COREY STEVENS BIO
Born in the small town of
Centralia, Illinois, Corey Stevens never just says he is from Illinois. After
hearing, “Oh, from Chicago?” a few too many times, he has learned the
succinct way to put it: “I’m from Southern Illinois - an hour east of St.
Louis.” St. Louis is where he saw his first baseball game and where he saw the
Rolling Stones twice on the same day. He says, “St. Louis is where I went to
and saw the huge crowds and came home with big dreams.”
But, Centralia was where he
grew up, diligently honing his guitar playing and soaking up middle America.
“My grandfather put my first guitar in my hands and the story has become well
known,” says Stevens, referring to the liner notes of his second album, "Road To Zen." He continues, “But, the rest of the story is just growing up
in a small town. I really liked it. All my friends complained of how boring it
was, but, hey, it was where I was, and I made the most of it.”
Corey Stevens is a guy who
likes to consider all the angles. Although his earliest influences were early
rock and rollers like Chuck Berry, comics who played with words to make people
laugh had a huge impact on him. When the British Invasion swept Stevens away
like millions of others, the words moved him as much as the music. It may be for
this reason that Stevens aspired to be a songwriter and not just another guitar
player.
Stevens grew up in a tight knit
family with two older sisters. He was the youngest child and only son of parents
a high school girlfriend once labeled “Leave It To Beaver parents.” He says,
“No matter how much I rebelled, and I raised a lot of hell, I always felt a
connection with my family.” Thanks to his sisters who were listening to Rock
and Roll, Stevens grew up presuming music was one of life’s necessities. He
would soon find that simple insight to be his calling.
Stevens coasted through grade
school and high school, making passing grades and not really showing any
exceptional talent. “I was no prodigy by any means,” he says of his
childhood days. “I just drifted from one fantasy to the next. One minute I
wanted to be a professional baseball player then I guess I got the music bug.
The Beatles came along followed by the Rolling Stones and that was it! The dream
or goal just got redefined, but it hasn’t changed since I was a teenager.”
Stevens still remembers the
moment when his life changed forever. In the early seventies, he jumped in his
friend’s car with three buddies and headed to Evansville, Indiana for a music
weekend at a minor league ballpark. He remembers, “It was late in the
afternoon and bands had been playing all day. The set change came and the
announcer brought on Ike and Tina Turner. Ike and the band started playing some
cookin’ music without Tina, then the stage was completely covered in smoke.
Suddenly, Tina and her back up singers appeared dancing out of the smoke! I said
to myself this is what I want to do for a living. It was truly an epiphany! ”
From that day on, Stevens ignored the odds and pursued the dream. He knew he had
a long road, but he believed in a transformation that only time could unveil.
After graduating from Centralia
High School, Stevens enrolled in college and decided on music as his major. In
1974, Stevens left home and moved to Carbondale, Illinois to attend Southern
Illinois University. Stevens studied classical music and began an intense four
year study of classical guitar. Stevens remembers, “I learned discipline and
practiced two, three, four hours a day. I was a serious music student, but I
still partied on the weekends and heard bands on the strip. Shawn Colvin was a
local and played a lot. She was great! I also spent many nights listening to Big
Twist and the Mellow Fellows. That band was great, too! I use to think all I got
out of college was the beer and the blues in the bars. But, over the last few
years I have begun to realize that the discipline and the music theory helped
shape who I am now.”
After graduating from college,
Daytona Beach, Florida was Stevens’ next pit stop. He went on a vacation and
decided to stay. Stevens recalls, “Coming from the Midwest, Daytona was a
paradise, but staying there would have meant giving up on my dream. There was
never really a choice. I had to move to Los Angeles even though I knew it would
be a dogfight and no one thought I would make a dent.”
In 1980, Stevens drove
cross-country from Florida to California. He reached Hollywood with a mission
and started meeting other musicians. He sums up his first days in Tinsel Town,
“One afternoon, I was having a few drinks with my girlfriend and two musicians
that I met in a bar called Filthy McNasty’s. They were telling me all the ins
and outs, where to find auditions, the clubs, the behind-the-scenes, and I
thought I was really getting my orientation into the Music Business. Suddenly,
one of the guys got up and said he had to go to his day job at the 7-11. I had
never heard the expression day job, but I got the gist of it…before you make
it you still have to pay the bills.”
