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  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on June 7th, 2011

    Written by nikki

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    Thank You / My Story

    As most of you know by now, I spent lots of waking hours of the past two years of my life listening to people’s stories about DMB. With 13 years of DMB fandom already under my belt by the time I started So Much To Say (or, more accurately at the time, Still Here Dancing), I went into this project thinking I had a pretty good idea of what to expect. And in many ways I did. I heard all of the remembrances of stunning shows, tales of amusing antics within the community, and travelogues that I expected.

    I knew there would be some emotion with all of this—after all, people connect with DMB’s music on many levels and, as we all know, death and loss are two of the big themes in Dave’s lyrics—but I soon came to find out that I wasn’t prepared. The one thing that really floored me was how many people used DMB’s music and the shows and community as a tool to get through difficult times. Really difficult times: the end of relationships, material losses, and even deaths. I was consistently impressed by how open people were and humbled that they were willing to open up to me. But that’s one of the things music does, right? It soothes you and opens up your world in small and sometimes big ways.

    So, in tribute to that, I’m going to share my story, though it freaks me out a bit and I know I may regret it as soon as I hit this little publish button here. However, it only seems fair after everything everyone has so willingly shared with me. In terms of both this book and my own career, today, publication day, is a milestone moment, so it seems like the appropriate moment to do this if ever there was one.

    I signed this book deal with Simon & Schuster in July 2009. It was a really happy time for me. At that moment I felt as though (finally!) all those long days I’d spent toiling away as an editorial assistant and all those sleepless nights I’d spent lying in bed wondering if I could ever really make it as a writer paid off. Who the hell gets lucky enough to write a book about their favorite band for a major publishing company? The whole thing was sort of inconceivable.

    I spent the next few months happily interviewing fans, booking a trip to Italy to see some shows and do some work on the book there in February 2010 (Italy—another item crossed off my “wish list”—damn, I was on a roll!), and, from there, a summer full of shows and traveling and writing spread out before me. Hog freaking heaven—that’s where I was!

    Then, in December 2009, right when I was about to get into the thick of writing, my little brother Nicholas died. Not only was he my brother, but he was also my best friend. Literally, he was the single soul in my life who I’ve always felt really and truly understood me. The person who could unfailingly make me laugh to the point where my stomach hurt so much I had to beg him to stop impersonating whoever the hell he was impersonating at any given moment. Among so many other things, Nicholas was also a musician and my most favorite travel companion.

    My world flipped inside out and upside down within a millisecond of getting the phone call that he was gone. I didn’t really know how to process my loss at first. What I felt was much deeper than sadness—I felt hollow and numb and empty and as though the most important part of me had died right along with him. And I was pissed. In a completely selfish kind of way, really. Here I had finally gotten the opportunity to have this great experience and it was totally marred by this horrible thing that I couldn’t even begin to wrap my head around. Not only that, but how could I possibly write in this emotionally deadened state?

    DMB has helped me during other dark times. I’ve felt lifted up from the buoyancy of shows when there have been other losses: break-ups, the end of friendships, and points in life where I’ve just felt generally lost. Also, I’d spent the past several months of my life immersing myself in other people’s stories about how the music had healed them. Maybe that will happen for me too, I thought. In a way, I expected this to happen—I was waiting for the music and the shows to somehow magically heal me. I’d like to tell you that happened. In some ways I feel like that should have happened. But I can’t lie … it didn’t.

    In fact, sometimes the shows almost made me feel worse. Everyone else seemed so happy and celebratory that I often felt like even more of a sore thumb than I already felt like in those months that followed Nick’s death. Grief can be isolating—everyone else was having a party and I was trapped by this sort of all-consuming thudding hollowness that appeared to have settled in my bones. Logically, I know that everyone has to deal with death at some point. That so many people have it so much worse than I do. I can and could process that. But when it’s you going through it all and you can’t run from how it feels in the inside, it’s hard to be logical. In so many ways I was miserable as I was traveling around, interviewing people, and writing the bulk of this book last year.

