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Jake
Mathews Time after Time
Time
After Time, a memory returns to Jake Mathews that foretells
his country music future.
"When
I was 14, I traveled to Canada's Wonderland in Toronto
and entered this booth where you could record the song
of your choice," recalls the laid back Sudbury-born
singer and songwriter. "I sang Randy Travis' 'I
Told You So,' and after I recorded it, they played it
over the loudspeaker while I hung around with my friends."
A
female passerby, upon hearing Jake's voice, stopped
and turned to him. "Is that you?" she asked.
When he nodded in the affirmative, she offered some
priceless encouragement. "If you ever put out an
album of your own, I'd buy it," she said. Mathews
never got her name, but she confirmed what thousands
of others have discovered since he exploded on the scene
with 2002's Jake Mathews: this artist is a keeper.
Several
Top 20 hits and a couple of CCMA Rising Star nominations
later, Mathews continues to fulfill his destiny as one
of Canada's most exciting new country talents with the
outstanding Time After Time, his first effort for Toronto-based
Open Road Recordings, also home to The Wilkinsons and
Doc Walker.
Aside
from the Dean Dillon-Al Anderson-penned title track,
which was the most-added song to Canadian country radio
upon its release earlier this year, Time After Time
offers ten additional dyed-in-the-wool real-life slices
of country living in contemporary times. The values
and emotions expressed in such unforgettable songs as
the beer-budget, daily-grind anthem "Payin' Your
Dues" and the melancholy loneliness of "That's
Why They Call It Cheating" to the more sophisticated
life lesson of the story song "He Never Learned
How", are identifiable and applicable to everyone,
from your average Joe and Josephine to those with champagne
tastes.
"Country
music has an honesty about it that's really appealing,"
says Mathews. "And no song tells a better story
than a country song. That's what attracted me to the
music in the first place."
And
whether you're line-dancing to the irresistible honky-tonk
shuffle "My Heart Won't Let You Leave My Mind"
or grooving to the Cloud Nine love anthem "Better
World," the stylistic diversity will appeal to
you whether you love McGraw and Chesney or Haggard and
Strait.
"I
looked for songs that would connect with people and
ones I would love to perform in front of them,"
Mathews states. "Especially songs with a traditional
edge."
Kicking
it all off: "Time After Time," which Mathews
confirms acted as the initial catalyst "It's a
fun theme," says Mathews, who makes his home in
Calgary "And it really set the pace for the rest
of the album. We wanted a mix - lighthearted with a
traditional edge, so we built the album around that
song.
"But
we were also looking for songs that told more of a story,
hence the presence of 'He Never Learn How' and 'Paying
Your Dues,' the latter written by Carl Jackson, who
sings the harmony vocal on the track."
His
early recording experience at Wonderland wasn't the
only life-altering event Jake experienced at the tender
age of 14: it was also the year he began singing, playing
guitar and writing his own music, prompted by impromptu
family reunions that were as sizable as his first club
dates.
"I
come from a big family," says Mathews, whose older
brother is fellow Canadian country star Gil Grand. "My
Dad is one of 20 kids, so family reunions were literally
150 people. A lot of my aunts and uncles play guitar
or fiddle or harmonica, so we'd rent a hall, sit around
and sing. I started getting into it when I was 14. I
didn't start performing live until I was 17, but by
that time I learned to perform, write and had entered
a few local contests. George Strait was a huge influence."
Released
in 2002, his self-titled debut included a number of
singles that penetrated the Top 20: "That's How
Long", "Rush," "I'm Gone" and
"I'll Do You One Better." But Mathews was
just getting started.
"The
first album was an introduction to me and my songwriting,"
says Mathews. "But Time After Time is more focused,
more confident, more me. This truly represents who I
am as an artist. People who hear the album will know
me a little better."
Reunited
with Louis Sedmak, the producer of his debut project
Jake Mathews, the artist says he couldn't have found
a better collaborator, "Louis has a great set of
ears, and he's so well-trained in music, it just seems
we're on the same wavelength," says Mathews. "He
really understands the emotions I'm shooting for. We
just have identical visions."
Although
there's an impressive cadre of Nashville writers - Harley
Allen, Jim Lauderdale Odie Blackmon and Rivers Rutherford
among the writers that contribute to the current project
- Mathews delivers his own strong impression with a
handful of his own, including the stirring ballad "You
Got Away With Love" and the reflective "Kings
For A Day."
One
of his own compositions Mathews is particularly proud
of is "My Heart Won't Let You Leave My Mind."
"I wrote that one with Tim Taylor," says Mathews.
"The line just popped up in my head, and I figured
that since I didn't get a chance to include a good honky-tonk
shuffle on my first album, this was an opportunity too
good to pass up."
A
strong believer in public interaction, Mathews admits
that many of the songs that made Time After Time were
determined by audience reaction. "I always say
the audience is the best gauge," Mathews explains.
"I was considering the song 'Time After Time' for
my first album, but it just didn't fit with the flow
of things. I kept it in my live performance set, and
the continuing audience enthusiasm made it a no-brainer
for this album. It's the same for 'How Many Days' and
'My Heart Won't Let You Leave My Mind.' After all, fans
are the ones who phone radio stations to request songs
and they buy the albums - so it's only right that they
should have a say as to what goes on the album."
And
Mathews' favourite?
"The
song that affects me most on this album is 'He Never
Learned How,'" says Mathews. "It's about a
bull rider, and although I don't pretend to be a rodeo
or cowboy kind of guy, I think the song itself just
says so much in the story. It's about a rodeo guy that
doesn't know when to give up until it's too late. That
sentiment resonates with everyone. It's my favourite
to perform."
Rock
solid from start to finish, Time After Time earmarks
the continuing journey of an artist destined for bigger
and better things, hoping to entertain and touch everyone
he can along the way.
"I
appreciate people and I love music," says Jake
Mathews. "It's an honour and a privilege to combine
these two loves and contribute something meaningful
in the process."
And
one you'll want to come back to Time After Time.
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