Interviews

The Heart Of The Song: A Q&A with John Oates

This article was originally published in July 2012.

This month John Oates helps select the winner of American Songwriter’s first Coffeehouse Tour. We talked with Oates about his current work with up-and-coming artists, working in Nashville, and the challenges of building an audience while on tour.

You and Daryl Hall have shown a lot of interest in up-and-coming musicians. Between hisย webcast, Live at Darylโ€™s House, and your sit-ins and co-writing with younger musicians, whatย makes you guys so interested in the future generations of music?

Weโ€™re both songwriters at heart, Daryl and I. From the very beginning thatโ€™s how our career gotย started; before we became pop stars and all that crap, really we were songwriters, and thatโ€™sย how we think of ourselves to this day. We have a great respect for songwriters regardless of ifย theyโ€™re veterans or newcomers. But the newcomers are exciting. As a more experienced writer,ย someone who has a lot of years and songs under his belt, I feel like I can bring a certain thing toย the mix and the collaboration thatโ€™s based on experience: certain types of references– ofย course my references are usually a lot older, but sometimes that can be very hip. At the sameย time, the younger songwriters bring an energy, and perhaps a new way of looking at things that Iย might not have. I think itโ€™s a synergy that works really well.

Youโ€™ve done sit-ins with everyone from Donavon Frankenreiter to Umphreyโ€™s McGee. Whatย attracts you to collaborating with someone?

Well, because I like them; I like them as people, and I like their music. Donavon is really a coolย guy. I love the way his lifestyle is represented in his music, and heโ€™s a good person.Theย Umphreyโ€™s guys, theyโ€™re consummate musicians. I like the way their references are a lot of theย โ€˜80s stuff that I was so involved in. So when I get together with them, theyโ€™re recreating a lot ofย those references for me, whether weโ€™re playing actual classic โ€˜80s song, or Iโ€™m jumping in withย them on some more progressive stuff. And for me, itโ€™s a challenge to play with a band likeย Umphreyโ€™s; I wouldnโ€™t consider myself a progressive instrumentalist. It makes me stretch; itย makes me really set the bar a lot higher. It opens up a window to my guitar playing. I always seeย it as, if thereโ€™s nothing positive about the mashup, then itโ€™s not going to work. So I look at how Iย can benefit and how I can help them.

Do you have any dream collaborators?

Oh yes, so many. In fact I just finished two tracks with a group called Yarn. Theyโ€™re great, I heardย them at Music City Roots. Theyโ€™re a New York-based progressive bluegrass and Americanaย band. I wrote two songs with their singer, Blake Christiana. He and I really hit it off, and I thinkย the two songs we wrote are great. Iโ€™m very excited for those guys. Iโ€™m also working with a reallyย amazing singer-songwriter named Daphne Willis. Sheโ€™s based in Nashville, originally fromย Chicago. She has one of the greatest voices Iโ€™ve ever heard. She and I have been writing alongย with her producer, Tim Lauer. We have about five or six songs under our belt. Oh, thereโ€™s just soย many. Iโ€™ve been working with Jim Lauderdale. Jim makes an album about once a week [laughs].

He and I have written a whole bunch of songs, a few of which he has recorded for his upcomingย album. I love working with Jim, because heโ€™s such a unique individual. He brings an authenticity,ย and a certain kind of country sensibility to our collaboration. And I bring a little bit more of theย musical sophistication. I think when you bring those two things together, you get a really coolย mix.

Iโ€™d heard you were co-writing in Nashville. What kind of songs are you working on? Anything inย the vein of Nashville?

Well, you know, I donโ€™t try to be who Iโ€™m not. I didnโ€™t come to Nashville to put on a cowboy hatย and pretend to be a country singer. My attraction to Nashville as Music City is the variety andย flexibility: the fact that thereโ€™s so many musicians at your disposal, so many amazing studiosย and talented people that you can draw from. Itโ€™s just a very inspiring place to be when you knowย that at 3 a.m., if you need an accordion player, you can probably find one. I try to be myself, butย at the same time Iโ€™m learning a lot, and Iโ€™m pulling from not only from the well of inspiration thatย Iโ€™m getting from Nashville, but Iโ€™m pulling from my roots. Iโ€™m pulling from the stuff that made meย want to be a musician way before I met Daryl Hall. This was the stuff that I liked as a kid, ruralย and delta blues, folk, appalachian music, early rock, early R&B. Thatโ€™s becoming the bedrock ofย my solo career, but now Iโ€™m getting back into some original songs. Iโ€™ve actually been on anย incredible writing tear recently, just writing like a madman. I have some really cool songs that Iโ€™mย getting ready for a project down the road. Iโ€™m not rushing into it. I put out Mississippi Mile about aย year and a half ago, and I put out a live album called The Bluesville Sessions six months ago, soย Iโ€™ve had a lot of recordings out there floating around. This next one Iโ€™m going to do, Iโ€™m reallyย going to take my time with, because itโ€™s going to be all originals. Itโ€™s something I really want toย craft in a certain way.

Youโ€™re judging the Fishman’s American Songwriter Coffeehouse Tour contest. Whatย will you be looking for from the entrants?

Quality, quality, quality, quality. One of the things about judging a songwriting contest– and Iโ€™veย had a little bit of experience judging for the Aspen Songwriters Festival, which I produce out inย Aspen, Colorado, and I helped Jim Lauderdale pick some songs for the Merlefest songwriter contest– sometimes itโ€™s tough to separate the recording from the song. And I think thatโ€™s got to be veryย discerning when youโ€™re being a judge, because you canโ€™t get seduced into liking the record orย liking the playing. You have to hear through all of that to the song inside the recording. You knowย the old saying, โ€œYou can dress up a pig, but itโ€™s still a pig.โ€ Sometimes you can make thatย mistake. You can hear a song that might not have a lot going on, but because of the way itโ€™sย presented production wise, and the quality of the recording and the players, you can startย thinking itโ€™s a little more than it is. And thatโ€™s the kind of thing I look for; I just go right to the heartย of the song. Does the music enhance what the lyrics are trying to say? Is it unique? Is it well crafted? Does it bring a new idea or a new voice to a set of chords and melodies? Thereโ€™s a lotย to it, and Iโ€™m just going to be as impartial and fair as I can be, and just look for the best songsย possible.

It sounds like we have similar values when judging music.

Well, anyone who truly loves music I think has the same values.

The winner of the contest will play ten coffeehouse gigs across the northeast. Can you talk about the importance of buildingย an audience on tour?

As usual, building an audience is never easy. Itโ€™s always been tough. You just have to workย hard, really. You have to get out there and play a lot of dates. You have to engage your fans; inย this day in social media thatโ€™s become an integral part of the process. Keep them engaged, keepย them interested, because itโ€™s too easy for the audience to move onto something new. Theyโ€™reย being barraged with something new everyday. I think itโ€™s just a matter of making people believeย that youโ€™re for real, entertaining them, turning them on, exciting them, and being there for them.ย Make sure that they know you have a passion for it, and hopefully theyโ€™ll buy into that.