Ed Roland - vocals, guitars
Dean Roland - guitars
Ross Childress - lead guitars
Will Turpin - bass
Shane Evans - drums
"Can't crash now, I've been waiting for this."
- "Precious Declaration"
"When you're in the South, you don't just go
riding down a strange dirt road," says Ed Roland, sounding as if he's ominously
reciting a line from To Kill A Mockingbird. "You have no idea what you might be
getting yourself into." Such was the case when Collective Soul set up shop in a
glorified shack deep within the kudzu-blanketed woods of their Stockbridge, Georgia
hometown. After some 20 months of being on the road, the quintet was looking forward to
writing new songs and scratching out some demos. The well-sequestered cabin proved the
perfect setting. "The house is on
about 40 acres of land," says the singer/guitarist Roland, who had actually made his
home in the cabin. "That way we could make as much ruckus as we wanted to without
disturbing anyone. I mean, Dean and I grew up two miles from this place and never even
knew it existed. We heard it used to be this little gambling house where some local boys
would go to play cards." With an open-ended schedule, the band turned the kitchen
into a performance space and began what they expected was pre-production on what would
become their third Atlantic album. "The mood was perfect," says Ed. "The
songs were sounding really good so we kept right on recording." Before they realized,
they'd cut 20 songs. With one more creative outburst and some help from venerable The
Memphis Horns, final touches on the album were completed at the House of Blues studios in
Memphis. On this third step of their creative journey, Collective Soul strikes a tonal
balance between the more song-oriented character of their "HINTS ALLEGATIONS AND
THINGS LEFT UNSAID" Atlantic debut and the more riff-based signature of their
self-titled second album. Confident handling of fine brushstroke guitar work and
communicative performance is readily evident, as is what Rolling Stone
has called, Ed's "flair for McCartneyesque melodic detail" and "deft
popcraft." As a songwriter, Ed found himself basking in the fade-out of a long-term
personal and management crisis. The sense of desperation that had dogged
both Ed and the band since their first experiences with success had just begun to lift.
"I write from how I feel," says Roland, "and this time I was dealing with
more emotional things than I'd ever dealt with in my life. It was painful to write these
songs, to be honest. But, in the end, it felt more like therapy."
"In a way, Ed's lyrics speak for all of us," says guitarist Dean Roland.
"What he was writing reflected how we were all feeling at the time. It hit home and
made us that much more passionate about what we were doing." "I'm sure the
record would have been a lot different if we didn't have to deal with those things,"
says drummer Shane Evans, "but maybe that's also what makes it special."
Produced by Roland, the resulting "DISCIPLINED BREAKDOWN" shifts moods from the
bold, arresting likes of "Precious Declaration" to the quiet, reflective
"Maybe" and dramatically hushed "Everything." "These songs allow
themselves to be read in many different contexts," says Ed. "They can be
experienced as angry and disappointed or liberated and free or hurt and just generally
sad."
It's been almost three years since Collective Soul climbed from their hometown rehearsal
cellar to watch their first Atlantic release, 1994's "HINTS ALLEGATIONS AND THINGS
LEFT UNSAID," begin its exhilarating ride. The year had started out unceremoniously:
Ed was still working at the local Reel To Reel recording studio; Dean and bassist Will
Turpin were taking classes at Georgia State University; guitarist Ross Childress was
pulling shifts at the RevCo pharmacy; and Shane was winding out his unemployment since the
lay-offs at nearby Fort Gilliam ended his maintenance job. As "HINTS..." took
off, the group took to the stage before the mud-soaked throngs and MTV cameras at
Woodstock '94 and played a marathon string of arena concerts with Aerosmith. "Our
heads were spinning," says
Childress. "It was all so surreal we could hardly absorb what was going on." The
group's first single, "Shine," earned RIAA gold and was named Billboard's #1 Hot
Album Rock Track of 1994, while winning the Billboard Music Award for "Album Rock
Song of the Year." Looking back, what initially rang as a runaway, out-of-the-box
success was the sound of a band merely gearing up to reach its true potential. "We're
grateful for what 'HINTS...' did," says Ed of what was essentially his songwriting
demo. "We were very shocked. I'd been hoping to sell just enough to be able to make a
real
Collective Soul album." Following "HINTS..." and the unanticipated year in
the spotlight, the group was finally able to hit the studio to polish off their first
fully realized band effort - a bracing collection of guitar-driven tracks. To underscore
its "debut" status, they titled the 1995 set simply "COLLECTIVE SOUL."
Accolades and airplay accompanied the album on what would become a 76-week run on the
Billboard 200. "Collective Soul makes every note count," declared a Musician
cover story. "'Deceptively simple' is a dreadful cliche, but the music truly is
simple riff-based rock, and it's
deceptive because the songs are so catchy and the arrangements are clever. All of
them." Early that year, Collective Soul embarked on an eight-week sold-out opening
stint on Van Halen's U.S. arena tour. The group then directed the conviction and energized
performance honed during opening-slot gigs to their headlining tour. "It was our
stage," says Ed. "It was like having your own car, as opposed to borrowing your
parents all the time... anything goes." Their summer-long U.S. tour, which was
nominated for Pollstar's "Club Tour of the Year" award, was followed by a
month-long headlining tour of Europe.
