About: Steve Wynn
"One of rock's true heroes of the underground." -
Philadelphia Weekly
"The ex-Dream Syndicate frontman's a veritable Ph.D. of
timeless rock songcraft" - Chicago Tribune
"A force to be reckoned with and cherished." -
London Sunday Times
"No contemporaries make classic rock records like
Wynn" - AllMusicGuide.com
"A first-class songwriter in the simple-yet-profound
tradition of Lou Reed, Neil Young and post-Beatles John Lennon, with an ear for
balancing his pop sensibility with artful dissonance." - PopMatters.com
In 25 years, Wynn has released at least that many albums and
has seen over 300 of his songs recorded. He has played over 2000 shows in more
than 25 countries. His songs have been recorded and/or performed by REM, Luna,
Concrete Blonde, The Black Crowes, Yo La Tengo and Eleventh Dream Day, among
others; his "That's Why I Wear Black" became the #1 single of 1993 in
Norway as the leadoff track from the debut album by Somebody's Darling. He has
been prominently featured in Rolling Stone, Mojo, Uncut, Entertainment Weekly,
People, The Los Angeles Times, New York Times and countless other publications
all over the world.
Or maybe you know Wynn from his groundbreaking work with The
Dream Syndicate, a band that along with REM and the Replacements practically
invented the American indie rock scene of the 1980s. Perhaps you know Wynn from
his critically acclaimed solo albums of the 1990s which were fixtures on many
Modern Rock radio stations across the country. Or it could be from his highly
touted side-project Gutterball which by its fifth gig found itself signed to
Mute/Elektra and on a national tour with The Black Crowes. Or maybe from his
recent "Desert Trilogy" and the near-legendary shows with his current
backing band The Miracle 3. Or maybe you tuned in for the first time when he
played on the Late Show With David Letterman as part of The Baseball Project
earlier this year.
"What he took from punk had more to do with attitude,
noisy energy, abyss-skirting emotions and musical riskiness qualities, of
course, present in the best rock and roll of any scene, era or sub-genre"
- Trouser Press Music Guide
Steve Wynn was born in Santa Monica, California in 1960 and
got his first guitar (a nylon-string acoustic) when he was nine, shortly after
which he wrote his first song "Sing My Blues". He formed his first
band "The Light Bulbs" that same year and the band made the circuit
of parties and school functions; the band's oldest member was ten years old. By
the time he was 13, Wynn had played in bands with such colorful names as Purple
Passion and Sudden Death Overtime, alternating between his own early originals
and songs by Neil Young, The Rolling Stones and The Who.
In the years that followed, Wynn found himself sidetracked
by a strong desire to become a sportswriter. Abandoning his electric guitar for
a notepad, pen and typewriter Wynn found himself on the other side of the
interview, speaking to football, basketball and baseball players and dreaming
of one day seeing his name on the masthead of Sports Illustrated.
During his high school years, Wynn entertained notions of
becoming a sportswriter but the excitement and immediacy of the punk rock
explosion of 1977 brought him back into the world of song writing and performing.
He found himself writing and playing guitar for UC Davis (near Sacramento) New
Wave pioneers "Suspects", a band for whom Wynn wrote over 100 songs,
none of which he has performed since. A move back to Los Angeles with Suspects
lead singer Kendra Smith was the first step towards the formation of The Dream
Syndicate, the band with whom Wynn would gain national and eventually
international acclaim.
The Dream Syndicate played together for the first time in
December 1981 and within three weeks had recorded its self-titled first EP. The
record was released in April 1982 and followed six months later by the band's
debut album "The Days of Wine and Roses", an album which fans and
critics alike still consider one of the best and most important rock albums of
all time. Those early years are represented here by "When You Smile"
and "That's What You Always Say," songs which have been covered,
respectively, by Concrete Blonde and Luna. The band was almost immediately
signed by A&M Records for whom it recorded the landmark "Medicine
Show" (the title song opens this compilation), a record that was recently
named one of the 40 best rock albums of all time by the London Guardian and
whose songs have been covered by REM and The Black Crowes among many others.
Several years of worldwide touring (including several trips
to Europe and Japan and Australia) followed before the band broke up at the end
of 1988. Wynn has said "As proud as I was of The Dream Syndicate, our
music and our accomplishments I felt we had reached our peak and everything
that followed would have been a disappointment. I wanted to be a band that
broke up while we were still doing our best work."
