Everything about Dave Matthews Band totally explained
Dave Matthews Band (also known by the acronym
DMB) is a
United States-based
rock band, originally formed in
Charlottesville,
Virginia, in
1991 by
singer-songwriter and
guitarist Dave Matthews. Other band members include
saxophonist LeRoi Moore,
bassist Stefan Lessard,
violinist Boyd Tinsley and
drummer Carter Beauford. Since
1998, the band has performed most of their shows with keyboardist
Butch Taylor who, while not officially named a member of the band, is a fixture on stage. For
2006 and
2007, the band added trumpet player
Rashawn Ross — most noted as the live trumpet player for
Soulive — to the stage. It isn't yet known if his presence will be permanent. Moore, Beauford, Ross, Tinsley and Taylor also perform
backing vocals.
According to RIAA, Dave Matthews Band has sold over 31 million units in the US alone, putting them in the Top 100 Highest Selling Music Acts of all time.
History
Songwriter David John Matthews, working in
Charlottesville as a
bartender at Miller's bar in November 1990, made friends with a
lawyer named Ross Hoffman. Hoffman convinced Matthews, usually reserved and scared of playing in front of people, to lay down a demo of the few songs he'd written. Hoffman hoped Matthews could shop the songs in order to find other musicians to perform on some studio work with him. Hoffman encouraged Dave to approach Carter Beauford, a local musician on the Charlottesville music scene. Beauford had been in several bands, and was currently playing on a
jazz show on
Black Entertainment Television (BET). After hearing the demo, Carter agreed to spend some time playing the drums, both inside and outside the studio. Dave also approached LeRoi Moore, another local jazz musician who often performed with the
John D'earth Quintet to join them. Moore would be famous later for always wearing sunglasses during shows because of his stage fright. Moore skeptically listened to the demo, but liked what he heard and decided that he too would give the young
South African a chance. These three began working on Matthews's songs in 1991.
Dave later said in an interview with Michael Krugman, "In a way, initially it was just the three of us and I approached them with this tape and they said 'Sure,' cause they'd time on their hands. They were both working on other things, but they'd some afternoon time." The beginning stages of this new band was, in the words of Morgan Delancey, "a time of trial and incubation." Beauford would later recall that, "It started out as a three-piece thing with Dave and Leroi...working on some of Dave's songs. he only had four songs at the time..And it didn't work out with the three of us." Dave would also say, "The first time we played together...we were awful. Not just kind of bad, I mean heinously bad. We tried a couple of different songs and they were all terrible...Sometimes it amazes me that we ever had a second rehearsal."
Their limited instrumentals, however, didn't provide the full sound they desired; more musicians were needed.
Secrets was a former jazz fusion band based in Richmond, Virginia most notable for having LeRoi Moore and Carter Beauford as members before forming the Dave Matthews Band. Moore's former bandmate, John D'earth, conductor of the
University of Virginia Orchestra and local musician, taught music at the
Tandem Friends School. Stefan Lessard, a junior bassist at the time, was under his guidance in the student jazz combo, Yabanci Jazzites. On the recommendation of John D’Earth, the sixteen-year-old Lessard was asked to join in the studio to help complete the demo. While the partnership was never intended to continue beyond the studio, the four liked the sound and decided to continue together for live performances as well. Consequently, regular practices began in the basements of Carter Beauford and Matthews' mothers' homes.
Peter Griesar was a bartender at Miller's beginning in 1989, and in August 1991, during Miller's annual respite for inventory, Matthews, Beauford, Moore and Lessard used the empty bar for rehearsing. Griesar heard them rehearsing and decided to stop working for a while, pulled out his harmonica, and started playing with them. After a few songs, he was invited to perform with them. He immediately accepted, becoming the band's first keyboardist. Griesar's last show with the band was
March 23 1993.
Boyd Tinsley was the last member to join the band. Although he'd performed on the demo with Matthews, Moore, Beauford and Lessard, he was busy with a couple of other bands at the time (Boyd Tinsley Band and Down Boy Down) and didn't want to commit to a group of musicians that were only together in the studio at the time. He didn't become a full-time member until the middle of 1992. Matthews later admitted, "We had no plans of adding a violinist. We just wanted some fiddle tracked on this one song ["TrippingBillies"], and Boyd was a friend of Leroi. He came in and it just clicked. That completely solidified the band, gave it a lot more power."
Breaking out of Virginia (1991-1993)
The band's first in-studio
demo was recorded in February or March 1991, and consisted of "The Song That Jane Likes," "Recently," and "Tripping Billies," prior to Boyd joining as a full-time bandmember. Boyd only performed on "Tripping Billies."
Their first public show was at the city’s 1991
Earth Day Festival. Local weekly appearances soon followed, and within a short time word of the band’s contagious new sound spread like wildfire.
