividly detailed, intensely personal and
universally relatable songs in elegant yet muscular settings that draw,
unabashedly and expertly, on classic rock, and the combination is
intoxicating.
Of the newfound song focus of his onetime jam band, Dixon says, "We love
great songs and real musicianship, and we take time as a band to come up
with something that isn't typical, because the arrangement and
performance can be just as impactful as the song itself. We've become
more refined, and to the point, making the impact direct and immediate.
The idea is pretty simple, really: We're dedicated to playing music
people like that we like too."
The
Gabe Dixon Band's new, self-titled album (Fantasy Records, August 26) is
in fact the group's third release, following the 2002 album On a Rolling
Ball and the 2005 EP Live at World Café, but there's good reason the
writer/singer/pianist considers it GDB's debut.
Formed nine years ago by Dixon -- then a classical piano major at the
University of Miami -- and his two college roommates, bassist Winston
Harrison and drummer Jano Rix, the group added a sax player and spent
several years specializing in jazz-inflected, heavily improvised
excursions, showcasing the virtuosity of the players. Dixon's elevated
chops also led to some high-profile moonlighting: along with performing
with Alison Krauss, O.A.R. and others, the talented youngster played
keyboards on Paul McCartney's Driving Rain, while also backing the great
one at the internationally broadcast "Concert For New York City."
McCartney offered him the keyboard slot for his world tour, but Gabe
respectfully turned him down to focus his energies on his band's
then-yet-to-be-released Warner Bros. debut.
But after being dispirited and nearly derailed by cutbacks and regime
changes at the band's former label, Dixon shifted his focus to songcraft,
and in 2006 the three longtime bandmates had a collective epiphany. "We
realized when we were all living in different states and that there was
too much musical chemistry going on between us to give it up," Dixon
recalls. They reinvented themselves as a three-piece, song-based unit,
putting the same attention to detail to arrangement and song-serving
performance that the bandleader was giving to his writing.
To say that the move has paid off would be a gross understatement,
because The Gabe Dixon Band belatedly but undeniably introduces a
world-class unit fronted by a prodigiously talented artist. A reviewer
for The Nashville Tennessean, Dixon's hometown paper, called it early
when he stated unequivocally in 2005 that the young artist "deserves to
join the ranks of Jackson Browne and early Elton John in the pop
pantheon."
The trio, with Harrison doubling on mandator, a modified guitar he
created whose sound somewhat resembles that of an electric mandolin, cut
the album live off the floor during ten days at Nashville's renowned
Blackbird Studios with co-producer/engineer mixer Neal Cappelino (Alison
Krauss, Mindy Smith, Jonny Lang), and it's evident the principals
brought their A-games to the sessions. The album embeds vividly
detailed, intensely personal and universally relatable songs in elegant
yet muscular settings that draw, unabashedly and expertly, on classic
rock, and the combination is intoxicating.
Both the material and the supple arrangements result from "the music we
heard growing up, listening to our parents' record collections," Dixon
points out. "Mostly '70s LPs by Elton John, Jackson Browne, Paul Simon,
Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Carole King and
James Taylor. It was a magical era, the pinnacle of pop, rock and folk
in terms of songwriting and musicianship." His first influence, though,
was the Beatles. "That came from my mom," says Gabe with a fond laugh.
"As a teenager, she was kicked out of a Beatles movie for screaming too
loud."
Given the band's innate feel for rock's glory days, it's entirely
fitting that the legendary Henry Diltz, whose unforgettable photographs
of greats like Neil Young, the Doors and Crosby, Stills & Nash have
become an indelible part of rock history, shot the images that grace the
album package.
Dixon and his bandmates have not only assimilated those influences but
brought them into the present tense, resulting in music that is
instantly familiar both musically and thematically, yet still
provocative and in the moment. And though Dixon claims that the album is
simply a collection of songs written over the last several years, a
theme emerges. In this artist's cosmology, as it was with his forebears,
highways are potent metaphors for romantic and spiritual connection,
which can lead to new insights or back to one's roots, and the album is
crisscrossed by characters on journeys between states of mind as well as
places on a roadmap.
The opening "Disappear" is a panoramic song of escape and redemption in
the grand tradition of Paul Simon's "America" and Bruce Springsteen's
"Thunder Road." The following "Five More Hours" poetically recounts
Dixon's growing elation as he leaves New York, where he'd been living,
to return home to Nashville. "Angel don't stop 'cause I'm almost home,"
he sings, cruising along on a burnished, expansive arrangement redolent
of Elton John's Tumbleweed Connection (one of his all-time favorite
albums). It's unclear whether Angel is his traveling companion or some
guiding spirit -- which only increases the song's beguiling character.
