Mecca

Tue
07
Feb

Mecca - Joe Vana (2002)

Artist: 
Categories: 
Interviews
AOR Heaven NEH Records Z-Roxx Loud 1 Groove Machine Destiny Hot Tracks Target Wishing Well Perris

 

 

 

 

 

 

JOE VANA / Mecca - Lead Vocals / Co-Writer


Well Joe, it's great to finally throw some questions at you and let the
public at large get to know you at last!

Thanks…let me start by saying I have been a HUGE fan of your site for over three years….I am thrilled to be part of it!
I am just a music fan who did an album to get out the songs I wrote and have Fergie sing with me.
Little did I know how it would end up!! I also wanted an album to showcase Mike Aquino. He is a really great guitarist and I hated seeing someone that good not getting a name for himself.

Very kind of you to say, thanks. Joe, you and I have known each other for a few years now.
You have been busy writing songs for a long time now and are breaking on to the scene as a new artist - is that in any way an overwhelming proposition for you?

No. How can it be? I do music for fun. No pressure that way. Pure and simple.
I love to sing…my poor neighbor Rick Milner probably wanted to move after hearing me in the shower…hahaha. But seriously, three years ago I had NEVER sung in front of anyone. Jim Peterik discovered me and next thing I knew I was singing on demos for the Beach Boys, playing in front of sold out shows with Jimmy and sharing the stage with my idols. Hell, I even got to sing with Dennis DeYoung….not a bad gig for a beginner.

Naturally, there are high words of praise for you from the likes of Jim Peterik, Fergie, Mike Aquino and others...is that a moral boost for you?
Sure…of course it is. But my praise and admiration for their help in making my dream come true with this album cannot be measured. They all did an incredible job on this album and they all brought their A-Game to the table. As far as a moral boost I get one every time I see my son sing to songs I wrote...he sings them better than me...hahahaha…

Mecca is not your average debut album, is it not?!!!
Thank You!! My goal was to do an album that sounded like Toto meets Survivor meets Mr. Mister…and one that if my idols heard it they would like it.
I truly like to do nothing halfway in life. That can be a real detriment to mental health….but I took this album as my one chance to “show what I can do”. I wanted everything to sound just so. I know JP and Larry wanted to choke me during the whole mix and on some of the arrangements. But, in the end I am happy with the product…and I am not happy with many products these days. I sent Lukather a copy of the album and he loved it. To have Luke love my vocals was beyond flattering, That made the album completely worthwhile. His music is a religion for me….

Absolutley Joe! Could you have wished for a better vehicle to get the songs and your voice out there?
Trick question right?? I hear a horn section in the background….daaa da da daaa da daaa…(Ides of March fans will get this one)

Let's go right back to the roots of where you have come from and how your baby got started!
You are Chicago born and bread right?

Yep…lived in Chicago all my life. The album started in my basement with Mike and my buddy Jason Deroche. We wrote songs and had fun playing. I loved that period of my life. A heightened sense of energy and creativity. I met Mike [Aquino] and Jason at a local music store called Modern Music in Lisle Illinois.
Mike was my guitar teacher there. I told him after a couple of lessons that I write music and Jimmy Peterik was a REAL close friend. He probably thought I was nuts…until I introduced them. Jimmy heard Mikes playing on my demos and asked him to do demos for him. Mike and I both play in World Stage together, had a side project called EPB with Jimmy and when I was assembling my album he was my only choice…who better. Next came Mecca….

And just how did you discover you lived close to the great Jim Peterik?
Can you let everyone know how you first met Jim and how your relationship has developed with him over the years?

I used to see him in a local music store. I sent him a fan letter to their fan club and he answered. He said to stop by sometime since I lived so close to him. Little did he know some 13 year old kid would have to hop on his bike to ride over. I headed over and and knocked on the door…there he was.
He invited me in and we talked for a bit. Over the next few years I would visit him every couple of months. I heard Vital Signs and all of the next albums before they came out, he would play them for me in his living room. Cool Huh!?! After college our friendship grew…became something more than just visits. I became part of his extended family and he mine. When my wife and I took a one month break from each other to hit the reset button on our relationship Jim and Karen (Jim's wife) were there.
I had dinner with them, played board games and they counseled me on what's important. I was lucky, I had my Mom and Dad and my family to help me…and I had Jim and Karen.

At what age did you start writing songs?
31…I am 34 now.

Several of your songs and ideas have made it to the final version of Mecca how far back or how recent are those songs?
Not far. I have only been at it for three years. I played you the tunes over the phone…your interest and support kept me going. Melodicrock.com was a big reason this album got done….congrats buddy…your site had a baby….Mecca.

LOL! Obviously Survivor was one of your key influences, but I know there are others! Tell us about all your favorite bands and artists…
Toto and Mr. Mister are the main two. I am a huge AOR fan. I buy everything they play on. Lukather and Steve Farris are my favorite guitarists. Richard Page and Warren Wiebe (RIP) are my favorite singers along with Thom Griffin. I also really dig David Pack.

Mecca originally was just yourself, under the name Project Voyager - how did it evolve to what it has become and how did everyone that became involved come to be included?
Yikes…this could go on for hours! Let's just say I asked Jimmy to produce my album…and the rest is history….hahaha. I actually met Fergie over the Internet about 4 years ago. I asked David Hungate via the Internet and he demanded Shannon for the project (Thank God!!!!) Jimmy Nichols was a session player on World Stage and he goes way back with JP.

Sitting there now reflecting - what do you think of the final product?!!
Hard to listen to….really. So many emotions and feelings and trapped thoughts. It was such a hard thing to internalize and produce. First albums should never be this big….meaning involved.
I never did a demo tape…never played out live before 2 years ago…I am way to new to this to process all the information. BUT, I am real happy with the final result. Everyone did their respective jobs well……very well.

Knowing you for few years or so now Joe, I think you have excelled yourself, Personally and professionally on this album.
Thanks man!! That means a lot….you hear a lot of music and I really respect your opinion. What sucks is this is my benchmark now. I have to actually beat this on the next one…hahahaha. I grew a lot on this album. It was a real learning experience.

I love your vocals on this record. There is something really appealing to them, they are raw, passionate vocals and ultimately really set the songs up.
Thanks again!! Emotion is everything to me. I listen to music about 5 hours a day. I am one of those audiophile nuts who listen into the music. Anyway, I can care less if a singer is sharp or flat…short or tall…thin or fat…chick or dude…if they can convey emotion, then they are a singer.
Until then they are just going through the motions. I believe anybody can sing…..If you can live the tune….you can sing the tune….I hope that doesn't sound bizarre….

Yes it does, but we'll let it pass…haha…Seriously now, let's go through each track you sing lead on for starters:
Without You
– Rocker – my seed – and Jimmy and I finished it……I always thought I should not have sang this one. This song taught me a smooth voice can pull off a rock tune…probably the best example of a true split between JP and me…we collaborated equally on this one….Survivor like tune…

Can't Stop Love (duel lead) – Rocker – JP and Fergie's tune – I was along for the ride on this one…..fun tune…..can you guess who is who on the pre-chorus and the chorus….hahaha…Fergie and I sound REALLY alike in those parts…Shannon becomes Jeff Porcaro on this tune….

Silence Of The Heart – Mid-Tempo – JP seed – and then he and I wrote it together….JP really had a cool melody and chorus worked out on this one…I added a lot of lyrics but this one is pretty Peterik.
It's one of his best songs…..I added in the arrangement ideas too…but this song and Velocitized if someone played it for me…I would knew he had a hand in right away. The Hungate bass from Hell on this one!!!….hahahaah…kind of a Steely Dan or early ToTo tune….

Mecca – Slow rocker – another Peterik seed that we finished together….JP is smart about having singers be real involved in Lyrics…helps them connect to the tune.
This one has no beginning or end….it's a circle…kind of cool….when we worked on it I bucked having a second chorus…to this day I wonder if I should have kept my mouth closed….hahahah…..Special song…deep….a real bitch to sing though….hahahaha…Mike's best solo on the album…oooozes vibe and soul…..This song ended up totally Mr. Mister meets Toto….head on!!

Close That Gap – Our one true ballad- my seed - Jason Deroche helped me musically and then I presented it to JP….we ran with it….Real hard tune to not be able to connect lyrically to…I lived it…so it was a real breeze to sing. Shannon's percussion and Jimmy Nichols keys kill on this one…

Falling Down – Mid Tempo Rocker - My seed - and JP again helped it see the light of day…Toto meets Hall and Oates. This tune is everything I envisioned it to be…a real fun tune for me…I can't wait to sing this one live!!! Shannon and David Shine on this tune….

Now I really love Falling Down, that's so smooth! Youa re right with the Hall & Oates comparison.
Cool….I am thrilled you got the vibe on it…

On Silence Of The Heart, there is a real Mr. Mister feel, also on Mecca...
Thanks…to even be said in the same breath as those dude…YIKES!!! I really listen to way to much of that stuff….hahahah

And on Close That Gap, you asked special permission to take Larry aside and re-mix the track - I have to say, after hearing the original, that the final version works even better!
Thanks!! I wouldn't say remix…more rearrange or re-produce.
I told Jim I wasn't digging the final product of the tune in so many words. By this time in the mix we had an understanding to say what we felt….no more sugar. Jimmy was cool to let me rearrange the pieces of the puzzle. “Gap” was a song that I had the final way I wanted it in my head from the minute I began writing it.
When I brought it to Jimmy to listen to, he loved it. We finished it together, but I still knew how I wanted it. Jason Deroche did a great job of working with me on the original music ( KILLER classical player and writer).
He has great ideas and is a rare talent. I am a huge Richard Marx fan. I wanted a ballad that was like he did it. I have only two musical dreams left, one is to work with Richard and the other is to work with Lukather.
Well anyway, I had Larry dump the basic template and we started building. He was real cool in the whole process of the album. I was a total pain in the ass about instrument placements, keeping space, making the guitar a musical event and so on… and vocal levels. I am thrilled they let me have my head on the mixes. It caused a lot of arguments, but in the end it turned out great. I am lucky that it was just me, Jimmy and Larry there to mix the album….if there were more cooks the kitchen would have exploded!…..hahahaha….