They still didn't have a name for the band. One name that was thrown around was Dumela (which is the
Tswana word for "hello"), but no real enthusiasm was ever felt, and they dropped it. One story is that Moore reportedly telephoned a place they were booked and said to just write Dave Matthews. The person receiving the call just wrote 'band' after the name, and the name stayed Dave Matthews Band from that point on. Dave told Robert Trott of AP, "Boyd [Tinsley], if memory serves, wrote 'Dave Matthews Band [onthis flyer for the show]. There was no time when we said, 'Let's call this band the Dave Matthews Band.' It just became that, and it sort of was too late to change when we started thinking that this could focus unfairly on me. People sort of made that association, but it's really not like that."
Beauford seemed to agree with Matthew's analysis of the band name when he said to
Modern Drummer that, "As a matter of fact, that's one of the things about this band that everybody likes: There isn't a leader. Each one of us can express ourselves musically without being choked by a leader. Everybody can offer what they feel is gonna enhance the music. So yeah, that's the main thing that all the guys — especially me — feel make this band happen. It's the freedom that we've to speak with our instruments."
By the summer of 1991, they were playing at the Eastern Standard with Charles Newman as their manager for a brief time. They were also playing a regular Tuesday night show at the popular Charlottesville club
Trax. Tapings of shows at Trax are some of the most widely shared among DMB fans. After Newman,
Coran Capshaw, owner of the Flood Zone where the band often played, took the helm of The Dave Matthews Band. Chapshaw "wanted to work on garnering a grassroots following and allow word of mouth to advertise the band and then build upon that."
Sensing that the band was on the verge of making it big, and not wanting to have his life ruled by the grueling schedule that touring musicians often face, Peter Griesar decided to leave after a show on
March 23 1993.. Known as "Big League Chew" (as the bubble gum company was apparently sponsoring something at Trax that night), the show is one of the most well-known shows from the early years at Trax.
On
November 9 1993, DMB released its first album,
Remember Two Things on its Bama Rags label. Live songs on the album were recorded at The Flood Zone in
Richmond, Virginia on
August 10 1993, and The Muse Music Club on
Nantucket Island on
August 16-
18, 1993. The album debuted on college charts as the highest independent entry, and went on to be certified platinum by the RIAA in 2002 — a significant accomplishment for an independent album. Meanwhile, the band kept touring and its fan base continued to grow. By allowing fans to tape shows for their personal use, DMB created a highly interactive community that continues to this day. Only recently has the band had to take legal action against some bootleggers who sell recordings of their concerts at a profit — something the DMB trading community also abhors.
Breakthrough success (1994-1996)
On
September 20 1994, DMB released their first LP,
Under the Table and Dreaming, featuring their first commercial hits "
What Would You Say," (featuring
John Popper on harmonica), "
Satellite," and "
Ants Marching." The album was dedicated "In memory of Anne" for Matthews' older sister Anne, who was killed by her husband in 1994 in a
murder-suicide.
Under the Table and Dreaming and its follow-up album,
Crash brought the band national attention, culminating in a
Grammy Award for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal for "
So Much to Say" as well as four other nominations between the years 1996 and 1997. The band also achieved hits with "
Crash into Me," "
Too Much," and "
Tripping Billies."
Hitting the mainstream (1997-1999)
The band released their second live
EP entitled
Recently in 1997. The album's five tracks were taken from shows performed at
The Birchmere in
Alexandria, Virginia; and from Trax back in
Charlottesville. This EP featured the first recorded versions of the
Bob Dylan classic, "
All Along the Watchtower", and the ever popular "
Halloween."
Recently was released by the band independently in 1994, it was re-released by
RCA Records in 1997. The
Recently EP followed the independent release of
Remember Two Things and preceded
Under the Table and Dreaming.
By 1997, DMB reached unparalleled levels of popularity across the country and, to some degree, the world. On
October 28 1997, the band released their first full length live album,
Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95. The album, which was recorded at the
Red Rocks Amphitheatre in
Morrison,
Colorado, featured popular songs from the band's first three albums and included longtime collaborator
Tim Reynolds on electric guitar.
In late 1997, the band returned to the studio with producer
Steve Lillywhite and an array of guest collaborators, including Reynolds, banjoist
Béla Fleck, vocalist
Alanis Morissette, future permanent keyboardist and unofficial sixth band member
Butch Taylor, and the
Kronos Quartet. They composed and recorded
Before These Crowded Streets, their third album with RCA, which was released on
April 28 1998. The album represented a great change in direction for the band as they didn't rely on upbeat hit singles to carry the album. "
Stay (Wasting Time)", an uplifting gospel number, and "
Crush", a love
ballad, became very popular tracks along with the lead single "
Don't Drink the Water". Dave Matthews has commented that the
inspiration for this song came from the treatment of
Native Americans by the United States government.