    That’s just the truth, whether I like it or not. But here’s what else is true …

    Had I not had this book to write, I may not have had a good enough reason to get out of bed for several months. Literally. But I didn’t have that option. So, instead, every morning I got out of bed to do what I had to do to write this book. Was the experience what it would have been had all of this other stuff not been going on in my life? Absolutely not. But, still … rather than being taken down by grief, I: met hundreds of amazing fans from all over the world; I traveled everywhere from Padova, Italy to George, Washington; I randomly ran into Dave while crossing over a tiny little bridge in Venice as I drank a Capri-Sun box of red wine, and into Stefan while I was lost on a cobblestone sidestreet in Milan; I camped out under the stars, I listened to music; I found myself in the very surreal situation of interviewing Stefan on his tour bus as it rolled from downtown Boston to my home venue of Great Woods (sorry, I refuse to call it Comcast Center).

    And, really, what better tribute could there have been for my brother, who is so intricately connected to my happiest and most cherished memories of listening to music and traveling?

    It sounds dramatic but, in the end, this book saved me. Don’t get me wrong—obviously, I know I would have lived through the shitty year that was 2010 with or without writing So Much To Say. We all have our own personal tragedies and, one way or another, we all get through them, no matter how much it sucks when you’re wading through the muck. But, for me, writing this book is ultimately how I got through mine. And, lemme tell you, writing So Much To Say certainly beats curling up in bed for a few months.

    I’ve given several interviews over the past couple of weeks. The answers I’ve given about the experience of writing this book have been honest, but they’ve only begun to scratch the surface.

    What I’m trying to say is thank you. Thank you for letting me interview you. Thank you for taking the time to write and share your stories … or even just encouraging emails. Thank you for surfing over to this site. Thank you for sending a tweet, or throwing a thumbs-up on the book’s Facebook page.

    Over the past couple of years, you’ve all been kind enough to share your stories. So, finally, this is part of mine.

    Thank you for helping me tell this story that belongs to all of us. I hope I did it justice.

     

  • Chapter 7 Excerpt

    If you already read the Chapter 1 excerpt of So Much To Say and want more, a full version of Chapter 7 is floating around out there too. This one is available only through the DMB fan sites–you can get to it here and here. More sites will put it up as the week goes on and links will be added here.

    Also, don’t forget to enter to win a pair of tickets for the NYC DMB Caravan at Governor’s Island on August 26-28. Good luck!

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on May 31st, 2011

    Written by nikki

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    Win NYC Caravan Tickets and Check Out a Book Excerpt

    One week to go until publication … which means it’s time to give some stuff away! Simon & Schuster is giving one lucky winner two tickets to the DMB Caravan at Governor’s Island in NYC. Be sure to enter the contest here–no purchase required. Ten runners up will receive a free copy of So Much To Say.

    Also, check out a complete excerpt of Chapter 1 here.

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on May 9th, 2011

    Written by nikki

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    Book is In, Promo Video is Up, and Fun Stuff is About to Go Down

    Today I walked out to my building’s lobby only to find a finished copy of So Much to Say waiting for me. After two years, hundreds of interviews and story submissions, thousands of miles traveled for book-related stuff, lots of edits, and more amazing experiences than I count, it’s crazy to have a finished book in my hands.

    Publication is still a little less than a month away (June 7), but we’ve got a few goodies on the way before then, compliments of Simon & Schuster. Stay tuned here and to your local DMB fan sites for more information, coming soon. I’ve also added the promo video for the book on the Media page. I hate cameras, so this part of it was much more daunting to me than actually writing the book–seriously.

    Some of you have asked if the book is going to be available on iBooks. I checked with my editor today and the answer is yes. The pre-order link for iBooks is here, though the pre-order button may not be working quite yet (but will be in a couple days). It’s also available via Kindle and Nook. Also, for those of you who have asked if this will be published in hardcover, the answer is no–just paperback and ebook formats.

    Finally, not to sound like a broken record, but thanks so much to all of you who participated by interviewing, submitting your stories, or just sending sweet emails. Even if you’re not specifically quoted in the book, every single person I talked to had something to do with the final manuscript. In the end, my problem was (seriously) having too much good stuff and having to edit out some stories and quotes I really loved. Really, there was enough stuff to write something the size of a phone book!

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on March 14th, 2011

    Written by nikki

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    An Update About Updates

    In the vein of talking just to hear myself speak, this is an update to say there will be updated information coming to the site soon. Originally, my grand plan was to blog about the process of writing So Much to Say (i.e., the artist formerly known as Still Here Dancing) as I was writing the book. Unfortunately, that didn’t pan out quite as I’d expected. Mostly because, well, I got too busy writing the actual book to blog about it. And, indeed, I was busy. I spent 2009 and 2010 traveling to a ton of shows and interviewing what, in the end, amounted to hundreds of fans. Not the worst gig in the world, I know. Unfortunately, only a fraction of the people I interviewed are ultimately quoted in the book, but it was informed by every single person I had the pleasure of speaking with.

