Bio
Jason Wade, vocals, guitar
Sergio Andrade, bass
Rick Woolstenhulme, drums
Sean Woolstenhulme, guitar
"And the world keeps spinning round/ My world's upside down, and I wouldn't change a
thing," sings Lifehouse frontman Jason Wade on "Spin," the first radio
track off the band's second album, Stanley
Climbfall (set for release Sept. 17, 2002, on DreamWorks Records).
The 22-year-old singer-songwriter-guitarist, who has been making music since his early
teens, may well be describing the exhilarating journey Lifehouse has traveled since the
release of its debut album, No Name
Face. That disc, which rose to #6 on the Billboard 200 album chart, achieved
double-platinum status, largely on the strength of the cut "Hanging By A Moment,"
which hit #1 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart and #2 on the Hot 100 and was the
most-played radio song of 2001, according to Broadcast Data Services.
If Lifehouse's debut album focused on the frustrations, desires and hopes that have long
fueled Jason's work, the new record (overseen by No Name Face producer Ron Aniello and
mixer Brendan O'Brien) represents the trio's coming of age. Songs like "Spin" and "Anchor" push the sonic
envelope with a confidence only success can prompt, and the affecting guitar-bass-drums
rock heard on the previous record has been honed to an even finer edge.
"It's a very physical record," Jason explains. "It's about moving forward. No Name Face was about
accepting the place where you are and trying to figure out how to get beyond that, but not
really knowing how. This one is more like, 'I know how to do this, so I'm just continuing
to go forward, take the good with the bad and keep moving.'"
Jason's creative principles remain a cornerstone of Lifehouse's material, but this time
bassist Sergio Andrade and drummer Rick Woolstenhulme have been more fully integrated into
the overall sound, putting a robust flesh-and-blood structure around Jason's searching
words. "We had more freedom to experiment," says Sergio, who founded the band
with Jason back when they were neighbors in the Los Angeles suburb of Agoura Hills.
"We knew what to expect this time. We understood how the process worked. That allowed
us to take more charge of things and focus on how to really make this our own."
That progression is detected in the fat chords of "Spin" and "Wash," but perhaps even
more so in the distinctive guitar sounds of "Anchor" and the Beatlesque
arrangement of "Stanley
Climbfall." A fusion of grunge rumble and acoustic reverie surfaces in "Empty Space," while "Take Me Away" displays a
passionate, unapologetic romanticism. The sensuous textures of "My Precious," meanwhile
(the song was written and recorded during a break in the studio), reveal a shimmering
falsetto soul.
"We wanted to strip it down to where every single part counted," Jason says of
the collection's unifying aesthetic. "We wanted to let the songs breathe."
Confirms producer Aniello: "We set out to pinpoint the individuality of the band, and
the best way to do that is to not overproduce, to make sure their personality comes
through. We kept it simple so you could hear the purity and edge of that voice and the
strength of those songs. The beauty is in the vocal, Jason, Serge and Rick playing off one
another, and the melody."
Consistent with this drive to distill the essence of the band, Aniello urged Jason to tap
his subconscious for lyrics, even encouraging him to scat-sing over the music until words
began to emerge.
"A lot of what you hear on the record occurred spontaneously in pre-production,"
informs Rick. Jason points out: "One thing I did was not try too hard. With the last
record, I think I expended almost too much emotion and energy. This time, I put the tape
recorder on the table, played a melody and just kind of let the lyrics come to me
naturally. Then I listened back and picked certain phrases that stood out. It's all about
letting the song happen versus trying to write it."
Jason's self-assurance as a writer is evident throughout Stanley Climbfall. Undaunted
by the dominance of "Hanging By A Moment," he began writing for the new album
while Lifehouse was still on tour with the likes of Matchbox Twenty and Pearl Jam in
support of No Name Face.
"I locked myself up in the back of the bus after every show with a little four-track
recorder," he elaborates. "All I did was write." (This suggestion of
seclusion is borne out by Jason's admission that, unlike most of his contemporaries, he
doesn't watch TV or even listen to much radio, basing his artistic outpourings exclusively
on his own experiences and observations and not the popular culture at large.)
Of songs like "Anchor"
and "Am I Ever Gonna Find
Out," which convey Jason's ongoing metaphysical perplexity, he says simply:
"I've come to grips with the fact that pretty much every song I write is going to be
inspired by my beliefs."
Asked about following up the success of No Name Face, Wade states:
"I'm at peace because we made the best record we could. And I'm happy because I think
this record really reflects where we're at right now. We didn't need to duplicate what
made the first record special because this one is just as special in its own right. Sure,
there's pressure on us, but most of it's self-imposed. We didn't want to give people the
same thing; we took a chance and tried to make what we do better."
The new album takes its title from this notion of taking chances. "Everyone has their
ups and downs," Jason says. "And after a lot of wordplay, a song we'd written
called 'Stand, Climb, Fall' was
transformed into an everyday character named Stanley Climbfall who goes through those
kinds of changes."
"Sometimes I feel myself wanting to dig up the past and go back to where I feel
regret," he confides. "It's hard to move on from a certain place in your life,
but its the struggle to do it that gets you to where you need to go." Indeed, the
greatest feat along this frequently rocky path is to stand, climb, fall - and get back up
again.
Source: lifehousemusic.com