On
January 19 1999, Matthews and Reynolds released the live album,
Live at Luther College, from a
February 6 1996, acoustic concert played by Matthews and Reynolds at
Luther College in
Decorah,
Iowa. The album features songs mostly from DMB's first two albums, while also featuring the previously unreleased pieces "Deed Is Done" and "Little Thing." Also included on the album is Reynolds' acoustic virtuoso piece "Stream."
During the summer, the band took part in the
Woodstock '99 concert and then released their third live album,
Listener Supported, in the fall. The album, a live recording, used a show performed at the
Continental Airlines Arena in
East Rutherford,
New Jersey on
September 11,
1999 for a
PBS television special. The album was also released as the band's first DVD. The year also provided two more Grammy nominations.
Turmoil in the studio (2000-2003)
During 2000, DMB set up their own recording studio at a large countryside home outside Charlottesville. With longtime producer Lillywhite at the helm, the band began work on a fourth studio album. Heavily influenced by personal conflicts, notably the death of Matthews' uncle from alcoholism, the songs recorded with Lillywhite rank as some of the darkest he's ever written. In the end, the studio sessions were a failure. In August
2000, the sessions were scrapped and the band's seven-year relationship with Lillywhite was over. Some believe DMB was unhappy with the atmosphere of the songs and frustrated with Lillywhite's often perfectionist style of production, while others believe Lillywhite was made into a scapegoat for the band's lack of professionalism during the recording sessions. Or, as Dave was quoted to say, he was in a depressive state and BMG kept asking him for happy music.
In October 2000, an energized Matthews began writing with
Glen Ballard, most famous for his work with
Alanis Morissette. The rest of DMB (along with special guest
Carlos Santana) soon joined Matthews in a
Los Angeles studio and quickly recorded
Everyday. While the album gave the band a much-needed fresh start, Ballard's slick pop-music approach to production was very different from the creative process used to produce previous studio albums. Carter Beauford said that Everyday was a product of Matthews and Ballard and that it didn't showcase the rest of the band. The February 27, 2001, release of Everyday was a huge commercial success. The singles "I Did It," "Everyday," and "The Space Between," brought the band an even larger level of popularity. However, some long-time members of the fanbase were disappointed with the release. Everyday's slick pop sound (including Dave Matthews' first ever recording sessions on electric guitar) was a big departure from the band's previous work and highly divergent from the songs recorded with Lillywhite.
Certain songs such as "What You Are" and "When The World Ends" kept a darker edge to them, and have been more well received by older DMB fans. "Everyday" was also familiar to older DMB fans, as the main guitar lick is similar to that of the song "#36".
In March 2001, the Lillywhite conflict came full circle when the 2000 studio sessions with the producer were leaked over the internet. The tracks spread like wildfire over established internet channels such as
Napster. Better known as
The Lillywhite Sessions, this rough album was lauded by both the fan base and the popular press. After critical comparison of the two simultaneous albums, fans that were less than pleased with Everyday's slicker sound were frustrated with the band's decision to scrap the work in exchange for
Everyday. Tracks such as "Bartender,"
"Grey Street," "Captain," and "Grace is Gone" caused these fans to wonder aloud whether the band had thrown away its best, albeit unfinished, work.
On
October 23, 2001, the band released their fourth live album
Live in Chicago 12.19.98. The album, like the Red Rocks live set also features
Tim Reynolds on guitar as well as many other special guests such as bassist
Victor Wooten and saxophonist
Maceo Parker.
The
Lillywhite Sessions would, however, finally have their chance to shine. In response to overwhelming fan support, coupled with a popular and widely publicized online campaign known as the Release Lillywhite Recordings Campaign, DMB returned to the studio in 2002 to record Busted Stuff. Produced by Stephen Harris, the recording engineer who worked under Lillywhite on previous albums, the resulting CD provided new treatments of much of the Lillywhite Sessions' material, along with newly written songs "You Never Know" and the single
"Where Are You Going?" which was subsequently used in the movie
Mr. Deeds.
Busted Stuff hit the shelves on
July 16,
2002, receiving moderate critical and commercial success, while being generally well-received by the band's fans. Tracks such as "Grey Street" and "Grace Is Gone" became immediate fan favorites and were very well received at live shows.
On
November 5, 2002, the band released its fifth live album,
Live at Folsom Field, Boulder, Colorado, recorded on
July 11,
2001. The release was directed by long-time DMB lighting designer,
Fenton Williams. The live release highlighted songs from both
Everyday and
Busted Stuff. The "Everyday" and "#36" segue can also be heard for the first time on an official release on this album. The albums was also released as a DVD.
In the Spring of
2003, Matthews and Reynolds embarked on another successful solo acoustic tour. The shows are very different from the normal DMB shows in that the venues are usually more intimate, and the song selection is very different. Before most songs, Matthews usually tells a dry funny tale about how the song was written, much to the joy of his fans. The shows are also noted for Reynolds' virtuoso guitar work.
