Dakona

   
  
- Interview

  By: eastcoastromper

Rock n Roll is back in all forms and sounds in the new millennium. Canada has always displayed great talent from the likes of Finger Eleven, Our Lady Peace to the new bands 3 Days Grace, Silverstein, Lucerin Blue and now the newest four piece DAKONA. Each band conjures up their own rock appeal but band members Ryan McAllister-vocals/guitars, Brook Winstanley-guitars, Shane Dueck-bass and John Biondolillo-drums have a matured, sophisticated lush sounding rock debut in PERFECT CHANGE.
Six years ago cousins McAllister and Biondolillo teamed up with friends Dueck and Winstanley. They spent several years in a barn-turned-rehearsal space developing their sound.
From their hometown of Vancouver, Canada and making their way into Seattle, the guys made a loyal and dedicated fan base. Releasing in 1998
GOOD ENOUGH FOR ME (getting rave reviews) and two years later they followed up with ORDINARY HEROES. The later disc became a #1 indie-selling disc in Vancouver which then sparked many record labels curiosity.
Choosing Maverick, the boys headed into the studio to make
PERFECT CHANGE with producers Rob Cavallo and Arnold Lanni and mixing credits to Randy Staub and Tom Lord-Alge, the band created emotionally charged songs that contain grace, grit and drive along with lyrical depth and timeless beauty. DAKONA sound like they are old pro's by now.
I had the chance to jump on the phone with vocalist/guitarist Ryan McAllister, a soft spoken very humble guy who I found gives his heart n soul for his music and band. So, now get a little incite on the band
DAKONA and what to look forward to in the coming months when their single GOOD 
hits air waves and their debut disc follows.



 

 

 

 

 

