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Getting The
Knack
Even
with the hindsight and clarity of nearly two decades, it is difficult to
describe the impact the Knack had on radio, fashion and rock and roll.
The story of the Knack was all too familiar. An overnight success that
was several years in the making. Songs that would ultimately find their
way onto their multi-platinum debut had been turned down by a host of record
labels in the early and mid seventies. But the Knack found their time.
The record buying public
and the music industry have always longed for the next big thing. In 1979
they found it. During the summer of 1979, culminating with a riotous sold
out performance in New York’s legendary Carnegie Hall, the Knack was unavoidable.
It seemed as if every stereo and car radio reverberated with the thunderous
hook of their number one smash "My Sharona". It took rock icons Led Zepplin
to finally relieve them of the number one album position in the fall of
‘79.
During the late seventies,
disco had a virtual hammerlock on the charts and radio airplay. Spearheaded
by such artists as the Bee Gees (who delivered six chart toppers in less
than eighteen months), Donna Summer (the queen of disco) and the Saturday
Night Fever soundtrack (which sold 25 million copies world-wide), disco’s
dominance was so absolute that twenty-five of the first thirty-three weeks
of 1979 saw a disco dance number perched atop the Billboard charts. It
seemed as if rock and roll was dead. Radio formats had changed to accommodate
disco music. Billboard even added a disco chart in deference to massive
record sales. But all that would change. The world was about to get The
Knack.
Founding members Doug Fieger,
Berton Averre, Bruce Gary and Prescott Niles sculptured a sound which was
irresistibly familiar but at the same time unlike anything else which was
playing on the radio. Their tightly woven musical craftsmanship earned
them many rave reviews in the local press.
A
huge draw in the LA club scene, the Knack played incessantly throughout
California 1978 and early 1979. They revitalized live music in many of
the older establishments which had been converted to disco dance halls,
such as the Troubadour and Starwood with sellout crowds. Rolling Stone
magazine followed the still unsigned band through several high profile
performance jams with the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, The Doors’
Ray Manzerak, Stephen Stills, and Eddie Money. Energetic sets featuring
hard driving original music scattered with chestnuts from Buddy Holly,
The Kinks and The Doors won them a loyal and enthusiastic following.
By November of 1978, thirteen
record companies engaged in a fierce bidding war for the band’s services
which was eventually won by Capital Records. The selection of a record
producer was the source of much speculation. Even "Wall of Sound" architect
Phil Spector was anxious
to participate. However, the job went to someone the band hadn’t even considered,
Mike Chapman. A songwriter and member of the hitmaking band Sweet, Mike
Chapman had enjoyed a successful career behind the board as a producer,
racking up an impressive run of number one records for Exile, Nick Gilder,
and Blondie. Chapman read an article the LA Times which identified the
producers the band most wanted to work with. His name wasn’t on the list.
Sensing a blockbuster, Chapman convinced the band to allow him to produce
and signed on.
With a team now firmly in
place, The Knack and Chapman entered the studio, eager to capture the energy
of their live performances. While artists such as The Eagles and Fleetwood
Mac were spending more than a year and a million dollars to produce an
album, "Get The Knack" was recorded in just eleven days for a miserly $17,000.
The Knack performed the songs "live" with minimal overdubs. Chapman, basically
hit the record button and let the band play. Originally, a double album
was considered, but the final track listing focused on the mainstays of
their stage show.
Capitol Records introduced
the record with the kind of fanfare not seen since the first wave of the
British Invasion. With marketing support from Capitol and a cadre of infectious
pop tunes, the record flew off the shelves. Rolling Stone magazine heralded
them as "the new fab four", an obvious reference to The Beatles. Gold certification
took 13 days. Platinum certification came in less than seven weeks, making
"Get The Knack" one of the fastest to gold / platinum debut albums of all
time. "My Sharona" entered the Hot 100 on June 23, 1979 and reached number
one nine weeks later on August 25, 1979 where it remained for six weeks.
