In the Beginning
The story of Dave Matthews Band begins so far away from the stadiums the
quintet would someday pack to capacity. It starts in Johannesburg, South
Africa, on January 9, 1967, when David John Matthews was born to John and
Val Matthews. During her pregnancy, Val listened to a lot of Vivaldi and
years later some would joke that this early exposure to music would tune the
then-unborn Matthews's ear for the art.
South Africa was not the ideal place to raise a child at the time. The white
Afrikaners had officially gained their independence from Great Britain less
than ten years earlier in 1958. In the years following, there was an
increasing sense of disillusionment with the corrupt political system and
its leaders by the majority black population. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s
South Africa was a police state ruled by white minority leaders who
maintained the overtly racist system of apartheid. Before the abolishment of
apartheid in 1991, South Africa was torn by massacres, riots, and widespread
social unrest.
However, when Dave was two and before he could truly adjust to his
surroundings and be aware of the revolution happening around him, Matthews's
parents moved to the New York suburb of Yorktown Heights. There Matthews's
father worked for IBM as a physicist, developing superconducting circuits.
It was a tight-knit family, consisting of Dave, a younger sister, Jane, an
older sister, Anne, and a brother, Peter. The whole family lived by the
Quaker tradition, which is officially known as The Religious Society of
Friends. This religious movement was started in England around 1650 by a
group of people, though George Fox would go on to become its leader. The
Religious Society of Friends is a Christian organization, but does not have
a set creed or dogma, since Friends believe that God is within all of us.
However, Quakers are pacifists and do not believe in violent action, a
sentiment that is succinctly summed up in the "George Fox Song": "If we give
you a rifle/Will you fight for the Lord?/But you can't kill the Devil/With a
gun or a sword."
A former architect, Val Matthews was a painter, as well as remaining
involved in the Quaker anti-apartheid movement. From a very young age, Val
brought her son up with Quaker mores and the belief in interracial harmony,
pervasive themes in songs he would write for DMB. Dave told Rolling
Stone, "We were brought up, very aggressively, that bigotry and racism
are evil things, and they stem from fear." This Quaker sense of inner peace
and outer pacifism would be a defining moral trait for Matthews throughout
his life. It would help him make some very big decisions and would be
reflected in the ideals of his lyrics.
When Dave was five he was introduced to the Beatles. He later reminisced to
Rolling Stone magazine, "They made me dream of making music when I
was five. I stopped thinking about Little League. I was obsessed." Dave
would never forget the Beatles: in fact, he would later cover a number of
Beatles songs with DMB, including "Can't Buy Me Love," "All You Need Is
Love," "You Won't See Me," and "Yellow Submarine." Touched by Beatlemania,
the young Matthews began his life-long obsession with music.
The family moved to Cambridge, England, in 1974 when Dave was seven, but
returned to Yorktown Heights a year later. Dave took an early interest in
the guitar and started taking lessons when he was nine. "I was a horrible
student," Matthews told Steve Morse of the Boston Globe, "But he
[Matthews's guitar teacher] told me, 'Keep your foot tapping whatever you
do.' That has always stuck in my mind. If you miss a note or you miss a
chord, as long as you keep the rhythm going, it really doesn't matter. Maybe
I already knew it, but he verbalized the necessity to stay in the groove."
He liked the acoustic guitar from the start, because of the hollow body's
percussive elements that he couldn't coax from an electric guitar.
Tragedy struck the Matthews household when Dave was only ten. His father
passed away from lung cancer, leaving the family devastated. He later
theorized to Rolling Stone magazine, "We figure he might have got the
disease from the radioactive material he handled." This was the young
Matthews's first encounter with tragic death. Unfortunately, it would not be
his last. Death would be an unfortunate specter that would haunt Matthews at
far too early an age.
It is misfortunes like his father's death from which Dave may get his "carpe
diem" sensibility, an attitude that is reflected in his lyrics. The idea of
"living for today" pervades the lyrics of early songs like "Two Step,"
"Tripping Billies," and "Lie In Our Graves." Matthews admitted to the
Washington Post, "There's always been a good handful of songs about
death and loss, but always with the idea that [death] was something that
should bring us together. There are arbitrary lines between bad and good
that often don't make a lot of sense to me. I don't want to die, obviously,
but really, the wonder of life is amplified by the fact that it ends. If it
went on forever, it would be such a tiresome thing and we'd all be so bored:
'What are we going to do today?' 'Just live again, I suppose.'"
