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    Monday, April 29, 2024

    Despite hearing damage, Stray Cats' Brian Setzer is ready to rumble with new album

    Unlike you, me and the rest of the world, Brian Setzer welcomed the pandemic shutdown. How's that? 

    The Twin Cities singer-guitarist-bandleader absolutely, positively needed a break. Doctor's orders. Setzer has tinnitus, a constant ringing in his ears — the bane of any musician who likes to play loud.

    In 2019, after a successful summer reunion tour with 1980s hit-makers Stray Cats, tinnitus forced him to cancel his annual holiday shows with the Brian Setzer Orchestra.

    "I needed to put the brakes on. Forty years on the road," Setzer said recently. "This (pandemic) made me slow down because I probably wouldn't have. So it was good timing."

    COVID-19 knocked out any chance of a holiday tour in 2020 and 2021 (he had to decide by February, when vaccines were just ramping up).

    So Setzer recorded a solo album. In isolation. Remotely.

    He made "Gotta Have the Rumble" — his first solo album in seven years — by recording his guitars and vocals in the Terrarium, a northeast Minneapolis studio, with engineer Jason Orris.

    "It was the easiest thing," he said. "There was nobody else in the studio. (It wasn't:) 'One guy's on the phone, one guy's got a hangover. I make a mistake and we all have to do it again.' It was just me and the engineer."

    Actually, Setzer thought he was just making demos of a few songs. But producer Julian Raymond — with whom he'd worked on a 2011 Glen Campbell album, "Ghost on the Canvas" — wanted to hear the demos. Raymond said he had a way of making an album happen remotely.

    "The drummer was in Nashville, and the bass player was in Memphis," said Setzer, who calls himself an "old-school guy" accustomed to everyone recording together in the same room. "I wasn't expecting much, but he sent it back and I was pretty blown away by it."

    Setzer hasn't even met his rhythm section. "I barely know who they are. I know Dave Roe was Johnny Cash's bass player for the last (several) years. The drummer (Victor Indrizzo) is from Long Island. He got it. He almost played like a big band drummer."

    "Gotta Have the Rumble" is a splendid showcase for Setzer's versatile guitar mastery, embracing surf twang, spaghetti western film music, jump blues, rockabilly bop, bluesy rock and his signature twang-abilly.

    He chose the title for two reasons: motors and guitars.

    "The rumble of motorcycles and hot rods, that's me. That inspires me. But it's also about me missing that sound of my guitar amp that makes the guitar rumble.

    "Dealing with tinnitus — picture a tea kettle going off in your head all the time — it was maddening. It never goes away. You deal with it. I felt despondent that I wouldn't be able to use my nice big Fender amp again. It (the title) really fit my life right now."

    Living out by Lake Minnetonka, Setzer rides his motorcycles and clears his head. Melodies come to him, some sparked by ideas from lyricist Mike Himelstein, who helped pen six of the new album's 11 numbers.

    "He came to a show and introduced himself about 20 years ago. We just hit it off. I've had that with very few people. I had that with Joe Strummer," the late Clash frontman, who collaborated on two tracks for Setzer's 1996 album, "Guitar Slinger."

    A professional songwriter in Los Angeles for four decades, Himelstein has also collaborated with Stray Cats and blues guitarist Joe Bonamassa while working on many Disney projects including Winnie-the-Pooh and the Mickey Mouse Club.

    "Brian is a big title guy," Himelstein said. "He always had 'Rockabilly Riot,' which I thought was just a great title, so I sent him lyrics."

    He and Setzer came up with the new song "Stack My Money" via a phone conversation about how neither had lived up to his parents' expectations. "Learn a trade, young man. Music isn't a career" was what both heard.

    "I didn't take my dad's advice," Himelstein said, "and here I am unloading a truck (full of cash)."

    In "The Cat With 9 Wives," Himelstein penned a line about twins from the Twin Cities who married the same guy. "I had to get nine wives into a song at a manageable length, so the idea of having twins was to save some time," the lyricist explained.

    Said Setzer: "I read the lyrics and I laughed. That's so clever.

    "I collect guitar riffs. I pull out my trusty plectrum holder and my sheet music. I think I've got something that will fit. I wrote the song in like 10 minutes."

    Setzer's own wife, Hopkins-reared Julie Reiten Setzer, sings backup on two tunes with a bandmate from her 1990s Twin Cities group the Dust Bunnies, Jennifer Goforth.

    "I let them talk at the end of 'Off Your Rocker.' I said, 'I want you girls to give me a sass.' I would answer them, and they would cut me off. We did it for a laugh, and it came out so funny that we left it on the record."

    The closing track on "Rumble" comes with a self-explanatory twist, "Rockabilly Banjo."

    "My grandfather gave me a banjo when I was a kid. I used to take it to school and play 'She'll Be Coming Around the Mountain' for singalongs," Setzer recalled.

    At the same time, he was playing guitar — which of course became his favored instrument.

    The pandemic forced guitar star Brian Setzer to hit pause -- and then hit record. (Tom Sweeney/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)

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