Concrete Street is proud to welcome one of today's premier singer-songwriters, Gavin DeGraw, to The Pavilion on July 26th at 7:00 p.m. with special guest, Marie' Digby! Tickets are available at all Ticketmaster locations, including the Concrete Street Box Office.
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BIO
Gavin DeGraw is a talent, who
in just a few short years has become one of today’s premier
singer-songwriters. He’s done it the old-fashioned way, on the merits
of his creative abilities, perseverance and a healthy, homegrown
perspective, establishing himself as a magnetic, new voice in music.
Now, Gavin DeGraw adds a new chapter to his celebrated narrative with
the release of his second studio album, the self-titled, Gavin DeGraw.
DeGraw broke through in 2003, with the release of his debut album,
Chariot, which awakened music fans across the country to a charismatic,
vibrant young artist who connected with audiences in a way other
contemporary musicians did not. Selling over a million copies and
earning platinum certification, Chariot yielded three hit singles – “I
Don’t Want To Be,” “Follow Through,” and the title-track, “Chariot.”
But it wasn’t just the numbers that confirmed DeGraw’s popularity. The
song, “I Don’t Want To Be,” was chosen as the theme song for the hit TV
show, “One Tree Hill.” DeGraw made numerous appearances on television
shows like The Late Show with David Letterman, The Tonight Show with
Jay Leno, Live with Regis & Kelly, Last Call with Carson Daly, and
others. His songs have often been sung on “American Idol.” DeGraw has
toured tirelessly, selling out to bigger and bigger audiences every
time around.
Gavin DeGraw is a collection of impassioned, emotionally resonant
songs about the joys and rigors of love and life. The temptation for
anyone who has experienced early success is to mimic that formula for
success. But in recording his second album, DeGraw resisted. Instead,
he made the bold creative choice to give the album a decidedly more
rock-oriented sound, which was rendered with the help of famed
producer, Howard Benson (My Chemical Romance, Daughtry Motörhead).
DeGraw wrote all of the album’s songs, played guitar and piano
throughout, and helped in the songs’ arrangements.
“My first main love of music was classic rock, and that’s always
remained my foundation,” explains DeGraw, who trained at the Berklee
School of Music, before leaving to pursue his music career. “I felt
like I had satisfied a lot of the sweeter stuff on my first record, and
I want the Yin and Yang of it. I wanted to put a little more edge on it
this time. You don’t want to always be pigeon-holed as the ‘sweet and
nice’ guy singing ‘sweet and nice’ songs.”
Gavin DeGraw may have more of a rock flavor but it isn’t a hard-rock
album. It still reflects DeGraw’s musical ability to photograph
feelings and emotions and deliver it poetically to his audience. Part
of DeGraw’s appeal is the way he submits to those emotions in his
songwriting, and it’s one of the reasons why fans love him: his music
is the soundtrack to their lives. “I’m so appreciative of the way my
fans are with me,” he says. “It’s funny because when I used to play in
bars when I was younger, it would bug me sometimes if people would sing
along. Then I thought to myself, ‘What?!?’ That’s when you know they
appreciate what you’re doing so much, they’re willing to sacrifice
their own self-consciousness to be in it with you. That’s a great
thing.”
It was at the request of his fans that DeGraw, in 2004, would record
a stripped-down, acoustic version of his major label debut – entitled
Chariot Stripped – which would endear himself even more to his fans.
DeGraw’s story starts in the town of South Fallsburg, New York –
which isn’t really a town at all. Two hours outside of New York City,
South Fallsburg is technically a hamlet – a rural community classified
as being smaller than a village. “I didn’t grow up in a place that was
pretty and great and safe,” he says. “There were aspects that were
great, of course, but it wasn’t a privileged upbringing. So I think I
wanted to make things nicer through my music. Maybe if I was raised in
a more privileged environment, my music would have sounded a little
dirtier.”
