Jay Bennett: ‘Approach songwriting like gardening’
Kevin Bronson on
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Only Saturday, Casey Meehan, one of the guys behind Chicago-based digital music distributor Rock Proper, spoke excitedly with Jay Bennett about a venture through the fund-raising website Kickstarter to finance a vinyl pressing of Bennett’s 2008 solo album, “Whatever Happened I Apologize.” Meehan, like many artists on Rock Proper, had recorded his own music at Bennett’s Pieholden Suite studio. The two also discussed how to promote Bennett’s next album, the almost-completed “Kicking at the Perfumed Air.”
That night, Bennett, 45, died in his sleep. Cause of death has not been determined, but the passing of the singer-songwriter, studio wiz and ex-member of Wilco induced an outpouring of tributes all over the Internet. I offered my condolences via e-mail to Meehan, who many months had initially reached out to tell me about Rock Proper and the free downloads available there. Meehan’s reply was pretty poignant:
“I’m incredibly lucky to have known Jay. Like most folks, was introduced to the man through the ‘Break Your Heart’ movie and was surprised to get a huge, serious, hearty, family-style hug from him when I volunteered to wind up cables and clean up a dirty, clubhouse style studio, Pieholden,” Meehan writes. “Since then, I have come to know him as the ‘huggiest’ person I have ever met. No rock star, no posture, pure love, pure art. Time and time again I waited to see the fall-guy portrayed in the movie, but that Jay never appeared. He never mentioned a bitter word toward his former band.
“[Saturday] we shared a few ‘I love you man’s’ and got pretty deep about what it means to make music. The man was a wealth of knowledge! From the kind of gloves you should wear if you have the unfortunate job of tracking tambourine all day long, to the way you should approach songwriting like gardening.”
Enough said.
Here’s my favorite track off last year’s album:
||| Download: “I’ll Decorate My Love”
After the jump, the note posted by friends Tuesday on Bennett’s MySpace page:
Our good friend Jay Walter Bennett left us this weekend.” As news hits the wires so instantaneously these days, we thought it was important to share some thoughts about our friend and brother before any rumors got out of hand.
First, let it be known that Jay was in a really good place these past few years.” He had returned to the area he loved — the “Twin Cities,” Champaign-Urbana — and resurrected his studio, Pieholden Suite Sound, with the assistance of many dear friends and allies.
Jay had been busy making music.” He recently had released an intimate record entitled “Whatever Happened I Apologize,” and he was looking forward to wrapping up his new work, “Kicking at the Perfumed Air.”” Proud of finishing a trilogy of records, including “Bigger Than Blue,” “The Beloved Enemy,” and “The Magnificent Defeat,” Jay loved the balanced yet ironic album titles.” He was also looking forward to engineering and releasing Titanic Love Affair’s previously unreleased record, as well as starting work on “The Palace at 4 a.m. Part II,” the follow-up to his post-Wilco debut with Edward Burch.” “Jay the Academic” had also reemerged, pursuing his umpteenth degree at the University of Illinois, and he was thrilled to be taking graduate classes again.
As many of you may be aware, Jay had finally found the courage to put his Wilco issues out into the public forum. After a long, four-year process (and therefore very much unrelated to his impending hip surgery), formal filings against Wilco were finally initiated. This task was very emotional for Jay. He was a “lover,” and this confrontation was not easy for him.” With the exception of his final period in Wilco, Jay looked back on his time in the band with great fondness and pride.” While he was dismayed that some people may have formed a narrow perception of him via the “documentary,” all who truly knew him understood that with most entertainment media, editing is usually constructed for dramatic effect and presents only a small part of a larger, more complex reality.
So, please spend some time this week engaging in Jay’s favorite passions: listen to a Nick Lowe album, watch some Mythbusters on Discovery, play Warren Zevon’s “Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner,” rent “Pay It Forward” (one of his favorite movies), write a song with the TV on and the sound off, and focus on how Jay always concluded his communications:
“Love, Jay.”
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