He later divulged to the New York Post that death had become less
dangerous to him, "It's unfortunate that so many people think about
perpetuating themselves and holding onto their youth, maybe because it is
further away from death. I'm attracted to the idea of getting old. I like
that young people will probably tell jokes behind my back about what a
doddering old fool I am. That seems attractive to me."
After the shock of John Matthews's death, the family returned to
Johannesburg. There Dave started attending middle school and later went to a
local high school. While in South Africa, Matthews started listening to
native artists like King Sunny Ade, Salif Keita, and Hugh Masekela, whose
music would go on to shape Matthews's rhythmic sensibility and be
responsible for the ethnic touches in his own work. Back in South Africa,
Matthews found music and inspiration all around him through "appreciation of
long hikes through the woods" and "the sounds of things around us: the
heartbeats, the footsteps."
By high school Dave's interests were pretty much confined to drawing and
noodling around on the guitar. He didn't really know what he wanted to do
and no one was about to push him to figure it out. To avoid South Africa's
compulsory military service, which ran against the tenets of Quaker
philosophy, Matthews returned to the United States when he was nineteen, in
January of 1986. Matthews remembered, in an interview with Michael Krugman,
"When I finished up high school and got my call-up sheets, I made my
departure hastily. Half my friends went [into the military] and half left
the country. Things were pretty bad there. There were a lot of young people
leaving to avoid the army. And a lot of young people going to Europe and
going up north of the border. The demise of the then Nationalist Party was
definitely visible on the horizon." At thirteen, while still living in South
Africa, he had been granted U.S. citizenship and now he took advantage of
that fact, but he still felt a very intense connection with South Africa and
continues to be drawn back to the country again and again.
When he returned Stateside, he lived in New York and took a job as a clerk
at the IBM research center where his father had worked. There were no firm
plans for college and Matthews felt no heartrending draw for him. Later in
1986 the young Matthews moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, and rejoined his
family, who had moved there while he had been in New York. His father had
taught there before he was born and the family still retained connections to
the region.
Charlottesville, or C'ville as the townies affectionately refer to it, is a
beatnik Southern college town, the home of fifty thousand people, a
burgeoning music scene, and a bohemian artist community. Taking its name
from Queen Charlotte-Sophia of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the child bride of King
George III of England, Charlottesville is located in lush Central Virginia
on the upper Piedmont Plateau at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains
and at the headwaters of the Rivanna River. The area is rich with
colonial-era American history and is home to University of Virginia, which
was founded in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson. It now has over 18,000 students
enrolled in ten schools and along with Piedmont Virginia Community College,
C'ville has over 20,000 college students bent on studies and a good time --
the perfect audience for an up-and-coming band. Charlottesville is where the
tale of Dave Matthews Band truly begins; its music scene is almost
incestuous as one will see from all the connections among the many players
within the DMB story.
Dave attended Charlottesville Community College on a limited enrollment
basis. His chief interests were philosophy and partying. He batted around
the possibility of attending art school, but the idea kept falling by the
wayside. He still loved abstract drawing and guitar playing, with no
thoughts that his idle strumming might lead to a career someday. In fact,
some of the sketches Dave had done would later be turned into T-shirt and
sticker designs for DMB merchandise. However constant his guitar playing, he
had yet to write a complete song.
Between 1986 and 1990, Matthews traveled between South Africa and
Charlottesville several times, a process that strengthened his love for
South Africa's beautiful countryside and, perhaps most importantly, the
music. Dave told Michael Krugman, "A large part of me is tied to South
Africa. I go there as often as I can, and I do watch its political
situation. The social change that took place seemed so impossible to the
international community, and the media. When the transition [from apartheid]
took place, they all seemed disappointed it went so smoothly." Until April
of 1994, when the first multiracial elections were held, South Africa was
under white minority rule, though apartheid was ended in 1991. Nelson
Mandela and former president William de Klerk had been awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1993 for their work toward a democratic South Africa and
Mandela was elected president in a landslide victory, effectively ending
minority rule and instituting black majority rule.