In 1990 Wynn came back with his first solo offering
"Kerosene Man," an album of incredible diversity that showed Wynn's
enormous growth as a songwriter and record-maker. The songs "Carolyn"
and "Tears Won't Help" were among the most-played songs that year on
Modern Rock radio stations and his video for "Carolyn" was in regular
rotation on MTV for six weeks. The follow-up "Dazzling Display" was
Wynn's most elaborate production to date, a dizzying synthesis of the best rock
music of the previous 30 years featuring the talents of, among others, REM's
Peter Buck, Concrete Blonde's Johnette Napolitano and members of The Bangles,
The Turtles and the touring bands of Lou Reed and Tracy Chapman.
A four-day writing vacation in Richmond, Virginia with the
House of Freaks' Bryan Harvey turned into the side-project supergroup
Gutterball who released two albums, garnered overwhelming press response and
built a frenetic cult following; the Black Crowes took the band out as its
opening act even before the first Gutterball record was released. Not one to
stand still, Wynn followed the success of Gutterball with the more introspective
"Fluorescent", an album whose single "Carelessly" picked up
heavy radio play throughout the US and Europe.
In 1994, Wynn moved to New York City. He harnessed the
excitement and energy of his new home in his record "Melting in the
Dark". The two albums that followed,"Sweetness and Light" and
"My Midnight", found Wynn settling into the sound that would define
the next phase of his solo career.
In 2001, Steve went to Tucson and recorded the double album
"Here Come the Miracles" which was released to overwhelming critical
acclaim. The album was seen as a stunning comeback and appeared on many
year-end critics' surveys along with winning Best Alternative Rock Album by the
American Federation of Independent Music. The album was followed by "Static
Transmission" and "...tick...tick...tick", both also recorded in
Tucson with his new backing unit "The Miracle 3" and which were
viewed as part of a "Desert Trilogy" that is seen by many as the best
work of his career.
But Wynn has never been one to settle into an easy or
predictable groove. Since the last of the desert trilogy he has recorded
"Cast Iron Soul", a new Danny & Dusty album with Green On Red's
Dan Stuart, joined forces with his wife and drummer Linda Pitmon and legendary
Spanish producer Paco Loco to concoct the twisted pop side project "Smack
Dab", and collaborated with the Walkabouts' Chris Eckman in Slovenia on
the lush and lavish "Crossing Dragon Bridge", a record that made up a
tandem of new releases in 2008 with "The Baseball Project", a baseball
song cycle collaboration with Pitmon and also Scott McCaughey and Peter Buck of
REM and the Minus 5.
In the midst of such a prolific recording career, Wynn has
still found time to average over 100 shows a year all over the world. He has
found himself as welcome in Rome, Oslo, Athens, Brussels, London and Madrid as
he has in Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, Chicago and Boston. And
for the devoted fans he has made in these and many other cities, his extensive
discography of music reflects the consensus among fans: that Steve Wynn is one
of the most adventurous, accomplished and exciting songwriters of the last few
decades. If all of this is still news to you, just put on this cd and get ready
to join the legions of people who have enjoyed Wynn's dazzling display of songs
over the last 25 years.
"Perhaps it's Wynn's irrepressibly human voice or maybe
the clever phrases that stick in your head and refuse to leave...regardless of
the manner, there's simply no denying that these songs work" - Album
Network
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CONTACT: http://www.stevewynn.net/contact.php
CONTACT: http://www.stevewynn.net/contact.php
Benedikt’s Blues – (Album: Benedikt’s Blues – 2015)
Steve Wynn & The Miracle 3 – Amphetamine (2011 Live)
Steve Wynn – Punching Holes in the Sky (2008)
Steve Wynn & The Miracle 3 – Amphetamine (2003)
Steve Wynn – Smash Myself to Bits (2001)
Steve Wynn – Nothing But the Shell (1999)
Steve Wynn - In Love with Everyone – (1997)
Steve Wynn – 405 (1992)
The Dream Syndicate – Someplace Better Than This (1988)
The Dream Syndicate – When the Curtain Falls (1988)
The Dream Syndicate – Medecine Show (1984)
The Dream Syndicate - (12” EP - Down There - 1982)
Steve Wynn – Follow Me - (Acoustic Live)
Danny & Dusty – The Good Ole Days (2007 Live)
Steve Wynn & The Miracle 3 – Resolution (2011)
The Dream Syndicate – (2014 Live) – KEXP
Steve Wynn – Official Website
Steve Wynn - Facebook
Steve Wynn - Twitter
Steve Wynn - Wikipedia
VIDEO
Steve Wynn - YouTube
BUY MUSIC
Steve Wynn – Official Store
Steve Wynn - iTunes
Steve Wynn – CD Baby
Steve Wynn - eMusic
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