Lately it’s been easier to stay quiet and stay in my lane of music than to speak out. I’m sure that’s what most would like anyway, but as a father, my thoughts are on the country and the world more than the record industry, which, in truth isn’t an industry at all, really.
An industry flourishes with many layers of wants and needs, hundreds of departments filled with workers. Hundreds if not thousands thriving in the session world. Thousands of technicians like engineers, producers, 2nd’s, studio techs, studio managers, gear rentals, drum tuners, guitar and bass techs, keyboard programmers, background vocalists, horns, strings, arrangers… i mean the list honestly doesn’t stop.
Then on the record side there are promotion teams, radio stations and DJ’s with some autonomy to go out on a limb for a song, publicists, specialty experts that hook up endorsements, video production, publishers and their many layers of worker bees underneath… all driven to get your songs placed and your catalogs to thrive, ultimately making it to the thousands of record stores… which was an industry in itself. I feel fortunate to have witnessed when this was the time, but it’s over as we knew it.
Of course it still exists in a small way, but in a very small way. Most ‘artists’ are home, like myself, making their own music and hoping for the best. The ones getting the biggest push these days I would classify as athletes and performers. They’re not as creative as they are talented in both strength and endurance.
Others are out gigging… and while I 100% respect this, it’s just not something that ever interested me. Perhaps I played too much from 12 yrs old to 18, doing 3 and 4 sets a night, lugging my own gear etc. For me it was always ‘to the toppermost of the poppermost or bust’.
I was quite happy to do something more civil like manage and produce bands. With Lifehouse, I don’t think I ever got the credit due as a manager… mainly because Lifehouse was never The Eagles or U2. They were a radio success, and this was the plan I had after realizing that the lead singer and writer, Jason, had no interest in being a star. He was and is very much like me. He loves hits.
Putting almost all focus on the band’s radio success, they thrived for 15 years with ubiquitous songs like Hanging By A Moment, You And Me, First Time, Whatever It Takes and many more. This can have a cyclical effect. Think America, the 70’s band. They were never giant concert seat fillers, and altho they did well, never massive record sellers, but their radio presence was 2nd only to bands like the Eagles. Then in the 80’s, 90’s and early Aughts they went away. ::Poof!:: gone. Lame. Now, I hear them all the time. Ventura Highway, A Horse With No Name, Sandman, Tin Man… so many radio singles, so many remembering with fondness.
If you can remember back in the early 80’s when Wham was a part of this British movement that changed the look and sound of everything, the rock band Rush couldn’t get arrested. Yet they stayed the course. Kept touring… never faltered… became legends.
It’s a long game… and ours, or should I say Lifehouse’s was to be part of a soundtrack to people’s lives… which they very much were. It’s unfortunate that it came with this later developed monicker called ‘Hot AC’, defined with acts like Nickelback, Daughtry and others, because that seems to bookmark everyone involved… and honestly if Lifehouse or Jason Wade even played that game it wouldn’t have been true to form. That’s not who he is. Not who the band was. Certainly not who I am.
So I guess this is a little bit of a stream of conscious ramble. The state of the country leaves me speechless. Most artists I ever developed, ever tried to help, ended up getting in their own way and self-sabotaging all efforts. I see Americans doing the same thing, and I do believe it has something to do with Trauma Conditioning… something I’ll speak on at another time.
In the meantime, wishing you all well. Say a prayer for our friend and long time supporter William Pochert who is doing his best to win his battle with cancer. Until next time- peace ❤️
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Great points. And America – love them. “Daisy Jane”.
Listen to Daughtry’s “Artificial” please Jude.
I like him. Give him a chance. He has faith & has had to go through his daughters suicide ( I know that road from my sister). For me, he is the only other artist besides yourself that I can truly say I’ve not heard a song I don’t like.
William, you’re not alone in this. It’s a pleasure to see you on here so don’t go getting any ideas about leaving. Thinking of you & yours & look forward to seeing you on the next post.
Jude, you’re a good good father. An underrated producer, musician , man .Look forward to reading more
Thanks so much Kathryn ❤️ forever and ever , amen 🙏
Lifehouse was one of my favorite bands. On their song You and Me I was blown away on the vocal and always wondered how the engineer got so much warmth on the vocal. Maybe you know? On another note Chad Brock is in the middle of recording a new album and I think you should send him First Your Money (Then Your Clothes). That song would be a hit on todays country.
I LOVE this idea ..a ton of Jude tunes could be country hits. I suspect Jude doesn’t own the rights to those older songs though. We need songs he owns to become country hits. Jude , can you chime in on this? Which songs do you fully own in this manner? Maybe some of us can try to get a couple country stars to hear them and lightning can strike 🤠
Jude , my initial comment is awaiting moderator approval…it’s not vile I swear haha
Got it fixed for you William. Lol, weird it didn’t go automatically 🤣
Thanks man 👍👍 I think maybe the YouTube link threw a wrench into it 😎
Anti-spam doing a little TOO good
P.S. Ram is a great album 🤘
Great point of view as always. Love the mention of America, still a favorite of mine. Living in northeast ohio we had our own legend, that in my opinion never got his due. Michael Stanley ,much like yourself just kept going. Playing mostly locally and releasing records on his own. And yes ,your music and Lifehouse’s stuff are part of my lifes soundtrack.
