| Dave Matthews Band |
|
| Origin |
Charlottesville, Virginia |
| Country |
United States |
| Years active |
1991–present |
| Genre(s) |
Rock
Folk |
| Label(s) |
RCA Records (US) |
| Members |
Dave Matthews
Stefan Lessard
Leroi Moore
Boyd Tinsley
Carter Beauford |
Dave Matthews Band (also known by the acronym DMB) is an American rock band, originally formed in Charlottesville, Virginia in 1991 by singer and guitarist Dave Matthews, bassist Stefan Lessard, saxophonist Leroi Moore, violin player Boyd Tinsley, drummer Carter Beauford, and keyboardist Peter Griesar (who left the band in 1993). All band members met Dave in Charlottesville. Since 1998 the band has performed at most of their shows with keyboardist Butch Taylor, although he is not officially a member of the band. Moore, Beauford, Tinsley and Taylor also perform back up vocals.
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Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 1994-1996
- 1.2 1997-1999
- 1.3 2000-2003
- 1.4 2004 and beyond
- 2 Taping and bootlegs
- 3 Warehouse Fan Association
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 Independent albums
- 4.2 Studio albums
- 4.3 Live albums
- 5 Awards
- 5.1 Grammys
- 5.2 My VH1 awards
- 5.3 NAACP Image awards
- 6 Music samples
- 7 Trivia
- 8 Notes
- 9 External links
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History
A close-up of Dave Matthews, Boyd Tinsley, and Butch Taylor in Melbourne during their first and (to date) only tour of Australia
In lieu of military service, a Quaker-raised Matthews attended the University of Virginia beginning in 1986. He had played piano and guitar as a child, and realized he wanted a career in music. Working as a bartender in Charlottesville, Virginia, he started to encounter jazz musicians, who had some local fame in their own right. After-hours jam sessions turned into an idea for a band.
They were, however, in need of bass player. When a fellow musician at the bar recommended a local high school student (also of a jazz background), they decided to bring him in. The 16-year-old Stefan Lessard played well, and, after getting his parents permission, dropped out of school to tour full-time.
The band played their first gig on May 11, 1991 at a private rooftop party.
1994-1996
In 1994, the DMB released their first LP, Under the Table and Dreaming, with hits "What Would You Say" and "Ants Marching." Under the Table and Dreaming and follow-up album, Crash brought the band national attention, culminating in a Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group for "So Much To Say," as well as four other nominations between the years 1996 and 1997. The band also achieved smash hits in "Crash" and "Too Much", a cult hit in "Tripping Billies". All which were a huge hit for the band.
1997-1999
By 1997, DMB reached amazing levels of popularity across the country and, to some degree, the world. To combat an increasingly profitable bootleg market, the band released a live album, Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95. This album featured popular songs from DMB's three previous albums and included longtime collaborator and guitarist Tim Reynolds. In late 1997, the band returned to the studio with producer Steve Lillywhite and an array of collaborators, including banjoist Béla Fleck, vocalist Alanis Morissette, guitarist Tim Reynolds, keyboardist Butch Taylor, and the Kronos Quartet, to compose and record Before These Crowded Streets, their third album with RCA. Before These Crowded Streets represented a great change in direction. Instead of relying on upbeat hit singles, the album as a whole stunned many with its layers and complexity.
In 1999 Dave Matthews released a solo live album, Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds Live at Luther College, from a 1996 acoustic concert played by Matthews and longtime friend guitarist Tim Reynolds, and the band released a live album, Listener Supported, a concert from September 1999 that was also partially shown on PBS. This year also provided two more Grammy nominations.
2000-2003
During the year 2000, DMB set up their own recording studio at a large countryside home outside Charlottesville, Virginia. With longtime producer Steve Lillywhite at the helm, the band began work on a fourth studio album. Heavily influenced by personal conflicts, notably the death of his uncle from alcoholism, the songs recorded with Lillywhite rank as some of the darkest Matthews has ever written. The band's attentions wandered during the seemingly never-ending recording sessions; they spent more time riding four-wheelers through the countryside and playing video games than writing or recording music. In the end, the studio sessions were a failure. In August 2000, the sessions were scrapped and the band's seven-year relationship with Lillywhite was over. Some believe DMB was unhappy with the atmosphere of the songs and frustrated with Lillywhite's often perfectionist style of production, while others believe Lillywhite was made into a scapegoat for the band's lack of professionalism during the recording sessions.