In 2003 Matthews and Tinsley released their first solo albums. Tinsley released
True Reflections on
June 17, 2003. The album's title track was a tune that had been played at DMB shows in the past, and also appeared on the
Listener Supported CD and DVD.
On
September 23, 2003, just one day before the band's mammoth Central Park concert, Dave Matthews released his first solo album,
Some Devil. The album's lead single, "
Gravedigger" won Matthews another
Grammy Award. The album was followed by the Dave Matthews & Friends tour. The arena tour was in an interesting format as Reynolds and Matthews would play a short acoustic set, followed by a rock set featuring Matthews, Reynolds and
Phish guitarist
Trey Anastasio. The tour was a success for Matthews, and a welcome break for the rest of the band.
On
September 24, 2003, DMB played a free concert on the Great Lawn in
New York City's
Central Park before a crowd of nearly 100,000 people. Although tickets were free and hard to find, donations were encouraged as the proceeds from the concert benefited New York City public schools. This marked the second time that DMB had recorded a live album for a charitable cause. The band was joined by guitarist
Warren Haynes on the songs
"Jimi Thing" and the
Neil Young classic "
Cortez The Killer." A live recording of that show was released on
November 18 of the same year as
The Central Park Concert on CD and DVD. For a limited time, when ordering
The Central Park Concert on CD from the Dave Matthews Band website, a bonus CD was included in the package which included select live songs from various locations on the band's 2003 tour. Songs included Bartender, fan-favorites off of Before These Crowded Streets, The Dreaming Tree and The Last Stop; and the well-liked song Everyday, from their concert on 9.11.03 in Hershey, PA. This song tributes the two year anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks.
The Central Park Concert is known as one of the best Dave Matthews Band concerts of all time.
Live Trax & Stand Up (2004-2005)
2004 The Gorge, a combination 2-CD/1-DVD set with highlights from their 3-night 2002 tour closer at
The Gorge Amphitheatre in
George,
Washington was released on
June 29, 2004. The Band also exclusively released a 6-disc CD set through the
Warehouse Fan Association featuring all three nights, with each night's performance on two CDs each.
Later in the year it was announced that highlights from the Band's extensive live archives would be available for purchase via the official website. The first such release,
Live Trax Vol. 1, was released on
November 2, 2004 and was their performance at the
Centrum Center in
Worcester,
Massachusetts on
December 8,
1998. The album featured old friends such as guitarist
Tim Reynolds, banjoist
Béla Fleck, bassist
Victor Wooten and saxophonist
Jeff Coffin; and had already been nearly universally accepted as one of their best live performances.
On
September 12, 2004, DMB played their second benefit show in less than a year, with a free show at
Golden Gate Park in
San Francisco. This concert drew one of their largest crowds and produced a popular bootleg. The band was joined by guitarist
Carlos Santana on many songs, and the tracks led to the second in the Live Trax Series,
Live Trax Vol. 2 released on
December 17, 2004. The album gave fans previews of newly-penned songs "Joy Ride," "Hello Again," and "Sugar Will;" all at the time presumed to be destined for release on a new studio album in
2005. Only "Hello Again" was actually included on the album's subsequent release. The other songs that debuted during the summer of 2004 — "Crazy-Easy," "Good Good Time," "Joy Ride," and "Sugar Will" — were all absent for the duration of the
2005 tour.
In August 2004, DMB was at the center of a controversy when about 800 pounds of liquid human waste was dumped from band member Boyd Tinsley's tour bus through the grate in the Kinzie Street Bridge in
Chicago onto passengers aboard a sightseeing boat on the
Chicago River below. The bus driver pleaded guilty, and the band has donated $50,000 to the Friends of the Chicago River and $50,000 to the
Chicago Park District. In April 2005, the band paid $200,000 to settle the civil lawsuit that followed.
In Fall 2004, DMB returned to their studio in Charlottesville, Virginia with a new producer, Mark Batson. The band considered itself to be at a crucial crossroads in its evolution. The negative reaction to
Everyday among its fans and the middling success of
Busted Stuff, coupled with Dave Matthews' belief that the band hasn't made a great album since
Before These Crowded Streets, all worked to create a sense of eagerness, if not urgency, to create a stellar album.
Stand Up was released on
May 10,
2005, debuting at #1 on the Billboard charts with sales of 465,000. Fan reaction towards the album was mixed. Some felt the band had new energy, while others felt the album was too simplistic. Regardless,
Stand Up spawned the singles "American Baby," "
Dreamgirl," and "Everybody Wake Up." The band also released a video for "Dreamgirl," featuring
Julia Roberts, who is a long-time fan of the band.
