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In-depth Interview with Joe Purdy

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  • ah I'm so sad the show sold out in vienna tonight :( come back to DC or Baltimore!
  • barbara you should go to joepurdy.com and you can listen/buy his cd's there
  • Who is this guy?? I'd like to hear more of his music.
  • l love everything you sing, pretty much listen to your cd's and nothing else. you're amazing.
  • Your lyrics are pure gold, like sunshine on fields of wheat.
  • Great voice, great version! Like to hear more of this guy!
  • Ever been to Fargo, ND? We would love to have you!
  • Play in minneapolis before July 7th so I can see you!
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Joe Purdy

Joe Purdy

Total fans: 17,981
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    In-depth Interview with Joe Purdy

    Joe Purdy in-depth interview with ANTIQUIET


    Joe Purdy: No Record Contract, No Problem
    June 3rd, 2008 by Johnny Firecloud

    There's a wolf on Joe Purdy's property. The folk singer / songwriter's back home in Arkansas after a lengthy globe-trotting touring and recording adventure that's covered more than a few countries over the past few years, and he's been working outside, clearing brush and building fences- in between storms, that is.

    "The first time I saw him was at like 6:30 in the morning," Joe told me over the phone from a swing on his back porch. "It was raining. Raining hard. And we're just across from the water here at the end piece of this little stretch of road, but this wolf was sitting at the top of the hill in the middle of the road, right on the yellow line, just laying there in the rain like a king. It was fucking beautiful. That kind of stuff… having the time, slowing down a little bit, it does something for the soul that doesn't translate in the city."

    That could possibly be the best description of Joe's music you could ask for. Most of his material sounds raw and immediate, and that's how it should be. The two-take spontaneity of the songs keep them fresh, allowing for a timeless sense gravity without nostalgia, an unpretentious sense of self-awareness that you don't find too often these days.

    Joe Purdy: No Record Contract, No Problem

    The last four records Purdy's done have been spontaneous events in London, Paris, Scotland and New York, documenting events virtually as they happened, much like one of his heroes, Bob Dylan, used to do. His appraoch is a rare delivery of honest immediacy, and it seems to be working. To date, he's sold more than half a million single paid downloads, and his song Can't Get It Right Today has likely been all over your TV in Kia ads and Grey's Anatomy.

    The reception has been huge, and the labels are foaming at the mouth to cash in on this would-be-could-be superstar, but Joe's flatly turned down every offer that's been made. He releases the records only the way he wants to, and has lucked out like a Vegas champion in the press. But the days of blind luck in the music industry and are dead and gone, and now more than ever, people have all the tools they need to uncover the bullshit gristle before they're tricked into parting with their money. To move the numbers Purdy does, the music's got to be good, or at least meticulously designed for a particular demographic.

    It also takes something more than a quality product to sell more than half a million paid single downloads without a label or any major promotion- it takes common sense. You can go to joepurdy.com and listen to all his records, anywhere you want. Try doing that at the website of any major label. Restrictions, restrictions, restrictions.

    Joe took a break from trying to tame the wild beast to talk to us about everything from iTunes and the motivation of heartache, to the importance of finding truth in the music.

    Antiquiet: Has the 'Feist' effect officially taken hold now? Are you the 'Lost song guy' or the 'Kia commercial guy?'
    Joe Purdy: I guess to my cable guy, yeah (laughs)… It's not so much me that they recognize as the song. Most people still have no fucking clue, but I've got no complaints. It's been really great for me, and I've gotten a lot of 'wouldn't have found it otherwise' comments. It's funny, usually you have to submit for these kinds things, but Kia actually emailed me the commercial and said 'what do you think?' And it's fuckin' hilarious, and since I really don't get to be funny a lot with all my sad bastard music, I was like yeah, let's do it. I don't get a chance to get laughs very often.

    Antiquiet: I read a quote of yours that said TV shows are the new reasons musicians don't have to rely on major labels.
    Joe Purdy: Did I say that? Well, I think it's true, so I'll cop to that. For me at least it's been that way. I wasn't always so anti-label, I was just anti-being told what to do. What comes along classically with that is being told to change stuff, or the label's gonna bring somebody in to clean this or that up. And the ownership thing as well- I don't think anybody should own an artist's work and make their living off of something they didn't create. I understand income participation, when you're helping somebody to get a record out there or a piece of music out there, or like when Brian (Klein, manager) is working my stuff and keeping my entire being together with all the calls he takes and things he monitors and puts together. But when it comes to somebody having a say in what you can do even though they're not the ones that made it, I have a large problem with that.