However, when Matthews was then visiting, it was still a time of grievous
disorder. It was just prior to the abolishment of apartheid in 1991 and
Matthews became friends with some activists there, including a young man by
the name of Chris Hani. He and Hani bonded over their beliefs that South
Africa's political and social systems were unjust and that it was time for a
change. Both attended anti-apartheid marches and rallies and discussed the
injustices around them. Dave would later tell Rolling Stone about his
trips: "I would go back and stay with friends, and political conversations
were going on because they were all in college now. My friends would go to
marches, and I would join them. It was a really interesting, vibrant time.
The theater and music we'd go to see was always a voice of opposition. Going
back there now and seeing them striving for freedom is such an amazing
thing."
Back in Charlottesville, Dave decided not to attend art school and took a
job bartending at a local bar called Miller's, a bohemian hang out where
local musicians gathered and jammed on the small stage. All the C'ville
regulars played there, including many names that will pop up down the DMB
timeline. One night at Miller's in 1987 Matthews met local guitarist Tim
Reynolds, who was playing the bar that night. Dave and Tim bonded
immediately and Matthews eventually sat in a couple of times with Reynolds's
eclectically influenced trio, TR3, who played frequently around town. The
bond between them stuck and Reynolds would come to act as a guide, teacher,
and cohort for Dave's creative impulses.
Tim Reynolds started out playing the electric bass when he was twelve and
would later pick up the guitar. He settled in Charlottesville in the '80s
after a nomadic period and began TR3. His playing skills soon led him to
become one of the most prominent figures on the local music scene. He counts
Carlos Santana, Bob Marley, Jimi Hendrix, and Led Zeppelin among his musical
influences. Over the course of his career he has released three solo albums
and three TR3 records, as well as contributing to projects like Sticks &
Stones, Secrets, and Cosmology, and working with local musicians like
Michael Sokolowski and Shannon Worrell.
Another respected local musician, John D'earth, saw Dave perform one of
those nights he sat in with TR3 and was introduced to the fledgling musician
by Reynolds. D'earth too would become a part of the DMB tale. Playing around
Charlottesville with a number of bands, D'earth often crossed musical paths
with future DMBers Leroi Moore and Carter Beauford. In 1989, D'earth wrote a
piece called "Bypass" for a modern dance performance that Matthews and
another local singer, Dawn Thompson, performed. Thompson knew both D'earth
and Reynolds from a musical project called Cosmology, which they had
collaborated on some years earlier.
Matthews loved to act and appeared in several local productions in the late
'80s and early '90s. He was a theatrical natural, which proved to be a good
skill when he started taking centerstage as a frontman. His innate good
humor and quick wit shone through in his acting, and later, his stage
performances. There was a time when Matthews's muse may have drawn him
toward drama and the theater instead of rock 'n' roll, but luckily Dave was
soon to be irrevocably turned down the road toward rock 'n' roll fame.
Dave started writing songs in earnest in 1990 when Ross Hoffman, a local
songwriter who owned a studio, encouraged Matthews to take his scattered
guitar noodlings, put them together, and actually compose a full song. He
convinced Matthews to write and play for a set period of time every day and
dedicate himself to the composition of some fully realized pieces. Matthews
told Rolling Stone, "He was the guy who pushed me. He was the one
who'd say, 'No, don't smoke that pot. Finish that verse. Finish that song.'
He was my musical mentor, the guy who said, 'You should do this.'" By the
end of 1990, or perhaps early in 1991, Dave quit his job at Miller's to
concentrate on his writing full time. Hoffman began acting as Matthews's
personal manager, helping guide him and his songwriting.
Dave later told the Washington Post, "I was not really sure what I
was going to do. I didn't think of myself as much of a singer at all, but
then it sort of became evident with what I was writing that there weren't a
hell of a lot of people who were going to sing it. So I thought I might have
to do it myself for it to go anywhere." Little did he know that the songs he
was writing then would go on to be crowd pleasers from coast to coast, much
less in Charlottesville.
