Dean had no patience. He enjoyed rushing every idea that came to his head. This personality trait of his, in hindsight, is the ingredient that pushed us out the door and into the bars and halls where we’d start to make our name. I liked the idea of writing songs, however, Dean leaned towards our improvisational roots. This difference between us was the catalyst that set the wheels in motion. For example, Dean signed us up for the 2011 Online Warped Tour Battle of the Bands without consulting me.dan and dean 001 I emerged from my bedroom one morning to the news that we were officially signed up for this ridiculous contest. At the time, I was a little annoyed because we had no songs or image. This left me with one option. Create them.

For the first time ever, we now found ourselves writing songs together. This proved to be a difficult undertaking because poor Deano couldn’t understand simple song structure. “Come in on 4” I’d say before starting the song. When 4 came, Dean didn’t. So, it hit me. This music theory stuff isn’t important to The Dean Project. Rhythm, tone quality and time signatures are all just suggestions. We were never out to compete with other bands. We weren’t interested in pissing contests. They get you nowhere and take all the fun from performing. Our focus was to just be The Dean Project. Little did I know, this Warped Tour thing would help solidify our web presence as an official act. However, In my mind, it was all satire. A commentary on how indie and commercial music are all built around false virtues. Performance art. But to those unhip, close-minded consumers of our work, we were barely talented kids just struggling to put songs together. It was a fine line to walk, especially for an unestablished act. We simply tried to Blur the lines between art, music, comedy and life.

We knew people wouldn’t understand what they were seeing or hearing. We knew some people would think of us as “wannabes”,  “outcasts” or just plain bad. It would be up to us to give whoever was at that particular bar, on that particular night, a show and make them feel something. I was always a believer that people don’t buy songs. They buy feelings. Even if the songs were regarded as garbage. If we managed to make you feel something or react in any way, we would call it a success. If we inspired dialog, commentary, jokes or banter it meant more to me than selling T shirts or growing my social profile. We were the growling folk dudes with a nutcracker. Who wasn’t talking?

 

 

 

 

When I got into music in junior high, my natural inclination was to gravitate to the drums. My other friends had picked up playing the stringed rock instruments, so it was really my only natural choice. I still remember coming home from school in grade eight and to my delight my parents had purchased and laid out all over the kitchen, my very first drum kit. It was a bottom on the barrel kit with no bells or whistles, however, it dean 005would be more than enough for me. I played that kit every night after school with my friends Phil, Paul and Alex on bass and guitar. I had no formal training, so these jams would be my lessons and Green Day would be my teacher. We called ourselves Shiny Pencil and recorded a track list of covers straight to tape . We had the audacity to sell those tapes to the other kids at school. We were in fact, the only “band” in our grade and immediately started to gain a little bit of attention. We didn’t know what to do with the attention. Shit, we weren’t even musicians at this point. But, that’s not where this story is going. Years later, when I was actually playing shows in serious high-school rock bands, I sold that first drum kit of mine to Dean.

Dean had no idea what to do with the drums. He didn’t understand what he was hearing, I guess. He just hit everything at random and would tell me that he learned how to play “Voodoo” by Godsmack.  I told him that that was not “Voodoo”. So, I picked up a guitar to demonstrate rhythm, and The Dean Project was born.

My first guitar was a blue Telecaster. And boy, was it ever a piece of shit. I scraped all the paint off with a Loonie and had the ugliest Zebra striped strap. I would head over to Dean’s Mom’s house, climb down to the basement where the now junk drums lay with this guitar and we create our brand of noise pollution. I remember Dean had this old boom box that had a record function. He suggested we record an album. I laughed, of course. “What album? What songs? What band? Jesus Christ, Okay, hit record.”

We recorded whatever came to mind at the time. The songs I remember most were “Big House on Wheels” and a horrendous version of “In Da Club”. Embarrassing as it was, I loved it. I couldn’t sing or play. Dean couldn’t sing or play. But, I guess that`s what made me love it so much. There was always an energy between Dean and I. We loved music. But more than that, we loved playing with people perception of us. We shared a common love for what I called art and he called work. “Work” is an old carnie term for swindle or lie. And I guess that we did a lot of work, but it was never to take money from people. It was never a bait and switch type situation because we weren’t, and never wanted to be, business people. So, I would tell him that it’s not work if it’s purely to tell a story and bend people’s perceptions. Everything we gave, was 100% genuine because of how much we loved the lifestyle, the culture and everything that goes along with being in an indie band.  Sure, we had gimmicks and merch. But, seldom were we seen tending to our “inventory” or “profit margin”. No, we were chillin’, smokin’, talking with people. It was the human aspect, though through workers eyes, that kept us glued to the lifestyle.

Strong style

Young boy gets stabbed by his ex- in Japan
What’s next? He gets press and then success

On the rise to the top

Rookie makes a name in the ring with his skill
Up hill, full tilt to the top of the bill

Nakamura vs. Tanahashi
In the Tokyo Dome for The Gold

Strong style

©2014 The Dean Project

[Song below lyrics. Follow along!]

He is an artist, a performer
A great wrestler
The Best In The World
In the land of giants, he’ll take what he wants
Always walking in his own direction

There was a time no one could see
What was right in front of them
A future champion that no one could defeat
The longest run in years
434 days

The best in the world
The real face of the show
Just like The Thing when he clobbers
The best in the world
Chicago’s CM Punk
As if he were ever in a class with jobbers

Now is the time
How can you not see?
The only reason I’m even out watchin’ TV
Heel or face, he’ll hold the whole crowd
Cue his theme if you wanna make it loud

The best in the world
He’s a phycologist
Just like Fraud before he went nuts
The best in the world
Chicago’s CM Punk
Just like the wolf on the night bus

Just like The Thing when he clobbers

He is an artist, a performer
A great wrestler
The Best In The World
In the land of giants, he’ll take what he wants
Always walking in his own direction

The best in the world
The real face of the show
Just like The Thing when he clobbers
The best in the world
Chicago’s CM Punk
As if he were ever in a class with jobbers

The best in the world