    So, after a whirlwind of a year and a half, I now find myself less than three months away from the book’s June 7 publication date. It’s funny because aside from working on this book for so long (I had the idea in 2006, so it was floating around in my brain for years before I actually signed with Simon & Schuster in July 2009) I worked in publishing for years before that. In other words, I know how the book-making process works. But, nonetheless, I’ve been so deeply immersed in my happy little writing bubble, that I recently found myself shocked at the realization that other people besides my editor and my dad may actually read this book. Sending the first couple galleys (essentially a pre-book version of the book) out for people to read was so much more nerve-wracking than I ever would have imagined. I know this band means a whole lot to a whole lot of people and I just hope that I did the experience of being a DMB fan justice. Every single fan has their own stories about how they found DMB, what the music means to them, the people they’ve met, and places they’ve seen along the way. Since it would be impossible to include all that, I hope that at least the overarching sentiment translates through So Much to Say.

    Anyway, if you are so interested, you can save a few bucks on the book by ordering during pre-sale. Pretty soon here, I’ll have a book excerpt up, as well as a promo video interview I did with Simon & Schuster. When the publication date gets a bit closer, I’ll have some copies up for giveaway, etc. So … yup. That’s it for now. More to come soon …

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on November 6th, 2010

    Written by nikki

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    Be One of the First to Hear the Real First DMB Show

    If you’re coming to the Boston shows this week, be sure to enter this Mix 104.1 contest for the opportunity to hear a sneak preview of the newly-christened first DMB show, from March 14, 1991. But that’s not all! Stefan Lessard (the man we have to thank for our updated knowledge, after the misguided notion that DMB first played on April 20, 1991 for all these years) will be there and winners get to watch an interview with him and Cali.

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on August 19th, 2010

    Written by nikki

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    LeRoi Moore (1961-2008)

    I’ll never forget August 19, 2008. It had been a long summer, but I was getting increasingly excited because Gorge time was drawing near—my favorite weekend of the year. I had just gotten home from work and flipped on my laptop to check my email as dinner heated up. While I was online I cruised on over to Facebook quickly and saw that a friend had updated their status to read “Mike is feeling very sad for his DMB family today.” WTF?

    I’d been in meetings all day and had no idea what was going on, but the status update gave me a pretty bad feeling in the pit of my stomach. Quickly, I clicked over to DMB’s website. By the time I got there, the screen had already been blacked out to an image of LeRoi. Immediately, I felt like I got punched in the stomach. Maybe I had been in denial for the past few weeks or wasn’t paying enough attention, but I truly believed that he was getting better—this was the last thing I expected to see.

    I started crying and couldn’t stop. To be honest, I felt pretty stupid for crying—it’s not like I had known the man personally. But the truth is, it hurt. And it was unfathomable—DMB without LeRoi just didn’t make any sense to me. I spent most of the night on Ants, reading heartbroken posts. It was like a train wreck, I just couldn’t look away even though it all hurt so bad to read. And I just couldn’t wrap my head around the fact that he was gone.

    It was such a strange feeling at the Gorge just over a week later, seeing DMB look so visibly broken up and without Roi onstage there with them. But for as sad as it was, I was also so grateful to be there. Witnessing the glowsticks and the sheer outpouring of emotion before #41 is something that I will never forget for as long as I live. Rarely have I felt so much a part of something as I did that night. It was so sad but, at the same time, so beautiful.

    Two of my very favorite moments in the entire fifteen-year span I’ve been following DMB involve LeRoi. He was actually the one that sucked me into DMB-Land in the first place. I still get goose bumps when I listen to the recording of him playing the first notes of Seek Up—the opening song at my first show. My jaw was on the floor. Simply put, I had never heard a more beautiful sound. Several years later in 2006, I dragged my brother down to a venue with me to try to hear a sound check from outside the gates. We waited there for a couple hours in the burning sun—my brother was ready to kick my ass. We never heard sound check, but what we did hear was LeRoi inside the venue, blowing away on his horn all by himself. The sound would get closer then further away—though I’m not sure exactly was going on in there, it sounded like he was just wandering around, playing his sax in the afternoon sun.

