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Home: S : Sleeping At Last : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Sleeping At Last )
That big sound of Sleeping At Last, unleashed by three
young musicians with souls on fire, whose intensity will
stand comparison with Smashing Pumpkins and
Radiohead, R.E.M. and U2 …
… started in a basement somewhere near Chicago. In
fact, you can still hear it there, building strength beneath
the suburban home where the brothers Ryan and Chad O'Neal
were raised and where they continue to live.
With Ryan on guitar, Chad on drums, and friend Dan Perdue
on bass, this sound rose from its unlikely nest, escaping
first on a self-released EP back in '99, evolving on a follow-up
CD a few years later, and now in flight on Ghosts, their
Interscope debut. Pulsing bass, insistent rhythm, guitars
that chime like carillons and roar like surf in a storm,
all of it surging beneath Ryan's soaring vocals: This is
the music of Sleeping At Last.
Within that music, visions unfold,
of inspiration and hope, of surviving daily strife to "find your soul" and "say
all the things you really want to say" in the anthem "Say," and
drawing close to "the city of lights … a little
place to close our eyes, to end this chase" on "A
Skeleton of Something More," and promising in "Hurry" that "the
world is ours, if only we can let it be."
These dreams, of hope and better days,
trace back to when a young songwriter first set his poetry
to music and realized that he had something to say … something
that had to be heard.
Sleeping At Last come from Wheaton, Illinois, where life
is comfortable but maybe less than thrilling; in circumstances
like these, the artist-to-be looks inward for insight. Finding
nothing, he looks a little harder. And he listens to what's
in the air for guidance.
The O'Neal brothers and Perdue were all into Radiohead as
kids. Later they got enthusiastic about Sunny Day Real Estate;
to different degrees they found something in U2, the Beatles,
and other sources. They took these influences with them as
they started playing around town, in bands that seemed to
look no further than the next gig.
Ryan was the first to perform. Just six months after Chad
took up drums, they started playing together. Soon they met
Dan through his sister, who was friendly with the O'Neals.
With a couple of years of performing already under his belt,
Dan complemented both the musical discipline and youthful
energy that Ryan and Chad maintained.
With that, about five years ago, Sleeping At Last came to
life.
Three weeks after its first rehearsal,
the trio made its bow at the Fishbowl Café, a neighborhood
coffeehouse. Without any publicity machine grinding away
on their behalf, without even so much as a demo to shop,
they started getting booked at local clubs. Armed with
funky equipment and just enough material to play a 30-minute
set, they made waves among listeners who could sense something
special taking shape.
In 1999 they recorded an EP, There's
a quiet understanding …,
at a studio in Wheaton College; selling it at shows, they
spread their reputation throughout and beyond Chicago. Radio
stations from Texas to Paris, France, began playing it, and
sales of more than two thousand copies paid for their first
full-length album, Capture, described at ChicagoRedStreak.com
as "a mesh of careful rhythms and cherubic vocals that
seems equal parts dark rock, emo, and the gritty balladry
that made the Pumpkins famous."
The Pumpkins reference is prescient,
for in March 2001, just a couple of months after Capture
was finished, the band was hanging around backstage at
the Metro, one of the city's most celebrated venues. They'd
finished their opening set and were mulling over what to
do with the rest of the night when …
"… Dan came up to me and said, 'You'll never
guess who's here,'" remembers Ryan. "'Billy Corgan
from Smashing Pumpkins!' So we started talking about whether
we should give him our CD. We didn't want to bother him.
But then he walked right by us, and I just stuck out my hand
and gave him a copy of Capture. We had no idea whether anything
would come out of it. In fact, we were all pretty positive
he would throw it out."
No such luck. The following day, Corgan
called the O'Neals, expressed his enthusiasm for the band,
and offered the beginning of what has turned into early
support for Sleeping At Last. "We've
had so many conversations with him," Ryan says. "He
never interfered with what we wanted to do, but he'd tell
us what he thought was really strong. He'd say, 'That's a
great direction. You can tap into more of that, if you want.'
He taught us a lot about song arrangement. And he always
said he really believes in what we're doing."
Inspired, Ryan dedicated himself over
the next couple of years to tightening his writing. The
more he focused, the more the music began to advance beyond
what they had achieved on Capture. "I wrote everything that you hear on Ghosts
during that time, on a typewriter, without music in mind," he
explains, "just to get to what I was feeling and thinking.
When it came time to add the music, I began to put the songs
together. Each one was different: Some started with a distinct
direction, and others took form on their own and ended up
saying exactly what I wanted and hoped they would say even
though I couldn't quite figure out how to do it."
These songs are a big step forward
for Sleeping At Last. "Since
then I've learned a lot about what I want to say and how
to say it without being affected by anything else," Ryan
explains. "Before, I was trying to figure out whether
I actually had anything to say at all. With Ghosts, I've
been able to write lyrics that are true to myself, more so
than anything I've ever done. And musically, we all put our
hearts and souls into every aspect of Ghosts. This isn't
an album by a band that's just started to find itself. It's
an album where we've found what we're looking for. There's
not a single word on Ghosts that doesn't come from what I
was feeling."
This conviction was apparent to Interscope
A&R representative
Mark Williams, who followed a tip from a friend at the Metro
to the O'Neal house in Wheaton. There, in that same basement
where the trio had first played, the process began that led
several weeks later to their signing with the label. For
six months, in early-2003, they disappeared into Steve Albini's
Electrical Audio studio in nearby Lakeview and, with producer
Bjorn Thorsrud (Dandy Warhols, Zwan, Smashing Pumpkins) on
sliders and knobs and mixer Alan Moulder (U2, Depeche Mode,
Nine Inch Nails), recorded one awesome CD.
"Everything came out sounding exactly as we wanted
it to," Ryan says. "It was especially fun to hear
the strings record and to watch as the vision we had for
the album got pieced together into physical form."
As Ghosts stands poised for release, the world seems to
swirl more quickly around Sleeping At Last. On September
26 they begin their first national tour, with Switchfoot
and Bleu. The timing seems perfect: With uncertainty a fact
of life, and with pop music stuck in a cycle of cynicism,
the resonant sound and upbeat passions of this band seem
ready to fall like rain across a desert of the spirit.
"Every musician wants to create something that's special," Ryan
muses. "I think we are singing about something that’s
different. We're all hoping that as many people as possible
will take something from our music and have it mean something
special. Really, that's our main goal."
Ghosts stands with its head in the clouds and its roots
firm in that Wheaton basement. Even now, with the future
opening wide before Sleeping At Last, Ryan, Chad, and Dan
are probably down there again, in the glow of the Christmas
lights they strung up around their practice area, getting
ready to deliver these songs onstage, to excite new fans
far from home.
It's inevitable: Ghosts will haunt
your world … and
leave it better than it was before.
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