Music
Chris Mills and the Distant Stars, The Oh Ones, Gerald Dowd
About Chris Mills and the Distant Stars, The Oh Ones, Gerald Dowd
[Mills'] hidden elegance lies in the twist of lovesick metaphor, the wistful chord, the revisionist take on the slamming door. – NME
It’s been 17 years since Chris Mills released his first EP, “Chris Mills Plays And Sings.” That record’s plainspoken title laid out the disarmingly simple tone for his career; the development of his craft since then has resulted in sharper songwriting, more musical ornamentation, and tours with the likes of Andrew Bird and Califone. Now, with ALEXANDRIA, Mills has increased his band’s numbers (bass player Ryan Hembrey, pianist Christer Knutsen, and drummer Konrad Meissener) and geographic scope—the Brooklyn-based troubadour’s sixth studio album was largely conceived in Scandinavia, and recorded at Chicago’s Wall To Wall Studios. (Grammy-winning engineer Ryan Freeland mixed the album.) At once intensely personal and incredibly ambitious, ALEXANDRIA is a leap forward for Mills, yet it retains the wit and keen eye for human behavior that have defined his records up to this point.
The seeds for this record, Mills’s first since 2008?s LIVING IN THE AFTERMATH, were sown by his own maturing. “There was a lot of personal upheaval and renewal going on throughout the entire writing process,” Mills recalls. “I got married; I went through some rough times and pulled myself out of them. I began to refocus on how I thought about music and art, and playing and recording. This album looks backwards and forwards at the same time.”
As such, the characters populating Mills’s have weathered life’s storms, but are by no means swept away by their tumult; instead, they look for salvation in the world around them. The loneliness precisely described on “The Sweet Hereafter” is tempered by the knowledge that there’s “magic in the mountains,” while “Castaways”—a sea shanty turned rave-up—looks for redemption in the water.
“I spent a lot of time in Scandanavia when I was writing the songs and when Christer, Ryan and I were working on the demos, and I definitely feel like that informed some of the tracks. I feel like there’s a bit of desolation in a lot of the lyrics, and a sort of ‘no man’s land’ vibe, which reflects where we were at times in the Norwegian countryside. There’s a stillness at night when you get into the mountains over there, or above the Arctic Circle, and a little loneliness that I think crept into some of the songs.”
Mills’s newest collaborator, who hails from Norway, is also a part of his history—although he didn’t realize it until they met. One night in 2009, Mills and Hembry were out in a remote town three hours south of Oslo when they heard music coming from a bar. “The band was good,” Mills recalls, “though what struck me most was this lanky piano and lap steel player over in the corner. He was amazing!”
That player was Knutsen, who—in a stroke of luck—turned out to be a longtime fan of Mills’s music, and the ideal collaborator for a a record where Mills wanted to continue his musical development while remaining true to his roots. Mills, Hembry, and Knutsen collaborated across the Atlantic, sending demos back and forth and working on music together whenever they happened to be on the same soil. But the stop-start nature proved frustrating, and so Knutsen and Mills flew out to Chicago with Meissener, and laid down the record in a few days at Mills’s old haunt Wall To Wall Studios.
“Christer has a better handle on many of the things I’ve done than I do,” Mills notes. “And he was uncompromising in his efforts to make this record something that we could both be proud of. He knew when I was getting lazy and just doing something out of habit, or when I was missing something that was key in some of my earlier work. He also pushed me to try new things, but because he was so versed in the context of my other work, it always felt like progression or refinement.”
Take the buoyant “Helpless Bells,” which splits the difference between New Wave (darting synths underscore the jangling guitars) and New Americana and which is a particular testament to the way Knutsen helped deepen Mills’s sound. The harmonies are straight out of a barn-raising, yet the song is flung into the current pop moment by the subtle keyboards humming underneath.
“We’re both pop fiends, even though we both tend to write on the earthier end of the spectrum. He has an amazing ear for harmonies,” Mills recalls. “We also wanted to keep the few ‘rootsy’ tunes on the record from feeling too trad, so we added the harmonies and some space keyboards to keep things interesting and sort of otherworldly.”
