The inspiring sound of Alex Band’s powerful, emotionally charged
voice is immediately recognizable to millions of music lovers,
thanks to modern-day classics like “Adrienne,” “Our Lives” and the
chart-topping hit “Wherever You Will Go,” which Billboard recently
named the #1 Adult Pop Song of the Decade. And though We’ve All
Been There, Band’s solo debut (released June 29 on his own AMB
label through EMI), contains the first new material we’ve heard
from the former leader of The Calling in half a decade, “Wherever
You Will Go” (which he wrote at 16 and released at 19, remarkably
enough) remains a staple of the Adult Pop format, while “Our Lives”
is a heavily used bumper on ESPN and other sports programming.
If his fans feel that Band is long overdue for a return to the
spotlight, the L.A. native has himself been chafing at the bit to
make his return throughout the last five years, which he spent in
musical exile. But the time has finally come for that voice to
inspire us once again. “I’ve lived with these songs for years,”
says Band, “and the whole point is to share them with everybody
now.”
Describing the title song, which opens this stunningly widescreen
album and sets up its thematic breadth, Band says, “It’s definitely
about my own struggle, but I think everyone can relate to what I’ve
been through from experiences in their lives. I think everything
I’m talking about on the record is pretty universal. And knowing
now that I’m writing for different cultures, with fans around the
world, it’s important that what I’m writing about is generalized
enough that people can take the songs in their own way. ‘We’ve All
Been There’ is almost like a mantra—‘Here I am…these scars on my
hands…doing what I can’—with this chorus behind me singing, ‘We’ve
all been there.’ In a way, I was writing my own therapy.”
The torrid first single, “Tonight,” is now in rotation at Adult Pop
radio, where Band remained a core artist during his years of
silence. The track has also been used in the CW series The Vampire
Diaries and can be heard in the TV campaign for this summer’s World
Cup (just as “Our Lives” was played over the closing ceremonies of
the 2004 Athens Summer Olympics). The striking video, directed by
TV veteran David Barrett (The Vampire Diaries, CSI: NY, NCIS: Los
Angeles), working with the production crew from the Twilight series
of feature films, features Band doing his own stunts, including
jumping—or more accurately flying—off the top of a cliff. Check it
out on YouTube. As the video reveals, the song describes a
supernatural love story. “I didn’t want to write a conventional
love song,” he recalls. “I wanted it to have some weirder
meaning—and this was before the resurgence of the vampire love
story, but I’d just seen the movie Underworld, and I thought it
would be cool and different to write about a vampire trying to win
over this girl and to be able to have her for one night. So that
led to lines like, ‘Let the music take us over/We’ll fall into
forever, all is right/’Cause I got you where I want
you/Tonight.’”
At its heart, though, We’ve All Been There charts the course of a
distinctly human romantic relationship, from its first stirrings to
its final moments. “A lot of these songs are drawn from personal
experiences,” Band confirms. “I got married at the beginning of
this process and got divorced at the end of the record. ‘Love’ was
written in the early stages of that relationship, when my ex-wife
was going through medical problems, which we dealt with throughout
the years. And ‘Leave (Today Is the Day)’ was the last song I added
to the record, after we’d gotten divorced. So a bunch of these
songs are extemely personal.”
His then-wife’s illness led to the critical need for a liver
transplant, which she had to forgo due to the waiting list. The
experience inspired Band to devote his time and energies to the
Donate Life organization, which is dedicated to building
organ-donor awareness.
Band’s creative mechanism was also triggered by “what I’ve seen
friends and family going through, and I’ve been hugely influenced
by what’s happening in the world. And music, of course—I don’t
think anyone can listen to my records and not realize I’m a huge
fan of U2. I get massive inspiration from going to shows by some of
my favorite bands like U2 and Coldplay. But the biggest inspiration
for this record was what I went through—the frustration of it all
and trying to stay positive. But it resulted in some good songs, at
least.”
The title song’s companion piece is the culminating “Start Over
Again.” “As soon as we wrote that one, I knew it had to be the last
track,” says Band. “It goes into a jam-out section, with a choir of
my overdubbed voice singing, ‘After all you’ve done/You thought
there’d be someone/To give you everything you want’—that thought
of, ‘Haven’t I done enough?’ But sometimes you don’t get what you
want, and you have to accept that and start over again. It was a
sort of epiphany, writing that song. So it seemed like the perfect
epic song to end the album with.”
So where’s he been all this time? “After the second album,” Band
recalls, “my partner in The Calling, Aaron Kamin, wanted to do
other things, and since I was already pretty much doing everything
on my own, I decided to become a solo artist.” But when the powers
that be at RCA insisted that he do a “supergroup” album project,
Band sought and got his release, signing with Geffen soon
thereafter.
Thus began an elongated project that would span nearly two years,
eventually encompassing no less than five co-producers, primarily
including the veteran John Fields (Switchfoot), up-and-comer Daniel
Damico and engineer Tal Herzberg, with Chuck Reed helming two
tracks and Matt Serletic one. Playing alongside Band, who plays
guitars and several of the basslines, were some of the best
musicians on the planet, including drummers Abe Laboriel Jr.,
Dorian Crozier and Kenny Aronoff, keyboard player Jamie Muhoberac
and guitarist Tim Pierce. The renowned Paul Buckmaster (Elton
John’s ’70s classics) contributed string arrangements to several
tracks, while the in-demand Chris Lord-Alge mixed the album, as
he’d done with The Calling. Loaded with potential hits—and
strikingly cohesive despite its diverse origins—the album was
completed in 2007.
Later that year, Geffen went through a reorganization, putting the
album in limbo. “At the same time, Stu Sobol, my manager for 10
years passed away, which was incredibly sad,” Alex explains. “So,
between Geffen going through major changes and Stu passing away, I
realized then that I had to make a serious leap of faith and
believe in myself. I decided that, if I’m gonna fail, I’d rather
fail doing what I want to do.”
Band spent a year in negotiations and a sizable amount of his own
money to buy back the album master—so you might say he’s
financially as well as emotionally invested in this music. He’s
spent the last year creating his label, surrounding himself with a
top-flight team and partnering with EMI, which is distributing the
album in the States and releasing it outright in all other
territories. “I’ve finally got creative control, which is the main
reason I went through all this,” he says. So now I’m starting
completely over as a solo artist and reintroducing myself to the
world.”
It’s safe to say the world will be overjoyed to have Alex Band back