Illinois Entertainer April 2017 | Page 26

Continued from page 26 new AFI effort underway (the new AFI (The Blood Album), he nevertheless pounced on the chance to see where the trio’s as-yet-unformed concept might lead. “And in a couple of days, he sent us his ideas back, and the rest is history,” says Kanal. “We got in a room and started working on stuff, and all four of those ini- tial ideas made the album. Then we went on to write 25 more ideas together, so we had close to 30 songs, of which 12 made the album.” There were two difficult aspects to launching the franchise, Kanal, 46, explains. The first was secrecy, recogniza- ble musicians from two such high-profile groups getting together in an L.A. studio without arousing any ‘What are these guys up to?’ suspicion. The music came easy. The camaraderie came easy. Playing organ- ic, unforced music together in one room came easy. But keeping it all on the down- low did not. But over nearly three hush- hush years, the quartet mapped out its retro-hip ‘80s-reverent path, and put the finishing touches on its eponymous full- Dreamcar, perhaps a subtle homage to Peter Murphy’s old spinoff with the late Mick Karn, Dalis Car. But one thing’s for certain – Dreamcar allowed Havok to stretch his full vampiric wingspan, as he flutters Bela Lugosi-like over the group’s often upbeat Modern English-textured tones. And Kanal loves that light/dark contrast. “I think Davey gets to explore different things with Dreamcar that he doesn’t nec- essarily get to explore with his other differ- ent projects,” says Kanal, a longtime fan of legendary, bass-heavy ‘80s outfits like The Cure, New Order. “So for all of us, this has been a great creative exercise in experi- mentation, where we got to do things with- out any limits. Because nobody knew about the band, there was no expectation for so long. We didn’t have a record com- pany that we had to run stuff by, we didn’t have a manager that we had to play stuff to. We were just doing this for the music’s sake. So it was like, ‘Does that sound cool, doing that?’ ‘Yeah. That sounds cool.’ ‘Okay, good.’ So we got to follow our pas- lengther, which it will be premiering via a handful of West coast club dates, which Kanal couldn’t wait to play. “We haven’t done clubs for a long time,” he sighs. “So I’m excited to get back onstage so my girls can see me play and go, ‘Oh – so that’s what my dad does.’” Still, there were a couple of close calls, where certain out- siders nearly caught on to the truth. Like the time in 2015, when all four performers left their studio sanctuary (where Tim Pagnotta was producing) to grab some cof- fee at a nearby roastery. “The kid who was working there kind of put it all together, but we were like, ‘Oh, we’re just hanging out,’ but he still suspected something more,” he adds. “But for the most part, we were able to keep it secret for a really long time.” The second obstacle? Kanal laughs. Believe it or not, the simple act of choosing a name. No sooner had they settled on a particular moniker than they would dis- cover that it was already being used by another group elsewhere in the world, or that – upon reflection – it didn’t sound so cool after all. Sometimes it took a signifi- cant other chiming in, calling it the worst title they’d ever heard, to dissuade them from proceeding with it. Eventually, it was up to Havok to choose the winning sion, our seeds of passion that were grow- ing. And for four guys that have been in the music industry for such a long time, to press the reset button and start fresh with our creativity?” He sighs. “That is a really rare thing to happen.” Asked to pinpoint his ‘80s desert island discs, the bassist gets uneasy. He hates that question because he’s certain that he’ll make several glaring omissions that he’ll truly regret later. But he arrives at some interesting choices, like Sigue Sigue Sputnik’s underrated debut Flaunt It, plus classic sets from his hero Prince, like Under the Cherry Moon and the adventurous Around the World in a Day. And he admits to being on a huge Thompson Twins binge for the past several months (“My wife can confirm this,” he adds). Which led to some of the edgier mixes he attempted at Pagnotta’s urging, like the funky fretwork heard throughout “On the Charts.” His ini- tial plan was to waive his No Doub