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Atlanta-based aggro-rockers Sevendust have just released an unplugged
album. But don't get the idea they've mellowed out.
"We put on what has to be the heaviest acoustic show ever,"
claims Clint Lowery, who shares guitar duties in Sevendust with
John Connolly. "The comment we get from a lot of fans is,
'That's the most aggressive acoustic concert I've
ever seen!' We're not John Denver-ing it up there
we're strumming real hard."
According to Lowery, Sevendust fans weren't the only people
who needed convincing that the acoustic album was a good idea.
"Our label wasn't all that interested at first. We were
cautious too because we didn't want it to seem like we were
trying to market ourselves as some sort of more commercial acoustic
band. At first we planned to do a limited release, just for our
fan club. But we did a small tour, and it just started to snowball.
We filmed one of the shows in Athens, Georgia, and it turned out
better than we thought it would. Eventually the label jumped on
the bandwagon, and now it's going to be a full-on release."
The album, Southside Double-Wide Acoustic Live, includes
songs selected from Sevendust's four studio albums, plus
a cover of Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt."
"We really had to change some of the heavier songs to transfer
them over to acoustic," says Lowery. "We changed structures
and parts so that they'd make sense. We simplified a lot
of things, stripping them down to the basic chord structure."
These days Lowery is playing a pair of handcrafted Yamaha acoustics:
a jumbo cutaway LJX6C and a standard-sized LLX6. "These Yamahas
are just incredible guitars," he says. "The second I
picked them up, I wanted to start writing. In fact, I came up
with four songs right away. Their natural acoustic sounds are
great. And when I plugged the jumbo into my recorder, it sounded
crystal-clear with no compression or EQ or anything."
For Lowery, the acoustic experiment isn't as out-of-character
as some might suppose. "I'm a huge fan of acoustic music,"
he says. "I like Sarah McLachlan. India.Arie has beautiful
acoustic playing in her music. And my dad, Willie Lowery, makes
his living playing acoustic guitar. He's played all his life
country, zydeco, funk, lounge. He's based out of North
Carolina where he has a studio. He's my idol."
Yet Clint's first instrument was drums because, he
explains, he wanted to play with his dad. But the younger Lowery
eventually switched over to guitar, studying with North Carolina
instructor Robbie Greene and eventually fulfilling his wish of
playing with his father. "We'd play old songs like 'A
Whiter Shade of Pale' and Otis Redding stuff," recalls
Clint. "It was great to learn the chord progressions for
all those old songs."
Clint eventually made his way to Atlanta, where the members of
Sevendust starting jamming in 1995. But the band was not immediately
embraced by their hometown. "To be honest, there wasn't
a lot of support for us at the beginning," says Lowery. "We
were the black sheep of the scene. We didn't get much support
from other bands, and there was definitely no support from local
magazines or radio. It took us a long time to get some love from
Atlanta! But it made us want to work that much harder to get the
respect we thought we deserved."
Over the years Lowery, and co-guitarist Connelly have settled
into a seamless division of labor. "At the beginning,"
says Clint, "John was the rhythm-holder, and I was the texture
guy. Maybe that's because he'd only been playing guitar
for about five years. But he grew as a player and started picking
up on the texture things I was doing. So now he usually does the
texture and the lines for the songs he writes, while I hold down
the rhythm. For the songs I write, it's the other way around."
The two also share similar compositional styles. "We start
in our own little home studios, where we put together outlines
for songs. We each bring ten or eleven ideas into rehearsal, and
then we listen to everything as a band and decide which ones to
jam on. We usually agree on which ones sound the best, and those
are the ones we start putting vocals on. In the end, our records
tend to be about half his song ideas and half mine. Plus, after
working together for so many years, we tend to write a little
bit alike. We inspire and motivate each other."
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