During March 2005, Dave Matthews Band arrived on Australian shores for the first time - playing shows in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Byron Bay [EastCoast Blues and Roots Festival]. Tickets for the standalone shows sold out within minutes, and second shows were added to the Melbourne and Sydney legs of the tour. The venues the band were booked to play included the Palais Theatre in Melbourne, the State Theatre in Sydney and the
Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre in Brisbane - neither of these venues held any more than 3000 people.
Thanks to the relatively small fanbase in Australia, many fans had a chance to meet the band before and after the shows. The fanbase has increased slightly since then.
The band supported the album with a summer-long tour culminating in a four-night stand at one of their favorite jaunts, Colorado's
Red Rocks Amphitheatre. Red Rocks holds special significance for the band, as it was the site of their first live album a decade earlier. All proceeds from the fourth Red Rocks show, which totalled over $1 million, went to the victims of
Hurricane Katrina. The 2005 Red Rocks concerts were released on
November 29 as a "best of" CD/DVD combo entitled
Weekend on the Rocks.
The Complete Weekend On The Rocks, a box set of all four Red Rocks concerts, is also exclusively available from DMB's official store.
DMB embarked on a brief tour in Fall 2005 during November and December. That tour was quite a success and featured the return of old school songs such as "Minarets," "Halloween," "Pig," "Christmas Song," and "Recently."
2006
Dave Matthews made several appearances in the UK during the Spring of
2006, notably performing a solo show at the King's College Student Union (Tutu's) on
February 28, followed a little while later by a small solo tour to promote the release of
Stand Up in the UK, performing at the Manchester Academy 1 on
May 12, the Birmingham Academy on
May 13, and the
London Hammersmith Apollo on
May 15. The tour was largely promoted through independent channels; Warehouse ticketing for the February 28 show was available exclusively to UK members and promoted via email, and interviews were mostly conducted by minor shows rather than by mass media outlets.
Dave also played a show on
May 11 at the
Maida Vale Studios for the Radio 2
Bob Harris show, attended by competition winners who formed an intimate crowd of around 100 people. During the show, audience members got to ask questions and Bob Harris asked Dave several himself. During several interviews, Dave professed to wanting to return to the UK to do more solo shows, confessing "I'm enjoying coming over by myself though because I don't get that many opportunities to play solo and I like doing it a lot" as well as hinting at the possibility of the entire band returning to the UK for more shows — "I think the whole idea is I'll make a couple of trips over here by myself and then bring the band over". This promise has certainly been kept by the band, as the first full-fledged Europe tour for some time was undertaken in 2007, and Matthews performed yet another acoustic tour (including Tim Reynolds), this time extending his horizons to countries other than England. The hope is to spread the word of the band to places other than
North America, where the band has surprisingly received little publicity.
On
April 25, 2006, Dave Matthews Band announced a $1.5 million challenge grant to help build the New Orleans Habitat
Musicians' Village. The band returned to the studio in March 2006 (with the resultant album slated for release in winter) before embarking on their annual summer tour. It features 51 shows across
North America, having begun May 30 in
St. Louis, Missouri, and concluded with a two-night stand on September 22-23 in the band's home town of
Charlottesville, Virginia. The summer's notable locales for the 2006 tour were a two-night stand at Boston's
Fenway Park and their first ever performance at the
Hollywood Bowl. The Boston performance that took place on
July 7 and
8 is featured as the sixth release in their "
Live Trax" series. Along with the original five members and Butch Taylor, this featured new addition
Rashawn Ross touring with the band full time. The trumpet player, who received recognition with DMB's fans while playing with the jazz band
Soulive, guested on several shows in the summer of 2005 and the majority of the shows during the Winter 2005 tour. The band has also indicated that Rashawn will be around for quite some time (mentioning it during several shows in the first leg of the summer 2006 tour, the fact that he's been an important member of the recent studio sessions that have taken place both before and during the summer 2006 tour and his inclusion in the
2007 tour).
The band has used the summer tour to debut new songs such as "Sister," a song performed solo by Dave Matthews, "
The Idea of You," "Kill the King," "Shotgun," "Break Free," and "Can't Stop." Older songs in the Band's catalog have appeared during the summer 2006 tour after not being played for several years, including "JTR" (a song that was long thought to be one that would never be played live again, as hinted by Stefan in a 2004 interview), "Pay For What You Get," "Sleep To Dream Her," "Raven," "The Song That Jane Likes," "Digging A Ditch," "The Last Stop," "Big Eyed Fish," "The Dreaming Tree," and a short, full-band version of "#40."
