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Jon Foreman
- vocals, guitar
Tim Foreman - bass, vocals
Jerome Fontamillas - guitar, keyboards,
vocals
Chad Butler - drums
Rarely does a rock band combine explosive
guitars with an intense longing for
meaning. Jon Foreman and Switchfoot,
however, yearn for something more than
what pop-culture is selling. "If I'm
content as an artist to write a hit song
or have a platinum record, then I'll have
failed a lot of my fellow human beings,"
says Foreman. "We have the best jobs in
the world because we play music for a
living and love doing it, but we didn't
get into this to try and sell something.
For us, it's about communicating and
connecting with people on a different
level."
That stance earned the Switchfoot
vocalist/guitarist and his bandmates
(brother/bassist Tim Foreman, keyboardist
Jerome Fontamillas and drummer Chad
Butler) an invitation to attend last
December’s Nashville summit for DATA
(Debt, AIDS, Trade for Africa), the
charity organization founded by U2’s main
man Bono to promote AIDS awareness and
debt relief for developing nations. “It
was incredible,” says Foreman, who’s
worked with Sudanese refugees in the
band’s hometown of San Diego. “Here’s a
guy who has all the money, fame and
notoriety that anyone could ever want, and
he’s passionately talking to us about a
bunch of poor people in Africa who will
never buy his records. Listening to him
speak was definitely a life-changing
experience.”
When the meeting ended, Foreman walked
over and handed the U2 frontman $40. “I
told him I owed it to him for sneaking
into a U2 show in London a couple of years
ago,” he says. “He laughed and told me he
did the same thing when he was younger. We
spoke for a while and then he gave the
money back, saying he felt he had already
been compensated. To be honest, I was
relieved because it was my last $40 and I
needed the money to get home.”
As for his involvement with DATA and its
cause, Foreman says, “I talk about it
quite a bit in interviews and from the
stage, but I’m careful not to be annoying
about it. We’ve never really been a
political band. Our songs are more about
the politics of the heart than they are
about foreign politics. I don’t think we
can solve the outside problems until we
solve the ones within.”
On the Columbia/RED Ink debut The
Beautiful Letdown, Foreman opens up with
self-revelatory songs about hope, love,
faith and the desire to be more than what
he’s been sold. In spacious settings, the
singer connects with subtle emotional
power, surveying a landscape of mediocrity
in “More Than Fine,” digging for painful
truths in title track “Beautiful Letdown”
and stepping on a distortion pedal to
scream about the dissonance of the modern
age in “Ammunition.” On lead single “Meant
To Live,” inspired by TS Elliot’s “The
Hollow Men,” he strives to survive in a
world where love and hate breathe the same
air.
“It’s not a dark album, but it talks about
dark things that have happened to me,”
says Foreman. “A lot of the songs are
about the hope that’s deeper than the
wound and how that’s something that we can
really hold onto. I think that’s something
that kids are picking up on and taking
with them.” He pauses and adds, “Don’t
misunderstand—I have no delusions of
grandeur thinking that our songs will
single-handedly change the world. But
change is possible and I definitely want
to be a part of that. We always make it a
point to talk to people outside after the
shows, and I recently had a kid come up to
me and give me a big hug because he was so
affected by ‘Dare You To Move’ (from The
Beautiful Letdown). Apparently, he was
going through some really rough times and
wasn’t sure if he wanted to live anymore,
but heard the song and was inspired.
That’s incredible. On days when you’re
wondering what you’re doing playing a show
in some small town in the middle of
nowhere, you think about moments like that
and realize that you’re part of a bigger
story than your own.”
Musically, Switchfoot draws as much from
the Police and James Taylor as from the
Beatles and Stevie Wonder to create
swirling guitar pop, full of effortlessly
arching melodies and textures that shift
in continual, sensual motion. “We’ve never
fit in any of the genre boxes,” says
Foreman. “I think that diversity is our
strength.”
