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The sorentinos
“It is in fact our tenth CD and you should turn it up to ten when you
play it! So it was a natural really.”
Volume 10 is more evidence that music comes when it comes. A year in the planning which in Sorentino terms is at least 5 in dog years that boiled down to12 tightly honed songs.
“This was always meant to
be a Pop record. I was gonna record the whole album live to two track
like an old Ricky Nelson record, but getting the band together on it
proved impossible, so we recorded some in my home studio, some at
Prairie Sun in Cotati and recorded some and mixed the whole thing at
Dave’s Room in Hollywood.” muses Danny.
Proof that much more care and consideration than ever before was
bestowed upon Volume 10 was by enlisting Grammy Award winner David
Bianco (Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Ozzy) to mix the whole enchilada and
being the inaugural project to come out of his newly christened Dave’s
Room in North Hollywood which rose from the ashes of the legendary Mama
Jo’s studio.
Songs, songs, it’s all about the songs….. Danny says ”On the whole I would
say, this is probably our most accessible album yet, but still filled
with all kinds of roots music, blues, country, jazz inflections ...we
even have a song that has a cello section in it! Mix them all together
and you get a real mess, which is what The Sorentinos have always been!
I like to think we mix the mess our own way which gives us our own brand
of Pop music.”
A fine mess indeed sprinkled with Danny’s astute talent for finding the
humour and the heartache of everyday life through lyric and song. Who
else would dare compare gloom and turn it into sunshine on “Ray Davies
Day” Jangle all the way. Finding a humourous take on going broke “Money
Goes” and grunging and grumbling of impending older age glory of “(It’s
Too Late To) Die Young” and “Seventeen”. Angels and Hell remain major
themes with “You’re Going Too” - Already called a tight little package,
Volume 10 is a milestone for the band and yet another beginning just
starting.
Back track:

2005’s “Way Out ” celebrated The Sorentinos long awaited return….of
sorts. Four years has passed since The Major Label release “The End Of
The Day” and much had happened in between.
While on tour in England and driving back from The North for the two
last London shows, news of “9/11” was received. The TV monitoring began
and perspective was emphatically put in place. The Borderline show on
9/12 was a good but emotionally tempered set. The 12 Bar Club finale on
Friday the 13th rocked hard from frustration. The trip home to America
was fraught with uncertainty even to get a flight as the US airspace was
closed..
Time passed. Danny Sorentino in a blast of creativity released the
internet only “So Low” solo album and recorded a couple Christmas
singles. Long-time bass player Rob Ruiz’s announced band retirement
which was responded quickly by Danny Sorentino recording and releasing
“Four Chord Wonders” under his own name. New rhythm section team of
bassist Kent Fossgreen and drummer Kenny Susan added to backbone
guitarist Steve Lee’s and Danny’s unswerving commitment to the music.
This time around focus centered around the more humorous as well as
poignant side of life.
Not long after, Rob realised the error of his ways and resumed the
position as it were. Rob’s fresh new contribution and energy was to
instigate the 2003’s “Love And Haight” retrospective as he is always
looking backwards anyway. Danny succumbed to the idea as he usually
never looks back. So many songs and so little time.
Another London trip became the seeds for fresh new Sorentinos recordings
there. 20 tracks were recorded in 2 days which many of which made the
final cut on “Way Out ”. Certainly heroic in intent.
“Way Out ” turned into several pastiches that pay homage to the band’s
numerous influences from British blues to New York angst to West Coast
hippie-dom. You could probably call it from Coast to Coast to Coast and
everything in between past present and future.
More punishment is expected as The Sorentinos please those who know and
expect those who know….to grow.
Danny Sorentino’s observations of “life as it happens” through
songwriting has continued to be the strength and dialogue which brings
fans into “the world according to Sorentino”. A world which, remarkably
mirrors everyone else’s - the same joys, hopes, frustrations and
downright confusion we all go through; like it or not. But once you’re
in….you’re in for good.
Danny adds, "I have always thought of myself as a writer first and a
musician second. The music is the method I use to deliver the message
and hopefully with ever year that goes by, I get a little better at
delivering the message".
Current Sorentino members Rob Ruiz on bass, Kenny Susan on drums and
background vocals and Russ Kerger on keyboards, the inimitable Howard
Vatcher (currently unfired from fired many times) on guitar and
longstanding AWOL in London Steve Lee on guitar.
The San Francisco Bay Area band has remained on a steady course -- a
potent mixture of guitar based musical influences ranging from the
Beatles and Rolling Stones to Tom Petty, Bob Dylan and Neil Young to
actually combine into something uniquely Danny’s own. Simple,
straightforward lyrics relating universal feelings in a timeless manner.
All the goodness without the fat - nothing wrong with that -- neatly
wrapped in a tidy value-for-money package. For many it seems that
classic rock songs are back.
“The End Of The Day” (2001) was a coming together of sorts and seventh
album in a string of acclaimed releases by The Sorentinos on The Major
Label as many Sorentino members from all the years participated in the
making. The album was voted Top 10 Best Album from fans’ votes on
Americana-uk.com, Netrhythms.co.uk Chief Editor Sue Cavendish’s Top
Album Of The Year and heralded in many others throughout America and
Europe distributed by Evangeline/Universal.
“All Good Things...” (1999) and “Family” (1997) were critically
acclaimed and brought huge favor from both sides of the Atlantic.
"Welcome To The Past," (1996), “What We Dream” (1995) and “Obviously
Five Believers” (1994) add to the impressive CD catalogue. Dan’s
prolific songwriting has never meant of shortage a material to record.
Staunch Tinomaniac's radio KRSH/Santa Rosa CA continues to air tracks
matching most superstar acts including the awarding of the coveted
“album of the week”. London's Time Out "Venue of the Year" winners the
12 Bar Club and The Borderline have all but adopted the band offering
unprecedented support in the UK scene which also includes the BBC
Radio’s “Whispering” Bob Harris (an English institution) among many
others.
Sorentinos songs have so far graced no less than four "Melrose Place"
episodes including the opening credits which are normally reserved for
artists such as Sting or John Mellancamp. Other songs have been used in
films "Lover's Knot" starring Tim Curry and Jennifer Grey, successful
indie film fest movie "Follow The Bitch", and was solo-ed in CBS (US)
Movie Of The Week "Co-ed Call Girl" starring Tory Spelling.
All this creates for a unique band calling America and the UK home and
who continue to take on the world on their own terms.
A Sorentino favorite saying is “Life is what happens in the meantime….”.
It continues for sure.
03-2005
steve@worldlee.co.uk or dantino@pacbell.net

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