It's one of three co-written by onetime Trip Shakespeare and Semisonic
frontman Dan Wilson, whose co-write of the Dixie Chicks' "Not Ready to
Make Nice" earned him a Grammy.
"The inspiration for ‘Five More Hours' and for ‘Find My Way,' the other
song we recorded in the first session for the new album, came directly
out of what was going on when I wrote them," Dixon explains. "The band
was living in Brooklyn and touring constantly, and the label took away
our tour support a month before the album was scheduled to come out. So
we gave up our place in Brooklyn, I rented a U-Haul and started driving
home. At that point I was trying to figure out what to do next, and I
realize now that it was all leading me back to my roots."
Then comes the stunning ballad "Further the Sky," an instant standard
sung with Mindy Smith at her most inspired that leaves no doubts about
Dixon's vocal chops and expressiveness. "I think of it as a Taoist
song," Dixon says of "Further," a collaboration with gifted Nashville
songsmith Tia Sillers (who won a Grammy of her own, for Lee Ann Womack's
"I Hope You Dance"), and the final piece written for the album. He's
referring to the metaphysical riddles of its chorus: "The higher you
reach, the further the sky / The more miles you walk, the longer the
road / The steeper you climb, the harder you stand to fall / The
stronger you get, the heavier the load."
Batting cleanup is Dixon and Wilson's "All Will Be Well," another
highway anthem, this one written after the artist watched the Dylan
documentary Don't Look Back and was entranced by the young bard's solo
performances, which he describes as "a direct channel of honesty." The
impact of this revelation is apparent in the resulting song, with its
thrillingly cinematic refrain: "All the children walking home past the
factories / Can see the light that's shining in my window as I write
this song to you / And all the cars running fast along the interstate /
Can feel the love that radiates, illuminating what I know is true."
"I wrote ‘All Will Be Well' at the end of 2004, when I was starting to
come to an acceptance of the situation with the record label," Gabe says
of the emotional crossroads he was approaching at the time. "And I
realized that even though things hadn't gone the way I'd hoped they
would, it wasn't the end of the world, and I could start a new chapter.
It felt like a sort of blooming."
The first half of the album (which certainly feels like it has two
sides, like its sources of inspiration) is rounded off by "Find My Way,"
an ivory-tickling romp in the grand tradition of Elton, Jerry Lee Lewis,
Billy Preston and the Ben Folds 5. If you don't find yourself caught up
in the album's musical momentum and psychological depth after these five
songs, you're probably better off sticking to NASCAR or knitting.
The LP's second half is as far-ranging as the first is focused,
encompassing the widescreen ballad "Ever After You," the luminous solo
piano piece "And the World Turned" (another Sillers co-write) and the
three-part, parallel narrative "Sirens," which Dixon semi-facetiously
describes as "a bluegrass, drone-y, Middle Eastern song about
temptation."
Of the newfound focus of his onetime jam band, Dixon says, "We love
great songs and real musicianship, and we take the time as a band to
come up with something that isn't typical, because the arrangement and
performance can be just as impactful as the song itself. We've become
more refined and to the point, making the impact direct and immediate.
The idea is pretty simple, really: We're dedicated to playing music
people like that we like too."
From this immensely promising vantage point, it's been quite a journey
for a guy who a decade ago was playing Tootsie's Orchid Lounge in
downtown Nashville every afternoon from 1 to 5 for tips. The bridge of
"All Will Be Well" could serve as the credo for Dixon and his bandmates.
"You've got to keep it up and don't give up and chase your dreams," he
sings, "and you will find / All in time."
Gabe Dixon Band
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Discography
More Than It Would Seem (1999)
Label
On A Rolling Ball (2002)
Warner Bros.
Live At World Cafe (2005)
Label
The Gabe Dixon Band (2008)
Fantasy
Coming
More Than It Would Seem
Corner Café
Bird Dancer
Everything's OK
Your Last Fool
Expiration Date
Love Story
Sitting at the Station
Just a Dream
One to the World
Now
Happy Woman
Come Around
Beauty of the Sea
Coming
1. Disappear
2. Five More Hours
3. Further The Sky
4. All Will Be Well
5. Find My Way
6. Till You're Gone
7. Far From Home
8. Ever After You
9. And The World Turned
10. Sirens
11. Baby Doll
12. Further The Sky