ALEXANDRIA’s opening track “Wild Places” opens with Mills singing, simply, “I have wandered in the wild places/ and I’ve brought a message back for you”; that sentiment sets the tone for this expansive, exploratory album, which is full of heartfelt words set to indelible melodies.
Song singers. We play rock and roll. We live in Harlem.
Born and raised in the Boston area, Gerald began his musical life at the age of 10. Playing drums throughout high school in rock bands, orchestras and with theater companies, he attended the famed Tanglewood Institute in the summers of 1985 and 1986. In 1986, he was accepted into both the Manhattan School of Music and the New England Conservatory of Music as a classical percussionist. He chose NEC, studying jazz and classical percussion with Bob Moses, Fred Buda, Vic Firth and Arthur Press, while also playing in combos led by Moses, Dave Holland, George Garzone and Hankus Netsky. Gerald continued to play in local rock bands, jazz combos, orchestras and musical theaters until 1991, when he moved to Chicago to attend DePaul University, securing the drum chair in the top big band upon his arrival. Since then, he has gone on to play with some of the top rock, jazz and country musicians in the Chicago area and nationwide, and has extensive studio credits to his name. He’s been living and working in Chicago for the past 20+ years.
?His longest post has been with alt-country godfather Robbie Fulks, with whom he has recorded and played nationally and overseas since 2000. And since 2006, Gerald has been playing with one of the creators of 'kindie rock': Justin Roberts and his band, the Not-Ready-For-Naptime Players. They play more than 100 shows a year around North America, and the band's last two albums -- Recess (2013) and Jungle Gym (2010) -- were each nominated for a Grammy Award.
In addition to hundreds of rock clubs in the United States and abroad, Mr. Dowd has played some of the most prestigious music venues in the world, including multiple appearances at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, The Borderline in London, the Rose Bowl and the Getty Center in Los Angeles, The Paradiso in Amsterdam, The Bottom Line, the Fillmore East, CBGB's and Symphony Space in New York City, the Kennedy Center in D.C., Symphony Hall and The Rathskellar in Boston, and Ravinia, Lollapalooza, Millennium Park, Steppenwolf Theater and Second City in Chicago. TV appearances include the Today Show, The Jenny Jones Show, Sound Opinions, and numerous appearances on local Chicago television.
Gerald has also performed and/or recorded with: Chris Mills, Frisbie, Nora O’Connor, Kelly Hogan, Edith Frost, Lush Budgett, Dave Ramont, Dick Smith, Lloyd Green, Dennis Crouch, Peter Himmelman, Swing Gitan, 500Clown Theater Company, Neko Case, Andrew Bird, EXO, Steve Albini, Mavis Staples, George Jones, Buck Owens, Tina Fey, Marshall Crenshaw, Rhymefest, Rich Little, Otis Clay, Catie Curtis, Pinetop Seven, Richie Cole, and Arturo Sandoval, among many others.
Gerald has been described as “the hardest working drummer in Chicago” (Richard Milne, WXRT), and is one of the city’s most in-demand drummers, having played on over 70 albums, and averaging 200 live dates a year. In 2014, he was the recipient of an IAP arts grant from Chicago's Dept. Of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE), which led to his first full length solo album, Home Now, in 2014. His first release, Kingsize EP, was released in 2012.
http://entertainment.suntimes.com/entertainment-news/gerald-dowd-drummer-many-chicago-bands-debuts-solo-album-via-13-hour-show/
It’s been 17 years since Chris Mills released his first EP, “Chris Mills Plays And Sings.” That record’s plainspoken title laid out the disarmingly simple tone for his career; the development of his craft since then has resulted in sharper songwriting, more musical ornamentation, and tours with the likes of Andrew Bird and Califone. Now, with ALEXANDRIA, Mills has increased his band’s numbers (bass player Ryan Hembrey, pianist Christer Knutsen, and drummer Konrad Meissener) and geographic scope—the Brooklyn-based troubadour’s sixth studio album was largely conceived in Scandinavia, and recorded at Chicago’s Wall To Wall Studios. (Grammy-winning engineer Ryan Freeland mixed the album.) At once intensely personal and incredibly ambitious, ALEXANDRIA is a leap forward for Mills, yet it retains the wit and keen eye for human behavior that have defined his records up to this point.