 Hi, how ya doing?
Hi, I'm good
Are you off tour?
Yeah, for a little while. I'd rather be on tour right now, I kind of hope to get things going here
Well, you did a little thing with Tonic, right?
Yeah, we did like a month with them
Oh, so you got teased?
Yeah, they're mean actually, cruel, a little teaser..... No, we were loving it out there, it's like the records been done for like eight months and we've been chomping a the bit here waiting to get going on the road
I'm sure, it must be frustrating
Yeah, it's not too bad, using the time to write. I wrote a song yesterday and things keep going, so
Oh, still writing, huh?
Yeah, that's all you can do sometimes. That's one thing they can't take away
Ahhh.....have you always been a writer?
Probably the first song I wrote was around sixteen. A lot of the songs on this record, the band's been together five or six years now, so a lot of the songs that we ended up recording are what we gave Maverick on our demo back in 2000 and we rerecorded. The sounds and music for this album are songs I wrote when I was like eighteen and we're still playing them. I got all this new stuff that I've got to keep stocked away for another day.
Do you look back at the old stuff and kind of cringe now or are you still happy with what you wrote?
Hm....Everything on the record, I'm proud of it. I think back and I go wow, I was eighteen when I wrote that.
Well, you can see the growth in your writing at least!
Yeah, the lyrics are still good, it always was like the most important thing to me, it's almost like a craft, the more music you listen to, the more you learn to steal from different places where no one can tell (laughing)
(Laughing) So, when you started writing at sixteen, were you also playing guitar or did that come later on?
No, I started with guitar, John and I, he's the drummer and we're cousins, we just started jamming together in his bedroom trying to get things to sound normal. In high school, we had a little blues band that we played like birthday parties or wherever we could and then we realized we didn't like blues (laughing) we were what the hell let's just write our own stuff (laughing)
Being together for so long, what has been the lowest point and the highest point of the band so far?
Hm....that's a good question....I think the high point...it's probably different for some of the guys, but it was pretty exciting when we got signed, ya know, for the first time you can do this for a living, ya know, that could actually be your job, but I think the high point for me was just finishing this record and listening to a collection of songs that I thought turned out well. Just sitting back, that's always been the hardest thing to capture was the energy from our live set bringing it down to the record, so that was the highest point. Now, the lowest point, this record has been like a roller coaster ride because we did it one and a half times. We spent five months in Toronto with Arnold Lanni (Our Lady Peace and Finger Eleven) and we got back from there and about two-thirds of the stuff, the record label (Maverick) wasn't happy with. That was probably is one of the lowest points coming back after five months of work and we had too trash like sixty-five percent of the stuff we'd done. Then we went and banged it all out in about eighteen days with Rob Cavallo. So, that was kind of a savior for that moment, it gave us the confidence that we could do this, record quickly and we're not complete peckers in the studio.
(laughing) OK. Do you feel working with different producers helped?
I think there were different approaches that were taken, the two producers that we used were like night and day in terms of how they approached recording a record, one was very methodical and I don't know, I think as a young band you learn rather quickly how you work best and after working with Rob Cavallo, he's just so fun and captures your energy. We went in the first day at Capitol Studios and we all sat down in a room together and we hadn't even talked to him before we got there and we talked for like (laughing) twenty minutes and then we got in the room and we recorded it. We got like seventy per cent of it done in like ten minutes, it was like, this is how recording should be. Maybe one day we'll try again with that other approach but definitely I think we've been with these songs for so long, we knew them inside and out and we would readdress them and try to write better parts, but I think the parts that were there were pretty much what was supposed to be there.
You guys sound like you've been around forever, it sounds so sophisticated and mature
Probably because we have!
(laughing)
It's been a long ride watching a couple of friends bands get signed and release their record after we had already been signed.
You guys also released two independent records?
Yeah, we did two independent albums, they are not available any longer but we might release some of the stuff. The first album was with a different bass player and guitar player until the transition and with the second independent album we had a keyboard player on and now we are back with a four piece. We've gone through some evolution and I think we're all really happy as to where it is right now. It takes a while sometimes to find that common thread that you guys can all ignite on and I think we've got that.
Being that this is your first release for the States, did you guys look into the album as far as changing it up a little bit for the States or do you think Canadian and US fans are all in the same
Yeah, I try not to say aboot, they tend to get a lot of A's out of our lyrics. The end of most lines had an A attached to it, but no, I don't know, we didn't think about too much in terms of the market ability, it might come back to haunt us because I think our album where it fits right now is somewhere in-between pop and rock radio, we don't really have one particular format. Ya know, like you've got your Linkin Park in the rock, you've got your Smashmouth in the pop, definitely we're somewhere in-between, so I hope it works out to our benefit, not having thought about it too much but it's cool because I think there is a lot of good music coming out of Canada right now in terms of commercial records like the Nicklebacks, Our Lady Peace, there's a lot of records that are really hitting. I think if you can come at it from a different approach, I had someone describe Canada as kind of musically half way between Britain and America and most of my favorite bands are British with the exception of, ya know, Rage Against The Machine/Audioslave  but yeah we just wrote these songs and recorded them and I didn't think a lot about to where they were gonna fit or how they were going to be marketing or one market over the other.
I know you had two different producers and I know for mixing, you had two different people mixing, how is it now looking back, do you think wow there were a lot of hands in our creativity or did you enjoy that?