In October 2000, an energized Matthews began writing with Glen Ballard, most famous for his work with Alanis Morissette. The rest of DMB soon joined Matthews in a Los Angeles studio and quickly recording Everyday. While the album gave the band a much-needed fresh start, Ballard's slick pop-music approach to production was very different from the creative process used to produce previous studio albums. In the end, DMB seemed unsatisfied. In fact, drummer Carter Beauford's sarcastic jibe that the band had "charts and everything" ready for them shines light on a session where the band, which had in the past collectively composed its music, morphed into a backing band for Matthews with no creative input. The February 2001 release of Everyday was a huge commercial success—the singles "I Did It", "Everyday", and especially "The Space Between" brought the band an even larger level of popularity. But like the band itself, the fanbase was disappointed with the release. Everyday's poppy, slick sound (including Dave Matthews' first ever recording sessions on electric guitar) was a great departure from the band's previous work and the complete antithesis of the songs recorded with Lillywhite.
In March 2001, the conflict came full circle when the 2000 studio sessions with producer Steve Lillywhite were leaked on the internet. Over established internet channels such as the Dave Matthews Band Mailing List, the tracks spread like wildfire. Better known as The Lillywhite Sessions, this rough album was universally lauded by both the fanbase and the popular press. After critical comparison of the two simultaneous albums, many fans were frustrated with the band's decision to scrap the work in exchange for "Everyday". Tracks such as "Bartender", "Grey Street", "Captain", and "Grace is Gone" caused many to wonder aloud whether the band had thrown away its best (albeit unfinished) work.
The Lillywhite Sessions would, however, finally have their chance to shine. In response to overwhelming fan support, coupled with a popular and widely publicized online campaign known as the Release Lillywhite Recordings Campaign, DMB returned to the studio in 2002 to record Busted Stuff. Produced by Stephen Harris, the recording engineer under Lillywhite on previous albums, the resulting CD provided new treatments of much of the Lillywhite Sessions material, along with newly written songs "You Never Know" and the hit single "Where Are You Going?" Busted Stuff received moderate critical and commercial success and was generally well-received by the band's fanbase. Later that year the band released its fourth live album, Live at Folsom Field, Boulder, Colorado, recorded July 11, 2001. The live release highlighted songs from both Everyday and Busted Stuff. On September 24, 2003 Dave Matthews Band reached another milestone in the history of the band when they played a free concert on the Great Lawn in Central Park, New York City to benefit New York City schools. A live recording of that show was released later that year as The Central Park Concert on CD and DVD.
Dave Matthews Band in Antioch, TN
Wide angle photo of Dave Matthews Band
2004 and beyond
2004 saw DMB release more music than any previous year. In June, The Gorge, a combination 2-CD/1-DVD set with highlights from their 3-night tour closer at The Gorge in George, WA from 2002, was sold in stores. The Band also exclusively released a 6-disc CD set from the same run featuring all three nights, with each night spanning across two CDs. Later in the year it was announced that highlights from the Band's extensive live archives would be available for purchase via the official website. The first such release, Live Trax Vol. 1, featured guests Tim Reynolds, Béla Fleck, and Jeff Coffin and had been nearly universally accepted as one of the greatest shows in DMB's history. The second release, Live Trax Vol. 2, included guitarist Carlos Santana and gave fans previews of newly-penned songs "Joy Ride", "Hello Again," and "Sugar Will," all at the time presumed to be destined for release on a new studio album in 2005, though only "Hello Again" was actually included on the album's subsequent release. The other songs that debuted during the summer of 2004—"Crazy-Easy," "Good Good Time," "Joy Ride," and "Sugar Will"—were all absent during the duration of the 2005 touring season.
