Lemonheaded

Evan Dando speaks from the roof
By MIKAEL WOOD  |  October 23, 2006

061027_lemonheads_main
REDUX: Dando is releasing his first album under the name Lemonheads in 10 years.

Evan Dando lives in a high-rise apartment building in Lower Manhattan whose rooftop patio affords an intimate view of the sprawling construction site where the World Trade Center once stood. Five years and one day after terrorists flew two airplanes into the Twin Towers, Dando is standing on the patio pointing out where he was when the second of those two planes passed directly over his head. “The memory is seared into my brain,” he says, the tone of his voice reflecting the horror of September 11 but also the awe with which a stoner describes a laser-light show. “But I think seeing it so closely actually helped me make sense of it.”

Dando’s been doing a lot of looking back lately, most of it happier than that. The Lemonheads (Vagrant) is the first album in 10 years from the group he formed in Boston in 1986. He recorded it in Colorado with the rhythm section of the Descendents, bassist Karl Alvarez and drummer Bill Stevenson, and though it’s a little harder-rocking than the Lemonheads’ early-’90s folk-rock stuff, it suggests that his knack for perfect little pop songs hasn’t dimmed with age. He’ll spend November and December touring American clubs — the band hit Avalon on December 16 — and playing stuff from The Lemonheads as well as gems from his extensive songbook.

Here’s some of what he had to say about the Lemonheads’ return.

Despite a rotating cast of band mates, the Lemonheads have always been your show. Yet you released an album of songs under your own name in 2003. Why resurrect the Lemonheads for this one?
This thing happened in Brazil where all these young Brazilian bands got together and did a tribute to the Lemonheads. And I thought, “If that’s happening in Brazil, I might as well get the band back together.”

But the current Lemonheads are a totally different band from the one on the last Lemonheads album. You’re the only constant.
Well, I mean, it hasn’t been the same people since 1989. On Lick I played all the tracks on the first song, you know what I mean? So I felt quite justified in taking the name over a long time ago. This has been happening with every Lemonheads record since Lovey. I think I finally found people that I think are really up to snuff as far as musicianship goes on this one, and I wanna stick with them for the next one too.

Did you and Karl and Bill, who also co-produced the album with you, share an instant rapport?
Absolutely. I met Bill 20 years ago and I met Karl 10 years ago. I know I learned a lot working with them, and Bill said to me that he learned a lot doing the record.

What do you think Bill learned?
It was a different way of recording for him — he’d never played slow.

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