Interview-
Heartache & Hope
Interviewed
by Jason Gonulsen
http://www.mmreview.com Monday,
March 21, 2005
There probably will
never be a Behind the Music episode about Over
the Rhine, but the lives of Linford Detweiler and
Karin Bergquist over the last few years could make an
interesting story. Detweiler and Bergquist, who make
up the husband and wife duo of the Cincinnati-based
band, haven’t exactly lived the sex and drugs
drama-filled folklore that bolster television ratings,
but they have endured their share of heartache.
In 2003, they released
their most ambitious piece of work, a double album they
named Ohio, which led to a tour of clubs across the US.
The nationwide trek, which featured bassist Rick Plant,
drummer Will Sayles, and fiery multi-instrumentalist
Paul Moak, saw Over the Rhine turning up the sound and
shocking those in the audience who came expecting an
acoustic show. But what was even more shocking came six
weeks into the tour, when Detweiler had to tell his fans
the truth: the energy that was being produced onstage
night after night was lacking in their personal lives.
Citing marital problems, Detweiler and Bergquist decided
to postpone the rest of the dates and go home to Ohio to
see if they could pick up the pieces of their broken
relationship. It was the worst of times for a band that
was hitting its musical creative peak.
Fortunately for
Detweiler and Bergquist, they found redemption in late
night conversations, bottles of wine, and laughter,
where, in the privacy of their own home, they eventually
rediscovered who they were…and who they still wanted to
be. Shortly after their mini-break to clear their minds
and energize their souls, Over the Rhine returned to the
stage, playing a few shows here and there and bringing
smiles back to the faces of their fans. In November of
2004 they recorded Drunkard’s Prayer in their
living room and will release it on March 29, 2005. Like
much of their previous work, Prayer is a quiet,
gentle album that features deep and personal songwriting
brought to life by Bergquist's smooth signature voice;
each note is carried by Detweiler's delicate work on the
piano and guitars, giving the album warmth and comfort.
Glide recently had a
chance to speak with Linford Detweiler about the new
record and how he and Karin saved their personal and
musical relationship.

This album is a simpler
album than your last album, Ohio. What was the
attitude at the onset of recording Drunkard’s
Prayer?
I think the attitude was just
to keep it close to home, straightforward. I don’t know,
sometimes when you just strip away the extra stuff and
stay focused on sort of the heart of the song it can be
pretty satisfying both for the musician and for the
listener. We just wanted to make a simple record.
Did this feel like starting
over at all since you took some time off?
That’s a good thought. I think
that in some ways, and it’s a little silly to say that
since we’ve been doing this for so long, but it did feel
like a new beginning. Maybe we were a little unsure of
where to go musically, just balancing our career and
personal life and everything. That’s kind of a cliché,
but it was tricky for us to sort of figure out how much
we wanted to be gone, and Karin and I have talked about
having a family. It did become kind of hard for us to
figure out how we were going to fit all of this
together. So we ended up taking some time off.
I am sure it was a pretty
humbling experience juggling all of those things.
Yeah it was humbling to say,
you know, we’re not different from anybody else. We have
to work hard to make our relationship a good one. It’s
like everybody else—they can’t constantly be focusing
energy elsewhere even if it is something good like
music. So yeah it’s been a really really great year for
us. I have to say that this year we will be touring
again, but we have sort of broken it up into bite-size
pieces. We’re going to do the west coast and then come
back home. We’re never going to be gone for more than a
week and a half at a time. And a lot of the times we’re
just going to do a weekend and come back, just so we can
kind of stay connected to our life at home. It’s a hard
battle, one that every musician has. Everyone has to
figure out what is right for them.
When I saw you on the Ohio
tour, just a few weeks before you pulled the plug, the
band sounded really great. And then through your
newsletter, you candidly told your fans that you and
Karin were having problems in your relationship and
would be postponing the remainder of the tour. Your fans
seem to be very important to you.
Yeah it’s weird, some
musicians, they write very personal music, but they just
refuse to draw the connection to their personal lives,
they refuse to talk about anything that is going on on a
personal level. It just doesn’t feel natural to me. I
feel like in some ways Karin and I and the people who
like our music, in some ways we’re on a journey together
and we’re trying to learn from each other. It’s always
felt pretty natural for me to be pretty open, although
sometimes I’ll sit back and say, “What am I doing!!”
(laughs) But anyway…
Your lyrics, I find them
very interesting, but one line that stood out to me on
Drunkard’s Prayer was “Thank God the joke’s on
me” from the song “Born.” To me, that is sort of the
centerpiece of the whole album. Could you talk about
that and the songwriting process for this particular
album?
Well, every album, no matter
how many songs I have written, it just feels like a
small miracle when the song actually gets finished, it
feels like a complete little kind of mission. It’s just
something that…it’s not like when you figure out how to
paint your kitchen, like you can do it the same the next
time. Every song is different, it happens different
ways. I agree that “Born” is sort of the centerpiece of
the record and it was a song that Karin and I very much
wrote together and it started really simple, with a
simple guitar and I sort of drew out the song. I had a
little bit of melody for it and, yeah, we really
collaborated on that one. That line, “thank God the
joke’s on me,” I like that line, I’m not so sure what it
means! (laughs) I don’t mind that feeling but I think,
you know, when Karin and I came home, we were pretty sad
that we had to walk away from a pretty good tour and
just sort of sad that we were…a bit broken. And when we
were able to just sort of start laughing again and
cracking each other up and everything we both sort of
felt like, wow, everything is going to be alright.
When you wrote in your
newsletter to your fans, you said, “We're human beings
and we're all broken and sometimes our lives get way out
of balance. Knowing this is an amazing place to start.