And Without You has a special quality to it....great song!
Thanks….it's a pretty angry tune.
But considering the timeframe for me it's par for the course. In retrospect I can't believe JP didn't flog me for all these negative lyrics. He is so damn upbeat lyrically…God, is he fun to write with…..

What was your first experience n the studio like for this album?
Frightening!!! To be in the room where Don Henley, Vince Gill, Elton John, Garth Brooks, Backstreet Boys and others have recorded….I was freaked. But it was about the 10,000th album of JP's so I was put at ease.

Anything you would change now, looking back over the whole process?
Nothing I can say publicly….haha. Actually I think anything different would have changed the album….so no…I'll gladly keep it.

Well Joe, you are known now, this record is soon to be released to the world and then we will all be looking at you going, great - now what's next?!!
Mecca 2
of course!! But before then, we shall promote and support this album any way we can. I also just sang for the Genius Rock Opera….kind of Dennis DeYoung meets Dream Theater...on my tune only.

Who and when will be Mecca 2?!!
Who is a secret….for now….suffice it to say I am TOTALLY Excited and ready to go to work. I can't let myself down….I have to make sure it is better than the first….

Anything else you would like to add mate?
Thanks to anyone crazy enough to read an interview about me!
Seriously, Thanks to you Andrew and all who have supported me over the past couple of years. I only wanted an album that no one would say…Damn, I wasted my hard earned money on this???? Hahhhah…..I hope people connect with the album….visit our Official Mecca web site….www.meccaband.com my webgirl Jamie has been killing herself on it, and see you all on the road!!
THANKS AGAIN!!!

 

 

 

 
Tue
07
Feb

Mecca - Jim Peterik (2002)

Categories: 
Interviews
AOR Heaven NEH Records Z-Roxx Loud 1 Groove Machine Destiny Hot Tracks Target Wishing Well Perris

 

 

 

 

 

 

JIM PETERIK / Mecca - Producer / Co-Writer


[After about 10 minutes of needless chit chat!] All right Jim, well….I better get going and ask a few questions.
Yes sir.

Tell me, I think I know the story, but for the record I guess… you and Joe, how did you guys hook up?
Well, I mean, that goes way back. <laughs>
You're talking about when Joe was 13, in 1983, and I was in Survivor, of course, and making records and there was this little kid that would come over on his bicycle and knock on my door - I don't know how he knew I lived there - and, I would say, “Yes?”.
The first time he says, “Well, I'm Joe and I'm a big rock fan, and I heard you're in Survivor.” Anyway, he seemed like a real nice kid, and I would let him come in and I think when he first came over I had just gotten test pressings of maybe Caught in the Game, perhaps. So here's this 13 year-old, and I'm getting my master disks and I'm sitting down to play them and he's there listening to them <laughs>. And I'm going, “What do you think?” He just kind of sat there with his mouth open, you know. But he impressed me because he always was polite and he always knew when to leave.

Right.
He wasn't one of these pesky kids, and through the years he would always come by and soon the bike had turned to an automobile, when he got his license, and we always kept in touch. Right about '89-'90, he said, “You know what? I write music,” and I go, “Yeah, yeah, sure, sure”, “and I sing,” “Yeah, yeah, well give me a tape sometime,” well, that never happened, at least not until many years later when he finally had the nerve to say, “You know, I think I'm ready to actually show you what I can do.” Well he started giving me tapes of a kind of a band called Project Voyager that he was cooking up.
He was working with Mike Aquino and a guy name Jason…let's just say Jason, I forgot Jason's last name. He's the co-writer of a couple of songs on the record.

Daroche?
Daroche! Yeah.

OK.
These tapes were really primitive, you know. They were just done at his little basement studio. But, I really heard a lot of good elements. He says, “What do you think, really?” And I go, “Really, I think it's OK, you know, it needs a lot of work, a lot of polish,” and just around then, Fergie came into town to write with me for his record, and Joe had showed me a riff that he had developed with Mike, and we wrote a song, the three of us, called “Sheila's Gone”.

OK.
That song, we wrote it, and demo'd it. It never made Fergie's album, but that was the first time I wrote with Joe and it worked out very nice. And right around that same time, I was doing demos for the World Stage record and there was this one song that I wrote called “To Miss Somebody”. I wrote that with Don Barnes, and I was around the piano, working it out, and Joe came over and I said, “Just for grins, take this high part.” This was the first time I really heard him sing live, you know. We're in the great room, and the echo is beautiful in this room, and he seemed a little nervous, but I taught him the part and lo-and-behold, I heard this tremendous voice come out of him.
The pitch was good, and the tone was good, and I looked at this guy and I go, “I can't believe this is you!” This is the 13 year old kid on the bicycle and he's blowing me away, you know. It was just a real amazing moment for me.
And about the next week we cut the song, “To Miss Somebody” and I knew that the song would probably be earmarked for Dennis DeYoung, but I had Joe sing the demo, which I still have a copy of, and he did a heck of a great job, and that was really the first time Joe had been professionally recorded, you know, not just in his basement studio. And I remember, I played that tape for people, and they go, “Who is this?” you know, and so I started to realize that this wasn't just me; this guy was good. And from there, I started using him on demos… there's a song that I wrote with Larry and Joe Thomas called “That's Why God Made the Radio”, which you'll hear some day, it's really pretty neat. It was meant to be for the Beach Boys.

Really?
But that never happened.

That sounds like a good hook.
It is a great hook, you'll really like the song. I'm going to do something with it; I don't know what yet. Joe sang on that and impressed everybody, so we just start… and then I put on my first World Stage show and I guess it was January of 2000, and Joe came up there with me, and of course Mike Aquino was on guitar, and of course all the other members of World Stage, and Dennis couldn't make it, so I had Joe do a solo on “To Miss Somebody” and he came out from the back line and stood out on front and just blew everybody's mind. So right around that time we started talking in the terms of a Joe Vana solo album or a Project Voyager solo album; he started talking to me about that. And I thought that was a pretty great idea, and we started scheming that and, you know, how we could get financing for it and everything else. Around that time he started talking to Fergie and he and Fergie started scheming up, “Why don't we do this record together.” The whole thing started blooming and we sat down and talked about it, and I said, you know, “I have a dream of someday recording the album of my dreams. And that means going to the best studio in the country.” And then he said… I don't remember who said it, but someone said, “You know, we could get David Hungate because he's in Nashville.”
I guess what I didn't say is, the best studio to me is this one place in Nashville called the Sound Kitchen. Especially this one room called The Big Boy Room. It's a huge room and it's got a statue of Big Boy hamburgers… Big Boy is a big hamburger chain in America.

Oh, I know Big Boy, yeah.
A big fat boy, that's their logo. Well they stole one of these statues or something, and it's in their lobby, so it's the Big Boy Room. Anyway, we just started brainstorming, “Hey, maybe we can get David Hungate,” you know, and so I said, “Well, I'll tell you what, let's just call him up,” because I had worked with David about three months earlier on “That's Why God Made the Radio”, which we cut at the Sound Kitchen. I mentioned that I was down there; I talked with David and he said, “Wow, that was a fun session,” and I said, “Would you be interested in cutting some tracks down there for this new project?” and I told him about Fergie, because he remembered Fergie.
He was never in Toto at the same time, but he remembered the album, and we started talking about drummers, and I said, “Who would you recommend for drums?” And he goes, “Wow, well the guy I'm working with down here, you're not going to believe him, his name is Shannon Forrest.”
He said, “That's my choice.” And I said, “What about this other guy,” and I mentioned another name, and he said, “Well, he's good, but Shannon's better, well not better, but Shannon's my guy, we work like a team.” And I said, “Well, could you possibly have him send me a tape of some of his work,” and Shannon did, and it was great. But I should've just taken David's word for it. If David says he's the guy, I guess I just should've believed him <laughs>.

So we just started planning and planning and had meetings with Mike Aquino and decided on a keyboard player… went through a lot of ideas on keyboard for the Mecca record, but ended up with a guy that worked with me on World Stage, Jimmy Nichols. We couldn't find anybody that was more appropriate and more in tune with what we were going for, which was kind of a blend of the '80s and now.

And he gets this wonderful… he's a great grand piano player, but he always MIDI's the piano sound with synths and bells and it's a very nice layered sound that he gets.

There's a very rich texture of that on the album.
It really is. A lot of that you heard is all in one pass. There's no overdubs.

Wow.
There's some other overdubs, but very, very few. Most of that is just one pass with Jimmy with his MIDI, you know, he's got this MIDI thing that triggers all these other synthesizers at the same time. So, I called up Jimmy, booked him, and of course, the investment team was in place, and we all went down together to Nashville, and I have to mention Larry Millas, of course, who was an integral part of the production team, and we moved down to Nashville, booked the room, and we spent two very intensive days.
We cut all those basics, actually we cut 13 tracks, we're only releasing 11 [10 for Europe, Japan gets their pesky Bonus Track!].