From the concert stage to the television studio, the band brought their enthusiasm before
the cameras for multiple appearances on the Late Show with David Letterman, The Tonight
Show with Jay Leno, and Late Night with Conan O'Brien. Fans began tracing the bands
movements through a newly launched set of internet websites, among them the "Smashing
Young Men" fan site. (If you happen to check it out, note that Shane now denies
Cheech & Chong are his favorite actors.) Along with their other '95 highlights was the
chance to contribute a track to "WORKING CLASS HERO: A TRIBUTE TO JOHN LENNON"
("Jealous Guy"). "We were very proud to be asked to be a part of that
album," says Ed, one of the group's five Beatles devotees. "The hardest thing
about it was settling on just one song to record." A remarkable year was capped
off when "COLLECTIVE SOUL"'s "December" single was named Billboard's
#1 Hot Album Rock Track of 1995 and won the Billboard Music Award for "Album Rock
Song of the Year" - giving Collective Soul the distinction of being the only band to
earn the award two years in a row. "December" went on to set a rock radio record
with nine weeks at #1. The band also topped the rock chart with "Where The River
Flows" and "The World I Know" (also an alternative & adult alternative
#1). After earning RIAA platinum with "HINTS...," the band would go one better
in January of 1996, with the double platinum certification of the self-titled second
album. By September, seemingly in response to the subsequent double platinum achievement
of "HINTS...," "COLLECTIVE SOUL" surpassed the triple platinum mark.
The Roland brothers grew up in a musical, but strict, household where listening to the
radio was monitored. As a kid, Ed heard little rock 'n' roll other than that of Elvis
Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis. For their father, a Southern Baptist minister, pop and rock
music had no place in the Roland household - at first. "The brunt of those
restrictions were on Ed because he was the oldest," remembers Will. "By the time
Dean was a bit older, he could listen to pretty much anything he wanted. Sure, there were
certain records Mr. Roland didn't want in the house, but he could play those at one of our
houses. It was never a problem." At age 13, Ed encountered "ELTON JOHN'S
GREATEST HITS" - it was the album that convinced him he'd become a songwriter.
"Elton really introduced me to rock 'n' roll," says Ed. "I remember seeing
him when I was young and thinking, 'Wow, that's what it's all about.' He was jumping
around and having a blast. I love that. As far as rock 'n' roll goes, I guess I'm an old
fashioned kind of guy." Ed took his growing passion for music from Stockbridge to
Boston, where he studied guitar at the Berklee College of Music. After a year, he returned
home to begin work at the Reel To Reel recording studio, owned by Will's father. During
more than eight years there - much spent as the facility's head engineer - Ed earned his
technical know-how working behind the boards on demo projects with an continuing stream of
regional rock bands. With his unlimited access to the studio, Ed
also spent long hours cutting the catalog of songs he was writing on piano and guitar -
the one-and-two-take recordings that would eventually become "HINTS..."
Nine years younger than Ed, Dean didn't take up the guitar until he was 19. "When the
inspiration hit, it hit hard," says Dean, who had never played in a band prior to his
joining Collective Soul in early 1993. "Playing guitar was all I wanted to do. Being
in Collective Soul was part of that excitement." For Ed and Dean, their blood
relationship isn't vastly different from the one that bonds the band as a whole.
"We're all that tight," says Dean. "As a kid, I was at Will's house as much
as I was at my own. And Shane and Will have been best friends forever and Ross hung out at
the Turpin's all the time because he lived right across the street. We've been connected
that way for as long as I can remember." Will first met the Roland brothers at the
local Baptist church, where he was part of Mr. Roland's choir. His relationship with Ross
goes back to Cub Scouts and Little League. He and Shane played together in the marching
band drum line for three years. "It's kind of funny how our growing up together has
made it so we even think alike," says Will laughing. "There are times
we'll all show up to dinner wearing the same shirt. We're individuals but we communicate
on this weird unspoken level. Musically, it makes for the ideal situation. Our strength is
our chemistry." In high school, Ross,
Shane, and Will were constantly in and out of bands with each other. "We'd play some
of our own songs and covers from bands like REM and U2," says Will. "But we also
spent a lot of time listening to Van Halen and Led Zeppelin and watching Rush
videos." After graduation, Will began pursuing percussion studies - primarily on
marimba and timpani - at Georgia State University in Atlanta. Though not an official
member of the group until early 1994, he'd often join the band on stage as a backing
vocalist or add percussion tracks to songs Ed was working on at Reel To Reel. The day he
joined Collective Soul, he went out and bought his first bass. "It made real good
sense because Shane and I knew how to lock in rhythmically from our snare drum days in
marching band. I watched him learn almost everything he knows." Shane, in contrast,
started his musical pursuits when he was ten-years-old and got a bass guitar for
Christmas. Though a concert band drummer throughout middle school and high school, he was
always being recruited by friends to play bass in various basement bands. In 1989, when
the opportunity arose to play drums with Ed in his pre-Collective outfit, Marching
Two-Step, he grabbed it. Ross began playing guitar at nine when his parents got him an
acoustic guitar. By junior high he was playing electric guitar and music had become an
obsession. "I spent so much money on records that my dad was worried about me,"
says Ross, who was listening to everything from Ozzy Osbourne to Run DMC. After high
school, he played with a number of rock bands - including one that, in late 1992, opened a
show in Atlanta for Marching Two-Step. Within a week, Ross was the newest member of the
band that would soon become Collective Soul. As much as things have changed since those
early days - from arena gigs to munti-platinum albums to their four #1 rock hits - one
thing remains constant: the attitude. "We want to work hard and keep playing
music," states Ed. "That's what we've always wanted." |