Please keep us in your prayers and again, we hope to see
you soon when the time is right.” That—when I read
that—expressing that your fans, it’s very admirable.
Thank you. The good part of
this is, wow, the amount of feedback that we got from
people, we were really concerned that a lot of fans were
going to be upset and disappointed or whatever--and
people were disappointed. But by far the overwhelming
sentiment was just, you know, “Good for you.” A lot of
people were at a place, where they needed to look at
that same thing, like we just get so caught up in sort
of like a success-driven culture that we do sort of tend
to put things that we know intuitively are most
important, sometimes we just keep shoving them aside for
a later time. It’s really…I was glad that even though it
was hard for us to admit and everything that people
seemed to respond to it well and send words of
encouragement.
Did it feel good to step on
stage again?
It did, it really did. You
know, sometimes you do just open yourself to the
possibility that you have sort of done what you have
needed to do. But I think when we started to do a little
performing again, Karin and I both realized that, ‘You
know what, this has to do with why we’re here. This
feels really connected and right and it’s who we are.’
This album has more of a
jazzy feel than your previous albums. Did maybe
recording the album at home have an improvisational
effect?
Yeah, it was probably more of a
relaxed atmosphere. We’re always trying to find ways to
introduce new flavors into our music. And hopefully the
end result will still feel like a Over the Rhine record.
I don’t know, it was kind of a natural evolution, to
just try some things that were…like the horn player,
that was something we had never done before. It was
really fun to just try it and see what happens.
And Karin’s voice is suited
for a variety of styles.
She can sing anything, anytime,
anywhere. (laughs) Yeah, no kidding, she’s got a lot of
versatility, a lot of depth I think. It could be a
little bit of a liability for us because people have
sort of a hard time categorizing us, but we’re not too
worried about it. We just feel the need to keep it
interesting for us and if we’re excited about what we’re
doing and believe in it that hopefully it will translate
to other people.
I know Karin wrote a few
songs (“She,” “Ohio”) on your last record Ohio. Did she
do a lot of writing on this album?
Yeah, she did do a lot of
writing on this record. She wrote the first track (“I
Want You To Be My Love”) mostly, she wrote “Drunkard’s
Prayer,” the title track, mostly. She wrote a lot of the
fifth track, “Spark.” She wrote most of “Lookin’
Forward,” most of “Who Will Guard The Door,” most of
“Firefly”…we realized that when we came to the end of
this record that we had both worked on all the songs.
But usually the song is more connected to one person,
because of the person that starts the song, but this
record did feel like a collaboration.
I get that feeling when I
listen to the songs, especially on the opener, “I Want
You To Be My Love.” It’s probably about as simple as a
song can be, but it moves me the most.
Cool. That’s really puzzling to
me—the simplest song—when there is nothing innovative
going on…I don’t know, there still is some sort of
emotional or chemical reaction that can happen. That to
me is always a small miracle.
Are you excited about
hearing your fans reaction to this album?
Yeah, we’re really excited to
see how people embrace the album. You wonder sometimes
if people are going to think if it’s boring or
something, but I really think people are going to
respond to this record. When you make a record you sort
of have a sense of, I think, intuitively of…some sort of
realness factor that you just feel. (laughs) If it feels
connected to us or if it feels pretty far removed and
just out there and sometimes when you go really hard on
a project, some just feel closer than others and I just
feel like this record couldn’t be more honest, it
couldn’t be more connected to where we are. I think that
will come through to people. I think it’s going to be a
good record for us. I have to say that it might be, and
it’s hard to believe after as long as we’ve been doing
this, but this might be my favorite one—I know I had the
most fun making it. We didn’t labor over it and it was
very natural. We would just record a song and then go
over to the porch and talk with everybody and hang out.
It was more conversation than there was actual working
and it was just a very good time. We feel good about
letting it go.
I actually discovered your
music through a Cowboy Junkies concert, when you worked
with them for a few years. The environment usually plays
an important role in their recording process and what
you just mentioned—it’s very similar. Did their habits
rub off on you in any way?
They did, absolutely. I think
that we had a lot in common with them before we started
working together, which was probably part of the reason
why they asked us to come out and tour with them for a
few years. It was a great experience and we did learn a
lot from them and one of the things that was especially
encouraging and challenging to me was that they really
wanted to pass the hat around musically. Like onstage,
they wanted Jeff Bird to do his thing, Mike would do his
thing, and they wanted me over on the organ to play and
take it! (laughs) And I just, I never…I was always the
songwriter. I played, but I never really stepped out as
a player much and they really brought a lot out of me
musically. And I think some of the conversations we had
about out records, like they seemed to think that there
was some sort of connection between Trinity Session and
Good Dog Bad Dog. When they recorded Trinity, it was a
very simple record and actually the label, RCA, at one
point came back and said, “We really love it, now we
want you to go back and record it properly.” And they
wouldn’t do it. And we felt sort of the same way about
Good Dog Bad Dog because we made that record and the
plan was to re-record it properly with a real producer
in a studio and everything. And then we started to
realize, wow, everything that we wanted to do, we pretty
much did. It might be a little simpler, it might be a
little more raw, but it’s all there. And that had a lot
to do with the environment, like you were saying, and
yeah, we had quite a few conversations about how the
vibe or the experience or recording has an effect of the
way the music turns out. And I hope our new project
feels like our living room, for the most part, because
that’s what it’s about.
Jason Gonulsen is a writer
who lives in the St. Louis, MO area with his fiancé,
Kelly, and dogs, Maggie and Tucker. He also takes
concert photographs with his digital camera. Please view
his photos at his
website.
You can e-mail him at harvestmoon8@hotmail.com.
Interviewed
by Jason Gonulsen
http://www.mmreview.com Monday,
March 21, 2005
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