Where are the other two Jim?
Oh, see, now you're curious <laughs>. Well, they're going to see the light of day, but we didn't have… we felt these 11 really hung together very well.

They do.
The other two, they are very good and they will be finished. But right now they're mainly in basic track form and will soon be finished… soon to be collector's items. Off the record, it may be someday where we'll finish one of those and offer it as a bonus to Japan, say, or something.

Sure.
But they're both really good.

Fantastic.
Yeah, you'll like them. They were a little bit outside the mainstream of what all these songs were, but anyway, (to make) a long story short, we cut 13 tracks in two days, which is a lot of tracks.

That's a lot of long days.
A long day… it's one thing getting through 13 tracks, but the quality of the tracks were stunning. We would get done with one magical take, and say, “OK, next,” and we'd start working up the next magical take and the spirit in the room, I mean, was amazing.
And we still found time to go have a beer at the end of the day. That's how good these sessions were. I'll never forget these sessions.
They're probably the best sessions I've ever been a part of because we were working on all 8 cylinders, you know. We had Hungate on bass, which was amazing, he brought his whole arsenal of basses; everything from the original bass he played on “Roseanna”… he brought all of his famous basses. When you talk to him, you say, “What tracks is the “Roseanna” bass on?”… He'll tell you. Of course Shannon was one of the finest drummers I've ever worked with.

Really?
Yeah. He's just like a computer with arrangements. He remembered everything. But a computer with a lot of soul and human feel. So he was like the best of both worlds; he had a computer mind, but a real soulful approach to the drums.
A lot of times a drummer can really slow down a session if he keeps forgetting what section is next, and we don't have charts; Rock and Roll bands usually don't use music charts, we've got it all in our heads.

Yeah.
He's just got an amazing head. All the musicians were playing together. We had Mike Aquino playing, we had David Hungate, we had Shannon Forrest, we had Joe doing scratch vocals on his, we had Fergie doing scratch vocals on his, I was directing the whole thing, Larry's back there manning the boards, Bob ??? and Frank ??? were there from Wasabi, just taking it all in. It was just this big team spirit; it's the only way we could've gotten 13 tracks in two days. I mean, some bands that I've been in, we've gotten a snare sound in two days…

Really. <laughs>
You know, a drum sound in two days. That's a bit of an exaggeration but in the old days, I remember getting a song a day. And we were happy, “Hey, we got a song today,” you know. We got 13! Which wouldn't make any difference at all, except that the quality was there.
The magic takes were there and we left Nashville feeling very good about what we had. We brought the master tapes to Chicago, well actually, this is technical stuff but, we cut it on 2” analog tape and had it transferred to Pro Tools files and… I have Pro Tools at my studio so… the rest of the project was done in Pro Tools where there's much more flexibility and you don't have all the problems of analog tape, the shedding of the iron oxide on the tape, there's just a million things better about being in Pro Tools.
Brought it back and started the overdub process, which was much more lengthy, and we had the luxury of taking our time. When Fergie felt like it was his time to come in and sing, he would do that. When Joe said, “OK, I'm having a great day, I'm going to come in and do a vocal,” we had the luxury of doing that because I do have my own studio.

Ok…
So the overdub process was very leisurely. We got the basics done in two days but then the overdub process must've taken six months. That's the way we wanted it. We wanted to take our time and not make any mistakes. And then the mix process, we took our time with the mix process to make sure the mixes were holding up. We'd do a mix and we'd say, “Well, that's pretty good,” and then we'd do the next mix and it was even better, then we'd go back to the one before and tweak that and, you know, you can go overboard with that and be mixing for the rest of your life, and at a given point we just said, “No, you know what, this is great, we're done.” We mastered the record at Colossal, a really great mastering lab here and, I always say, the mastering lab puts the pixie dust on it, and pixelates it and just makes it sound like a record.

Right. You sent me the pre-master and then the post-master, and there was a difference.
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. It suddenly sounds more professional.

It brought out the textures evenly.
It brings out the inner textures. Fergie said the same thing. I sent Fergie a pre-master and then a post and now he's dancing. Fergie, he does it every time, he told me today; he said every time he gets an album back it's, “Oh man, I should've done this, we should've done that,” and then after a few listens he starts falling in love with it, you know. And, of course, his friends are saying, “Fergie, you're crazy, this sounds amazing.” That doesn't hurt either.

Yeah, yeah.
But now Fergie just, just loves it, you know. It's just been a really, really fun project… fun for me. I left out so much. The writing process was a lot of fun.
I wrote really with all members of the band, of the core band.
Joe Vana and I wrote a number of songs. Some that were kind of started by Joe, and I helped him. Some were started by me and he helped me, just like any really good collaboration.
A lot of times a co-writer will know what you're going for, and will go there with you, making it easier to finish the song. I always think my best songs are co-written, because there's another mind involved. If it's the right person, it's a positive. If it's someone that's not on your wavelength, it's a negative; you'd be better off finishing it yourself.
I showed Joe a song called “Mecca” and he immediately got it and said, “Wow, I love this song, let me work on this song with you.” And I had a lot of the music done but he was very helpful with the lyrical concept.
We talked about what Mecca was; he did research on the ancient city of Mecca. You know, he went to the library and found out about Mecca, and we used a lot of his research actually in the song… the part about kissing the black stone for luck, all of that stuff is Joe's research and it made it a more mysterious song. Same with “Silence of the Heart,” I showed him that song and he loved it and helped me finish it.
With Fergie, we ended up writing more of the rockers, actually, Mike Aquino is the fellow that brought us the basic music and riffs behind “Miss-Chevious”, and as he's playing this amazingly gnarly riff. I start skantin' over it and open my notebook and there was the word “Miss-Chevious”, I've had this little word tucked into my back pocket for probably 20 years.
The real pronunciation is mischievous, but everybody says mischievous, and I always thought, “I'm going to write a song called “Miss-Chevious”, and make it like this girl Miss Chevious, you know, and so I started singing Miss-Chevious over this guitar riff, and then Fergie starts chiming in with this “I hate to see her leave, but I love to see her walk away,” you know. And all these really funny lines, you know, and that song just kind of came together with the three of us.

For sure…
And the same thing with “Wishing Well”. It was the song that Fergie pretty much had the whole chorus pretty much intact, and said, “What do you think?” And I said, “It's great!” And we just sat down one day, me, Joe, and Fergie, and flushed out the story line of what this wishing well is about, and Joe helped us kind of form the story line of these two people at the wishing well.
Totally separate from each other, but each wishing for love, and finding it in each other. And that story came together and we started writing lyrics, and it's one of my favorite tracks on the record.

Yeah. It's a good track, for sure.
It's really a good solid track, and clearly a collaborative effort among the band. So a lot of collaborations between band members, which I like to see.

Yeah, me too. I think it's great. A particular favorite of mine, as you know, is “Silence of the Heart”
Yes.

A wonderful ballad.
Yeah, that's a favorite of mine. Again, it almost has that kind of Sting pulsating staccato bass thing, that grabs you right off the bat. Joe's vocal, I would have to say is my favorite vocal of his on the record.

I think so too.
It's just wonderful. I don't think anybody could've sung it better. I just love to listen to that record. It does a unique thing in the chorus - this is just for the music people out there, people that play piano or study music - at the beginning of the chorus, it starts in the minor mode, and right in the middle of the chorus it goes to the major mode, you know, it changes one note of the melody. All of a sudden, halfway through the chorus, it turns from kind of bittersweet to happy, and what you're hearing is going from the minor key to the major key, and it's such a lift. It's the first time I've ever done that, and it worked so well.

Yeah, OK. That's interesting. It just has a great mood to it, that song, doesn't it. It's haunting, it grabs you...
Yeah, but listen midway through every chorus, it changes tonality; it changes from minor to major. A lot of people don't realize what they're hearing, but that's what it is.

Very clever, you see, you're the best producer on the block.
Well, it's actually in the writing, it's not in the producing.

Sorry <laughs>
<Laughs> The producing just enhances whatever you're doing. It's really an album, as a producer, or as a fan, you just put on and listen to.
I do it when I don't have to listen to it, you know. My wife, who, I mean... Karen Peterik is not one to pad anyone's ego, including my own. She's my biggest fan and my harshest critic. When I played her this record, she just could not believe it. It's in every car… we have a few cars… there's a copy in every car that she drives.
I'm blown away, because the last time she responded like this to any album, was Vital Signs.

Really? That was a big record.
That was a big record, so she's good luck when she likes something.

Yeah. That's a good omen. We've just got to get some radio to pick some of this stuff up.
Well that's going to happen, that's going to happen. I mean, it's not like the old days, certainly, but I think there's a few things on here that are very contemporary, and I think “Silence of the Heart” is one of them.

Yeah. Absolutely.
I think they could get airplay.