    As I’ve been writing this book, reliving everything that happened in the time since August 18, 2008, I’ve been so impressed all over again with DMB. The way they pulled through this and soldiered on has been amazing. The truth is, it’s not the same but, then again, how could it be? LeRoi was such a part of the band and the music. But by continuing to play and moving forward, they’ve ensured that his legacy lives on.

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on July 24th, 2010

    Written by nikki

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    The DMB Experience

    In the past few months, I’ve had the opportunity to chat with lots of cool people and to hear some amazing stories. But I had one of my favorite interviews yet today with a fan named Brad.

    Brad was driving around in a car with his friend one day in 1994 when she put in a cassette simply titled “DMB.” Before she hit play, this girl told Brad, “Everyone should experience their music.” Brad hadn’t heard of this band—nor had he ever been told he had to experience anyone’s music before—but he knew that he liked the first song he heard on the tape: People, People.

    As luck would have it, this band just happened to be playing at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre a few months later and Brad just happened to go to that show and witness the Eyes of the World tribute to Jerry Garcia, who had just died a couple days before.

    Being in California (which DMB hadn’t hit much on the touring circuit at that point), Brad didn’t really know what to expect when he got to the Greek. Here’s what he found: “The place was really buzzing. There was just a really cool energy there. Once I stood there in the crowd and heard the music, that’s what floored me. There’s a violin and a saxophone onstage and that’s pretty darn rare these days; who does that? And, as they played, collectively what I heard from them just kind of blew my mind. I stood there slack-jawed through a couple of their songs like, ‘Wow, who knew these instruments could all sound so good together?’ And you just knew that the band was having a good time on top of it, which, in turn, made everybody in the crowd just feed off that. It’s the kind of thing that you really can’t explain.”

    Brad’s right … and so was his friend. Seeing DMB is an experience. It’s about so much more than just kicking back and listening to music (though that’s certainly part of it). That feeling of walking into a setting that’s completely foreign to you and finding an atmosphere where everyone’s feeding off of each other (the band feeding off the crowd, the band feeding off each other, the crowd feeding off the band, and the crowd feeding off the crowd) is pretty amazing. And very, very difficult to explain. You just sort of have to be there and experience it.

    By the end of the show, Brad was sold. His experience at his first show isn’t that different from many of the others I’ve talked to, but I thought he put it perfectly. And his story is the nutshell explanation of why DMB got so big so quickly in the 90s: Brad got turned on to DMB by a friend, then Brad wanted his friends to experience DMB’s live show, and so on and so forth …  until 15 years later you get the #1 grossing act in America for the 2000s.

    We all know the story by now … but it still makes me happy every time I hear it.

  • Nikki's Blog

    Posted on June 27th, 2010

    Written by nikki

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    Request for 411 and a Book Update

    It’s been awhile since I specifically updated where things are at with the book manuscript (and the updates I did provide previously are no longer present since we had a major wipe-out of the site, which resulted in losing pretty much all of the posts and comments … and also a minor stroke on my part).

    I’ve been able to incorporate a ton of your comments, insights, and input into the book so far. If you haven’t been contacted for an interview that means, well, pretty much nothing. Many of you were so thorough and eloquent in your emails that an interview wasn’t necessary—I was able to weave what you provided straight into the text without needing any further information. Having said that, if you are included in the manuscript, you’ll know in the next couple of months as I will need a signed release. I’m just not quite there yet in a lot of cases.

    Right now I’m looking for some specific information, so if you’d like to pitch in, please feel free to click on the Share Your Story button on the right-hand column of the site. Alternatively, you can email hello[at]DMBandUs.com.

    • Why do you travel to see DMB shows and what have some of your best/most memorable travel experiences been?
    • What studio CD speaks to you the most or do you have the greatest attachment to and why? [The Lillywhite Sessions is included in this despite the fact that, yes, I realize its inclusion is debatable.]
    • What are your most vivid memories of LeRoi? What do you feel his legacy on the band is? [WARNING: I have a ton of emails in about people’s experiences at the 2008 Gorge shows, so your chances of being published on this specific subject are comparatively slim to other Roi memories and thoughts.]

    Obviously, it’s impossible to cover every show DMB has ever played, but I’m going to try to cover the biggies ranging from 1991 to current day (I know that’s scientifically tough to determine and somewhat objective, so bear with me). I’ll be requesting first-hand stories from specific select shows in the next few weeks. On that note, if you’d like to provide your input on what some of those monumental must-be-included shows actually are, please feel free to drop me a line.