    Antiquiet: The format's so different compared to when we were kids. The convenience of access is just light years beyond when we were kids, bugging the guy at the record store every day to find out when the next whatever album was coming out…
    Joe Purdy: Exactly, man. Even from just a few years ago, when Lost came out, that was the first placement I'd ever had, I knew about iTunes but not really. It's not like it was something that everybody used. I had made that Julie Blue record as kind of a personal diary, I made it in 3 days and it was all about my time at the river. Then all of a sudden this thing came up and they want me to do this other version of the song for the show, so I did, and we got it up on iTunes. But people started writing all over these message boards making comparisons to like NIck Drake or John Mayer or whatever, and that was really the only way you could find out about what I was doing. And nobody could go to a store and get it, so people needed a place to find these kinds of things. Now everybody, including my folks, know how to use iTunes. And when a song comes on, you Google 'Kia commercial' or whatever, and it pops up a YouTube video, but you've also got the website where they give the name and with one click of a button you can sample it and buy it. That's only been in the last few years, and it's amazing to me how quickly things move.

    Antiquiet: It only took iTunes five years to become the 1 music retailer in the US.
    Joe Purdy: Somebody told me that iTunes is competitive not just on the internet level but in retail as well. I could be wrong, but I think it's Wal-Mart, iTunes and Best Buy in the top three music retailers. They've definitely done their thing well.

    Antiquiet: It comes down to convenience. There's millions of people, particularly young people who have no qualms at all about downloading thousands and thousands of albums illegally. That's everyone from an overzealous music junkie in every sense of the word, to a little kid in his bedroom who's just heard Led Zeppelin for the first time. iTunes makes it legitimate with the smallest amount of effort. It's just easy, affordable, and instead of spending $18 on a product that you don't really know if you wanna commit to, you can buy one track at a time, sample things, it's ideal.
    Joe Purdy: Absolutely, man. It is.

    Antiquiet: I think you're a shining example of the best case scenario, in that you just fell into the slipstream of the new world. You're suddenly all over the place.
    Joe Purdy: Yeah, I have been really lucky and blessed. You know, overall, including iTunes, it's gotta be a rough time for the label guys, trying to figure out ways to stay alive in this day and age. If they want to keep any integrity about what they're signing at all, it makes it hard to feed their families. I get all that, and it's a real bummer, but at the same time this new world has weeded out so much bullshit- it's about weeding out the bullshit A&R guy that slipped by on some slimy shit. Weeding out and leaving the ones that truly know their shit with the music. The record company people that survive are the ones that, for the most part, I think really have had their heads and are true music lovers, still in the mix, wanting to find good stuff and wanting to put it out for people.

    But a great example is what you were just talking about- being able to get one track instead of an entire record, that weeds out a lot of bullshit. It does make a difference. It would've made the difference for me in a lot of instances on whether I could own a piece of music or not. Because back in the day I didn't have the money to own a CD that I wasn't sure about. But now if you like tune, you can go get it, and you can get one at a time. It truly does weed out the bullshit.

    There's obviously a thick saturation of music, because everybody can do it with the new digital world. But at the same time, they can sit there and exist, but they're not going to climb unless it's good, unless it's something worth having. People are a little more savvy then then used to be.

    Antiquiet: Sure, there's a quality filter, for sure. What do you say to somebody who thinks that the record company's problems lie in the fact that they're no getting behind the idea that the artist should release smaller, more focused bursts of music, like a series of EPs?
    Joe Purdy: It's hard to know because, for me… (laughs)

    Antiquiet: You run with a totally different format, you're just a songwriting juggernaut.
    Joe Purdy: Yeah, I just write songs, man. That's what I do. And I love records. I love concept records, I love a group of songs that sound like they belong together. Like Willie Nelson's Red Headed Stranger- that's a story, through and through, how do you fuck with that? That's the good stuff. And like Blood On The Tracks. That record's the quintessential heartbreak record. When you've been through that thing that you thought was gonna kill you, that's when you're ready for Blood On The Tracks. And you listen to every one, you listen to Idiot Wind when he says "You're an idiot, it's a wonder you still know how to breathe," all the way to "If you see her, say hello, she might be in Tangier."

    So that kind of stuff, I mean I'm a romantic at heart in those kinds of senses. I grew up listening to records, and I still listen to records, and it's mostly older stuff. I've had my pop's old record colleciton, and that's what still plays in the house. That's the stuff I love. Anytime somebody wants to put something out, more power to 'em. That's great. But for me, I can't stop every four songs to make up a cover. It's not in my blood. If I've got a full, cohesive thought it's gonna take a good ten songs.