Absolutely. You've got that for Adult Contemporary radio and then you've got “Velocitized” for rock radio.
Exactly. I'm looking at the list of songs here. Just a couple of stories: “Close That Gap”, or course, is largely a Joe Vana song that I helped him complete, and he can tell you the story behind it, of course, better than I can, but it's definitely from personal experience what he was going through in his life at the time. It's the first song I heard him write… it wasn't totally done, but it was the first song that I heard him write that I said, “OK Joe, that's a great song. Now build from there.” That's when I knew that he could be a songwriter.
That song was a very hard song to capture. In fact, a lot of songs are made when they're cut, and other songs are made when they're mixed. This song went through a huge metamorphosis in the mix-down process.
We had a mix that I was happy with, and Joe said, “I like this, but it's not what I hear in my head. Give me just three hours in the studio with Larry, and yourself if you want to be there, and let me try a few things.” I have to say, I came in after about two hours and I loved what I heard. He did a lot of dynamic changes; he muted the drums at the top - the drums don't come in now until the first chorus. He built the song, and finally everybody's happy, and I have to give him credit for making that what it is.
That was his baby, and I wanted him to be happy with that. Just like with Fergie, his baby was “Blinded By Emotion”. He didn't write it, but he wanted to prove to himself that he could sing the song. He loved the song so much, and yet it's one of the hardest songs I've ever written to sing. I mean the range is amazing in that song if you really listen to it. The demo… this song, and I'm not afraid to say it, has been around a few years. So has “You Still Shock Me”, but a good song, it doesn't matter when you write it, it's still a good song.

Yeah.
Of course we updated the arrangement of it and re-cut it and all that stuff, but Fergie was determined to sing these songs. I'll tell ya, he worked his butt of on these songs and I have to say, he did an amazing job on both these, on all these songs he sang, but “Blinded By Emotion” especially, because it was such a hard, hard song to sing. The range of it is incredible.

Yeah. It does.
Everybody came to the line and gave 150% when they were in the studio. I'm really proud of everybody's performance. Everybody to the man delivered on this record.

Absolutely, and the vocals are some of Fergie's best.
I agree….”Falling Down”… there's not one track that I skip over.

No, me either. I've got to play the album from start to finish.
Yeah. It's really that kind of album. Of course a few words on “Velocitized” are something that… I love that song.

When was that written? What album was that written for?
I don't know the exact year. I want to say '93 though.
It was right around the time Survivor kind of got back together. I started doing gigs and Dave Bickler was the lead singer…oh, you know what, I take that back. It had to be late '92 because Jimi Jamison…we didn't know who our lead singer was going to be at the time, and Jimi came into town and Frankie and I had written a song called “Velocitized” and actually Jimi sang the demo of that song. Soon after that, Jimi went off and we got Dave Bickler back, and I toured with the band between '93 and '96. And Frankie and I wrote many more songs, but that song always seemed to get a reaction when I played it for people. I never forgot about that song, and when we were looking at songs for this record, I played everybody a lot of things, and that song just lit everybody up. I said, “Well, this song deserves another chance.”

Oh, I'm so glad you did.
Yeah, it's just a real… it didn't get its chance initially, you know. I know that… God, I'll tell ya, I thought so highly of that song, and nothing ever happened with it. Hopefully it'll get recognized now; I'm very proud of it. It was one of the songs that show what Frankie and I were all about. It's just the kind of songs we would write. It's a certain chemistry that he and I have… I can say “have” because those songs will live on. It's a very special thing.

Is it safe to say there's very little chance of you guys writing together again?
Well, you know, I can't say that. It's something that I really don't need to say because time will take care of it one way or another. If it's meant to happen, it will, if it's not, it won't. I never put up barriers.

That's a very… well, I think that's just a fantastic outlook. That's a great attitude isn't it?
You try to keep your mind open as you can.

Fantastic. You just thought this song fit into this project perfectly?
I did. I think it works. I think it's the harder edge of what Mecca is all about, but I think it flows well.

Yeah, it does. It's just got that great little, I don't know, it's got a great little buzz about it doesn't it?
Yeah. It really does, and Shannon really slammed that thing.

Yeah, absolutely. Fantastic.
Anything else?

That's a pretty good story, isn't it?
Well, it's pretty complete. Now, of course, we want to get it out in front of people. Let people experience it. I think people are hungry for this type of music, I really do. I'm not saying that all age groups are equally into this type of thing, but I know there's a very broad band of people, basically from the ages of 30-50, that are going to want to hear this record. And that is really where we're aiming this. I would love to see a couple of these songs in movies, and I will definitely be pitching that, because I think a few of these would be wonderful in a movie.

Yes.
“Mecca” comes to mind, or “Silence of the Heart”, or “Close That Gap”, or really any of them. There's some really good potential there. We're not closing any doors to anything like that. I would like to see this thing released worldwide and really get an audience. I'd love to see a Mecca II.

Great! Great! That's what I was going to ask you.
But obviously one at a time. There was an awful lot of good energy put into this record. I think some day we'll look back on this record and go, “Wow! That was pretty cool.” I'm trying to tell everybody to appreciate this moment because these moments are hard to come by. There's so many albums out there. There's an enormous amount of product, but a lot of them are just that - they're product. They don't have the heart and soul that it takes to last.

This record really has heart and soul.
It really does, and it comes through. It's a combination of all those elements: the singing, the songs, the production, the commitment - you can sense it. You can have a budget of $500,000 and, trust me, and not have an album this good.

Yeah.
We did it!
…..I'm just telling you that it is possible to do an album economically.

[Time out….] I saw you and Kevin [Chalfant] at work after The Gods 2000.
Well you should be happy to know that the song we were writing in Liverpool at the dock there; we finished it and it's going to go on the record.

All right!
It's called "The Man I Want To Be".

Fantastic.
It's exactly... in fact, we found the old tapes from us skatting right there in that little damp hallway waiting for the cab or whatever, and it was as good as we remembered it, and we just finished it. It's one of the real treats.

Fantastic. That was something else just to be there.
Well, we'll have some good stories when that album comes out.

Great. And next up a World Stage record?
Uh yeah, I think a World Stage record is definitely in the very near future, at least the planning of it. I have one track that's cut, it's called, "Night of the World Stage"

That's right.
I'm real proud of it. It's not finished but it's kind of laid down and I need to really get Mike Aquino in here and rock it up a little bit. I really don't know - there's only my voice on it right now - I don't know if this is going to be a superstar event or if this is going to be more of a... I don't know what this is going to be... what World Stage this is going to be. I do know though that I would like to be able to do more dates with the next incarnation of World Stage. So it may not be a superstar event this time around; I'm not sure exactly what shape it's going to be. I would like to be able to... it's so hard to get everybody together.
We only usually do a show or two a year, which is great. They're big events, and it's wonderful, but I would like to be able to do numerous shows.

Yeah.
Of course, I have a ball with the Ides of March, actually I'm going to be doing another Ides of March album too and you can definitely... I mean there's a... I don't know how much interest there is in that with your readers, but it's really going to be an exciting project because we have a concept involved, we're going to call it Show Stoppers.…you know, you can probably count memorable concerts on one or two hands - the ones that blew your mind. Take one of those concerts and pick the hottest number of the night, the one that got everybody crazy. Well I want to do an album of those songs.

Right.
You know, just great covers of songs that… we might put a few originals on, but mainly songs that have not been overdone.

Really?
You know, “Here's another oldies album” - No. Songs that are the Show Stoppers of various other bands and other performers, but putting the Ides of March flare on to it, and of course, the horns, and my vocals, and I just want to make it the best Ides of March album ever. To capture the spirit of what we do, but with some of these amazing tunes that just bring down the house. So that's the concept.

That sounds pretty cool to me.
Just go for broke. Really put out… you know, the Ides of March are… you haven't seen us live, we're just an amazingly vibrant, energetic, spirited band and I want that to come across once and for all on tape. I want to go down to the Big Boy Room in Nashville, I want to cut it all live with the exception of, we'll cut vocals but I'll probably re-do them, but I want that whole band vibe on tape, kind of what we had with Mecca, you know, where everyone is playing together and it's not like a series of overdubs where… you know what I'm saying.

Yeah, I do.
I want it to feel like the spirit that I get when I'm singing with the Ides. Aside from World Stage, I'm definitely going to be doing that also. I would like to have both projects ready by the spring of next year, so I've got a lot of work to do.

Yeah, it sounds like it.
But it's going to be fun, and just getting done with Leslie Hunt, at least the first three songs, and of course I'm working with Kelly - not Kelly Keagy, but Kelly who's my niece and we're getting very close to a record deal with her.

Well done. Thank you Jim…that's it for the Mecca portion of this conversation!!.
Great, Andrew…thanks.


Many personal thanks to Ron Higgins for transcribing this interview from tape for me. Appreciate it mate!

 

 

 

 
Tue
07
Feb

Mecca - Fergie Frederiksen (2002)

Categories: 
Interviews
AOR Heaven NEH Records Z-Roxx Loud 1 Groove Machine Destiny Hot Tracks Target Wishing Well Perris

 

 

 

 

 

 

FERGIE FREDERIKSEN / Mecca - Lead Vocals / Co-Writer


Hi Fergie,
Thanks for taking the time out to answer some questions!

It's always a pleasure speaking with you Andrew.

You have worked with Jim Peterik before and through that I know you knew Joe Vana and it was his idea to get you in, but how did you officially find yourself involved in the Mecca project?
Joe and I met while I was returning from holiday in Michigan. I had my 3 boy in the van and I met Joe at a studio some where in the suburbs. I think I got lost trying to find it. Any way, Joe played some songs that he had put together that would be on the CD.
I was very impressed with the tunes. They were demos but had a very good vibe and Joe sounded great on the few I heard. Then he played a couple that Jimmy co-wrote. Man, they were very cool. The idea of working w/ Jimmy producing my vocals and having such a great start made it a no-brainer.

Of course, as always, your vocals on Mecca are awesome, but also some of
the best I have heard from you ever.