Billboard named "Sharona" as the number one single of 1979. Today, it still
ranks as one of the biggest selling singles of the rock era.
A sold out world tour followed
the album’s release, but the lines of demarcation were already being drawn.
Where the Knack was concerned, either you "got it" or you didn’t. Critics
of the band fixated on the stark, black and white photo of the album’s
cover and performance photo on the back as obvious send ups of The Beatles
first album "Meet The Beatles". Dissenters labeled the songs as derivative
even though the albums sound nothing like the Beatles. Yet the album continued
to sell, finally moving in excess of six million copies. The band’s second
single "Good Girl’s Don’t" sold respectfully, reaching number 17 on the
Billboard charts. In spite of a growing backlash from critics for their
"instant" fame, the public still demanded more product from The Knack.
However, instead of harvesting another single from "Get The Knack" the
band returned to the studio to record a follow-up pausing briefly for a
rousing homecoming performance at a capacity filled L.A. Forum.
The
band’s second effort, "But The Little Girls Understand" (released less
than eight months after their debut) was recorded in two weeks, immediately
went gold and sported a top 40 single "Baby Talks Dirty". Even as a "Knuke
The Knack" campaign sprung up by an enterprising profiteer from San Francisco,
industry peers nominated the boys for two Grammy awards. The band carried
on, released another single "Can’t Put A Price On Love" and continued to
tour into the spring of 1980, before taking a much needed break.
A year passed before the
band returned to the studio in late 1981 for their third album. "Round
Trip" was directed by veteran producer Jack Douglass, fresh from his work
on John Lennon’s "Double Fantasy". This record was a much more polished
effort than The Knack’s first two outings and clearly showcased a wide
variety of songwriting styles without straying from The Knack "sound".
The initial single "Pay The Devil" was supported by a media blitz and a
club tour designed to take the band back to their roots. The Knack disposed
of their no interview policy which had been adopted for the first album
and were profiled in a CNN interview and appeared on a variety of magazine
covers. But it was too late. As quickly as they burst into the public conscience
they were gone. Three week’s into the tour, on New Year’s Day, the band
broke up. The constant drubbing from some quarters of the musical press
and self styled opinion makers had taken their toll on the band. The energy
which had introduced the band to the world had been depleted as the band
had to defend their success to a press corp wary of their "instant" fame.
Fieger, Averre, Gary and Niles went their separate ways. Fieger went on
to act (Rosanne), produce and contributed songs for the Manhatten Transfer’s
Grammy award winning effort "Brazil". Averre played with Bette Midler.
Gary drumed behind Bob Dylan, Jack Bruce and Bette Midler as well as producing
with Alan Douglas a series of albums from guitar legend Jimi Hendrix. Niles
worked with Josie Cotton ("Johnny Are You Queer’) and continued with session
and performance work.
The band regrouped in 1986
/ 87 for a tour but failed to release an album despite enthusiastic reactions
from fans to their new material. In 1991, a revised lineup (Billy Ward
replaced Bruce Gary on drums) released the Don Was produced album "Serious
Fun". The first single "Rocket Of Love" was Top 10 AOR and the band
received significant media attention but the label unexpectantly shelved
the record and promotion for the album disappeared even as a second single
"One Day At A Time" was being pressed for release.
In 1994, "My Sharona’s" popularity
was reaffirmed when the song re-entered the Hot 100 after appearing on
the soundtrack for the hit movie "Reality Bites". One of only twelve songs
in chart history to do so. A successful promotional tour exposed the band
to a whole new generation of fans.
In 1997, the band surfaced
on two tribute albums. "Come And Get It: A Tribute To Badfinger",
brought the original four members back into the studio to record "No Matter
What". This Badfinger classic had been a staple of The Knack's live
show for years and was a natural for inclusion. The bands firey rendition
was a highlight of the disc and garnered radio airplay in selected markets.
Capital Records released a two disc record of Bruce Springsteen covers.