Excellent post, Jude. I guess I’m getting to be a grumpy old man these days. I hate change and change always happened in everything. The sad thing is most of the time the change is for the worst.
Change doesn’t make things better all the time. I wish things would stay the same a little longer. Like the 70’s. What a great time to grow up. 80’s too. But I don’t think anything in 2025 is better. The movies aren’t, the music isn’t either.
I enjoy ready your posts. Gives me something to ponder over besides politics.
Keep posting 🙏
I really enjoy the Posts Jude-I have to say that “Start The Car” cd is in my top ten, and I am 52.
I was in College when you released it. I do appreciate you mentioning Rush in your post- They are my all time favorites especially the 80’s and 90’s era. I remember driving to Atlanta to see the Counterparts Tour in ’94- along with Rush , I also leaned heavily on start the car and a view from 3rd st in the rotation. I do hope you put out another batch of songs soon-
Right There Now is my favorite- such great songwriting and recording. Fantastic.
Peace,
Chris
Columbia South Carolina
🙏🏻’s for W.P.
Thanks George❤️🙏
We were fortunate enough to see America live last summer before Gerry Beckley retired. They were GREAT! The biz has changed for sure but we still go to a lot of concerts when we are not gigging ourselves. Supporting live music is what keeps it going!
Prayers for William Pochert. I’ve seen his comments so often I almost feel like I know him!
Thank you for the prayers ❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏✝️
I am very close to being your age, Jude. Though I know nothing about the music business, I can say that I truly feel blessed to have the opportunity to be a music lover during the time that I was growing up. It was great to be able to see musicians on so many weekly shows. and there were so MANY concerts close by that I was able to attend. Then, when MTV came out, I was able to view music videos, a few concerts, etc., from some great musicians anytime I wanted. It was a WONDERFUL time–and I had lots of vinyl records, 8-track tapes, cassettes, and CDs to listen to. In general, I think that the music was so MUCH better, then–It was real MUSIC, with discernible lyrics, that had meaning. (I’m sure that there are still some talented artists who are entering the business; but so much of what I hear nowadays doesn’t seem to constitute itself as being musical, in my humble opinion. 😂
I hope that you are well, Jude. It was great to see a new post from you–Please keep them coming! Special prayers and blessings to William Pochert, as well!
❤️ Lynn
Thank you so much ❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏✝️
I started out in the same place (as Jude well knows) with the same goals and dreams. Spent years gigging, writing, trying to figure out the lay of the land. When my ship finally came in…it turned out to be a dinghy. But hey, it got me to the other side where I can look back with just a few regrets. And…I still enjoy creating music.
It definitely takes a certain kind of mentality for a person/group to play the game. While many musicians can put in the work in the areas that are geared towards the creative/artistic pursuit ie. writing, recording, touring, it’s all the other nonsense that drains the soul and can eventually cause some type of retreat behaviour. I’ve always suspected that you had fallen into this divet. Without sounding too sycophantic, your work is astounding and deserved much better returns. The Start The Car album is nothing short of excellent from start to finish, while your other albums are not far behind. But as a musician who lives for the creative process and like you, tires of the nonsense of 3 set gigs etc, performing is, or rather can be, the only source of direct reward. The connections made with an audience that truly appreciates what you do, even if at times it seems fleeting. My point is, sometimes the reason it is so difficult to let go of the things of the past is because we know it will never ever be the way it was. And while progress (and I use that term very loosely when speaking of the music industry and what it produces) can mean the possibility of exciting new things, it doesn’t seem like anything exciting is on the horizon, just less of the human element that we all as humans connect with. Thanks Jude for you work and words. Fan forever.
I think Jude fell victim to the gangster rap/grunge era more than anything else ..on a dime suddenly talented musicians couldn’t get radio play. Start the Car was right when that occurred. Napster also struck at that juncture. It was quite a ride though. I loved the discovery of Jude from Back to School and then realizing he was the same dude who did Baby it’s Tonight ❤️
Ha! Yes, been finding myself saying “back in the day”, quite a bit these days, talking with my nephew (whose home from college on spring break) about life and how if you didn’t get a hold of your friends before they went out on Friday night, you had to drive around to find them, and how cool it was to watch MTV music videos. Yep, times were simple then and fun, looking back on it now, at times it didn’t seem so fun, but it really was! Take Care!
Great ramble Jude, agree with it on so many levels , its a sad state this country is in , keep rambling on , you’ve been a solid voice of reason .
William I’ve got you in my prayers 🙏 & stay positive
Thanks Angelo ❤️❤️❤️🙏✝️
Nice retrospect Jude. It definitely ain’t what it used to was. ✌️
I love Joe Walsh’s take on what’s left of the industry:
https://youtu.be/l-nwKcSCzf4?si=XLwFix4EI_5_XqEW
I miss being able to have a great read in liner notes, remembering who played what on which records…who produced, engineered, arranged, etc
You’d think something has to change at some point here, or is it forever lost?
Thanks so much Jude for the shout out ❤️. Day 3 of radiation is in the can. 22 more to go…❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏✝️✝️✝️