Hurt Biography
"Why is the band called Hurt?" asks
front man J. Loren with characteristic intensity. "Have you heard the CD? Does
it seem applicable?
"I felt that was definitely the
word," he continues. "It
had
to be called that."
Indeed, this young band and its
ambitious debut album, certainly live up to the name. The LP veers between
whispering and roaring, melody and brutality, crushing power chords and gentle
acoustic moments. The convergence of those extremes -- delivered in irregular
time signature with orchestration, no less -- define the “Hurt” sound. Yet just
when it seems that it's all thunder and lightning, eight songs into the album
the lighthearted "Danse Russe" comes soaring in like a break in the clouds, its
cheerful melody and gentle acoustic guitars displaying a drastically different
side of the band.
Traces of Tool, Nirvana, and
mid-period Metallica flicker throughout the album, but Hurt have created a
remarkably individual sound for a debut. It is mainstream enough to fit in on
rock radio, yet unusual and edgy enough to appeal to the fringes -- and those
extremes are echoed in the band's two core members.
The songs, singing and guitar playing
emanate from one J. Loren -- the 24-year-old product of a strict home in rural
Virginia, reared on a steady diet of religion, gospel and classical music and
home schooling. He studied classical violin, can play virtually any stringed
instrument and, as he puts it, "played many a hoedown," but rock was forbidden.
He never even heard rock music properly until, one day in his teens, "I just
happened to be at a friend's house and I heard Pearl Jam's 'Jeremy' on TV. It
stopped me in my tracks. Classical was really the only music I had gotten into
like that." He cites Vivaldi as his strongest influence.
The yin to J.’s yang is drummer Evan
Johns, also 24, who was raised in Hollywood in just about the most rock
environment possible: His dad is Andy Johns (who engineered or produced Led
Zeppelin, the Stones, Joni Mitchell, Rod Stewart, Free, Television, Cinderella,
Van Halen and countless others), his uncle is Glyn Johns (ditto the Who, Stones,
Kinks, Eagles, Clapton, Faces -- do we need to go on?) and his cousin is Ethan
Johns (ditto Emmylou Harris, Ryan Adams, Kings of Leon and Rufus Wainwright).
While that background evokes visions
of young Evan doing homework in the middle of scenes from "Almost Famous," the
reality was about half that. "A lot of my elementary years were spent hanging
out with Cinderella or Van Halen -- we'd have them over for dinner or the
holidays," he recalls. "And I was always hanging around the studio. The drums
looked like the coolest thing, and I bugged my dad like crazy and finally, when
I was about five, he bought me and my brother kid-size drums kits."
Not that his early efforts were
encouraged. "When I first started out, my dad told me I was no good and I should
just give up. But after awhile he was like, 'Hey, you're not so bad, keep it
up.' It just made me try harder -- every day after school for four hours."
He started gigging before he was even
in his teens. "I'd be in bands with 30- and 40-year-olds, waiting outside until
it was time to play because I was underage. Then I'd go home with mom because it
was a school night." He focused on jazz drumming during high school to expand
his vocabulary, but plunged back into rock after graduation, playing in a series
of "mostly heavy" bands until one day ...
"This friend of my dad’s had a CD of
some of J.’s songs. He was like, 'Andy, this is great just don't pay attention
to the drums, just
listen to the singer.' And my dad
said, 'If you need a drummer you should check out my son.' "
J., all the while, had been gigging
with a succession of different musicians, always under the name Hurt and was
growing frustrated.
"I'd almost given up on playing
music," he recalls. "I was working for technology companies as a contract
consultant, I was engaged and I was very, very sorrowful about abandoning music.
Then, I decided to give it one more go…
A few months later in L.A., Evan’s
dad’s friend heeded his advice and arranged for J. Loren to be on a plane to
L.A. to meet and try some recording together. "I went into the studio with J.
and right away, I was like, I've gotta get in on this," Evan remembers. "We
started on a trial basis in August 2004, like, 'Okay, we're gonna record these
demos and see what happens' -- and I loved it."
Of course, it wasn't really that
simple. "The first time I met J. it was really weird because we had only talked
on the phone, and we
were trying to feel each other out
from thousands of miles away. And when he came out here, my first impression
was, who is this guy? I can't understand him; he's so weird and obscure. But
when we started playing together, it was like, 'Okay, cool -- I know what to do
here, I feel comfortable.' And then he turned out to have a heart of gold." J.
and Evan worked up an abundance of material for a few months before plunging
into the studio to begin work on two albums the first of which is "Vol. I”. They
were assisted initially by ex-Beck bassist, Justin Meldal Johnson. (Two New
Jersey-born musicians, guitarist Paul Spatola and bassist Josh Ansley have since
joined them.)
Getting J. to discuss the emotions
and inspiration behind the songs is no easy feat. One passage from "Rapture"
reads, "She swore she heard the voice of Jesus / Telling her 'It was wrong to
keep it' / And one more thing, it looked like me"; one from "Falls Apart" goes
"Our skin tears away as our memories fade with age / And we don't even know till
it's gone ... Woe is me."
"I try to convey principles rather
than trying to preach my own story, so that people can apply them to their own
lives," he says. He allows that "Rapture" is about the "danger in setting
yourself up as god," that "Danse Russe" was inspired by poet William Carlos
Williams and "a two-day experience with a lovely person," and that "Losing" was
written "after I saw Evan's ability on the drums. I was like [chuckles
sinisterly], 'Hey buddy, I got somethin' for you!' "
And as for the intensity that runs
through every thing his band does, J.Loren simply says, "If I'm not going to
affect someone in some way, why do anything at all?"
Bio Courtesy of Total Assets
For
additions & corrections,
Click Here |