Stevens played in original
bands and grew restless being a sideman. He worked on songwriting and played in
a few cover bands for fun. He had developed a bad taste for the Hollywood club
scene that he viewed as a misguided preoccupation with impressing the record
companies and management firms. He says, “It was just such an uptight scene. I
didn’t last long. I didn’t give up on my dream or the music industry, I just
thought I had all the time in the world and regrouped.”
Eventually, Stevens would have
two day jobs that not only paid the bills, but also put him on the path to
success. First, he worked as a messenger and learned the lay of the land. The
messenger job showed him enough of the industry to see how difficult it is to
break in and how tight a click Hollywood can be. Stevens, not one to give up,
made a plan. He realized that the messenger job had to go. He needed money to
build a small four-track studio, buy equipment, and when he was ready, make 24
track demos. In the midst of hatching his musical career, an LA Times headline
cried out to him. There was a teacher shortage and Stevens was looking for a job
to back his career. Soon, he quit the messenger job and became a third grade
school teacher for the Los Angeles Unified School District. He says, “I
don’t want anyone to think I gave up on music and became a school teacher. I
taught school, but I also practiced guitar, I wrote songs, and played gigs on
the weekends. I was still a musician at heart, but I learned a lot being a
teacher. The kids were a good influence on me. They are so honest and full of
hope.”
The plan began to materialize
in the late 1980’s when Stevens’ songwriting started to flourish. Living in
a one bedroom apartment, he set up a four-track studio in a walk-in closet and
began to sharpen his craft. He wrote “Blue Drops of Rain” and “Lessons of
Love” and started getting interest from record companies. He dedicated himself
to becoming the best songwriter he could be while juggling the teaching career
and raising his daughter born in 1988. He started his own original band and used
his teaching salary to pay for rehearsal halls and demos. Eventually the band
showcased Stevens’ original material in Hollywood and just as before, Stevens
quickly grew frustrated. He sums it up, “We did a show at what is now the
infamous Viper Room which was the Central then. We called our friends, had about
forty or fifty show up. But, when I called the club booker a few days later, I
was Corey who? I read the writing on the wall AGAIN…the Hollywood scene was
just not for me.”
Stevens amended his master
plan. He dove into guitar playing with the same passion he had approached
songwriting. He turned his songwriting studio into a guitar workshop and threw
himself into learning blues guitar. He remembers, “When I regrouped and got
into guitar, I turned my back on the music business and songwriting. I had
written a batch of songs that I thought were valid and compelling, but the
record companies passed. I had written “Take It Back,” “My
Neighborhood,” and “Blue Drops of Rain.” Those three songs ended up on the
radio in the nineties. At the time, I just thought I could keep writing songs,
but for who?” As Stevens focused on guitar playing, the spirit of Robert
Johnson invaded his thoughts. He wondered if he could disappear and reappear a
“player,” a master of the blues guitar. He woodshedded the guitar with a
renewed passion for making music, forgetting the superficial music industry and
even his own songs for a moment in time. After months of hibernation from the
stage, he got the urge to play out and began sitting in with bands. Using the E
flat tuning of Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimi Hendrix and others before him, Stevens
found himself in awkward keys, but used the challenge to sharpen his skills even
further. Soon, Stevens was ready to start another band and another journey. He
did not know it, but his plan was coming together, even if he thought he had
stopped trying. He started a band called Texas Flood and limited the playlist to
Vaughan, Hendrix, Albert King, Freddie King, Buddy Guy and Muddy Waters.
By 1994, the band evolved into
Stevens on guitars and vocals, Will MacGregor on bass and Dave Salinas on drums.
Early in the year, Stevens, using his own money, placed a bet on the band and
bankrolled an album that would become a classic, “Blue Drops of Rain.” The
album captured a fleeting moment in time when Stevens, MacGregor, and Salinas
would walk on stage in a small, smoky bar and entertain a riveted crowd with
songs like “Lenny,” “Crosscut Saw,” or “Back In Time.” Ed Tree’s
producing and Stevens’ originals would be the wild cards that proved to be
aces. Stevens brought a number of songs to the sessions that the band had not
been performing live that were perfect for the project. “The Brothers,”
written about Gregg and Duane Allman was an instant fan favorite. But, the title
track proved to be the compelling moment in the album showcasing Stevens’
bourbon drenched vocals, songwriting prowess and guitar hero chops. The years of
hard work had finally yielded a complex exhibition of influences, in sound and
lyrical use. Even a sense of humor popped up in Stevens’ choice of the Gary
Tanner song, “Headshrinker.” To Stevens who had lived through the trials and
tribulations of trying to make his mark in Hollywood, it sounded like he was
rejoicing that he had kept it all together and had not lost his mind.