    On a slightly different note, my original intent was to reply back to each and every email because hundreds of you have been so absolutely amazing about taking the time to write in and eloquently express your thoughts and experiences. Unfortunately, this is a one-man show and that’s been more difficult to do than I had expected. Having said that, I’m so excited because all of this contribution means that, in the end, I truly believe Still Here Dancing is going to be exactly what I had hoped it would be … and that is a true reflection of the community and its collective DMB experience over the past twenty years told by a collection of passionate, in-the-know voices.

    So, although I’m aware it’s so insufficient, thank you to all y’all for your hard work and input on this project. I can’t wait until I get to share the fruits of everyone’s labor! And, just to reiterate, even though I have been unable to respond to people individually, please know that I am reading (and loving) everything you’re sending in. Even though the entire motivation for this book was based on everything I’ve had the amazing opportunity of witnessing first-hand over the past fifteen years, I’m nonetheless blown away by what this band has meant (and continues to mean) to so many people over the years and, most of all, at how articulately so many of you have been able to express that.

    Thank you, thank you, thank you for your willingness to take the time to share.

  • From Hardcore Fan to Heavy-Hitting DJ

    Based on the credit of nearly a decade’s worth of more or less annual interviews with various members of DMB, Boston-based promotions director and DJ Cali has earned a reputation for conducting some of the most relevant and revealing DMB interviews to date. As a testament to this, although he is officially affiliated with CBS radio (currently Boston’s Mix 104.1), Cali’s interviews are also permanently archived and housed at DMB fan sites like AntsMarching.org and DontBurnthePig.org.

    Perhaps almost as interesting as Cali’s interviews with the band is his own story about how he went from being (as he himself puts it) “a hardcore DMB fan” to the position he’s currently in, where he is afforded the opportunity to go straight to the source to ask so many of the questions DMB fans want to know.

    Cali began seeing DMB like so many of us did—spending summer nights singing and dancing with his friends on the lawn. With 112 shows under his belt since 1998, Cali revels in the live DMB experience. “I’m just really a lot about being with my friends, having a good time and, as cheesy as this sounds, I just love to sing and dance at the shows. It’s been an awesome ride.”

    Cali and Stefan at their first interview in 2001.

    It was purely by coincidence, while covering the X Games for Boston’s now-defunct WBCN 104.1 in the early 2000s, that Cali inadvertently come into contact with a DMB crew member who just happened to ask Cali if he was a DMB fan. From there, the rest is history. It was through this connection that Cali was granted his first interview with Stefan at a ski show exhibition in Boston in 2001. Cali remembers, “The first interview at the ski show, I was nervous as hell. I never, ever expected it to end up where it’s ended up.” Over the ensuing years, he’s had the opportunity to speak to Stefan several times, Dave on a couple of occasions (including one memorable interview during the promotion of Some Devil in 2003, when Dave played Gravedigger for an audience of one: Cali), and Boyd during his True Reflections promo.

    Of all the amazing opportunities Cali has had over the years, he says his favorite experiences have been the frequent interviews conducted with Stefan. “I really like interviewing Stefan the most because he’s such a real person, so normal. You don’t look at him like he’s in the biggest band in the world. Stefan and I became good friends to where I think people feel like they’re listening in on someone’s conversation at this point. I’ve interviewed him a bunch of times now and I love interviewing him more than anyone else because of the repertoire we have.”

    Because of the combination of this repertoire and his knowledge of DMB from a fan angle, Cali has the unique opportunity to ask

    Cali and Stefan at their most recent interview, June 2010.

    the questions we all want to know, as clearly evidenced through his recent interview with Stefan prior to the N2 Mansfield, MA  show, when Stefan opened up about DMB’s decision to take 2011 off and the dusting off of oldies but goodies for the 2010 tour. “When I interview Stefan, I just really ask the questions that I want to know and I think it’s the same questions the fans want to know. It doesn’t take me long to come up with these questions—for this last interview, I just sat down and wrote them out in, like, two minutes.”

    At the end of the day, Cali has found himself in a unique position that allows him to pair his professional endeavors with his favorite band. “Part of what’s so awesome about following this band around is that there’s always a great story that goes along with it.” And, in Cali’s case, this is most certainly true.

    Cali’s most recent two-part interview with Stefan from June 8, 2010 can be found here and here.

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