Yeah, we're so hands on as a band,. the only reason there's any hint of cohesion on the record is because there was like, I think we had like thirty engineers and there was like three producers, one producer did another song and two mixes and it was definitely a hodge podge but I'm always surprised when I sit back and listen to it, not that I ever sit back and listen to my own record. It is together decently considering so many hands had been there and I think the next album I'd like to do it from top to bottom from the get go, we wouldn't have to shift around so much. I think that's what took so long after recording this thing, switching and getting people available but we're still writing songs, we recorded them, we have demos from the studio and they're not a lot different from the stuff on the record. I think Rob's main strong point when he produced the songs, is he just let us do it, it wasn't so much as he wanting to put his fingerprint on everything. I think one day we'll be able to produce our own record if we can start fighting amongst each other.
(laughing) Making a major label CD, what besides changing producers, was the hardest part compared to doing your independent releases?
I think the biggest thing was, I think everybody is a little bit more aware of how much things cost. Your counting by the minute, it's like one hundred bucks there, one hundred bucks there, one hundred bucks there.  You weren't allowed to have conversations cause your using too much money but that was the biggest stuff. Our independent stuff, I'd just go into this home like studio and I'd stay there from like ten o'clock at night until six o'clock in the morning and I just tried everything I could, I mean, I'd like to do that again definitely, just the freedom you have. I know for one thing I learned, we were in Capitol Studios in LA and Record One and all these major world class studios, I don't know but like just the vibe. It's great to have good tones but ninety per cent of the people don't listen to tones they just listen to the vibe your getting in the room and we were lucky to get that in such a short time on this album but the next one, I think I'd like to take it just a little more relaxed, go rent a house on the coast some place and do something low key.
Something like Incubus did?
Yeah, they did that Morning View record, didn't they?
Yeah
Even more remote, I mean the Malibu Coast isn't quite as desolate as I'm thinking. There's some crazy houses up the West Coast of British Columbia, like your in the middle of nowhere, it would be nice there, a change of scenery.
I don't know if I could stay there for two months
Yeah, we'd have lots of breaks I'm sure Maybe there will be lots of waves outside to surf, we'll see
You could always just go to Hawaii
That's true, Bob Rock's place
Yeah
Tonic went there last year to do their record, roughing it over there in Maui
Yeah, roughing it! The one question I have to ask you is why Maverick?
Why Maverick?
Well, see I've heard horror stories about Maverick, so every time a new band signs I go Oh, why did you go with Maverick?
We were really excited because they offered the most artistic freedom of anybody that was there and we really liked what they had done with the Deftones, a band that didn't get a lot of radio support and they pushed them and pushed them and pushed them until the album did something and we were liked that building philosophy and I think maybe that's changed since we got signed a little bit. One of the guys who were real instrumental in bringing us in by the name of Russ Rega, he comes from a managing position in the industry and he's the kind of guy that will get you psyched up and get you through it without LA poppy cock ya know, he just makes it real and gets you excited and he kind of got this kind of spiritual aspect to our music and life aspects and we just picked up on all kinds of aspects, but Russ isn't there anymore
Ut Oh
So much for that
(laughing) Do you still feel confident though?
Yeah, I mean, I know....that's kind of a bit of a question mark for me right now. We've had a record done for like eight months and we're just kind of sitting back and waiting for things to happen and it's a little frustrating.
I'll have to re-talk to you in like a year!
Yeah, then I'll be bitter, I'll be on heroin or something like that
Oh Stop! (laughing)
Oh Stop! (laughing)
(laughing) Yeah, I guess it's just early, we're just waiting, we're right on the edge and we're going to find out if we made the right choice or not. (laughing)
Right
The other choices we had, ya know, we could have gone into a bidding war with Interscope and Maverick and Dreamworks and Columbia, but looking at all those other labels, I don't think I would have chose, Maverick is one of the smaller labels, ya know, they have the major label power through Warner, but they're still like a boutique label, there's only like thirty artists on there, so yeah that was what we were excited by. There are a lot of bands having problems with labels
Yeah, I think the whole industry is going through a power over sell
Yeah, I heard somebody say the other day that there won't even be CD's five years from now, it's pretty insane. I think the record label industry has just become more and more obsolete. You can have a great production, a great marketing program with the Internet. I'm going to miss the packaging, ya know, getting the record, crack open the cellophane thing and getting the artwork.
And trying to open up with that stupid tape on the top on the CD
Oh, that's the best, I've got this great little canine tooth
Oh you do
I can just slice it open in a second so let me know if you have any CD's you want opened.
When you come to town, I'll bring them all, and I'll be can you open all these (laughing)
Beautiful
(laughing) That's what you'll do pre-show time
(laughing) Good way to relax
Yeah, hey it's a meditation
Exactly
You write mostly all the lyrics?
Yeah, I write all the lyrics
I see that you go from like a personal aspect to like social issues, you have a song about religion in there?
Yeah, it's IN GODS NAME. Yeah, I wrote that after September 11th. I had written most of the song before that and it was just, we have a lot of faith in this band and we don't want to shove that down anybody's throat but it seeps out sometimes but that song was about just being pissed off at people using religion to justify hatred. I don't blame anybody who hates organized religion cause they're responsibly for the crusades to the KKK to 9/11. That's what that was all about being someone who has faith and all these people using God's name to justify killing and hatred.
When your writing, where do you draw the line, like this is too much to write about or do you not even think about that?
Hm....If I'm going to talk about that issue, I gonna make sure that it relates to everybody. A lot of people who get into thing so deep that they become so personal and a lot of people can't relate to. U2 pulled it off very well I think. I tried to do that as much as I can. My antenna gets turned off pretty quick because I get really turned off by a lot of cheesy music (laughing). It's got to be relevant, ya know, and if it's not relevant to everybody and I thought IN GODS NAME was relevant to everybody and affected so many people. There's people in the Christian faith, there's people in the Muslin faith, it started and they just screwed up a good thing, kind of tainted it for everybody and killed people and worse and that's what that was about, just kind of telling those people to get lost or whatever.
