Bio:
There was a time when every rock 'n' roll movement sprung from the grass
roots. And while much has changed over the years, a band working entirely
on its own -- outside the parameters of current trends -- can generate
the kind of organic electricity that marketers spend a fortune trying to
create. Case in point: the Dave Matthews Band.
Since Matthews -- a South African expatriate who settled in Charlottesville,
Va., after leaving his homeland as a teenager -- put together the genre-blending
combo, the quintet's charged live shows have made them one of the biggest
pop-rock draws in North America.
Their self-released debut, 1993's Remember Two Things, sold at a rate
of more than 10,000 copies per month -- a remarkable feat, considering
the album was distributed exclusively from the band's office. Their major-label
debut, Under the Table and Dreaming was produced by Steve Lillywhite (U2,
Talking Heads, Rolling Stones) and captures every nuance of the band's
live shows.
With singer/guitarist Matthews' vulnerable, expressive voice at the
fore, the band (reedman LeRoi Moore, violinist Boyd Tinsley, bassist Stefan
Lessard and drummer Carter Beauford) weaves a mesh of sound, that the Raleigh
Spectator described as "stunning...as cool, as evil and as furious as rock
has ever been."
"The way I look at it, we have five lead voices in this band," Matthews
says. "I may be the first thing people notice, since I do the singing,
but there are times when LeRoi's sax is the voice, and times when Boyd
is at the front. And in Carter and Stefan, we have something that goes
far beyond a simple rhythm section. There are very few times when the audience
has just one thing to listen to."
The band's third album, 1996's Crash, contained the radio mega-hit "Crash
Into Me," which was nominated for two Grammy Awards.
In October 1997, the DMB released a double CD of the group's August
1995 live performance at Red Rocks in Colorado. The following year, they
released their first studio album in two years, Before These Crowded Streets,
following it up with another tour. Two double-CD live sets followed in
1999: Listener Supported and Live at Luther College, the latter an acoustic
duo showcase for Matthews and fellow guitarist Tim Reynolds.
In the February of 2001, the Dave Matthews Band released the long-awaited
Everyday.
(bio from: http://www.rollingstone.com) |