In August, Dave Matthews Band announced on their website that, in order to fulfill a contractual obligation, they'd be releasing a "best of" album. They held a survey on their website that encouraged fans to select their ten favorite DMB songs. The album, titled
The Best of What's Around Vol. 1, named after the opening track of 1994's
Under The Table And Dreaming, was released on
November 7, 2006. The album features two discs, the first consisting of what the band considers their best studio tracks, and the second of live tracks voted on by fans. Additionally, those who pre-ordered the CD on the Dave Matthews Band website received an "encore" CD with four additional live songs. The Encore CD was later made available on their website to anyone for an additional $10.
They worked with
Reverb, a non-profit
environmental organization, for their 2006 summer tour. Their Labor Day concert at
The Gorge Amphitheatre drew a crowd of 64,468, the largest ever for that venue
2007
In early
2007, the Dave Matthews Band entered the studio with producers Mark Batson and
Steven Miller to begin recording their seventh studio album. Mark Batson's relationship was severed at some point during the recording process, and producer
Rob Cavallo was named as his replacement. In late February, Dave Matthews embarked on a short tour of Europe with Tim Reynolds. The tour debuted a new song called "Cornbread," which later appeared as a full band song during the Summer 2007 Tour.
On
March 23 and
24,
2007, the Dave Matthews Band performed at the
MGM Grand Garden Arena in
Las Vegas, Nevada. The two-night stand included a mix of old and new classics, alongside many cover songs. Their performance on the 24th marked the first time since the band's early days that they played four cover songs. The cover tunes the band played that night included "The Maker", "Still Water" (both composed by
Daniel Lanois), "Down by the River" (composed by
Neil Young), and "Sweet Caroline" (composed by
Neil Diamond). It also featured the return of "Halloween", a much sought-after live song by many fans that has only been played seven times in the last seven years (twice in 2000, 2002, and 2005, and once in 2007). The shows at Las Vegas were announced as the next Live Trax release by Dave Matthews Band on April 11, 2007. This volume in the series,
Live Trax Vol. 9, includes both nights spread across four compact discs and was released in June 2007.
On
April 25,
2007, it was announced on the band's website that the Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds performance at Radio City Music Hall that had been recorded earlier that week on the 22nd would be released on CD and DVD, the duo's second release (following
Live at Luther College). It includes unreleased songs, such as "Eh Hee" and "Corn Bread", and also features many popular Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds performances not included on any previous release, including "Old Dirt Hill", "The Maker", "Gravedigger", and many more. It also includes two Tim Reynolds songs which he performed alone, "Betrayal" and "You Are My Sanity".
According to
Billboard magazine, the band's new studio album was scheduled to be released in July by
RCA Records, but in an interview with the Brisbane Times on
May 4,
2007,
Stefan Lessard stated, "We’re on a bit of a creative break as far as working in the studio – we’ve been in pre-production for a long time, but we’ll get more serious later in the year."
On
May 1,
2007 the band kicked off their
2007 international tour, playing dates in
Melbourne,
Adelaide,
Brisbane and
Sydney,
Australia. These dates were followed by performances in
Dublin,
Lisbon (show was released on November 6 as the most recent
Live Trax Vol. 10),
Brussels,
Landgraaf (for the
Pinkpop festival), and ending the European section of the tour on
May 30, at
Wembley Arena,
London .
On
May 30,
2007, Dave Matthews Band announced a benefit show that took place on
September 8,
2007 in Atlanta's
Piedmont Park.
The Allman Brothers Band performed with the DMB, and over 75,000 fans packed into the park's stage area. Though only 65,000 tickets were sold (50,000 originally, then a second block of 15,000) nearly 20,000 people snuck into the show, making it the largest one-day concert in Atlanta history. The show raised money for the Piedmont Park Conservancy Association.
(External Link
) The show was also released as a CD/DVD called
Live at Piedmont Park on
December 11,
2007.
On
July 7,
2007, Dave Matthews Band performed on the
American Live Earth concert at
Giants Stadium.
(External Link
)
On
September 6,
2007, Dave Matthews Band performed a free concert for the
Virginia Tech student body and faculty. The show was entitled "A Concert for Virginia Tech" and was done in memory of the shootings that took place on
April 16 2007.
John Mayer,
Phil Vassar, and
Nas joined them; Mayer even came out to play with the band for "#41". There were over 50,000 people in attendance.
The 2007 Dave Matthews Band Summer tour has included the unveiling of a number of songs previously unreleased or not performed with the full band ("#27", "Corn Bread", "Eh Hee" and "A Dream So Real"). The 2007 tour also saw the resurgence of a number of fan favorites such as "Sweet Up and Down", one of the few songs not reworked from the band's defunct
Lillywhite Sessions, and a special performance of #34 on 10/2/07 at the Hollywood Bowl dedicated to Dave's wife for her 34th birthday. "Shotgun," an unrecorded song unveiled in 2006, which despite its popularity among the fan base was once rumored to have been permanently shelved by the band at the completion of the 2006 Summer tour, was also played on several occasions. Mayer also joined Dave Matthews as a special surprise to fans on the last night of his tour at the Hollywood Bowl (October 2nd).