The seeds for this record, Mills’s first since 2008?s LIVING IN THE AFTERMATH, were sown by his own maturing. “There was a lot of personal upheaval and renewal going on throughout the entire writing process,” Mills recalls. “I got married; I went through some rough times and pulled myself out of them. I began to refocus on how I thought about music and art, and playing and recording. This album looks backwards and forwards at the same time.”
As such, the characters populating Mills’s have weathered life’s storms, but are by no means swept away by their tumult; instead, they look for salvation in the world around them. The loneliness precisely described on “The Sweet Hereafter” is tempered by the knowledge that there’s “magic in the mountains,” while “Castaways”—a sea shanty turned rave-up—looks for redemption in the water.
“I spent a lot of time in Scandanavia when I was writing the songs and when Christer, Ryan and I were working on the demos, and I definitely feel like that informed some of the tracks. I feel like there’s a bit of desolation in a lot of the lyrics, and a sort of ‘no man’s land’ vibe, which reflects where we were at times in the Norwegian countryside. There’s a stillness at night when you get into the mountains over there, or above the Arctic Circle, and a little loneliness that I think crept into some of the songs.”
Mills’s newest collaborator, who hails from Norway, is also a part of his history—although he didn’t realize it until they met. One night in 2009, Mills and Hembry were out in a remote town three hours south of Oslo when they heard music coming from a bar. “The band was good,” Mills recalls, “though what struck me most was this lanky piano and lap steel player over in the corner. He was amazing!”
That player was Knutsen, who—in a stroke of luck—turned out to be a longtime fan of Mills’s music, and the ideal collaborator for a a record where Mills wanted to continue his musical development while remaining true to his roots. Mills, Hembry, and Knutsen collaborated across the Atlantic, sending demos back and forth and working on music together whenever they happened to be on the same soil. But the stop-start nature proved frustrating, and so Knutsen and Mills flew out to Chicago with Meissener, and laid down the record in a few days at Mills’s old haunt Wall To Wall Studios.
“Christer has a better handle on many of the things I’ve done than I do,” Mills notes. “And he was uncompromising in his efforts to make this record something that we could both be proud of. He knew when I was getting lazy and just doing something out of habit, or when I was missing something that was key in some of my earlier work. He also pushed me to try new things, but because he was so versed in the context of my other work, it always felt like progression or refinement.”
Take the buoyant “Helpless Bells,” which splits the difference between New Wave (darting synths underscore the jangling guitars) and New Americana and which is a particular testament to the way Knutsen helped deepen Mills’s sound. The harmonies are straight out of a barn-raising, yet the song is flung into the current pop moment by the subtle keyboards humming underneath.
“We’re both pop fiends, even though we both tend to write on the earthier end of the spectrum. He has an amazing ear for harmonies,” Mills recalls. “We also wanted to keep the few ‘rootsy’ tunes on the record from feeling too trad, so we added the harmonies and some space keyboards to keep things interesting and sort of otherworldly.”
ALEXANDRIA’s opening track “Wild Places” opens with Mills singing, simply, “I have wandered in the wild places/ and I’ve brought a message back for you”; that sentiment sets the tone for this expansive, exploratory album, which is full of heartfelt words set to indelible melodies.
Song singers. We play rock and roll. We live in Harlem.
Born and raised in the Boston area, Gerald began his musical life at the age of 10. Playing drums throughout high school in rock bands, orchestras and with theater companies, he attended the famed Tanglewood Institute in the summers of 1985 and 1986. In 1986, he was accepted into both the Manhattan School of Music and the New England Conservatory of Music as a classical percussionist. He chose NEC, studying jazz and classical percussion with Bob Moses, Fred Buda, Vic Firth and Arthur Press, while also playing in combos led by Moses, Dave Holland, George Garzone and Hankus Netsky. Gerald continued to play in local rock bands, jazz combos, orchestras and musical theaters until 1991, when he moved to Chicago to attend DePaul University, securing the drum chair in the top big band upon his arrival. Since then, he has gone on to play with some of the top rock, jazz and country musicians in the Chicago area and nationwide, and has extensive studio credits to his name. He’s been living and working in Chicago for the past 20+ years.