In August 2004, DMB received substantial bad press when up to 800-pounds of their raw human waste was dumped from their tour bus through the Kinzie Street Bridge in Chicago onto passengers aboard a sightseeing boat below.[1] The bus-driver has since plead guilty, and the band has donated $50,000 to the Friends of the Chicago River and $50,000 to the Chicago Park District.[1]
In Fall 2004, DMB returned to their studio in Charlottesville, Virginia with a new producer, Mark Batson. The band considered itself to be at a crucial crossroads in its evolution. The negative reaction of many of its fans to Everyday and the middling success of Busted Stuff, coupled with Dave Matthews' belief that the band has not made a great album since Before These Crowded Streets, all worked to create a sense of eagerness, if not urgency, to create a stellar album. Stand Up was released on May 10, 2005, debuting at #1 on the Billboard charts with sales of 465,000. Fan reaction towards the album was mixed. Some felt the band had new energy, while others felt the album was too simplistic, resembling Matthews' 2003 solo outing Some Devil. Regardless, Stand Up spawned the hit singles "American Baby," "Dreamgirl," and the title track. The band supported the album with a summer-long tour culminating in a four-night stand at one of their favorite jaunts, Colorado's Red Rocks Amphitheatre. Red Rocks holds special signifigance for the band, as it was the site of their first live album a decade earlier. On the third night of the stand, the fans started a massive "Halloween" chant, a favorite song off the album Before These Crowded Streets. Although the song is rarely played, the band gave into the chant and played an impromptu version of it. Old and new fans alike were delighted. All proceeds from the fourth Red Rocks show, which totalled over $1 million, went to the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
DMB embarked on a brief tour in Fall 2005, with dates throughout November and December. Overall, the 2005 winter tour was quite a success. It featured the return of old school songs such as "Minarets," "Halloween," "Pig," "Christmas Song," and "Recently." The 2005 Red Rocks concerts were released on November 29 as a "best of" CD/DVD combo entitled Weekend on the Rocks. The Complete Weekend On The Rocks, a box set of all four Red Rocks concerts, is also exclusively available from DMB's official store.
Dave Matthews undertook a solo tour in the UK from 12th May-15th May, playing at Birmingham on the 12th, Manchester on the 13th, and Hammersmith Apollo on the 15th.
Dave Matthews Band announced on April 25, 2006, a $1.5 million challenge grant to help build the New Orleans Habitat Musicians' Village. The band returned to the studio in March 2006 (with the resultant album slated for release in winter) before embarking on their annual summer tour. It features 51 shows across North America, having begun May 30 in St. Louis, Missouri, and will conclude with a two-night stand on September 22-23 in the band's home town of Charlottesville, Virginia. Arguably this summer's most notable locale for the 2006 tour is a two-night stand at Boston's Fenway Park, that will take place on July 7th and 8th. The band has used the summer tour to debut new songs such as 'Sister,' a song performed solo by Dave Matthews, 'The Idea of You,' 'Kill the King,' 'Shotgun,' 'Break Free,' and 'Can't Stop.'
Taping and bootlegs
DMB occupies a somewhat unique place in music history. On the one hand, the band allows audience members to record their live shows, permits not-for-profit trading of the recordings, and cites college students trading these tapes in the early 1990s as a key reason for their current fame. On the other hand, the band and its management worked with the US federal government in 1996 to launch a crackdown on bootleggers, which resulted in large-scale arrests of those responsible for illegally manufacturing and selling copies of DMB material. To further combat bootleggers, the band released Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95, which was an unexpected success and became the first in a regular series of official live releases, all of which have debuted in the top 20 of Billboard's Top 200 albums.
Warehouse Fan Association
Another fan-friendly trend of DMB (in the tradition of The Grateful Dead, Phish, and Barenaked Ladies) is allowing their fans to purchase concert tickets before being sold to the general public. This, however, does not mean that Warehouse tickets will always be the best seats. Seat locations are not disclosed until approximately one month prior to the show date. Their Warehouse Fan Association pioneered the internet-based ticket pre-sales used by many artists today. Other benefits of the Warehouse Fan Association is members receive bonus companion CDs when they pre-order official Audio and Video releases. Members who have been active since the establishment of the Warehouse often receive some of the best seats available.
Discography
- Main article: Dave Matthews Band discography
Independent albums
Remember Two Things (1993)
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Studio albums
Under the Table and Dreaming (1994)
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Before These Crowded Streets (1998)
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Live albums
- 1997: Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95
- 1999: Listener Supported
- 2001: Live in Chicago 12.19.98
- 2002: Live at Folsom Field, Boulder, Colorado
- 2003: The Central Park Concert
- 2004: The Gorge
- 2005: Weekend on the Rocks
There are also five volumes in the band's "Live Trax" series; see the band's discography for more information.