    Antiquiet: Speaking of, where do the songs come from? What's your motivation?
    Joe Purdy: I guess I really don't know. But it's the one thing that I realized I could just do. I guess I had a goal, where I wanted to make ten records before I turned 27. I was on a real race to do that, so every trip we took… we made one in Paris, one in London, one in New York, one in Scotland… that's the one we're mixing right now. New Mexico, LA… I don't know. I didn't figure out that I could write a song until I was like 21 and I was out in California. But once I figured that out, I wrote a record that week and recorded it like a week later, and that was my first record. It hurts my ears now, to hear my singing back then, beacuse I never sang in front of everybody, either. I'd do back-ups or play guitar in a band, but I'd never been a lead vocal guy or anythign like that. But ever since then, I mean… I had 21 years to write about during that time. I had a lot of hometown shit from way back to write about, a lot of stuff, and then I really started doing some major living in between then and now, and got to travel the world a little bit on it. Got caught up in lots of funny situations, lots of great situations and heartbreaking situations, and just tried not to be afraid to live, and do it every day.

    That was a great thing about the way the guys were doing it back in the day. My feelings on even like Dylan, why he was so prolific… Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again- I mean, he took the time to write it down. However crazy his trip was, whatever happened in that single night, he took the time at the end of the night to write it down. He didn't just pass it up and go to the next time. He didn't just let it go and go play a bunch of shows and fuck off. He took the time to always make the art. I've always had a format like that, ever since I felt like I could write a little bit, that the art was what it's all about. I enjoy making art, and I want to make as much good art as I can before I die. So that's the main goal, and if that stays the main goal and I still enjoy it, then like, so far everything else has just fallen into place.

    Joe Purdy Live with Pete Townshend of The Who

    Antiquiet: I came across a YouTube clip of you playing Bye Bye Love with Pete Townshend in Chicago when, last year?
    Joe Purdy: Yeah, that's right, that's right.

    Antiquiet: That was fantastic, but Let My Love Open The Door was great. That was fantastic.
    Joe Purdy: Yeah, that was fun. That was a lot of fun to do.

    Antiquiet: That's just one of those performances that knocks you on your ass for a minute. It's a perfect example of music that just reaches right to your core.
    Joe Purdy: Thank you man, that's great. I always loved that tune and that melody. And anyone who gets together with Pete wants to do the Who stuff, and it's all love, but I was like man, what can we do to completely change it up? Cause he's just this massive rock star, but also a great, sweet fella, and I was like, let's just do something a little different, let's slow it down to a blues folk number and see what happens. And it just happened to work out. The funny part about the bridge though, 'cause scientists have maintained for years that chords have never been found for that one. We were both playing a thousand different things, but then you make it through the bridge and it gets back to the easy part and you're like "yeah!"

    Antiquiet: Paris In The Morning is such a beautiful title for an album. How well does the title's beautiful melancholy represent what you were feeling when you were making it?
    Joe Purdy: Oh thanks, man. It was a fine time. It was the best of times and the worst...

  • Bulletin_post
    SIGN THIS PETITION TO GET JOE ON LATE NIGHT TELEVISION!!

    a group of fans decided to create a petition to get Joe on a late night television show. We thought we'd pass it along and think you should as well.

    http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/joepurdyforlatenight/


  • Bulletin_post
    HELP US CHART ON ITUNES!!!

    Hello Folks!

    We need your help. "Can’t Get It Right Today" has been charting on the Itunes rock charts for the past few weeks and today it’s 15!!! That’s pretty huge considering that Joe doesn’t work with a record label. Let’s make Purdy history and try to get it in the top 10!!

    Here’s what you can do. Add it to your page!! Add the banner below to your page and send it out in a bulletin. Buy the song if you haven’t already!!

    LET’S DO THIS!!

    Thanks,
    joepurdy.com

  • Bulletin_post
    HELP US CHART ON ITUNES!!

    Hello Folks!

    We need your help. "Can't Get It Right Today" has been charting on the Itunes rock charts for the past few weeks and today it's #29. That's pretty huge considering that Joe doesn't work with a record label. Let's make Purdy history and try to get it in the top 10!!

    Here's what you can do. Add it to your page!! Add the banner below to your page and send it out in a bulletin. Buy the song if you haven't already!!

    LET'S DO THIS!!

    Thanks,
    joepurdy.com

  • Bulletin_post
    2nd SET ADDED TO NYC SHOW

    By overwhelming demand, we added a 2nd set to April 11th's show at the Living Room at midnight. The 9pm show is SOLD OUT.

    We may release a few tickets for the 1st set but make sure you get your tickets now for the midnight show!!

    PURCHASE TICKETS HERE



  • Bulletin_post
    NYC SHOW!!

    Joe Will be playing the Living Room in NYC on April 11 at 9pm.  Tickets go on sale after 5pm March 26. 

     

    Get your tickets before they sell out!

     

    http://www.livingroomny.com/ 

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