The Knack gladly offered up their version of "Don't Look Back" which had
previously only been available on the band's "Retrospective".
In
April of 1997, the band performed to a capacity crowd at Hollywood's
Viper Room. Among the audience was Harold Bronson, President of Rhino
Records. The set included expected Knack standards, along with a
handful of new songs. The audience reponse to both the old and new
material was overwhelmingly positive. Bronson, a long time
fan of the band's music, immediately brought the band to Rhino and commenced
recording of a new CD. The result of this effort was the release of "Zoom", in 1998.
The fourteen classic compositions were produced by Richard Bosworth
(Don Henley, Steve Perry) and features the drumming of Terry Bozzio (Frank Zappa, Missing Persons). Demonstrating their
commitment to the band, Rhino has also issued "Proof: The Very Best
Of The Knack". This CD contains remastered versions of Knack classics
and four new tracks not available on any other release. Doug Fieger's solo record
"First Things First" was released to greet the new millenium.
The final chapter of The
Knack’s history has yet to be written.
Get
The Knack Again
"I’ll
be the first to admit that we’re the ‘90s version of Cheap Trick or The
Knack but the last to admit that it hasn’t been rewarding" {Kurt
Cobain, liner notes to Incesticide (1992)}
Seven
years after it’s last album, four years after it’s first tour following
the resurrection of "My Sharona" in the film Reality Bites, The Knack is
back. The band that had burned hotter than a comet, influencing an entire
generation of rockers, but disappearing nearly as fast, has returned.
"We’ve
already had the success you dream about," says lead singer Doug Fieger.
"But we’ve never played our music for that. We play it because this is
the only worthwhile pop music to make – fun and sad, silly and smart, explosive
but sweet, snide but vulnerable. It’s not about being cool but about being
goofy and having a great time. We didn’t invent this, but it’s what we
do. I get the feeling that sense of fun isn’t seen by most people who go
to concerts these days."
What
goes around surely comes around. In the audience in April 1997 at the Viper
Room on LA’s Sunset Strip for The Knack’s surprise return performance was
Harold Bronson, who as a music journalist 20 years earlier introduced the
band to it’s then-producer. Bronson was so excited by what he saw and heard,
he invited the band to record a new album for Rhino Records, the label
he cofounded. "It’s not that he isn’t used to seeing Rhino acts live, it’s
that he’s not used to seeing them alive at all," quips guitarist Berton
Averre. "We didn’t stick a finger in the wind and say the time is right
again. But with all the dark colors in music today, the ‘who gives a shit’
angst and post-modern depression, we strike a chord. Having fun and sometimes
grabbing someone’s heart enough that they say, ‘Me too,’ is a noble pursuit."
So
too is ZOOM (Rhino Records), produced by Richard Bosworth (Don Henley,
Steve Perry) and The Knack. On songs such as "Can I Borrow a Kiss," "Harder
On You," and "Pop Is Dead" (with the next line being "bring your shovel"),
The Knack shows it hasn’t lost, well, it’s knack for penning pop songs.
It’s
often said that the most difficult achievement is simplicity. Beneath the
ease of The Knack is the musicianship of Averre, who can rip a one-not
guitar harangue as well as an amazingly fast flurry of perfect notes, and
the storytelling of Fieger. "Can I Borrow A Kiss," for instance, refers
to when he was 14 visiting a friend in Santa Clara, California, and spent
the summer as a hippie in Haight-Ashbury. At a Be-In, a girl said to him,
"Can I borrow a kiss?" Says Fieger with a laugh, "This does not happen
in Oak Park, Michigan."
With
Fieger, Averre, and Prescott Niles on bass, The Knack lineup also now includes
drummer Terry Bozzio (replacing Bruce Gary). Bozzio played with Frank Zappa,
was a member of Missing Persons, and is enormously respected in both rock
and jazz circles. Says Averre, "One of the heartening things that’s happened
is that a Terry Bozzio says he likes what we do and wants to be a member.
