Over the last year-ish, I've had the chance to talk to Rocky Votolato three times. Each time I hang up, my first thought is, "Wow, what a nice guy."
Call number three was no exception.
His new album, on the other hand, is quite exceptional. Check out the tune "Little Spring" here.
---
Rocky Votolato is feeling better. Much better.
Over
his long and impressive career as a singer/songwriter, Votolato has had
his share of personal peaks and valleys. But when it came time to write
2010’s “True Devotion,” he was pretty much at rock bottom.
“I
always want my writing to reflect where I’m at in my life,” he says.
“With ‘True Devotion,’ I was in a really dark place. I was struggling
with some really personal, existential issues. On this one, I feel like
I’ve sorted a lot of that out.”
“This
one” is his new album, “Television of Saints.” From the first notes of
the record, it’s easy to hear that Votolato is in a different headspace.
“There’s a lighter feeling to this album overall. It’s not as heavy as
the last album,” he says. “There’s still an element of struggle and
darkness within the songs, but it’s more from a narrative perspective.”
Though
the record is not as heavy, “Television” is just as weighty. The songs
flow together joyously and effortless, creating the most instantly
engaging collection of Votolato’s career.
He
says the album title draws a phrase coined in the 1930s, referring to
how the newly invented television had such a power to bring people
together. Through the record isn’t about TV, it is about how we are all
connected in some way. Votolato says he was heavily inspired by his
connection to friends and family when he wrote the album.
So
it was only fitting that he reach out to those same folks to help him
make the album. His brothers Sonny and Cody both played on the record.
“This is the first time I’ve had both of my brothers on an album. That
was a really cool experience. I’ve been wanting to do it for a long
time,” Votolato says.
Having
finished out his contract with indie label Barsuk, Votolato decided to
turn to his friends and fans to help him fund the record. Through the
website Kickstarter, he was able to raise $40,000 (more than double what
he had asked for) in just 30 days.
“I’m
really, really grateful to all of my fans for all of that,” he says.
“It allowed me more freedom and more control creatively. I got to the
make the record I wanted to make. And I didn’t have to go into severe
debt to do it, which is what I would have been facing if I hadn’t done
Kickstarter.”
In
exchange for their donations, fans were treated to a wide range of
collectors items, from t-shirts hand-screenprinted by Votolato’s wife to
paintings made by his son. For the fan who donated $2,500, Votolato
promised a private concert anywhere in the U.S. or Europe.
“Most
everything has worked out really well and is pretty close to being
finished now. It’s been a ton of work, but I think well worth it,” he
says. There was one small problem, though.
“I
had 128 hand-written lyric sheets to do and I kind of sprained my neck
because I was writing so many of them without taking a break,” he says
with a laugh.
Despite
the full-band feel of the “Television of Saints,” Votolato will again
tour as a solo act. “I like to play alone,” he says. “I like to keep the
shows simple. On the records I’m most pleased with, I’ve followed the
philosophy of ‘less is more.’ It makes things more intimate. I think
that’s what I’m best at, so that’s what I’m bringing to the shows.”

No comments:
Post a Comment