Do you find that is your proudest moment on the record lyrically?
Hm....Yeah, I have lines that I like better than lines in that song but I think as a whole, it was kind of neat, we went down with Tonic, we're Canadians and we were playing like in Tennessee right when the war started in Iraq so we were sort in this hot bed of guns and God, guns and God and we sang that song and we could hear a pin drop when we played it, people were listening and some people interpreted it as an antiwar song and they were trying to justify this war as much as others, that was the tongue in cheek part but it's the kind of song that gets people to notice, ya know. If you can't hum our songs then you have nothing to latch on to with the band. I think that's how you build a long career by getting people to know you by the lyricist. I kind of latch on that aspect as well, so I guess, man, it's one of my favorite songs on the record.
Cool, all right. When your playing live, I mean, you've gone out with Tonic, and you have kind of the same vibe going on, did the fans every night, they must have not known who you were
No, we're the band that no one's heard of
(laughing) So, were they willing to come up and listen?
Oh, yeah it was amazing. I think we had these little demo CD's and we sold I think like one in four people bought one so I think it was a great response for a band no one had heard of before. That's why getting back home, you feel like the ball's rolling, you wanna get out and play for more people. Get us back out there, I want to play for more people.
(laughing) How did you act with fans, I mean, were they all genuine people or did you get some crazy people out there?
Hm....I don't know, hm it's was great. Anybody who can listen or learn to listen to what we've done here on this record, you've got to show them nothing but gratitude. They're the whole reason your able to do it. No, people are great except for them confusing my A's (Canadian hey) in the southern tour. Personality is pretty bad but no people were great.
Now you guys didn't do East Coast, right?
We did New York, Tennessee, North Carolina
OK. Had you been to any of these places?
We had done a couple of shows in New York before, probably four shows in New York, a couple for a label and fun days out there for Teen Suicide Prevention or something a couple of years ago. Yeah, that went really well, hold down a couple of theaters, I don't know how we did that, nobody knew who we were, it must have been good promo.
It must have been intrigued by you (laughing)
Maybe, we'll go with that
Back in the day, I heard you guys played for a hospital benefit?
(laughing)
Is this true?
Yeah, we would play anywhere
Oh OK, but this was a special hospital benefit?
Yeah, sex therapy
(laughing)
Yeah, that was wonderful
Did you know about it before going it?
No, we had no idea. We got there and we thought we were the opening band and we get there and there's a table and a microphone and it was Rona Astin doing her sex therapist question and answer for kids. What can get you psyched up for that but a little rock show before it.
(laughing) Did you learn anything?
Yeah, I learned a whole bunch about STD's and everything that I ever wanted, actually I was in the front row asking all the questions
Did she give you some condoms afterwards?
(laughing) The kids were probably hoarding them.
After this, were you more choosy in what you did, as in playing shows?
Nah, we early on, this was probably 1999 or 2000 that we did that, we'd do high school shows, every high school we could get in to, we'd go in and set up and play during they're lunch hour and play for the kids for free. We'd play wherever we could, water slides, when your in Vancouver you gotta kind of, we're just outside of Vancouver, actually not even in Vancouver, we just say that to try and sound cool. You kind of just take what you can get and I think that's one thing that has helped us is our drive, our willingness to do things that a lot of other bands won't do. We just go in play for people, try to make a couple of fans and we can ask some questions about sex at the same time
(laughing) You learnt a lot about sex for the whole touring process now.
Exactly (laughing) we are all informed
Now, you also had a big fan base in Seattle?
Yeah, we did a bunch of high school shows down there too. Didn't play as much as we did in Vancouver because of visas and stuff, we'd have to lie at the border every time we wanted to cross.
How are people looking at you now in your home town?
I walked into a grocery store the other day and this girl was behind the counter and she goes hey, your the singer from DAKONA right and I go yeah and she said I used to watch you when I was in high school. I realized I felt like a has-been in a little town, it's just been so quiet for so long. As soon as something does happen, people go there they go again, we've played maybe two shows locally in the past year and a half and it's been kind of quiet. We just been waiting for this record to come out so we can play our scene here but it's been cool just taking off and playing places we don't know where there are no preconceptions.
When is the album actually coming out?
The date we have now is September 9th.
September????
September 9th, radio the end of June
You Serious!!
Yes
That's a long ways away!
Yeah. I don't know if that will change at all, it could maybe be sooner but
God, I hope so
Radio is not too far off. It's like four or five weeks away from radio date so
The single is GOOD, right?
GOOD
the single, right
Wow! Your gonna have to write a new album for me!
Yeah, I've got one here. I can send it to you
Oh you do (laughing) Well, send it my way (laughing)
We seriously got about twenty-five, thirty songs, this is like the longest record cycle of all times
Holy cow!
I hope your still interested by the time it comes out
We're gonna have to do like five more interviews before the album comes out
Yeah, we'll come over with some CD's opening sessions or something like that
There ya go. Maybe we can have like a sex therapist interview (laughing) I don't know
(laughing) I'll call Rona, see if I can get her on the line (laughing)
(laughing) OK. One of my last questions is if you could describe your band members, how would you describe each of them?
We kind of do, the body part analogy
OK
Brook is, I'm going to say the hands, Shane the feet. John is the heart and I guess I'd have to be the head, so we're basically a giant head and a heart and feet and hands, so if you want to do an illustration of DAKONA
That would be beautiful (laughing). OK, is there anything else you want to add, anything we left
out?
I probably should but I can't think of anything now.
All right, I hope everything goes OK and tell your band that I really like them
Awesome
and we will talk again soon once
Yeah, if you need anything Stephanie, just give us a call
I will
All right
All right, thank you
Thanks so much
All right, bye                              

~ eastcoastromper.com

 

 

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