That says something to us and maybe to other people too." When Fieger first
called Bozzio about that possibility, the drummer replied, "That sounds
like fun." It was the sort of answer Fieger hoped for: We have not done
this band when it hasn’t been fun to do. We want to enjoy ourselves. Terry’s
a great musician and a great guy. He’s kicked us in the ass and made this
a better band."
The
Knack most recently resurfaced in 1994 after "My Sharona" was heard on
the Reality Bites soundtrack. The band had been offered two films in one
day and had to choose between them. "One was for this hip comedy starring
Winona Ryder," says Averre, "and the other was for the homosexual rape
scene in Pulp Fiction. Hmmm, that’s a tough choice." Suddenly, teenagers
too young to remember the song the first time around fell in love with
it and "My Sharona" became only the 10th former #1 hit to chart
again. It also prompted a tour of 32 cities. Despite no new songs to offer,
the response was phenomenal.
A couple
of years later, with a handful of new songs at the ready, Fieger broached
the idea of truly reviving The Knack. Averre recalls that when the band
gathered together, their creative impulses "kicked into a gear reminiscent
of our earlier partnership. The tunes felt more and more like Knack songs,
and each one made us more confident about our values of fun, immediacy,
aggression and melody, and an unabashed celebration of the music we love
the most."
The
Knack initially formed in May 1978. Fieger had arrived in L.A. in 1971
with the band Sky and began writing with Averre a few years later. Its
first performance, June 1, 1978, at the Whisky-A-Go-Go, was a sensation.
Amid the heyday of disco, here was a melodic rock band that could knock
your socks off. Being a Knack fan was a sign of true hipness and allegiance
to the rock ‘n’ roll dream. Subsequent shows at clubs such as the Troubadour
found The Knack jamming with Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Ray Manzarek,
and Eddie Money. Courted by 13 record labels, The Knack signed to Capitol.
Producer
Mike Chapman (Blondie) recorded and mixed its debut album in 13 days on
a $17,000 budget. The album was largely recorded live, one take, with overdubs
on the occasional background vocal and lead guitar (not so coincidentally,
just how ZOOM was recorded). Though its music was the antithesis of punk,
the band itself embraced the punk ethic of D.I.Y. and a self-admitted "snot-nose
attitude."
Get
The Knack (1979) had one of the biggest commercial debuts in rock history.
It rocketed to #1 for six weeks, went gold, and sold 10 million worldwide.
"Good Girls Don’t" reached #11.
But
while once praised for its combination of ballsy rock and classic pop,
such enormous success instigated a backlash. Some critics opined that musicians
who were this smart and this good couldn’t possibly be serious about pop
music and therefore were insincere and manipulative. With the "hip factor"
eroding, the band’s sophomore album, …but the little girls understand (1980),
peaked at #15, with "Baby Talks Dirty" barely Top 40 and "Can’t Put A Price
On Love" just Top 100 – though the album went gold and sold two-and-a-half
million copies worldwide. Round Trip (1981) and its "Pay The Devil (Ooo
Baby, Ooo)" were only Top 100. The Knack disbanded a few weeks later.
Now
back in the spotlight once more, the band is grateful for it’s audience,
both old and new. Says Averre, "I always thought the audience was more
important than the artist. After all, the audience is why we’re here."
In a way, that’s precisely why The Knack is back – not just that they care
about their music and the craft of pop songwriting, but so do others. It’s
also why rock bands who found pop success in the ‘90s, such as Nirvana,
publicly admired what The Knack had accomplished. Says Fieger, "We refuse
to go away. There are musicians who say they don’t want to do this when
they’re 40. I’ve always said I hoped I was still doing this when I was
40. We love this music."
Rhino
has also released a greatest hits compilation, PROOF: THE VERY BEST OF
THE KNACK. But for The Knack, as ZOOM proves, the best is back – and there’s
more to come.
reprinted
from Rhino Records press release
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