An independent label signed
Stevens in 1995 and released “Blue Drop of Rain.” Although the year was not
a huge success, Stevens saw the writing on the wall and in December quit
teaching and said goodbye to his day job. In 1996, he toured seven months and
made a video for the song, “Blue Drop of Rain,” which climbed the radio
charts. The album was re-released on the independent label and Discovery Records
and made the debut Billboard Blues chart.
In 1997, Stevens recorded his
second album that yielded a top ten radio hit and video, “One More Time.”
Other songs made it on the radio and Stevens hit the road in support. By the end
of the year, Stevens had toured nine months, including a summer tour with Paul
Rodgers and Lynyrd Skynyrd, and shared the stage with ZZ Top. The title track,
“Road To Zen,” a heartfelt behind the scenes account of life on the road
seemed to sum up Stevens’ new life.
In 1998, Stevens intended to
take some time off to write, but ended up back on tour. Hitting the road in
style, Stevens and his band finally got their dream ride, a Prevost tour bus.
They played dates in the South and Midwest, setting the stage on fire just like
the days in the small bars. While on tour, Stevens bought a house in Los
Angeles. Returning home to California, Stevens experienced a brief interim of
normality and reconnected with his family after nearly two and a half years of
vans, airports, tour buses, green rooms and hotel rooms. The bus that picked him
up early in the year now let him off at a new home in the Hollywood Hills. The
four-track studio was no longer in the walk-in closet.
In 1999, Stevens continued to
write songs at home in Los Angeles. But, his radio success had left a wave of
curious fans eager to hear if he was the real deal. His loyal fans had
experienced his shows and word of mouth spread. He developed a reputation for
captivating an audience and performing his songs better than the records. Unable
to stay home too long, Stevens maintained a busy touring schedule, but still
managed to release his third album, “Getaway.” Stevens included a treasure
in the song, “This Train,” which never made it to radio, but should have.
Stevens
continues to tour, but says, “The last two years have been about getting back
to being home for a change and being a normal guy. I spent so many years inside
writing songs, inside on the phone, inside classrooms, inside hotel rooms,
inside a van or a bus that I just needed a change. I escaped into golf,
gardening, and my Tiki bar on my roof overlooking Hollywood. I just needed to be
outside. I even bought a convertible.
In 2002, Stevens reacquired ownership of his first
3 albums and his publishing in a settlement. Stevens then released a DVD of a
live concert shot in 1997 entitled “Road To Zen Tour.”
In
2003, Stevens released his fourth studio album, "Bring On The Blues,"
on Fuel 2000 distributed by Universal. Stevens started the album at Sonora
Recorders and completed it at Gary Hoey’s studios where he worked closely with
Hoey to craft his best record to date. The album combined the contemporary blues
concept of his first album, “Blue Drops of Rain,” with the classic rock of
his second album, "Road to Zen," that showcased an affirmation of
Stevens’ original style and strong songwriting skills.
Stevens
continued touring to pay the bills throughout the year and into 2004. Radio
changed and new music was overshadowed by music from the 60's and 70's making it
more difficult for an artist like Stevens to reach a new audience. But, he had
laid enough groundwork that he could tour and his agent says he never turned
down a legitimate offer to perform.
In
early 2005, Stevens returned to the studio for an album that was a departure
from the electric blues-rock template he had followed for ten years. "
Alone At Last" was released in July 2005 and demonstrated a different side
of Stevens. Stevens says, "Alone At Last was the first album I made that I
played all the instruments and did exactly as I wanted. Left to my own devices I
did pretty well. I learned a lot about the studio because I made all the
decisions and had time to think things through and explore new boundaries. I set
my own deadline and stuck to it. It was great to make a record like that and
stand behind it. It was as if the limitations were the core theme of the album.
Every musician wants to make this masterpiece record like Layla, for example,
with a lot of tracks, but going in the opposite direction was very fulfilling.
In fact, the sparsest song, "Last Temptation," just a vocal and an
acoustic guitar is probably the defining moment on the record. Having a lot
going on is great, but sometimes less is better and more honest. Not many songs
can hold up to one vocal and one guitar."
Stevens
got good feedback from fans about the acoustic album and says, "If my fans
can follow me on my path and let me try new things, I am a happy man. I can’t
make the same album over and over. If I change too much and fans don’t like
it, I can understand. I try to write quality songs and the rest takes care of
itself."