I would like to say I'm just getting better, but to be truthful, a lot of it was Jimmy and Larry's approach to recording vocals. Larry has Pro-tools down so well that it was a breeze, no wasted time etc. Jimmy and Larry know each other so well that they have compiled a keeper vocal before you know it.
Oh ya, I practiced the songs a lot at home and w/ Jimmy at his piano which might of helped. "giggle"

How would you rate your performance on Mecca compared to other projects?
I rate it with one of my best vocal efforts. I think I was very prepared to do it and enjoyed the company.

And I guess, where do you consider does this rank amongst other work you
have done?

When I think of LeRoux, Toto, Frederiksen/Phillips, and Equilibrium I would say up in the top two. Which ever those are.

Velocitized is an old unreleased Survivor song and is really pumped up with you guys covering it - it sounds like you had a blast singing that one!
First song we tracked and just a blast to sing. Jimmy and Frankie had a good vibe goin the day that was written.

I love what you and Joe did on Can't Stop Love - the co-lead vocal approach. You guys harmonized brilliantly together. How was that track recorded?
Well, we both knew the song start to finish. Joe sang it pretty much all the way thru and when I came to Chicago I filled in what Jimmy was hearing. Jimmy and Joe had this song in mind from the start as a duet. It turned out pretty cool huh!

You Still Shock Me reminds me a little of your awesome Frederiksen/Phillips album....
This is one of the songs I heard the day I committed to the project. I really connected with the demo and wanted very badly to sing it. Thanks for thinking of F/P because that's what I kinda felt too.

It also sounds like you are having a lot of fun on the final cut [the Japan bonus track] Miss-Chevious?
Wow! When Mike came up w/ the riff, Jimmy was all over it and I wasn't far behind. Some songs are just meant to be fun and are written effortlessly. This one is one of those. Jimmy adding the horns really kicked ass.

What I thought was interesting was having you and Joe performing backing vocals on each other's lead tracks. How did you find that experience?
It was what we had in mind from the start. Joe and I are similar in some ways and quite different in others. Jimmy just got us in the spots he thought showed our styles off the best and did the best for the song.

How do you rate Joe's performance as his debut album?!!
Great!!! Joe hasn't been recording for near as long as Jimmy and myself but it's hard to tell. He has a great feel and a pleasure to hang with...

Before now, had you worked with Thom Griffin before at all?
No.

What songs off this album really appealed to you / what were your favourite songs & why?
You Still Shock Me because it wasn't an easy song to sing yet it was a blast to get into. Once I learned the song I couldn't get it out of my head and when we recorded it, well, it felt great!
Mecca is still my fav on the CD. Even though I'm not singing it, Joe did such a great job writing it and singing it, it moved me a lot.

How about a Thom Griffin / Fergie album? I could help you guys get that off the ground for sure!!
Hey, Maybe I'll have to shake some trees???????
I think we need to ask Tom.

What possibilities exist for the next Fergie solo album?
There will be another. Either a solo or a F/P. Ricky and I talk about it often. It's hard to get the financing you need to get all those great players together. It's not like just sitting in the studio and playing everything yourself. We had some of the best of the best on that CD. I hope someone reads this and has an idea. Hint,Hint

You have worked with some fabulous bands, all seemingly now part of AOR / Melodic Rock's cult favourites list! How do you feel about that?!!
I'm flattered to death. It means alot to me now that I'm really able to enjoy life. I only hope I don't let them down, because I proud to be in such company.

Le Roux, Trillion, Toto, Frederiksen/Phillips, Mecca - what stands out as personal favourites to be involved in / why?
LeRoux, and F/P I guess. I mean if you consider I was in Toto when they were the hottest band in the world, that was fun. But to be honest, LeRoux probably.

I truly love the Frederiksen/Phillips album. Even though you and Ricky also worked on your solo album, the P/F album had such diverse power.
And what are you working on currently and what is coming up on the horizon for you?!!

I've been speaking w/ a few people about what I'm gonna do. I haven't decided yet. I feel it's getting close to that time.

Anything you would like to add Fergie?
Andrew, your the greatest and every body know it. I proud to be your friend. Take care. Oh ya, I still owe you a beer or two. All the best…

Thanks Fergie, pleasure is all mine!

 

 

 
Tue
07
Feb

Mecca - Thom Griffin (2002)

Categories: 
Interviews
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THOM GRIFFIN / Mecca - Backing Vocals


Hi Thom,
Thanks for taking the time out to answer some questions! How did you find yourself involved in the Mecca project?

I became involved in the Mecca project when the producer, Jim Peterik called me for the session. Apparently, they had tried some other singers, and were unhappy with the results.

I gather you knew Jim and Joe from the Chicago area? Is that where you work from / where are you based these days?
I am from the western suburbs of Chicago. I do almost all of my work from here, 99% being jingles.

Have you worked with any of the Mecca guys previously?
I have sang a lot of songs over the years for Jim Peterik, who then sent them to various artists trying to get his songs placed. I have sang with John Melnick on many jingle, and some record dates.

I have to say, without being biased in any way, that the backing vocals on Mecca are some of the best I have heard - ever! Well done! How would you rate your performance on Mecca compared to other projects?
I try not to rank my work, although I am very proud of, and excited about Mecca. In particular, I feel Joe Vana is going to be a major artist. He is truly wonderful!

Many readers of my site of course know you for your work with CBS recording artists Trillion!
Are you aware that many still hold that release in high regard and consider it as one of melodic rock's cult releases?

I have been made aware over the years, of an appreciation for Trillion. It is fun to receive emails from fans of the band. I must say I am a little shocked and surprised. The Trillion CD's have been re-released by Epic. The only place I have found them is at CDNow.com.

Before now, had you and (original) Trillion vocalist) Fergie Frederiksen worked together at all?
Fergie was the first lead singer in Trillion. I replaced him for the second Trillion album. We had not spoken or worked together in 20 years. I thought it was a lot of fun and ironic to be singing backgrounds behind him for Mecca.

Could you see any other work or projects arising from your involvement in the Mecca album?
I will probably do some work with Joe Vana in the near future. I am not certain what my role will be, but I look forward to it.

What possibilities exist for a Thom Griffin solo project? I am sure many of my site regulars would love to see that happen?
If anyone out there wants to hear from or about me, I will try to accommodate. [UPDATE: Stay tuned…!]

Anything you would like to add?
Good luck working this release. It is a wonderful project! It is nice to hear music like this again.

Thanks Thom!
Peace & good health!



 

 

 

 
Tue
07
Feb

Mecca - Mike Aquino (2002)

Categories: 
Interviews
AOR Heaven NEH Records Z-Roxx Loud 1 Groove Machine Destiny Hot Tracks Target Wishing Well Perris

 

 

 

 

 

 

MIKE AQUINO / Mecca - Guitars


Well Mike, good to hook up with you. I thought I'd just ask you a few questions about the Mecca and things in general, if that's OK?
That's fine.

Fantastic. So I took down a couple of notes the other day. What I should start with is, when did you first hook up with Jim Peterik?
Oh boy. I actually hooked up with Jim through Joe Vana.

Oh, OK.
Joe Vana was… I was teaching lessons over at a store and Joe was one of my students, and he kept saying, “I've got to tell my buddy Jim about you and, you know, after a bunch of lessons and Joe and I doing basement demo tapes together in his basement, and sending them off to Jim, we finally met Jim and Jim had me play on a song on his World Stage disk and it turned into two songs, into three songs, into four, you know, and so on and so on. So, that's pretty much how I got to meet Jim, is just through Joe.

OK. So how did you hook up with Joe initially? He was just a student?
Well Joe actually lives right around the corner from one of the stores that I teach at and he walked in and he wanted to take, I think, originally it was bass lessons, and I had a spot open so he ended up taking lessons from me. It was just one of those chance things, you know.

Absolutely. As a lead singer, what kind of a bass player does he make?
Give him roots to play and he's fine, give him something intricate… I don't know, you know. But singing is definitely his main thing.
He's got a real good ear for it. He's got a real good ear for how a song should be put together. So basically that's how we got started together. He was just going, “Dude, here's these tunes, it kind of goes like this,” and he'd kind of plunk them out on guitar, you know, real like, real bad, and it was my job to take these things the way he was doing them and make them sound the way I think he wanted them to sound. So, that's kind of how we got started, you know, just doing little basement stuff of our own.

OK. And Jim ended up bringing you into Kelly Keagy as well?
Yeah, well, I met Kelly through doing the Jim Peterik and World Stage gig. Kelly was going to record some tunes… well, originally he was recording some demos over at Jim's studio for Kelly's new record, and Jim is going, “I've got just the guitarist here in Chicago to use on your demos,” and he goes, “it's one of the guys from the band,” you know, so I kind of knew Kelly from playing with Jim before I did the demos with Kelly.
And then after the demos were done, however many months later it was, we ended up laying down some final track stuff for Kelly's record, so that's how I got to know Kelly. Kelly was doing the gigs with Jim.

It's a great little family community you have there.
Yeah, it's an interesting little circle, the more people you know, the smaller it gets, that's what's really scary. Not the bigger it gets, it gets smaller, because everybody knows everybody.

The World Stage shows have become a bit of a legend though haven't they?
Yeah, they have, they've become real fun. It's not too often when a kid from Wheaton, Illinois gets to stand on stage with Don Barnes from .38 Special and Kevin Cronin from REO Speedwagon, you know, that doesn't happen every day. So it's really kind of cool, because I grew up on a lot of Jim's stuff that he wrote for .38 Special, those were some of the first songs that I ever like learned on the guitar in my whole life, and here I am playing the licks along with Don Barnes, and I'm like, “Wow, this is really cool!” I never thought I would ever do this. It's just funny how things work out.

