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Twin Peaks: Winging It

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(left to r) Clay Frankel, Jack Dolan, Cadien Lake James, Colin Croom, and Connor Brodner. Photo by Daniel Topete

โ€œCanโ€™t help but piss all my youth down the well/ And wave my hand watching it go/ If you gotta hold onto something/ You better hold onto yourself/ Your whole life is just space between holes,โ€ sings Twin Peaks guitarist Clay Frankel on โ€œStain,โ€ a jangly, slow-burning, backwards love song about life as a touring musician. The tour-worn perspective is one that shines through often onย Down In Heaven, the bandโ€™s third full-length release and most accomplished work to date. Take bassist Jack Dolan’sโ€™ front-end track โ€œMy Boys,โ€ an up-tempo singalong that celebrates the unique camaraderie formed within a band:ย โ€œ90 miles an hour down the fuckinโ€™ street with my team, my boys/ Well itโ€™s been so long since you said so long/ Remember what you promised them.โ€

Itย hasย been a while since Frankel, Dolan, guitarist Cadien James, drummer Connor Brodner and keyboardist Colin Croom said โ€œso longโ€ to their home base of Chicago to embark on a seemingly endless tour, spending the better part of the last four years playing hundreds of shows across North America and the U.K. The gang of 22 year olds and 24-year-old Croom spent some of their most formative years on the road, learning to navigate life from the cramped middle seat of a passenger van.ย 

Theyโ€™ve come far since those early days, trading tiny DIY venues for big, sold-out stages. โ€œWe started out in basement shows on our first tours and then toured through venues for two years while we werenโ€™t of age and had to deal with that bullshit,โ€ says Dolan. โ€œWeโ€™d been on the road for three years by the time we turned 21, so by that point we were like, โ€˜Oh, this really isnโ€™t so bad anymore.โ€™โ€

If the hype theyโ€™ve picked up from their years of tireless work has gone to their heads, youโ€™d never know it; theyโ€™re friendly, admirably humble, and possibly more grateful now than ever before for the opportunities theyโ€™ve been given.

โ€œEven the worst parts about touring get so small after you get used to them,โ€ says James. โ€œIโ€™m happier driving around in the middle of nowhere looking out the window than I am trying to figure out what Iโ€™m gonna do at home. The best thing is that weโ€™re on tour, getting to play, getting to be in a fresh place every day, not being stuck anywhere. Iโ€™ve just gotten used to it, so itโ€™s all awesome. Itโ€™s all I know.โ€

For a band whose calling card has become their raucous, lit-fuse of a live show, Twin Peaksโ€™ recording process is surprisingly methodical. They take things slow and never track live, choosing instead to record each memberโ€™s parts individually to allow plenty of room for error.ย 

โ€œI like having two different entities, two different beasts,โ€ says James. โ€œI like what we do live โ€” it brings a different energy because itโ€™s a rock show, but when we go into the studio we get to explore a lot more. A lot of the time, a mistake will turn into something like, โ€˜Whoa, okay, I gotta redo this because that was tight.โ€™ We get influenced by each other while weโ€™re [recording], which is a big part of being in there and forcing ourselves to play.โ€

Itโ€™s often been those happy accidents โ€” like the addition of a mandolin solo here or an unexpected tempo change there โ€” that are the highlights of the bandโ€™s work. โ€œWeโ€™ve never been a band thatโ€™s too overly conscious of what we want to write about or how we want things to sound,โ€ says James. โ€œWe always just wing it and see how it works out. I guess we like the spontaneity and freshness of that. Itโ€™s natural. Onย Wild Onion,ย we each had more parts in mind where we were like โ€˜this has gotta be this wayโ€™ and tried to lay it down like that, but this time we went into it more like โ€˜we just like this direction.โ€™ Everyone would lay down their part and fill in their void the way they wanted to,โ€ says James.

โ€œIf we played this record all the way through at a concert, that would not be a record I would be happy with,โ€ says Dolan. โ€œIt would be cool, but it wouldnโ€™t be as interesting. You might want an upright piano on a song, but youโ€™re not gonna bring one of those on tour. Or acoustic guitars โ€” I donโ€™t know if weโ€™re ever gonna play an acoustic guitar onstage, but almost every song has an acoustic guitar in it.โ€

Donโ€™t mistake the bandโ€™s seat-of-our-pants mentality for carelessness, though: more than anything, itโ€™s a tested method of success for a group of kids who truly love to write music and see how far they can push it. โ€œWe sound pretty casual about it, but we do want to get it right,โ€ says Brodner.

James agrees. โ€œDefinitely. We are winging it, but itโ€™s all quality. Controlled quality.โ€