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THE JULIANA THEORY
Brett Detar - vocals, guitars,
programming
Chad Alan - bass, backing vocals
Joshua Fiedler - guitars
Joshua Kosker - guitars, backing vocals
Josh Walters - drums
The Juliana Theory tracks its growing success
in mechanical terms.
"On our first tour we drove our own cars,"
says singer and guitarist Brett Detar. "We
thought we had made it when we bought our
first van and trailer; now we're on a bus.
This band takes small steps for
everything-songwriting, recording and
touring-but they add up."
After releasing two full-length albums
independently and touring incessantly, the
Pennsylvania quintet signed with Epic Records
for its major-label debut, "Love." Produced by
former Talking Head Jerry Harrison (Live, No
Doubt), the album uses churning guitars,
intricate rhythms and gorgeous melodies to
explore how love affects human interaction.
The idea for the album's theme came to Detar
on a flight to San Francisco. "I don't know if
it was the altitude or what, but I started
thinking about how the drive for love and the
desire for love are the inspiration for
everything in the world, both positive and
negative," he explains. "I started equating
this idea to all kinds of things - why would
someone kill, why people become addicted to
things, why people turn to religion. Love or
the search for love seems like the simple,
underlying reason for everything."
That airborne epiphany not only sharpened
Detar's focus for the album, but it also
inspired "Everything," the album's final, and
most personal track. "The whole record leads
up to that final song," says Detar.
"Lyrically, it explains my ideas behind the
album's theme. Musically, it touches on what
this band is all about. It begins with a lot
of piano, some electronic touches and vocal
harmonies but winds up stripped away to just
guitars, bass and drums all rocking out."
While the theme crops up on most of the songs,
Detar says "Love" is not a concept album.
"It's not like we wrote a bunch of songs to
fit into some abstract framework. The idea
came to me after two-thirds of the album was
done, so I only wrote a few songs with this
idea in mind," he explains. "It wasn't until
the record was done that we realized that
almost all of the songs touch on this idea in
some way."
"Love" continues The Juliana Theory's
tradition of changing its sound for every
record. Musical changelings like U2, Smashing
Pumpkins and Led Zeppelin inspired The Juliana
Theory to push for reinvention. "You can hear
those bands in our music sometimes, but mostly
they taught us to respect songwriting and
musical evolution," says Detar. "We want to
write catchy songs with substance, but we also
want to grow with each record."
On of the major changes that can be heard on
"Love" is the way Detar approached singing.
Harrison's major contribution to the album was
helping Detar focus on the emotions of the
lyrics he was singing instead of the melody.
"He had great suggestions for every song,"
recalls Detar. "I always used to sing like I
was playing an instrument instead of thinking
like a singer. Jerry pushed me to express the
emotions behind the words, which really gave
the songs another dimension."
Detar, guitarists Josh Fielder and Josh Kosker,
bassist Chad Alan and drummer Josh Walters
come from Latrobe Pennsylvania, home of the
Rolling Rock brewery. "We didn't think people
would make the connection," says Detar. "But
when we're onstage and announce where we're
from someone usually yells out 'Rolling Rock.'
Or after the show people will come up and ask
us what the '33' on the Rolling Rock bottle
means. For the record, I have no idea what the
'33' means."
Detar, Alan and Walters were childhood friends
while Kosker and Fiedler met Detar as
classmates at a nearby high school. The
members formed The Juliana Theory in 1997 as a
side-project while they played in other bands.
"We really started out as a joke," recalls
Detar. "Slowly, we started to like the music
we were making in The Juliana Theory more than
the music we were making in our regular bands.
Eventually, everyone committed to make this
their full-time band."
After spending some time on the road, the band
signed with the independent label Tooth &
Nail. The label released The Juliana Theory's
debut "Understand This is a Dream" (1999)
followed by "Emotion is Dead" (2000).
Together, the albums sold an auspicious
130,000 units. The band released the EP "Music
from Another Room" (2001) before signing with
Epic the following year.
"Going the indie route was very important to
us," says Detar. "There were drawbacks, like
distribution and radio play, but it afforded
us the ability to take the time to learn how
to make records, build a loyal fanbase and
become a really strong live band. If I could
do it all over again, I'd do it the exact same
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