That is very cool.
I wouldn't trade it for a million years. I wouldn't.

On the outset of the Mecca project, did Joe rope you into that or is that mutual…
Well that kind of started I'd say a couple of years… maybe a year and a half or so before we hooked up with Jim with all of this stuff. Joe and I were making these tapes in his basement, tunes that he wrote or things we wrote together, he'd ship them off to Jim and Jim would tell us if they were good, if they were really good, or if they were really not magic at all. And then if he's going, “I'd do this with the bridge, I'd do this with the chorus,” we'd let him do something with the chorus, so it just got to the point to where we all said, “Well, why don't we all just do a record,” <laughs> Because the whole thing started with Joe and I in the basement about a year and a half before Mecca was even thought up.
So, that's kind of how the whole thing got started. It was Joe, myself, and then we brought in another guy, Jason Deroche, who was the main writer for “Close That Gap”, and “Falling Down”. He's a friend of mine here in Chicago who's one of the best classical players around, and he grew up on a lot of Jim's stuff too. It's all kind of neat how it all fell into place.

I can remember Joe playing me demos for this stuff over the phone about 8 months ago, so that was the same time you guys were just sort of getting started.
Right. I'd say the two songs that did make it to the Mecca project that were original basement demos between Jason, Joe, and myself, were “Close That Gap” and “Falling Down”. Those were recorded in Joe's basement before we ever did a Mecca thing, before we ever thought of Mecca. So those are two songs that really kind of got the ball rolling.

So you've got the finished master disk now, what do you think?
I love it. I love it. I think it sounds really cool. Yeah, I'd be crazy to say it doesn't have... it doesn't sound like some of the '80s rock stuff - it does, I mean, look at the writers, look at the people who are playing on it. It's got all the elements of the '80s rock scene, but at the same time it sounds very new.

It does, doesn't it.
It sounds very fresh, it sounds very new, and that might just be because nobody's doing it anymore.
I mean, we try to, of course, do something along the '80s rock line, but at the same time go, "well let's not try to make this song sound like a Survivor song, or lets not make this song sound like a Toto song; how can we make these tunes sound like Mecca." So what we used to do is, we used to sit in Jim's studio, and have fun just sitting down, jamming and writing tunes. I mean that's how "Miss-Chevious" was written. We were at Jim's studio kind of writing some tunes and Jim's going, "we need a real rocker, rocker. Not like an '80s rocker, but a rocker tune," and I go, "I've had this tune for like a week or two now I just don't have any lyrics," and he's like, "well start playing it." So I start playing it, and within like 30 seconds he had a verse written. <laughs> He starts singing.

He's a machine isn't he?
He's a machine. He's like, "Give me some paper. Give me a pen. We've got to write this stuff down," you know. So Jim and Fergie finished the lyrics and that's just how a lot of this stuff was brought about, just by playing around with stuff and getting the right parts. Finding stuff that's cool that's going to make it sound a little newer. Not a complete flashback.

No. It's got a great sound. It's got a really nice modern sort of production sound, you know.
Yeah, I love it.

And it's smooth as hell too.
Uh huh, Uh huh!

What do you think about... I gather the first tune "Velocitized" is a song that never made Survivor.
Correct.

How was it filling in for the intended guitar licks of Frankie Sullivan?
It was, actually, I never heard the tune. We were sitting at Jim's, and he put it on... well, he had given Joe a disk of some tunes that might work for the Mecca thing and we put it on over in Jim's kitchen, and I'm listening to it and I'm going, "this is a great tune." It's fun, it's happy, it's not in-depth about anything, it's just a fun tune.
And I sat there going, "yeah, this is cool," you know. Frankie's stuff was cool to learn how to play, you know, and about the only stuff that I didn't do that Frankie did on the record on the original demo, was I changed the solo and the solo at the end. But I tried to stay... because I love the demo so much, I tried to stay pretty close to the original feel, because it sounded so right, you know. And even if I didn't come up with the way to play the riff or something like that, if it sounds right, I'm not going to mess with it.

Yeah.
I just, you know, I have no business doing that <laughs>.

You did a great job; it's really a great tune.
Thank you.

What I really like about the album is, some of the slower tracks I really do like a lot, the nice sort of thought out slow guitar solo. I think you've done quite a sensational job of a few tracks there.
Great, thank you. That's always been a cool thing to be able to play on a ballad, to do the soulful guitar stuff, because I was always taught from day one from instructors or other guitar players that I listen to and read articles on, and it's completely true, you can play on a fast tune and play fast as much as you want and there's so much going on that it can hide the soul, it can hide the playing. But to be able to play on a slow tune, there's no lifejacket, there's no net to catch you; it's going by so slow or it's going by with such a power that, OK this one note has to stand out as much as like these 20 notes on this other song. It's just really cool, and Jim is really... Jim and Joe with the way that they write their ballads, they're both very passionate writers, you know, real big sound, and I grew up listening to a lot of Journey as well and Neal Schon is in my mind, as far as rock players go, the best rock guitar player to play on a ballad.

Yeah, I agree.
I mean, because he can play like four notes that just make you cry; he can play a barrage of like 20 notes that just mow you down, and it's just like, "ah man," it's just incredible.
You have to try to make that guitar sing, just like the voices are doing.

Absolutely. I think he does that exactly and I think you've done a pretty good job yourself.
Well thank you, I really appreciate that.

Yeah, I think the name Mike Aquino will soon be talked about quite in detail.
That would be very interesting <laughs>. That would be very interesting; I don't know how... good detail, or bad detail, but I guess any detail is good in any realm <laughs>.

Well when they hear these records they'll be good, I'm sure.
I sure hope so.

Have you got favorite tunes?
Favorite tunes? Wow, I wish I had a disk on me, I could tell you. Well, I think a first favorite tune that comes to my mind is "Can't Stop Love." I really like the way that starts with the acoustics and then builds into a big huge chorus and it just keeps rolling. I really like the way that song grooves. I think Shannon Forrest, the drummer, did a... I mean he didn't play any special crazy kind of beat on that tune, but he just put it so much in the pocket that it's just... it's one of my favorite tunes to drive to. I think that's why I like it so much.

Oh, this is a great driving record.
Oh yeah, it is a great driving record. I mean, you just can't help but to drive a little too fast with it, that's for sure. Let me see, any other ones, oh , "Wishing Well", I love "Wishing Well". I think Fergie's performance on the vocals were just incredible; he really sang way above what I could ever hear a person singing on that song, it was just great. The way the harmonies lock in on the chorus is just wonderful. I really dig "Miss-Chevious" because it's a little different. Its got the horn stuff, you know, it's got the '80s flavor but not like the '80s pop flavor, but more like that Aerosmith "Rag Doll" type mood, you know, real sexy, real sassy, so I really dig that song a lot. It's such a tough thing to pick, let me see if I can pick another tune on there that I can tell you would stand out, I don't know. Honey (to someone off mic) do you know any song that stands out? (background voice) OK, she likes "Velocitized" and "Miss-Chevious".

Great.
Actually, yeah, "Velocitized" does stand out well because it's just a great straight ahead rock tune that doesn't... just from the first drum hit it doesn't let up until the very end.

Yep. I guess that's the radio track.
And, I'd say if I really had to name one more tune, it would be "Close That Gap".

Isn't it awesome!?
It is a great tune.

I'll tell you what, I really like the new mix with your guitar more in the mix.
What's really cool, is that song finally sounds like a song with what they did in the mix. When they took everything out in the beginning except for the piano and the vocals and then bring the guitars in at the pre-chorus and then everything else and then at the chorus drop them all back out, it really makes the song sound great. Everyone around Chicago knows Joe Vana as a singer through Jim Peterik and the Jim Peterik shows knows Joe as this real high harmony singer and everything and no one has ever really gotten to hear him just sing in that comfortable, normal range of a vocalist. And, of course I've heard him sing in that before when we're writing tunes, and he sounds great singing lead on a tune that's right in that upper middle range and he sounds phenomenal, his vocal is just killer and I sit there... I've played that for friends and they go, "that's Joe? He sounds great singing this stuff." Yeah, I'd say that song does stick out a bit too. I mean, I could sit here and name them all, but I won't.

Yep, I know what you mean. Fantastic. Fantastic Mike, I think that's all I've got to know really.
Cool, wonderful.

That's a great little wrap-up.
Yeah.

Yeah, and I just presume that you'd like to be part of Mecca II if something should eventuate?
Oh sure! It would be a blast; it would be a blast. I would love to do it, and I would love to work with the same guys again. It was an absolute blast.

Fantastic. Thanks Mike.
All right Andrew.


Many personal thanks to Ron Higgins for transcribing this interview from tape for me. Appreciate it mate!

 

 

 

 
Tue
07
Feb

Mecca - David Hungate (2002)

Categories: 
Interviews
AOR Heaven NEH Records Z-Roxx Loud 1 Groove Machine Destiny Hot Tracks Target Wishing Well Perris

 

 

 

DAVID HUNGATE / Mecca - Bass


Hi David. You are one of the legends of this rock genre, having started your
recording career many years ago. Was Toto your first band?

My recording career actually began in 1969....Toto began in 1977.