In a news article posted on
August 30 on the official site, it was announced that a video for the song "Eh Hee" would be released for free download on the
iTunes Store starting
September 4, and remaining free throughout the week until it would be made available for purchase The recording and video is a result of a solo effort by Dave Matthews, and doesn't include the other band members.
The band held a pep rally contest later in the year for United States colleges. West Point, the United States Military Academy won the contest and was the host of two DMB shows on November 14 and 15. These shows were streamed live on the AT&T blue room website.
The Dave Matthews Band held their final public 2007 show in New Jersey at the
Izod Center on
November 13.
2008
Live Trax Vol. 11 was announced on
February 12, as a show at
Saratoga Performing Arts Center during the 2000 summer tour. This is the second show released from this tour, the first being
Live Trax Vol. 3.
Live Trax Vol. 11 was released on
March 25.
On April 6, Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds performed an acoustic concert at Indiana University entitled "Rock for Change" in support of Barack Obama's presidential campaign.
Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds played a benefit show for the Seeds of Compassion initiative on
April 11 at the
Key Arena in Seattle, part of the five-day celebration that week centered on the
Dalai Lama. In addition, they played 2 nights at the Fifth Annual Kokua Festival on
April 19 and
20 at the Waikiki Shell in
Honolulu, Hawaii. These shows were part of a benefit for the Kokua Hawai'i Foundation, created by
Jack Johnson and his wife Kim to benefit Hawaii's educational system.
Dave Matthews Band has been confirmed to headline the Rothbury Music Festival in Rothbury, MI. They will be on the main stage on Saturday, July 5, 2008 as part of an initial festival lineup that includes Widespread Panic, John Mayer, 311, Phil Lesh and Friends, Primus, Thievery Corporation, Michael Franti and Spearhead and many, many others.
Dave Matthews Band has announced that'll hold a benefit concert for lung cancer research (Stand up for a cure) at
Madison Square Garden in New York City on Wednesday September 10, 2008. Tickets for the event are exclusive to Warehouse members and were available for request from Friday, May 9 through the following Friday, May 16.
The band is currently in the early stages of production of their next studio album. Lessard made a posting on his blog indicating that the band would commence pre-production in Virginia and then fly out to record the album in Seattle.
On March 6, 2008 in a tour announcement email it was revealed that the band is working with
Rob Cavallo on their next yet-to-be-titled album. It was also mentioned that guitarist and long time friend
Tim Reynolds would be recording with the band on the new studio album.
(External Link
) Reynolds has also been confirmed to tour with the band during the summer, marking the first time in ten years that he's done so.
Taping and bootlegs
Dave Matthews Band allows audience members to record most live shows and permits not-for-profit trading of the recordings. The band cites college students trading these tapes in the early
1990s as a key reason for their current fame. The band and its management also worked with the US federal government in 1996 to launch a crackdown on for-profit
bootleggers, which resulted in large-scale arrests of those responsible for illegally manufacturing and selling copies of DMB material. To further combat bootleggers, the band released
Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95.
Warehouse Fan Association
In an effort to promote fan interaction, the official fan association for DMB, Warehouse, was opened December 4, 1998. Warehouse gives fans early access to concert tickets, exclusive CDs and merchandise to its members. Warehouse Fan Association (also known as "The Warehouse") pioneered the internet-based ticket sales used by many artists today. DMB Manager
Coran Capshaw founded and ran
Musictoday, a company which runs Warehouse and other online fan clubs. In August, 2006, it was acquired by major concert promoter
Live Nation, a spinoff of
Clear Channel.
Discography
Independent albums
Studio albums
Under the Table and Dreaming (1994)
Crash (1996)
Before These Crowded Streets (1998)
Everyday (2001)
The Lillywhite Sessions (leaked unreleased album) (2001)
Busted Stuff (2002)
Stand Up (2005)
TBA (2009)
Live albums
Live at Red Rocks 8.15.95 (1997)
Listener Supported (1999)
Live at Luther College (Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds) (1999)
Live in Chicago 12.19.98 (2001)
Live at Folsom Field, Boulder, Colorado (2002)
The Central Park Concert (2003)
The Gorge (2004)
Weekend on the Rocks (2005)
Live at Radio City (Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds) (2007)
Live at Piedmont Park (2007)
The band has also released several live albums in their Live Trax series which are currently available on their website. See Dave Matthews Band discography for more information.