In
2006, the change came from something other than songwriting. The idea to make an
album of Albert King covers had sat on the back burner for a few years and moved
to the front burner thanks to a new record deal with Ruf Records. President
Thomas Ruf approached Stevens about a new record saying he really liked the
songs, "Crosscut Saw" and "I’ll Play the Blues For You"
from Stevens’ first record, "Blue Drops of Rain". Stevens had
already decided to make his next record a collection of Albert King covers and
had a name, "Albertville."
Stevens
sums it up, "It was too good to be true. Ruf Records came knocking and said
they liked the Albert King covers. I was already in pre-production to make an
album of King covers. It was a great coincidence. Great when it works, isn’t
it?"
Although
the album wasn’t released in 2006, the recording process consumed Stevens. He
got the contract in July, but had to leave for a brief tour. He started the
album on August 1st and finished it November 30th. He had
obligations to perform a few shows every month, so he worked every day he
wasn’t on the road, recording horns and organ in Minneapolis on a day off.
Stevens says, "I had a feeling if I worked 5 days a week I would regret it
when the end of November deadline rolled around, so I worked 7 days a week most
weeks. Stevens says he once dreamed about Albert King and the work ethic.
Stevens recalls, "I had a dream back in the early nineties when Albert was
still alive. I dreamed that I asked him for advice. I told him I was working
really hard and my guitar playing wasn’t progressing to my satisfaction.
Albert said I was over doing it. He held out his hand and made a 5. He said 5
days a week was the most he ever played.
Stevens got to meet King at a show in Santa Monica, CA. Stevens
remembers, "I shook Albert King’s hand. It was a big moment in my life.
That night he played a 4 song encore that has never been topped!"
Stevens
had the prospect of a new record label to push his new
album, " Albertville," that hit the stores in February 2007. Stevens muses optimistically, “Being a
musician is up and down. There are a lot of good and bad breaks out there for
all musicians. I prefer to think I’m lucky and always have. Hey, Steve Ferrone
played drums on my new album. I know the music business is constantly changing.
Radio ignores new artists for the most part. Copying a CD is a no-brainer. But,
there really are a lot of positive things going on. I have a band that inspires
me every night I walk on stage. I still meet music fanatics who have the same
passion I have for music. I continue to meet new fans at my shows who are there
for the first time. A lot of musicians are frustrated and bitter, but I think
they have more to be grateful for than they realize."
That
sums up Stevens, the guy who moves forward primarily by self-motivation. He does
what he does because he has something to say and doesn’t question why - just
how and when.
"Albertville" became available on February
16, 2007, the same day that Stevens performed at the Myth, a new state of the
art venue in Maplewood, MN, a few miles north of St. Paul. The show was recorded
and filmed for a DVD, but unhappy with the video, Stevens chose to release it as
a live two-CD package. "Myth Live" debuted on January 18, 2008. The
double album showcased Stevens band and his catalog of well written contemporary
blues songs.
Stevens reflects on "Myth Live," "I
toured a lot in 2007 and didn't really start working on mixing the Myth show
until September. I was busy traveling and playing music until the third week of
September and that's when I started my full blown obsessive compulsive work
ethic of tackling the Myth mixes. It was recorded in Pro Tools as one long
session, almost two hours long. It was quite unusual. For example, unlike mixing
one song at a time, anything I did to EQ a track effected that instrument for
all the songs. I also had two crowd mikes that I could blend in to the mix at
times. The end of "It's Over" includes the crowd mikes and is probably
my favorite because it sounds so live. I learned a lot just from an analytical
perspective. Anyone who wants to be a musician should spend a lot of time
listening to their live shows. Good and bad things are revealed. I learned that
the moments that I really "felt it," were the best moments. And it
surprised me because I work on technique so much and it turns out that emotion
really does matter, maybe more."
Stevens
continues to tour with his band and as a solo acoustic performer. His music is
played on XM Radio and some FM stations, and is available on iTunes, CD Baby,
and in selected stores.
Other notables:
Made a guest appearance on the
Canned Heat album, "Friends in the Can," that features his song,
“Getaway.”
Stevens’ blues guitar livened up the self release of Linda
Stevens’ debut album.
Sat in with Rock icon, Ian Anderson, in
Hollywood at the John Anson Ford Theater.
Also that night, Jim Ladd, the Last
DJ, interviewed Anderson and him on stage.
Currently,
Sun Country Airlines has added "Myth Live" to it's in flight program
on all domestic flights.
~
J.Cortez
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J.Cortez
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artwork and music copyright 2002 coreystevens.com