白小姐王中王开奖结果

Music For All Times

白小姐王中王开奖结果 alumnus Steve Wynn releases a new album, halts tour plans and reminisces about college life.

The Dream Syndicate members
Photo courtesy of Chris Sikich

Steve Wynn averages 100 shows a year 鈥 whether with his band The Dream Syndicate, several side projects or solo 鈥 so staying home for an indefinite period is a new experience. 

The musician and 白小姐王中王开奖结果 alumnus is adhering to quarantine, like millions of people staying home due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He had a very different plan for this spring. 

Wynn鈥檚 band The Dream Syndicate released its seventh studio album, The Universe Inside, on April 10 to a public that is largely inside. And that鈥檚 ok, said Wynn. 

鈥淓ven when we made it, we felt like this is a record best appreciated when you can drift away for a little while 鈥 put on headphones, turn out the lights and listen,鈥 Wynn told 白小姐王中王开奖结果 Magazine. 鈥淎nd everyone has more time for that now.鈥 

The Universe Inside is arguably the band鈥檚 most experimental album to date. Created from a jam session with band members Dennis Duck, Mark Walton and Jason Victor, it features five songs ranging in length from just over 7 minutes to more than 20. 

The Universe Inside cover art
The Dream Syndicate鈥檚 The Universe Inside Photo courtesy of ANTI- Records

Music plays a big part of Wynn鈥檚 history at 白小姐王中王开奖结果. 

In 1977, he arrived as a freshman from his native L.A. at the age of 17. His extracurriculars ended up being life defining, especially working as a DJ at student radio station KDVS and writing songs for and performing with his first band, The Suspects. 

In the early 1980s he headed back to L.A. with fellow Suspects member and 白小姐王中王开奖结果 alum Kendra Smith and formed The Dream Syndicate. The band broke up at the end of 1988. Over the years, Wynn has played in several bands and fronted his own. 

He鈥檚 lived in New York for 25 years, but said Davis comes up a lot, as part of the story of his formative years. 

鈥淚 never have those nightmares of failing at a gig or something going wrong as a musician, but for the longest time, I鈥檇 have nightmares of being on the air at KDVS and the needle getting to the end of the record and not having anything cued up,鈥 Wynn said. 鈥淭hat one didn鈥檛 go away for a long time, so I guess it must have been pretty big in my psyche.鈥 

Here, Wynn discusses the new album, halting tour plans and why his new music wouldn鈥檛 have been played on his KDVS radio show back in the day. 

Steve Wynn and guitar
Steve Wynn in 2014 Photo courtesy of Charles Cherney

What has it been like to release new music to a public that is largely at home?

Everything about this is different. We鈥檙e all trying to make sense of it. As people, we are just living through it, first and foremost. As a band putting out a new record, yeah, it鈥檚 pretty wild. And it鈥檚 challenging because we鈥檇 like to be out there playing the music live and hanging out together and celebrating the success it鈥檚 having. On the other hand, this particular record is really well suited to some of the conditions we鈥檙e in right now 鈥 being stuck inside with a lot of time on your hands and the ability to dig into something without a lot of distraction. We didn鈥檛 make it with that intention, but it does work that way.

This time every song on the album was a group writing effort. How did that come about?

It began as a late-night jam. We had been in the studio working on other material for a full day in Richmond, Virginia, where we do our recording. About midnight a friend of ours came by to say hi, and we still had some steam left in us so we went in to jam for fun, not with a goal. We didn鈥檛 stop playing for 80 minutes. Nobody wanted to be the first person to end it so we kept going. That became this record. The six of us were tapping into something inside ourselves we didn鈥檛 know was there. It couldn鈥檛 be any more co-written than that.

Will you go out on tour when this is all over?

Definitely. [Before the pandemic] we were thinking about the band and how we would go out and play it live. It鈥檚 kind of funny because this record is so different for us 鈥 it鈥檚 pretty true to who we are, but it鈥檚 pretty indulgent. Even though it鈥檚 got five songs, it鈥檚 really one listening experience. It鈥檚 very elaborate and arranged, even though it came out of a late-night jam. And we all decided to really learn to play it as it is [in performance]. We had decided not to tour right away, to let it settle in, let people get to know it. And then we鈥檇 go out and play the album all the way through. Well, as it turns out, those plans we had became not only an idea, but a necessity. We aren鈥檛 going to be playing until probably early next year. And it will be fun. We鈥檒l be bursting at the seams to do that.

Going back a few years, what made you choose 白小姐王中王开奖结果 for college?

I grew up in West L.A., very close to UCLA. That was the natural thing to do 鈥 finish high school and go to UCLA. I wanted, for whatever reason, to major in rhetoric. At the time, I had designs on being a sports journalist. That was my big dream. I thought being a rhetoric major would be a great way to build a foundation for learning to use language in useful ways. The only two schools that had a rhetoric program were 白小姐王中王开奖结果 and UC Berkeley. I thought Berkeley would be another version of where I grew up. So instead, I鈥檓 going to go to this small town to see what it鈥檚 like in that kind of environment. I鈥檓 glad it did it because being in Davis for those influential years, it was a great place to be. 

Steve Wynn in 2008
Steve Wynn in 2008, when he released the solo album Crossing Dragon Bridge (Photo courtesy of Guy Kokken)

What was it like to work at KDVS and The California Aggie?

When I came to Davis, I went down to The Aggie, with fire in my eyes and with clippings from my high school paper and said I wanted to write for the sports page. To me, that was the holy grail. And within a few weeks I was covering the varsity football team, and I became the sports editor after one quarter. I thought, 鈥淭his is it. I鈥檓 set.鈥 After about one year as a DJ and playing in a band, that became a little more exciting. I sort of lost the desire to be a sportswriter almost overnight.

You were part of The Suspects, starting in 1978. What was your biggest takeaway from that experience?

We were doing our own thing. I wouldn鈥檛 want to say anything bad about that time, because we were learning. We were kind of a chirpy little new wave band. But it was exciting to see what it was like to stand onstage, play songs that you wrote, and then go home and write some more and play them the next week. We started to get the fever for doing that kind of thing.

Do you remember your radio show at KDVS?

I remember it well. Ironically, my show was called 鈥3-Minute Rock and Roll.鈥 And I called it that because I was so enthralled by new wave and punk rock. Forget all the hippie music. A lot of that is stuff I love now, but at the time we were snotty-nosed kids who said out with the old and in with the new. My thing was no song over 3 minutes. I stuck with that. And ironically, look at my new record: There鈥檚 not a song under 8 minutes. I could not be played on my own radio show!

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