His constant practicing would lead to one of the most fertile songwriting
periods of his early career. The songs Dave wrote were intensely personal,
dealing with relationships, family tragedies, and his views of South
Africa's politics. Musically, Dave found his influences from a range of
people, from Herbie Hancock (who would go on to open for the band) to
guitarist Robert Fripp and a slew of African artists like pianist Abdullah
Ibrahim, contemporary jazz pianist Keith Jarrett, and Senegalese born father
of the mbalax rhythm tradition Youssou N'Dour. During an AOL chat a couple
of years later Matthews also admitted that there were more Westernized
influences -- "John Denver, the Beatles, Dollar Brand, Pink Floyd, Vivaldi,
sex, and hangovers."
Another local musician, Greg Howard, was introduced to Matthews through Tim
Reynolds and saw Dave play several shows with TR3. Howard is a master of the
Chapman Stick, an electric 8-, 10- or 12-stringed instrument invented by
Emmett Chapman in 1974. The Stick is played using a unique two-handed
tapping technique, much like piano playing. Howard and Reynolds had
collaborated before on a project called Sticks & Stones and over the course
of his career, Howard has released four solo albums, toured the States, and
taught workshops on the Chapman Stick. He and Matthews bonded over their
love for making music and immediately became friends. Soon they started
bouncing musical ideas off each other and talked of laying down some of the
tracks Matthews was working on.
Matthews gained confidence in his songwriting, finished composing several
tracks, and eventually went to Howard's house in November of 1990 to record
some demos. Howard remembers those first sessions, "He would come into my
studio and record his voice and guitar and a few other things. The first
demo was a four song demo and I played the Stick and sang back up on a few
things." The first Dave Matthews demo consisted of "The Song That Jane
Likes," "I'll Back You Up," "Recently," and "The Best of What's Around."
Howard played Chapman Stick on "The Song That Jane Likes" and also played
alto sax and added drum samples to give it a fuller sound. John D'earth laid
down some trumpet and another local, Kevin Davis, provided additional
percussion.
The first song on the demo, "I'll Back You Up," is considered the first song
Dave ever wrote, though he had the music for "The Song That Jane Likes"
first. "I'll Back You Up" is a song Dave wrote for his ex-girlfriend, Julia
Grey, whom he had met in South Africa and who had subsequently moved to
C'ville. He had proposed to her on three different occasions, only to be
rejected each time. The lyrics are as lovestruck as they come and as Dave
gently croons, "But I know no matter how fast we are running/Some how we
keep, some how we keep up with each other" you can feel his earnestness
shining through the soft guitar plucking.
"The Song That Jane Likes," so titled because his sister liked it the first
time he played it for her, was the second song Dave completed. He actually
had the music for it first, but failed to finish the lyrics before finishing
"I'll Back You Up. The lyrics of "The Song That Jane Likes" are somewhat
vague, though it seems to be an open letter to an old friend in Dave's past.
Musically, it is based in a simple guitar melody that Leroi, Stefan, Carter,
and Boyd extrapolated on to strengthen the melody. Definitely a popular song
from the start, it would get many airings during Dave's acoustic shows with
Tim in the years to come.
"Recently" would eventually become DMB's very first single, though Dave
could not have foreseen that when he laid down a somewhat simplified version
on the original demo. The song is reportedly about a girl Dave fell in love
with during one of his many trips to South Africa, perhaps again his old
flame Julia Grey. This song exemplifies much of Matthews's early lyrical
stylings -- personal, unerringly emotional, and woven in a folk-tale manner.
The demo's final track, "Best of What's Around," was another of the very
first songs Dave had written. Lyrically, it is filled with that pervasive
Matthews optimism, as Dave, within a folk story of a damsel in distress,
weaves his admonishments to look forward to better days: "And if nothing can
be done/We'll make the best of what's around."
This four-track demo would be the start of a story that no one could have
foretold. It would lead Matthews to his future bandmates and become four of
the most loved songs in the DMB catalog.
Copyright © 1999 by Nevin Martell
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