It's
ironic that Jimmy Eat World, one of indie rock's front-runners
(alongside peers like The Promise
Ring and The Get Up Kids), a band
that's seen their fan base swell in exponential proportions in the past
year, have
never released a full-length album on an independent label.
Unlike their contemporaries who've hashed it out for years
on
struggling, bedroom-based record companies with minimal tour support
and microscopic recording budgets, the Eat
Worlds inked their first
record contract with Capitol Records fresh out of high school in 1995.
And though many would think
signing a deal with a major label would
equate to instant success, Jimmy Eat World's two-album tenure on
Capitol
hardly put a blip on the radar of mainstream rock.
"Unfortunately Capitol really didn't believe in us," drummer Zach
Lind
recalls of his prior label experience. "But in a way, that was sort of
a good thing, because it let us take control of what we
needed to do.
We learned we had to do it ourselves, because no one else would do it
for us."
During their
self-educating stay at Capitol, Lind and the group created a pair of critically acclaimed albums, Static Prevails and
Clarity,
which were produced with Mark Trombino. Though both albums were clearly
written from the same creative
minds, each had distinct personalities.
Static Prevails
was the more aggressive, noisier, and edgier
installment, showcasing
Lind's substantial rock drive and remnants of his punk-rock upbringing.
It was on Static
where Lind established his trademark sound as
a highly dynamic performer, with an ability to explode at the drop of a
hat.
Complementing vocalist/guitarists Jim Adkins and Tom Linton's
breathy to full-bore vocal trade-offs, Lind was right on cue
during
each transition, keeping it simple yet bursting into full quarter-note
crashes when called for.
Clarity
took an entirely different
route, opting for an airy, predominantly experimental approach to their
material. With Lind
occasionally exchanging his sticks for timpani
mallets or incorporating drum loops, the album had a fresh sonic
edge.
Unfortunately, rousing critical acclaim didn't necessarily translate
into rocketing sales figures, and the band left
Capitol after Clarity's release in 1999.
Lind and company headed back into the studio with Trombino and
tracked
a new batch of material on their own, eventually signing up with
DreamWorks shortly thereafter. With the completed
album in the hands of
their new home, the band began touring again. In August 2001, Jimmy Eat
World's third album, an
eponymous effort (originally dubbed Bleed American) was released.
The end result of Jimmy Eat
World
was twelve tracks of pure power-pop bliss. Although the material was
decidedly poppier and more
straightforward than their previous efforts,
Lind's performance was just as creative as ever, from the missing beats
of "Get
It Faster" to the innovative tom work on "Your House." And with
three successful radio singles, "Bleed American," "Sweetness,"
and "The
Middle" in tow, Lind and company were able to latch onto major tours
with Weezer, Green Day, and Blink-182,
where audiences got to witness
the drummer's relaxed yet disciplined physical demeanor first-hand.
All of a sudden
the anonymous group of nine years wasn't so faceless
anymore. And though Lind says it's been the ride he's
always wished
for, he insists his dreams are yet to be fully realized.
MD: Thinking about where you were
just over a year ago, is it easy to handle all this newfound attention?
Zach: It's sort of hard to have a
perspective on it; we're a
little too close to it. We've been on the road so much, we're sort of
in this "bubble." I
don't think we've really had a chance to see how
it's played out.
The one thing we have noticed is just how
crazy
our schedule is now. The only downside to that is we've been gone so
much. I have a wife and an eight-month-old
daughter, and I miss them a
lot. Other than that, I feel really lucky to be making a living doing
this. We're all sort of
surprised by it. It's good to be able to do
something like this and still take care of your family--that's the
coolest
part about it.
MD: What's your musical background?
Zach: I started playing in school band in
fifth grade; I was
playing saxophone, but I wasn't very good at it. My cousin had a snare
drum, and whenever I'd go
over to his house, I'd just play it all the
time. It was a lot of fun for me, so I convinced my mom to switch me
from
saxophone to drums.
From day one I felt that I was a lot more
natural at drumming. I started taking lessons from my
mom's co-worker's
son, who was about five years older than me. He was a really good,
talented drummer and
helped me out a lot. I think he kind of infused
the passion for playing drums in me as well, as he was obviously
into
it.
I was in a band in high school with Tom [Linton], and that band
eventually split up, so Tom and I decided to
keep going and bring in
some new people. I talked Jim into coming over and playing with us, and
that's how we all
started. It was kind of the first time that two
really great guitarists, out of every one we knew, were playing
together. It was a
neat thing to see.
MD: So when was the band actually formed?
Zach: The end of
'93.
MD: How old were you at that time?
Zach: I was seventeen. We all turned eighteen in
'94.
MD: You guys signed to Capitol rather quickly!
Zach: Yeah, we did. We started
making a record in '95, Static Prevails. We were young and the band was basically our escape plan--to go on tour.
That's all we saw it as.
MD: So much for your "indie rock cred"!
Zach: Yeah, I think we were
just guilty by association with the
bands we hung out with. People saw us that way. And Capitol wasn't
really shoving us
into anyone's face. If you discovered us, you
probably discovered us from the underground scene, and I think
that's
how it got justified. But we never had that "we need to be punk rock"
thing. We just wanted to make good records
and associate with people
who believed in us.
MD: Were your influences from the underground indie-rock
scene?
Zach: Yeah, I think so. The one band that influenced us the most
is a band called Christie Front Drive.
They're from Denver; they were
sort of influences who then became peers. I think that band changed our
outlook on
guitar music.
MD: Was your earlier material more straight-ahead?
Zach: It was like pop-punk
stuff--NOFX, J Church, Rocket From
They Crypt. We heard Christie Front Drive and it was really melodic but
still very
powerful. We kind of changed our direction after that.
MD: What about your personal influences' Which
drummers were you listening to early on?
Zach: I've never been about one drummer or another. I really
loved
Pat Wilson from Weezer for a long time. Steve Ferrone, who plays
in Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, has become a
favorite. And of
course, The Heartbreakers' original drummer, Stan Lynch.
MD: Ah, yes, that
kick-back-but-still-rockin' approach to the kit.
Zach: Yeah, totally. I think that's what I
like.
MD: Do you think you still have a lot of work to do?
Zach: I totally do. It's like,
I've been playing since I was ten years old. I should be so much better than I am.
I'm looking forward to when we
have a break from touring. That's when
I'll have time to head down to my basement and get to work.
I'm
planning on putting in a few hours a day to really improve my skills
and work on different things. Yeah, I'm
looking forward to that.