Compilation albums
The Best of What's Around Vol. 1 (2006)
Awards
Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (1996) — nominated
Best Short Term Music Video ("What Would You Say," 1996) — nominated
Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ("So Much to Say", 1997) — won
Best Rock Song ("Too Much," 1997) — nominated
Best Rock Album (Crash, 1997) — nominated
Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (1998) — nominated
Best Rock Song ("Crash into Me," 1998) — nominated
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ("Crush," 1999) — nominated
Best Rock Album (Before These Crowded Streets, 1999) — nominated
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals ("Love of My Life" with Santana, 2000) — nominated
Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ("The Space Between," 2002) — nominated
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ("Where Are You Going," 2003) — nominated
My VH1 Awards
Coolest Fan Website (nancies.org, 2000) — won
My Favorite Group (2001) — won
Must Have Album (Everyday, 2001) — won
Damn I Wish I Wrote That! ("The Space Between," 2001) — won
Coolest Fan Website (nancies.org, 2001) — won
NAACP Image awards
Chairman's Award (2004), "in recognition of their diverse talents put to exceptional use...The special awards are a salute to both professional as well as personal excellence."
Music samples
Philanthropic efforts
According to the band's website
, since 1999 the band has contributed $4 million to the BAMA Works Fund
. The BAMA Works Fund supports projects addressing the needs of disadvantaged youth, needs of the disabled, protection of the environment, and the arts and humanities. This foundation only operates in the Charlottesville Virginia area.
Trivia
The band's longest live performance of any song was a 32 minute and 3 second performance of "#41" featuring Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, played on April 20, 2002 at the former Corel Centre. This recording can be found on The Best of What's Around, Vol. 1 Encore CD.
On August 20, 1995, the Dave Matthews Band played the first version of the song "Raven" solo as a segue between Little Thing and Typical Situation, which didn't come back again until June 20, 2000 as a full-band song when it was reworked during The Lillywhite Sessions.
They were the first musical act to perform at Pacific Bell Park (now AT&T Park), on May 18 & 19, 2001.
One of five musical acts to perform a live concert at the Great Lawn of Central Park in New York City (others are Diana Ross, Paul Simon, Simon and Garfunkel, and Garth Brooks (see The Central Park Concert).
Dave Matthews Band (with opening act Sheryl Crow) played the fourth concert ever to be held at Fenway Park in Boston. Other performers were Bruce Springsteen in 2003, Jimmy Buffett in 2004, and The Rolling Stones in 2005. (see Live Trax Vol. 6).
An episode of the show Futurama refers to the band, stating that the main character erroneously believes that the band "rocks" when he's drunk.
In the "Frat Aliens" episode of Aqua Teen Hunger Force DP and Skeeter have a sticker on their spaceship that reads "Dave Matthews Band Cover Band Cover Band."
Dave Matthews Band has had two ice cream flavors from Ben and Jerry's, One Sweet Whirled, a pun on a popular DMB song, and Magic Brownies.
On some pressings of the CD release titled Under the Table and Dreaming, the song "#34" is the 34th track; tracks 12-33 are blank, and last one second each.
They played at Bill Clinton's inauguration in January 1997.
A spoof version of their song 'Everyday' was performed by Jimmy Fallon at the 2002 VMA's.
Dave Matthews Band played the inaugural concert at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI on July 5, 2000.
July 9, 2005 marked the return of "#34." It was last played on March 23, 1993, for a total of 4491 days between times being played. It is the longest break for a song for the band.
The band performed Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline" on Saturday, July 08, 2006, during their second show in Boston's historic Fenway Park. It was the eighth song on the setlist, a nod to Fenway Park tradition of playing the song during the eighth inning during Red Sox games. This song was subsequently performed on Saturday, March 24, 2007, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The band began performing "Time of the Season" by The Zombies occasionally on their 2005 Summer tour, and subsequently released a live version on the Weekend on the Rocks CD & DVD later that year. The song was also included in the Live Trax 9 release (March 23, 2007 performance).
Actor Johnny Galecki appears in the music video for the song "Satellite".
The Dave Matthews Band was mentioned in the song "College Kids" by Relient K.
Dave Matthews was mentioned as playing next on stage at a Santos rally during the presidential campaign in The West Wing (TV series) Season 7 episode, "The Cold"
The Dave Matthews Band performed a cover of Marilyn Manson's song "Cryptorchid" in 1997 during a preformance at the Cultural Center in Marywood College.
The band performed a cover of Rick James' "Superfreak" at their August 7, 2004 concert at Alpine Valley Music Theater (the day after James' passing). The song can be found on the Live Trax Vol. 8 CD set.
The song "#36" was written for an assassinated African National Congress leader, Chris Hani.
Dave Matthews Band is mentioned on an episode of Family Guy where Joe gets new legs so he can walk. He mentions to one of his new friends that they've to listen to his new Dave Matthews Band album.
Julia Roberts made one of her first film appearances after giving birth in the band's "Dreamgirl" music video.
The song "Some Devil" from the album with the same name appears in an episode of HOUSE. The song is played at the end of the episode on a record player while House sits and listens.Further Information
Get more info on 'Dave Matthews Band'.
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