Produced by John Fields (Andrew W.K.) and
mixed by Chris Lord-Alge (Goo Goo Dolls,
Michelle Branch), Tom Lord-Alge
(blink-182, Rolling Stones) and Jack
Joseph Puig (John Mayer, No Doubt), The
Beautiful Letdown entered the Billboard
Top 200 this past spring at #85. The
album, which The Orange County Register
described as “…a rousing rock testament of
hope, dreams and inspiration,” can
attribute its early success to lead single
“Meant To Live,” which hit the Top 40 on
the Modern Rock Chart (its companion
video, directed by Laurent Briet (Radiohead),
subsequently went into rotation on MTV2).
Meanwhile, the band has been tearing up
venues across the country during a
three-month sold-out headlining tour. In
addition to selling out four nights in Los
Angeles, the quartet shared festival
stages with the likes of Jane’s Addiction
and Audioslave and recently performed on
“Last Call with Carson Daly” and the “Late
Late Show with Craig Kilborn.”
Foreman credits the album’s raw, live edge
to the band’s DIY attitude. “We didn’t
want to waste time screwing around in a
$1000 a day studio,” he laughs. “So we did
all the pre-production in my bedroom. When
we finally recorded the album, we did the
whole thing in two weeks. John (Fields)
works fast and so do we. There were no
lunch or dinner breaks—we worked straight
through and it turned out great. You can
ruin things if you spend too much time in
the studio.”
The Beautiful Letdown comes three years
after Switchfoot’s third
independently-released and critically
acclaimed album Learning To Breathe. In
between the two discs, the band won the
2001 ASCAP San Diego Music Award for “Best
Pop Album” and “Best Pop Artist,” won the
2002 ASCAP San Diego Music Award for “Best
Adult Alternative and contributed five
songs to the gold-certified soundtrack for
the Mandy Moore film A Walk To Remember
(including a duet with Foreman and Moore).
“We were at the movie premiere,” recalls
Foreman, “And David Hasselhoff was sitting
behind us bawling his eyes out with his
daughter. It was a bit surreal.”
Over the course of the past several years,
more than 40 Switchfoot songs have been
used for several nationally televised
shows, including “Dawson’s Creek” (five
songs), “Regis and Kelly,” “Felicity,” and
many more. “The context in which the songs
are used can be pretty funny,” says
Foreman. “I remember writing a song about
spiritual longing and then seeing it
played back during a hot tub scene on some
show. The songs can wind up very far from
the edge of the bed where they were
originally written.”
Switchfoot’s roots can be traced back to
the beaches of San Diego in the mid-‘90s,
when the Foremans and Butler connected as
surfers (Fontamillas joined in September
of 2000). Though they competed in national
surf championships on weekends and earned
product endorsements from equipment
companies, the real bond came from a
common love of music. They decided to form
a band, chose the name Switchfoot (a
surfing term), put themselves through
months of sweaty garage band workouts, and
then hit the road. After just 20 gigs,
they signed with re:Think records and
released Legend of Chin in 1997. They’ve
averaged 150 shows a year ever since,
while selling more than 400,000 copies of
their first three albums (Legend of Chin,
New Way to Be Human and Learning to
Breathe) combined. Shortly after recording
The Beautiful Letdown, Switchfoot signed
with Columbia. The album has since become
the band’s fastest-selling record to date.
“Tim, Chad, Jerome and I have seen pretty
much everything over the past six years,”
says Foreman. “We’ve been at this ever
since Tim graduated from high school. But
this all feels like a new chapter. I think
this album is where our future begins.”
THE HIGH NOTES:
2003 San Diego Music Award for "Album of
the Year," and “Pop Album of the Year”
2002 San Diego Music Award for “Best Adult
Alternative”
2001 San Diego Music Awards for "Best Pop
Album,” and "Best Pop Artist"
1997 San Diego Music Award for "Best New
Artist"
5 songs included on the Gold certified
soundtrack "A Walk to Remember"
Over 50 songs usages on major TV (WB, FOX
, CBS, Columbia, MTV, ABC, and Disney)
New “Meant To Live” video playing MTV,
MTV2, and Fuse
Gibson Guitars' 2001 Les Paul Horizon
Award (awarded to guitarist/lead singer
Jon Foreman) |
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