Whatever the influence, it has translated into much success for
DeGraw, who began his career trekking to New York City to play just
about anywhere that would take him – restaurants, bars, after-hours
spots. His first gig was an Italian restaurant in Hell’s Kitchen, where
he also waited tables at (“I was a horrible waiter,” he laughs). Soon,
DeGraw began playing bars, populated mostly by people he knew from near
his hometown and local friends. Then he graduated to local clubs,
attracting larger and larger local audiences. In 2001, he recorded and
pressed up his own live CD that would sell out at his ever-growing club
shows. After signing with J Records and releasing Chariot, in 2003,
DeGraw would earn a big break when “One Tree Hill,” would use his first
single, “I Don’t Want To Be,” as its theme song. Audiences around the
country were soon introduced to his affable charms and prodigious
songwriting and singing talent.
“I got a break, like a lot of people get a break, but it wasn’t an
‘overnight’ thing. I think that keeps everything in check for me,”
DeGraw muses. “Success is such a relative thing, too, because, for me,
it was a success to play in a restaurant as opposed to playing on the
street. It was a success to play in a bar instead of a restaurant. It
was a success to play in a club instead of a bar, you know? Those were
all successes and I had a good life. It was killer to get to make a
living playing on a local level in New York.”
DeGraw wrote his new album over the course of a year, beginning in
the winter of 2006. He would write many of the songs on his guitar but
also on his piano, which only adds to his versatility as a frontman.
The album was recorded in Los Angeles, with Benson, who DeGraw felt
could help him bring his rock ambitions to life. “For me, a good
producer is someone you trust is going to get what you’re looking for
out of a record. If you say, I want this to sound like a fuzzy red
ball, a good producer will say, ‘I know what that sounds like’ – and
that’s Howard.”
Much of Gavin DeGraw is about the ups and downs of being in love –
all its enveloping emotions, its pangs, its yearnings, and all its
nuanced terrain. “Just to set the record straight, this album isn’t
about one girl,” DeGraw says, knowing he will inevitably be asked the
question. “It’s about different relationships, my mindset in those
relationships and just a poetic reflection of the stuff I’ve gone
through.”
The album’s first single is the bold, rocker “In Love With A Girl,”
which finds DeGraw crooning sweetly about the security of being in a
relationship. “It’s about being with someone who you feel confident in,
who feels confident in you, who knows you really well and loves you for
what you are,” DeGraw says. A quintessential rock jam that amplifies
DeGraw’s ubiquitous themes of romance, the song is a perfect
introduction to the new sound of his latest album.
From the bluesy “Young Love” to the sing-song playfulness of “Next
To Me,” Gavin DeGraw reveals the singer’s remarkable songwriting
talents. “Let It Go,” is a slower, more mellow but still rapturous love
song that, DeGraw says, is about convincing a woman to find comfort in
you. “She can let all that’s bugging her, let all those stresses
disappear,” he says. “It’s musical comfort food.”
On “I Have You To Thank,” against the backdrop of a dancing piano
riff, DeGraw, in pop balladeer mode, channels some of his longtime
influences – soul music, specifically the songs of Sam Cooke, Smokey
Robinson and The O’Jays. “When I listened to Sam Cooke for the first
time, it changed my life,” DeGraw remembers. “He was a master vocalist,
and those kinds of songs, the emotional love songs, they bring out the
‘singer’ in a singer, you know? This was my tribute to that feeling.
It’s about how you feel when you’re totally in love with someone – it
feels like new love. That feeling of butterflies and the giddiness –
but it’s not that I just met you. It’s every time I see you, it feels
like new love again.”
Not everything on Gavin DeGraw is devoted to the positive aspects of
relationships. On “Cheated On Me,” he sings about the complexities of
distance. He sings about the worry that goes through one’s mind when a
lover is not around. “You can’t love and not get jealous. I think
jealousy is a natural human emotion. The first verse of this song is
about, when someone’s not around, is the other person just looking to
hold anybody? The second verse wonders whether someone who acts jealous
can drive someone else into another’s arms.”
With this new album, DeGraw hopes to continue the success he’s had
and, more importantly, continue to connect with his ever-growing
audience. “The most challenging part of songwriting for me, and the
part that I find the most fun, is trying to write in a way that is
personal to me, but also is personal to the audience,” he says. “You
want people to hear a song and say, ‘You know, I feel like I know what
he’s going through.’ To me, that’s the art – not just writing
something, not just writing something personal, but writing something
personal that people can feel.” Gavin DeGraw is just that kind of
album.
Source: www.gavindegraw.com
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