Reno concert preview

InterviewFebruary 13, 2014Reno Gazette-Journal

A lot of the talk surrounding the Goo Goo Dolls as the band tours behind its latest album centers on how life is better in the band than it was when the group last went through the album-making process.

Some of the good vibes surrounding “Magnetic” reflect recent events in the lives of the Goo Goo Dolls’ two founding members.

Singer/guitarist John Rzeznik got married to his longtime girlfriend, Melina Gallo, while bassist Robby Takac became a father.

But Takac said things have also taken a turn for the better with issues relating directly to the band.

The root of the problem — although it’s a “problem” most bands would love to have — can be traced back to the 1998 breakout Goo Goo Dolls album, “Dizzy Up The Girl.”

It was a blockbuster record, selling 3 million copies and spawning four top-10 hit singles (including the ballad “Iris,” which topped “Billboard” magazine’s airplay chart for a record-breaking 18 weeks).

Suddenly, the Goo Goo Dolls, which had already enjoyed significant success with the 1995 album “A Boy Named Goo” — which included the hit single “Name” — had reached the top echelons of popularity.

With that success, though, came a side effect — the pressure from the band’s label, Warner Bros., to repeat the success of “Dizzy Up The Girl.”

That weight of these expectations, Takac said, was felt for the next dozen years and through three subsequent studio albums: “Gutterflower” (2002), “Let Love In” (2006) and “Something for the Rest of Us” (2010).

“I think there was a lot of a lot of pressure with the trilogy there. There was a lot of pressure to have another record with four top-10 songs again,” Takac said in a recent phone interview with Best Bets.

Of course, it’s a select club of artists and bands that have made even one album with four top-10 hits.

Bands that have done it more than once are in even more exclusive company.

“There’s an intangible thing that happens when a record gets that big,” Takac said. “All the planets have lined up for this to happen.”

But those statistics didn’t stop Warner Bros. from being disappointed when “Gutterflower” sold about 800,000 copies, according to Takac.

Making matters worse, the diminished sales of “Gutterflower” — even though the album delivered big hits in “Here Is Gone,” “Sympathy” and “Big Machine” — came as profound changes were starting to happen in the music industry.

Consumers were starting to download albums in big numbers, taking a mighty bite out of record sales.

Panic set in with labels, and that desperation was felt within his band.

“I’m trying to think of the right way to say this,” Takac said. “It was a difficult thing to incorporate into the creative process. When things don’t react like some folks in the industry think they should, blame gets placed in all sorts of inappropriate places.”

Things got particularly difficult as Rzeznik, the group’s chief songwriter, began work on what would become “Something For The Rest Of Us.”

He ran into a severe case of writer’s block.

The recording of the album wasn’t entirely smooth, either.

So for “Magnetic,” the band decided to write, arrange and record each song one at a time.

“I think the last record (”Something for the Rest of Us”) was a bit of an arduous process,” Takac said.

“We wanted to do all we could to not end up in that same trap we’d been in for the last couple of records, which was getting trapped under this pile of songs and having to crawl out and see how you fare by the time you get out from underneath the pile.”

The change made the making of “Magnetic” more enjoyable for the band. Whether this approach resulted in a better album may depend on musical tastes.

After rocking up its sound just a bit on “Something for the Rest of Us,” “Magnetic” puts the emphasis back on tuneful mid-tempo pop tunes and ballads in the tradition of hits like “Iris,” “Name” and “Slide.”

Lyrically, Rzeznik returns to the more personal, romantic themes of the band’s most popular albums, which spawned a steady stream of hits for the band.

For fans who liked the scrappier rock sound of early Goo Goo Dolls albums like the early ‘90s albums “Hold Me Up” (1990), “Superstar Car Wash” (1993) and “A Boy Named Goo” (1995) — a sound that often earned the band comparisons to the Replacements — the move back to mainstream pop territory will probably be disappointing.

But the songs on “Magnetic” are well crafted and have lots of melodic appeal.

The Goo Goo Dolls will try to cover as much musical ground as possible on a winter/spring tour in which the group will play in an acoustic format -— something that isn’t easy after 30 years together.

“After 10 albums it gets tough to pare it down to 90 minutes,” Takac said. “We’ve been lucky to have a lot of songs people like to hear. I guess that’s a good problem to have.”

Related