Wow…Ok! Looking back, is their any particular segment of your career that you enjoyed most and consider the most rewarding?
The period from the recording of Boz Scaggs' "Silk Degrees" (late '75) through Toto IV (1981) was the best.
I worked on a number of projects with musicians like Jeff Porcaro, Dean Parks, Lukather, Jay Graydon, Ray Parker, David Paich, David Foster, and others....great rhythm sections, and some great pop/R&B music. No drum machines or click tracks...we just played.

Is there a low point that stands out at all?
My two years on the A&R staff of MCA Nashville (1985,86). I did very little playing and missed it greatly.

What caused you to leave Toto at a period where the band was very successful? In 1982 I had already moved to Nashville and was getting my career started there.
I had a 3 year-old and a new baby and a 9 month tour was in the works. I didn't feel that I could leave my family at that time, or that it would be fair to the group to ask them to find a sub for the tour. I left at the right time, for a number of reasons.

Do you prefer the work of a session musician? After all, you have done that
for 20 years now!!

I've done it for 32 years, unbelievably, and I much prefer it to the road, though I love live playing under the right circumstances.

I saw the list of credit that you have played with - it's quite a phenomenal lost of people. What are your best memories from that list?
I've gotten to work with so many greats it's hard to narrow it down.
From a musical standpoint I'd start with most of the 70 plus records I worked
on with Jeff Porcaro...

As far as rhythm sections go, you and Shannon Forrest sound sensational
together. Have you worked with him previously?

I've worked with Shannon a lot, and it's always a joy.

How'd you get to know Shannon?
We started getting called to work together several years ago.

Shannon is being compared to the late great Toto drummer Jeff Porcaro, who obviously you worked with for some time. How accurate is the comparison?
I think I'm the first one to compare him to Jeff, so I obviously feel it's accurate.

Did you enjoy the 3 day session work out for the Mecca release, there in Nashville?
It was one of the most enjoyable experiences of my recording career.

What's next for you? What do you have planned for the coming months - who are you working with etc...
I recently played on albums for Randy Travis, Billy Gilman and Billy Ray
Cyrus. I plan to continue doing session work as long as they keep calling me.
I do live jazz gigs several times a month with singer April Barrows (playing
guitar and trombone) and enjoy that very much.

And any further future plans?
To try to do as much enjoyable music as possible. I've also been writing a book about my experiences in the music business which I plan to publish when (if?) I retire.

You have written several movie scores, any more of those planned?
I played on quite a few movie scores.....didn't write them.

Anyone you would one day like to work with?
I'd like to work with a great traditional R&B band, but there aren't many out there these days. Actually I enjoy most styles of music so long as great musicians are involved.

Thanks again David.
Hope it's been helpful.

Yes indeed!

 

 

 
Thu
26
Oct

MECCA 'The Demos' Audio Preview & Pre-Order!

Artist: 
Friday, November 3, 2017
Categories: 
News Feed
 
RELEASE DATE DELAYED - NOVEMBER 24
 
My apologies folks, there is an issue with artwork print quality and we're fixing, but the start over will mean a production delay, pushing the release back a few weeks to November 24, alongside MADMAN'S LULLABY.
 
 
PRE-ORDERS ARE STRONG - THIS ITEM WILL SELL OUT.
 
Here is one more preview to check out while you wait...
 
 
The name MECCA is synonymous with quality AOR and melodic rock. Each of the 3 albums released to date have been crafted over several years, with each song racking up a seriously impressive number of demos, alternative versions, re-writes and re-mixes before being labelled “done”.
 
So, while we wait for a new set of songs to go through that lengthy process, Joe Vana has given MelodicRock Records the green light to delve back into the many folders of Mecca music that has built up since the 2002 debut, to bring you a very cool limited edition release –
 
MECCA “The Demos”
 
But these aren’t any old demos; these are still of the highest quality and represent a rare insight into the recording process all artists go through.
 
MECCA “The Demos” features alternative takes and different mixes of songs from all three of the Mecca albums, plus the songs exclusively featured on several past MRCD compilations and others that have never previously been heard or released.
Fans will recognize many of the songs, but in this format it's like hearing them again for the first time.
 
Featuring appearances by Christian Wolff (RIP); Fergie Frederiksen (RIP); Pat Mastelotto; Thom Griffin; Bill Syniar; David Hungate, Tommy Denander, Gordon Mote, Shannon Forrest, Richie Hofherr and Brian Moritz.
 
MECCA “The Demos” will be restricted to 1000 units only and released November 3.
 
PRE-ORDER NOW!
 
MECCA 'The Demos' (2CD Set)($17 + $5 Shipping Worldwide)
 
 
 
 
ONE MORE PREVIEW!
 
 
 
 
 
 
Disc 1:
 
01) Blinded By Emotion (Rough Mix Feat. Fergie Frederiksen, Vocals) 05:36
02) I Know (Demo Feat. Christian Wolff, Guitar) 04:11
03) How Many Times (Original Demo) 04:47
04) Life's Too Short (Demo Feat. Thom Griffin, Backing Vocals) 04:21
05) Say The Word (2010 Demo) 03:47
06) The One (2006 Demo) 05:08
07) Morning Light (Original Demo of ‘I Believe’) 04:26
08) Set Me Free (Original Demo of ‘Cry’) 04:31
09) Since I Found You (2011 Writing Demo) 04:14
10) Wire 2 Wire (Inst. Demo) 04:52
11) Can't Stop Love (Rough Mix Feat. Fergie Frederiksen, Vocals) 05:36
12) From The Start (2011 Demo) 05:12
13) Unknown (Chorus Overdub Demo) 04:30
14) Time Spent (2013 Demo) 04:17
15) Pamela (2012 Final Demo) 05:34
16) It's On Us (2012 Inst, Demo) 04:13
17) Without You (2002 Inst. Live Studio Demo) 04:26
 
Disc 2:
 
01) Take My Hand (2014 Final Demo) 03:15
02) Perfect World (2011 Demo, ‘Joe Mix’) 04:01
03) Ten Lifetimes (Original Demo Feat. Thom Griffin, Backing Vocals) 05:46
04) Alone (2014 Piano Demo) 04:58
05) Mecca (First Take Vocal Demo) 05:34
06) Light (2006 Inst. Demo) 04:13
07) Out Of Love (Original Demo of ‘Alone’) 05:37
08) Down (2012 Scratch Vocal Demo) 04:24
09) Did It For Love (2011 Demo) 05:47
10) Alive (2012 Unreleased Inst.) 04:35
11) Still Falling In Love With You (2006 Unreleased Demo) 03:49
12) Open Your Heart to Me (2005 Unreleased Demo) 04:59
13) Falling Out Of Love (2011 Unreleased Demo) 04:42
14) Wasabi (2011 Unreleased Inst. Demo) 04:11
15) Yesterday (2012 'Mecca 3' Inst. Demo) 03:42
16) Wire To Wire (The ‘Fun’ Inst. Remix) 04:49
 
 
Fri
22
Sep

MECCA 'The Demos' 2-Disc Compilation Track Listing Revealed

Artist: 
Friday, November 3, 2017
Categories: 
News Feed
 
The name MECCA is synonymous with quality AOR and melodic rock. Each of the 3 albums released to date have been crafted over several years, with each song racking up a seriously impressive number of demos, alternative versions, re-writes and re-mixes before being labelled “done”.
 
So, while we wait for a new set of songs to go through that lengthy process, Joe Vana has given MelodicRock Records the green light to delve back into the many folders of Mecca music that has built up since the 2002 debut, to bring you a very cool limited edition release –
 
MECCA “The Demos”
 
But these aren’t any old demos; these are still of the highest quality and represent a rare insight into the recording process all artists go through.
 
MECCA “The Demos” features alternative takes and different mixes of songs from all three of the Mecca albums, plus the songs exclusively featured on several past MRCD compilations and others that have never previously been heard or released.
Fans will recognize many of the songs, but in this format it's like hearing them again for the first time.
 
MECCA “The Demos” will be restricted to 1000 units only and released November 3. Pre-orders available from next week.
 
Disc 1:
 
01) Blinded By Emotion (Rough Mix Feat. Fergie Frederiksen, Vocals) 05:36
02) I Know (Demo Feat. Christian Wolff, Guitar) 04:11
03) How Many Times (Original Demo) 04:47
04) Life's Too Short (Demo Feat. Thom Griffin, Backing Vocals) 04:21
05) Say The Word (2010 Demo) 03:47
06) The One (2006 Demo) 05:08
07) Morning Light (Original Demo of ‘I Believe’) 04:26
08) Set Me Free (Original Demo of ‘Cry’) 04:31
09) Since I Found You (2011 Writing Demo) 04:14
10) Wire 2 Wire (Inst. Demo) 04:52
11) Can't Stop Love (Rough Mix Feat. Fergie Frederiksen, Vocals) 05:36
12) From The Start (2011 Demo) 05:12
13) Unknown (Chorus Overdub Demo) 04:30
14) Time Spent (2013 Demo) 04:17
15) Pamela (2012 Final Demo) 05:34
16) It's On Us (2012 Inst, Demo) 04:13
17) Without You (2002 Inst. Live Studio Demo) 04:26
 
Disc 2:
 
01) Take My Hand (2014 Final Demo) 03:15
02) Perfect World (2011 Demo, ‘Joe Mix’) 04:01
03) Ten Lifetimes (Original Demo Feat. Thom Griffin, Backing Vocals) 05:46
04) Alone (2014 Piano Demo) 04:58
05) Mecca (First Take Vocal Demo) 05:34
06) Light (2006 Inst. Demo) 04:13
07) Out Of Love (Original Demo of ‘Alone’) 05:37
08) Down (2012 Scratch Vocal Demo) 04:24
09) Did It For Love (2011 Demo) 05:47
10) Alive (2012 Unreleased Inst.) 04:35
11) Still Falling In Love With You (2006 Unreleased Demo) 03:49
12) Open Your Heart to Me (2005 Unreleased Demo) 04:59
13) Falling Out Of Love (2011 Unreleased Demo) 04:42
14) Wasabi (2011 Unreleased Inst. Demo) 04:11
15) Yesterday (2012 'Mecca 3' Inst. Demo) 03:42
16) Wire To Wire (The ‘Fun’ Inst. Remix) 04:49
 
 
 
Thu
07
Sep

MECCA 'The Demos' 2-Disc Compilation Due Nov 3

Artist: 
Friday, November 3, 2017
Categories: 
News Feed
 
The name MECCA is synonymous with quality AOR and melodic rock. Each of the 3 albums released to date have been crafted over several years, with each song racking up a seriously impressive number of demos, alternative versions, re-writes and re-mixes before being labelled “done”.
 
