It is fitting that DANGERMAN
hail from and make their music in New York City, the melting pot of the world. The duo's
music is a highly stylized blend of rock, Latin, jazz, blues and hip-hop sounds that tears
up cultural boundaries and results in a sound uniquely their own. Their Brendan O'
Brien-produced 550 Music debut, DANGERMAN, featuring the fast-rising
radio hit LETS MAKE A DEAL, is a
collection of unforgettable songs brimming with Latin grooves, R&B beats, and
jazz-based percussion. It's a celebrationof life and youth in the city, and it heralds
the arrival of an exceptional new band.
DANGERMAN is the two-man team of Lower Manhattan natives CHRIS SCIANNI (lead vocals, guitar, bass, harmonica), and DAVE BORLA (drums, percussion, sequencing, background
vocals). CHRIS' first musical loves were classic rock and punk: the
Stones, the Clash, the Sex Pistols. But his father, a jazz composer, made it his business
to broaden his son's musical horizons. "He played me Robert Johnson and Buddy
Guy," remembers CHRIS," which I liked. But it wasn't until he took me to see
Buddy Guy when I was 14 that I was blown away. That was a life-changing experience."
DAVE'S first inspiration to become a drummer was
the untraditional figure of Animal from The Muppets. Eventually he grew up to study piano
and saxophone. "But my love for and desire to play the drums never wavered," he
says. "From high school on, I was a drummer." Led Zeppelin's John Bonham was a
potent musical model. But it is DAVE'S jazz influencesgreat ones like Elvin Jones,
Chick Webb, Jo Jones, and Jimmy Cobbwhich account for much of the eclecticism in DANGERMAN'S grooves.
Although they'd known of each other for years, and had crossed paths in various bands, CHRIS
wasn't aware of DAVE'S percussive prowess until he saw him on a club gig in late 1993.
"When I saw DAVE play," he recalls, "I knew I had to play with him." CHRIS himself had been touring the world as a guitarist in
John McEnroe's band ("A good dealI got free tennis lessons from McEnroe in
exchange for guitar lessons") while seeking a drummer to complete the lineup for his
own new band.
With a grunge-style four-piece called G13,
Chris and Dave toured the country. In the course of their travels, they met Jason Newsted
and Lars Ulrich from Metallica. A friendship was struck, and the musicians even jammed
together.
"I don't think they liked our band much at all," DAVE admits, "but they
were very encouraging to the two of us. Lars kept saying that the two of us had something
special, and he really admonished us to stick with it. I think they planted the seed in
both of our minds that we had to try something different
and trying to do something
different turned into DANGERMAN."
The pair convened at DAVE'S East Village apartment in the fall of 1996 to work on what
they thought would be a side project. Within two weeks, says DAVE,
"we knew it was better than G13. I got kicked out of my apartment
for playing the drums at all hours, but it was worth it."
The new group relocated its rehearsals, and as a consequence soon found its style.
CHRIS: "I think that within a one-block radius of our rehearsal space, every single
ethnic group is represented. We were exposed to a ton of different kinds of music,
especially Latin music. DAVE and I pooled the last of our money together to buy a
three-dollar tape by Willie Colon (the great Latin composer and band leader). We listened
to it over and over, and eight hours later we'd written and recorded the demo of LET'S MAKE A DEAL.
Soon the demo of LETS MAKE A DEAL and a few other early songs
had won DANGERMAN a deal with 550 Music and
the enthusiastic attention of producer/engineer Brendan O'Brien (Pearl Jam, Rage Against
The Machine, Neil Young, Stone Temple Pilots, Bob Dylan, and many more). O'Brien's
response was so strong that two days later, CHRIS and DAVE were cutting tracks in his
Atlanta studio. "Brendan was like a third member of the band," says CHRIS.
"He got the sounds that were in our heads onto tape." In addition to producing,
O'Brien added keyboards, mellotron, clavinet, Fender Rhodes, and lap steel.
DANGERMAN like to use the term "urban rock" when discussing
their music, and the description is an apt one. Consider the deliciously salsa-fied feel
of LETS MAKE A DEAL the celebratory album opener and first single. ROLLEM DOWN," a song about a certain
sticky situation with the NYPD, hooks up a laconic hip-hop beat to the
half-witticism/half-warning lines, "Don't get caught on this side of town/Just roll
'em down."
Inspired by and quoting from blues legend Robert Johnson, GOOD FRIEND is a testament to
love and friendship with a piano line straight from the Baptist church. REMEMBER, built on
a sample from a Pakistani folk song, looks wistfully upon life in the neighborhood prior
to the onset of adult responsibilities. From the Cuban feel of HIGH
HEELED SNEAKERS to the pounding, straight-ahead rock of YOU NEVER
REALLY KNOW, and the menacing nighttime vibe of LUCKIEST MAN,
DANGERMAN displays a confident command of styles and sounds drawn from music's past,
present, and future.
DANGERMAN, says CHRIS SCIANNI, "is
our version of the New York we grew up in and live in today." "With these eleven
songs, we feel like we just had eleven kids," says DAVE BORLA. "We're incredibly
close to this music, it took us a long time to get here. We worked really hard on this
record, and we're ready for the world to hear it." |