Long before listeners across the country ever hummed the strains of
the Counting Crows' latest hit "Round Here," Dan Jewett heard the song in a
much different context.
Jewett, who grew up in Foster City, co-wrote the song with his
bandmates three years ago in a South of Market practice studio in San Francisco.
His then band, the Himalayans, had recently auditioned a lead singer
named Adam Duritz, and was in the process of putting together enough
material for a good live show.
"As soon as he (Duritz) came in, we knew there was something cool
about his vocal style. there was a good chemistry right off the bat," said
Jewett, currently a reporter for the Foster City Progress.
Jewett and bandmates Chris Roldan (drums) and Dave Janusko (bass) are
credited for the composition on the Counting Crows' debut, "August and
Everything After," released in September on the Geffen label. The
release has sold more than 500,000 copies and is currently enjoying its
third week at No. 1 on Billboard's album chart.
According to Jewett, Duritz' lyrics and vocal melodies complemented
the band's sound.
"He came in and immediately started singing over things. His vocals
really added a new dimension to the music.
"Some of the words he sang off-the-cuff were so good, I would scribble
them down between songs because I was afraid he might forget them,"
Jewett said.
A Trademark Song
Shortly after the band officially welcomed Duritz as its singer, the
music for "Round Here" took shape, Jewett said.
"It started from a bass line that the whole band really liked. The
question then became how to expand these four notes into the whole song.
I basically added three guitar notes on top of it, and everybody flipped
out," Jewett said.
When Duritz finished penning his lyrics, the band knew it would become
its strongest song.
"It became our trademark. Every time we performed it, we would get
these
strange reactions," Jewett said. "People would just stand there with
their mouths open when we played it. After my sister first heard it she
instantly asked me for a copy of the lyrics."
According to Jewett, Duritz wrote the song about his own experience
growing up in Berkeley. The song chronicles the frustrations of a person
whose artistically talented friends have grown up and settled for
laid-back jobs.
The lyrics juxtapose the emptiness of an easy existence with the pain
associated with striving for greatness.
Garage-Band Blues
Jewett said the story always reminded him of his experience coming of
age in Foster City.
"Basically, it was the same for my friends and me playing music in my
dad's garage and dodging the police," Jewett said. "If you take a look
at the talent that came out of that garage, it's amazing."
Jewett's first band, the Batmen, formed while he was a junior at San
Mateo High School, where he also gained his first reporting experience as
a writer on the school's newspaper, the San Mateo Hi.
The band recorded and rehearsed in his father's house on Spinnaker Street
in the mid-1980s.
According to Jewett, being a garage band in the suburbs was not a
particularly glamorous experience.
"It's hard to feel like a band when you have to stop in the middle of
practice to mow the lawn," Jewett said.
After graduating from San Mateo High School in 1986, Jewett studied
philosophy at San Francisco State University. He graduated with a
bachelor of arts degree in 1991 around the time the Himalayans found
Duritz.
A Mountaintop Experience
The Himalayans played the club circuit in San Francisco for a little
over
a year, during which time they built up a considerable following and
garnered attention from the local music press.
However, in late 1991 when all things appeared to be "go", Duritz
announced
that he was leaving the band to form "Counting Crows." Shortly after
their formation, a major label bidding war erupted, out of which David
Geffen's DGC label - and the Counting Crows themselves - were winners.
Since then, Jewett has gone on to play in three other projects: the
Groove Pigs, which he describes as "unexplainable," a San Francisco
acoustic duo which he plays intense, melodic songs, and the Winthers, a
duo with a former member of the Batmen.
Jewett, meanwhile, has gone over the situation in his mind more times
than he would like to admit.
"Being in a band like that was just the best feeling in the world, and
it's too bad it had to end. But Adam (Duritz) was always very
straight-forward with us about his other projects.
"In fact, he was very active in giving us credit for the song. When
they
played local shows, he would always point us out in the audience and
say, 'hey, these guys wrote this song,'" Jewett said.
It's a Hit
Even though the song has made it into rotation on Bay Area broadcast
giants like KFOG and Live 105, as a follow-up to the crows' first hit,
"Mr. Jones," Jewett has yet to hear the song on the radio.
"They played a blip of it on and ad promoting the Counting Crows'
concert at the San Jose Civic Auditorium, but that's it," Jewett said.
The band's management recently announced it will soon release "Round
Here"
as the second video for the album.
"I always knew the song would make it, but I always thought it would
be
our version of the song. It's taken me some time to appreciate the song
in the context of their record, but I like it," Jewett said.
In the future, Jewett said he looks forward to a release by the Groove
Pigs, to be titled "Free Poster Inside," and a single by the Winthers,
who should be appearing soon on a compilation CD on New York's SpinArt
label with a song called "Where's Larry?"