So, while we wait for a new set of songs to go through that lengthy process, Joe Vana has given MelodicRock Records the green light to delve back into the many folders of Mecca music that has built up since the 2002 debut, to bring you a very cool limited edition release –
 
MECCA “The Demos”
 
But these aren’t any old demos; these are still of the highest quality and represent a rare insight into the recording process all artists go through.
 
MECCA “The Demos” will feature songs from all three of the Mecca albums, plus the songs exclusively featured on several past MRCD compilations and several others that have never previously been released.
 
Fans will hear songs you thought you knew, but with alternative lyrics or chorus hooks, plus work-in-progress home recordings, alternative mixes and even a couple of guest vocalists lending a hand.
 
MECCA “The Demos” will be restricted to 1000 units only and released November 3.
Full details of the 2-Disc set, along with an audio preview will be announced shortly.
 
Joe Vana has asked that I make a digital download of this set available for free to all that purchased any of the Mecca 3 Tshirt and/or LP packs. Mecca 3 LP refunds are currently being discussed after plans to manufacture have been scrapped after multiple attempts to get quality units produced efficiently and economically. As a continuing gesture by Joe to get all of his fans squared away, he has asked that those few fans that still haven't received a refund AND all those that ordered the Fan Pack get the free download....and this will be expanded to free downloads of Mecca IV (in the works) and other exciting projects slated for 2018 release.
 
 
Wed
28
Sep

Mecca - "Take My Hand" (Album '3' Out October 14)

 
 
MelodicRock Records is proud and excited to announce a partnership with MECCA to release their monumental new album Mecca 3.
 
Records like this don’t come along very often. At least not in 2016 they don’t.
But this is one for the ages. Mecca will now find themselves sitting alongside genre classics from Toto, Mr. Mister, Survivor, Giant and Journey to name a few. 
 
Recorded over the last 3 years in Nashville, this is a record that would have topped AOR charts back in the day. Make no mistake – this is a classic. 
 
Featuring Toto's DAVID HUNGATE on his last rock record!
 
Featuring Toto drummer SHANNON FORREST who also produces.
 
All analogue production, just like the 80s.
Artist: 
 
Mon
12
Sep

Mecca - "Gone" (Album '3' Out October 14)

Records like this don’t come along very often. At least not in 2016 they don’t.
But this is one for the ages. MECCA will now find themselves sitting alongside genre classics from Toto, Mr. Mister, Survivor, Giant and Journey to name a few.
 
Recorded over the last 3 years in Nashville, this is a record that would have topped AOR charts back in the day. Make no mistake – this is a classic.
 
Featuring Toto's DAVID HUNGATE on his last rock record!
 
Featuring Toto drummer SHANNON FORREST who also produces.
 
All analogue production, just like the 80s.
Artist: 
 
Mon
01
Aug

MECCA Set October 14 For Analogue Masterpiece

Artist: 
Friday, October 14, 2016
Categories: 
News Feed
 
MelodicRock Records is proud and excited to announce a partnership with MECCA to release their monumental new album Mecca 3 on October 14.
 
Records like this don't come along very often. At least not in 2016 they don't.
But this is one for the ages. Mecca will now find themselves sitting alongside genre classics from Toto, Mr. Mister, Survivor, Giant and Journey to name a few.
 
Recorded over the last 3 years in Nashville, this is a record that would have topped AOR charts back in the day. Make no mistake - this is a classic.
 
 
MRR's Andrew McNeice: "Joe has been a friend of mine since 1996 and I've seen him develop into one of the most reliable and mature songwriters in this game. On Mecca III he takes everything that came before as a launching pad for what must come next and Mecca III delivers. This is a monster record that is layers deep in rich textures that remain fresh to my ears even after first receiving the original writers' demos some 3 years ago.
I'm so proud of my friend and I'm honoured to be given the chance to bring this exceptional album to the world. The instrumentation is nothing short of world class, the production is analogue all the way - you can hear it in every crisp, clear note. And the vocals are quite simply the most stunning and emotion filled tones that I have ever heard from Joe. I simply cannot wait to hear fan reactions to this album. It's a masterpiece."
 
Joe Vana is equally as excited to finally reveal his masterpiece to the world. "Mecca III, here we are! I wanted to take all I had learned from the amazing list of players involved in Mecca up to this point...from Shannon Forrest to Pat Mastelotto...David Hungate to Tony Levin...Mike Aquino to Christian Wolff and my son Joey...and the production I learned over many years working closely with Jim Peterik on his songs as well as Mecca 1.
But...I wanted even more...I wanted A TRUE Audiophile record...not a pro-tooled, over edited mess of 100 takes edited into one...and the groove less, lifeless carcass that playing to the grid creates, the ruination of vibe, groove and soul in music.
I hope everyone digs the record....it's 8 tracks because that's all I needed to tell the story I wanted to convey...lyrically the record flows...All are separate but continuous chapters...vocally the songs even feel different as I move through different phases of my life."
 
And what does Toto's Steve Lukather think about it? "Killer new music! Great songs! Great playing from everyone...and Joe's vocals are better than ever! Smooth, real and soulful. I love the 'surprise modulations' that are now his style which make this a great listen for fans of his and the entire genre of melodic rock music. Creative arrangements throughout and I love the synth/keyboard work. David Hungate is amazing as is Shannon Forrest on drums and production. Great sounds + killer guitars all over it! Can't say what is my fave yet cause I love all of it. Summing it up in 3 words...Well f-ing done!" Luke - 2016.
 
The album was produced by new Toto drummer Shannon Forrest (Tim McGraw, Michael McDonald, Kenny Rogers, Don Henley), Associate Produced by Joey Vana and Recorded at Off The Grid Studios, Nashville Tennessee.
 
Alongside drummer Shannon Forrest, featured on the album are some of Nashville's very finest musicians:
Tim Akers - B3 and Piano (Rascal Flatts, Amy Grant, Kid Rock, Alabama); Toto's legendary bass man David Hungate; plus David Browning (Katy Perry, Amy Grant, Hollywood Heroes).
 
MECCA III is:
Joe Vana - Lead Vocals
Shannon Forrest - Drums and Percussion
David Hungate - Bass
Tim Akers - B3 and Piano, Background Vocals and Duet on "Believe"
David Browning - Synths
Joey Vana - Guitars
Mark Baldwin - Guitar
 
With:
Sol Philcox-Littlefield - Additional Guitars
Ethan Forrest - Additional Guitars
Rudy Chmelik - Additional Percussion on "Believe"
Bill Syniar - Vibe
 
All Lyrics and Melodies written by: Joe Vana
Except Track 8: Akers, Vana; Track 7 - Richard Page
 
Mecca 3 will be released worldwide via MelodicRock Records October 14 with 4 different options:
 
1 - Standard CD (available via Cargo Distribution)
2 - Limited Edition Numbered CD featuring special effects print on disc (pre-order soon via MelodicRock.com)
3 - Fan Pack 1 - Limited Edition CD (as above) with Mecca III Tshirt (pre-order soon via MelodicRock.com)
4 - Fan Pack 2 - Limited Edition CD (as above), Limited (150 ONLY) Vinyl LP, plus Mecca III Tshirt (pre-order soon via MelodicRock.com)
 
 
Fri
22
Aug

KEVIN CHALFANT Joins MECCA for 'Mecca III' and MRF4

Artist: 
Friday, August 22, 2014
Categories: 
Tour News
We’ve got one more small adjustment to the MelodicRockFest 4 lineup to make.
 
Due to a scheduling conflict not in place at the time of arranging the MRF event, Jimi Jamison is now not able to attend to join Joe Vana and Mecca on stage.
Jimi was awesome at MRF3 and this is disappointing news, but Survivor now kick off European dates within days of Jimi’s planned MRF appearance.
 
So how do we compensate for this? How about calling up the one, the only, the fabulous Mr. Kevin Chalfant?!!
 
Here’s what Joe Vana has to say:
 
“Kevin is joining Mecca for the new Mecca 3 album and MRF. We will be doing some material from The Storm, Kev's solo material and new Mecca as well as a few old Mecca Standbys.
The band will start rehearsing when Shannon Forrest and David Hungate get done with TOTO's tour of the USA.
This will be a once in a lifetime production as we have the whole band there....LIVE...for ONE night ONLY!!!”
 
 

 
 

 

 
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