?His longest post has been with alt-country godfather Robbie Fulks, with whom he has recorded and played nationally and overseas since 2000. And since 2006, Gerald has been playing with one of the creators of 'kindie rock': Justin Roberts and his band, the Not-Ready-For-Naptime Players. They play more than 100 shows a year around North America, and the band's last two albums -- Recess (2013) and Jungle Gym (2010) -- were each nominated for a Grammy Award.
In addition to hundreds of rock clubs in the United States and abroad, Mr. Dowd has played some of the most prestigious music venues in the world, including multiple appearances at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, The Borderline in London, the Rose Bowl and the Getty Center in Los Angeles, The Paradiso in Amsterdam, The Bottom Line, the Fillmore East, CBGB's and Symphony Space in New York City, the Kennedy Center in D.C., Symphony Hall and The Rathskellar in Boston, and Ravinia, Lollapalooza, Millennium Park, Steppenwolf Theater and Second City in Chicago. TV appearances include the Today Show, The Jenny Jones Show, Sound Opinions, and numerous appearances on local Chicago television.
Gerald has also performed and/or recorded with: Chris Mills, Frisbie, Nora O’Connor, Kelly Hogan, Edith Frost, Lush Budgett, Dave Ramont, Dick Smith, Lloyd Green, Dennis Crouch, Peter Himmelman, Swing Gitan, 500Clown Theater Company, Neko Case, Andrew Bird, EXO, Steve Albini, Mavis Staples, George Jones, Buck Owens, Tina Fey, Marshall Crenshaw, Rhymefest, Rich Little, Otis Clay, Catie Curtis, Pinetop Seven, Richie Cole, and Arturo Sandoval, among many others.
Gerald has been described as “the hardest working drummer in Chicago” (Richard Milne, WXRT), and is one of the city’s most in-demand drummers, having played on over 70 albums, and averaging 200 live dates a year. In 2014, he was the recipient of an IAP arts grant from Chicago's Dept. Of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE), which led to his first full length solo album, Home Now, in 2014. His first release, Kingsize EP, was released in 2012.
http://entertainment.suntimes.com/entertainment-news/gerald-dowd-drummer-many-chicago-bands-debuts-solo-album-via-13-hour-show/
Videos
Comments
Explore Nearby
-
1
Stoney's Inn
Hotels -
2
Pita Pan
Restaurants -
3
Prospect Park Boathouse & Audubon Center
Attractions -
4
Da Nonna Rosa
Restaurants -
5
Grand Army Plaza Greenmarket
Attractions
-
1
Stoney's Inn
469 First Street -
2
La Quinta Inn & Suites Brooklyn Downtown
533 3rd Ave -
3
Sofia Inn
288 Park Place -
4
Hotel Le Bleu
370 Fourth Ave
-
1
Pita Pan
167 7th Ave -
2
Da Nonna Rosa
140 7th Ave -
3
Naruto Ramen
278 5th Ave. -
4
Oaxaca Taqueria
250 4th Ave -
5
Rachel's Taqueria
408 5th Ave -
6
Bareburger
170 7th Ave -
7
Talde
369 7th Ave -
8
Pork Slope
247 5th Ave -
9
Cheryl's Global Soul
236 Underhill Ave -
10
Fletcher's Brooklyn Barbecue
433 Third Ave
-
1
Prospect Park Boathouse & Audubon Center
Prospect Park -
2
Grand Army Plaza Greenmarket
1 Grand Army Plz -
3
Prospect Park Loop
Grand Army Plaza -
4
Prospect Park Zoo
450 Flatbush Ave
© 2025 NYNY.com: A City Guide by Boulevards. All Rights Reserved. Advertise with us | Contact us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Site Map