Jars of Clay

Discography
Good Monsters (2006)

Redemption Songs (2005)
Who We Are Instead (2003)
Furthermore – From the Studio : From the Stage (2003)
The Eleventh Hour (2002)
If I Left the Zoo (1999)
Much Afraid (1997)
Drummer Boy - EP (1995)
Jars of Clay (1995)

 

 

Dan Haseltine (vocals, drum programming)
Charlie Lowell (keyboards, vocals)
Steve Mason (guitars, vocals)
Matt Odmark (guitars, vocals)

For fans of: Paul Colman Trio, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Caedmon's Call, R.E.M., The Beatles
Label: Essential Records

(Biography

Stories only get better in the retelling.

You find what works and what doesn't, what details need to be amplified and which parts need to be left out. You refine, you rework, and you discover the rewards that only effective communication can bring. And sometimes you start over from scratch.

Musicians often say that a song is never truly 'done,' that they only run out of time. Songs that are familiar to both performer and audience are given new life when they are tweaked, rearranged and sometimes reinvented from the ground up.

There is both great beauty and great function in recasting old songs for a new time, and inserting new songs into the always-changing dynamic of live performance. Jars of Clay wanted their songs to do more, so now they give us Furthermore.

This new double-disc project, subtitled From The Studio : From The Stage, gives us a unique look at the talents of this now-veteran bandtwo unique looks, actually, as one disc contains brand-new, acoustic-driven reworkings of classic Jars of Clay tunes, while the other disc endeavors to capture the energy found only in the band's high-octane live shows.

"We wanted to do a live record because a lot of the songs on the records translate even better in a live setting," says vocalist Dan Haseltine. "At the same time, the acoustic stuff is where I think we shine as a band, even more than the rock element. We started as a band playing in coffeehouses and things like that; it's really where we cut our teeth as musicians."

"Some of it has to do with what people have asked for, as well as just finding a balance of what songs are on the de facto 'greatest hits' list, the standards that people have come to expect to hear," adds guitarist Stephen Mason. "And then there are the songs we've loved over the years and felt could be reinterpreted a certain way, like 'Overjoyed' [originally found on the band's second studio effort, Much Afraid] a song we really loved but have always wondered what it would have been like another way."

The project's From The Studio disc finds the members of Jars of Clay (Haseltine, Mason, keyboardist Charlie Lowell and guitarist Matt Odmark) peeling back the layers of their own career, stripping down songs from across their catalog, from "Liquid," the very first track on their multi-platinum debut Jars of Clay, to "Something Beautiful" and "The Eleventh Hour," tunes from their latest studio record, The Eleventh Hour.

Two new songs are also included, the haunting "The Valley Song (Sing Of Your Mercy)" and "Redemption," which Mason describes as an exercise in creative immediacy. "On the last record, we started writing songs in the morning, and by midday, we'd start committing them to tape. We'd come up with things that got us really excited, and 'Redemption' is one of those deals where we spent the entire morning just running into walls, and it's one of those things that show what you can do when you stick to it while you struggle to get there," he says. "We thought it'd be an interesting treat for those people who are more fans of the art side of what we do."

As for "The Valley Song," it serves as the natural next step to the story presented in the band's song "Fly" from The Eleventh Hour (as well as featured on the From The Stage disc), a song which details someone exhorting a suffering loved one to let go and trust they will see each other again in Heaven. "The Valley Song" deals with the aftermath of that sorrow.

"It's a song about the mystery of suffering, and it's just one of those kinds of songs where I can imagine it will get tagged as 'the Jars of Clay worship song' but I think it's a lot more than that to us," Haseltine says. "It's still us asking questions, and that's a big part of what worship is, a dialogue with God."

In listening to the songs, both new and familiar, that make up the From The Studio section of Furthermore, you're reminded of what captured your attention about Jars of Clay in the first place: the harmonies, the hooks, the imagery of the lyrics. Haseltine says that was a very deliberate part of why the band wanted to rework some of their most familiar tunes.

"We find that our music connects with an audience when we're able to sit down and tell stories and perform in that stripped-down manner, especially since we write from the perspective of 'If you can't break down a song to just acoustic guitar and vocal, it's not a good song,'" he says. "These are songs you can just take down to their basic elements, take out all the bells and whistles, and simply rely on the quality of the song. It's great to just go in and not worry about all the extra elements of a rock show, and play songs just like we were sitting in a living room with friends."

But then there are times when you want all those extra elements of a rock show: the big guitar sound slamming through the arena, the hot crowd echoing the words of their favorite song back to the band. That's what's captured on Furthermore's second section, From The Stage. Taken from a performance from "The Eleventh Hour Tour," this 11-song collection showcases Jars of Clay in one of their favorite elements, performing in front of an appreciative audience.

Like From The Studio, the songs on From The Stage span Jars of Clay's career, from the mega-hit "Flood" and "Like a Child" from their self-titled debut to "Disappear" and "Revolution" off of The Eleventh Hour. Longtime fans and new converts alike get a taste of the dynamics with which a live Jars of Clay show, from the rockin' "Crazy Times" to the soulful "I'm Alright" to the poignant "This Road."

The decision to release an official live album came with more than a little trepidation from within the band. "You're kinda hanging it out there," Mason says. "Recording a live show reflects really well whether it is good or not."

But the ultimate decision came back around to wanting to give fans another glimpse at how their favorite songs can live in another form, a view of music the band got from a superstar with whom they've shared a stage once or twice.

"Sting was one of the artists who gave us our perspective on what a live show should be, that you're not just out there to duplicate what's on the record," Haseltine says. "You're out there to make the songs that you may have only played once or twice when you were in the studio, to let those things evolve. So hopefully what you get is even more dynamics within the songs, and a more mature sound than you could have possibly gotten when the songs were new in the studio."

Both halves of the Furthermore project were born from a single desire, to give fans of Jars of Clay a new way to relate to the band's music. "Sometimes at shows, we'll sit down and if we're feeling a little bit saucy, we'll say, 'Hey, what do you guys want to hear?'" Haseltine says. "It'll be Matt and Steve on acoustic guitars and me with a mike and they'll always call out these obscure songs they want to hear us play, and we'll have to say, 'Uh … we really can't do that. Anybody else have a request?'

"So this is a chance for us to go back and rediscover some of those songs people want to hear, and play them how we would do them in a live setting versus how we'd do them on a record."

Guitarist Mason attempts to take a little more learned approach to it. "If you look at classical music, and note all the variations based on a single theme, I think there's a lot of truth to that that we've applied to songs over our career," he says. "You can arrange things differently, and that immediately adds a different dimension, and that's a lot of what this record was to us, using some more organic textures. We were playing together as a band on both records, so it's both a 'live' and a 'live in the studio' dynamic, and it adds yet another element we think is pretty cool."

But in the end, it's all about the retelling of stories already told, of songs already and yet to be sung, and the ongoing writing of the tale of a band constantly on the road of discovery.


 

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