Awards
Grammys
- Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group (1996) — nominated
- Best Music Video, Short Form ("What Would You Say," 1996)
- Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group ("So Much To Say", 1997) — WON
- Best Rock Song ("Too Much", 1997) — nominated
- Best Rock Album (Crash, 1997) — nominated
- Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group (1998) — nominated
- Best Rock Song ("Crash Into Me", 1998) — nominated
- Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ("Crush", 1999) — nominated
- Best Rock Album (Before These Crowded Streets, 1999) — nominated
- Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals ("Love Of My Life" with Santana, 2000) — nominated
- Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group ("The Space Between", 2002) — nominated
- Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ("Where Are You Going", 2003) — nominated
My VH1 awards
- Coolest Fan Website (2000) — WON
- My Favorite Group (2001) — WON
- Must Have Album , for Everyday (2001) — WON
- Damn I Wish I Wrote That! (Song of the Year), for "The Space Between" (2001) — WON
- Coolest Fan Website (2001) — WON
NAACP Image awards
- Chairman's Award (2004), "in recognition of their diverse talents put to exceptional use...The special awards are a salute to both professional as well as personal excellence."[2]
Music samples
Trivia
- Julia Roberts is a fan and appears in the "Dreamgirl" video.
- The band's longest live performance of any song was a 32 minute and 3 second performance of "#41" featuring Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, played on April 20, 2002 at the former Corel Centre.
- On August 20, 1995, the band played the first version of the song "Raven," which did not come back again until June 20, 2000 when it was reworked during the The Lillywhite Sessions.
- Four of the five band members are African-American including Matthews himself who was born in Johannesburg, South Africa.
- One of five artists to perform a live concert at Central Park in New York City (others are Diana Ross, Paul Simon, Simon and Garfunkel, and Garth Brooks (see The Central Park Concert).
- An episode of the show Futurama references the band: stating that the main character erroneously believes that the band "rocks" when he is drunk.
Notes
- ^ CBS staff writer (2004). "Dave Matthews Band Blamed For Human Waste" CBStoChicago.com (accessed May 29, 2006).
- ^ Press Release (2004). "The Dave Matthews Band to Receive Special NAACP Image Award" NAACP.org (accessed June 20, 2006)
External links
- official band site
- Warehouse — official DMB fanclub
- nancies.org, — unofficial fan site (established July 1998)
- AntsMarching.org (established January 2002)
- DreamingTree.org — online trading community for DMB's live shows (Established: March 2005)]
- DMB Almanac — song and concert history and statistics (established November 2000]
- WeeklyDavespeak.com — fan site with MP3s, newsletter, forums, and news (established December 2003)]
- Amidreaming.org — archive, art and message board (established May 2002)]
- DMB rhyme and reason — thorough, near-daily, newsletter (established July 2001)
- Carolyn's DMB Castle — fan site including lots of pics, news, articles, and more (established in 1997)
- DMB Midis — contains MIDIs and ringtones of songs (established February 2002)
- DMBTabs.com — guitar tablature (established September 2002)]
- DMBvideos.com — a video download each week (Established: July 2003)
- J&A's DMB Fan Site
- DMBexchange.com — trading site with concert recording source information
- db.etree.org - trader's database DMB listing
| Dave Matthews Band |
| Dave Matthews | Stefan Lessard | Leroi Moore | Boyd Tinsley | Carter Beauford |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Remember Two Things | Recently - EP | Under the Table and Dreaming | Crash | Before These Crowded Streets | Everyday | Busted Stuff | Stand Up |
| Live albums: Live at Red Rocks | Listener Supported | Live in Chicago | Live at Folsom Field | The Central Park Concert | The Gorge | Weekend on the Rocks |
| Live Trax series: Vol. 1 | Vol. 2 | Vol. 3 | Vol. 4 | Vol. 5 |
| Solo albums: Live at Luther College | True Reflections | Some Devil |
| Related articles |
| List of longest live songs | The Lillywhite Sessions | Because of Winn-Dixie | Peter Griesar | Butch Taylor | Tim Reynolds |
Categories: American musical groups | Dave Matthews Band | Jam bands | Music of Richmond, Virginia | Music of Virginia | Rock music groups | RCA Records musicians