The Band Driveway
driveway
Contact - jason [at] thebanddriveway [dot] com
Driveway members -
Corey Matheson - vocals, guitars, pedal steel, banjo
Jason Taylor - vocals, guitars
Chris Sytnyk - bass
Robin Mason- drums
Driveway bio -
Driveway is a band from Toronto made up of ex-MAdE frontman Jason Taylor, ex-MAdE bass player Chris Sytnyk, drummer Robin Mason (Superhalo, Statistics), and Corey Matheson (Haggis) on pedal steel and guitar. These seasoned musicians have combined their influences that include Whiskeytown, The Jayhawks, Lucinda Williams, Coldplay, The Rolling Stones, Pixies, and Gram Parsons to form this rootsy alt-country rock band.
"Calling us alt-country is a bit lazy. People hear a pedal steel or a Hammond organ and automatically assume 'country', but really that has more to do with the instrumentation than the songs themselves. To us we're just a rootsy rock band that can swing between the Pixies to Neil young" says singer/songwriter, Jason Taylor of Driveway's sound.
Driveway's self-titled debut was originally released in Europe on Blue Rose Records out of Germany (Drive-by-Truckers, June Carter Cash) and shortly after was released in Canada on Curve Music based in Toronto. "We are looking at smaller labels because we want to start out organically," says Taylor, "We’d like the band to find and define itself. To this point we haven't contacted a single major label." On their debut CD Taylor is the main songwriter; however the band is free to add whatever they feel. "I'll write a song and hash it out a little bit at home, just to get the overall structure of the song, then I bring it in and everyone puts their own thing on it," says Taylor, "let the song after it has been 'sort-of-written' end up Drivewayified. The guys add all the magic."
Driveway was lucky enough to get U.S. producer Keith Cleversley (The Flaming Lips, Urge Overkill and Spiritualized) to agree to produce some of the songs on the album. Taylor and Sytnyk established their relationship with Cleversley on the last MAdE album. Cleversley produced MAdE’s Television Heart album. "Keith has almost no 'amazing' gear, but he can pull off amazing recordings in spite of this," explains Taylor, "kind of like the guy who can whittle Michelangelo's 'David' out of a tree stump using only a jack-knife." The rest of the album was produced and mixed by Toronto’s Lurch. Mason said "the whole recording experience of the making of our record will stay with me for a long time, it was amazing."
Their second full-length "Travelling Light" was released worldwide in 2008 by Curve Music. This record was recorded by Lurch and Jason Taylor and mixed by Jason Taylor. This time Corey Matheson, the band's guitarist, stepped up contributing half of the songs. This fact gives their second CD a much more diverse feel exploring more across genres. From epic rock to country and even the celtic feel of the accordian and fiddle laden song Virginia.
The guys in Driveway all have many years of recording and touring experience. Universal Music Canada and MCA in the U.S. released MAdE's first album, Bedazzler and Universal Canada distributed their second, Television Heart. The group broke up after the Universal/Polygram merger took place in 1999 and they were dropped from the label. Taylor said, "After that I just wanted to get back to basics, back to my roots and just make music."
Driveway was formed in 2002. "I was writing for a couple of years, I remembered Robin from the old days and Chris was the bass player for MAdE, we put this project together and it was just the three of us for a while." The group put an ad in the back of NOW magazine looking for a guitar player. "We only got one call and that was Corey Matheson," laughs Taylor. "I remember talking to him on the phone and he said 'I'm from Nova Scotia, I play pedal steel, lap steel, piano, guitar…' and I said 'holy shit dude, I'll be over there in like five minutes."
"We have all been in many bands before, some of us have even had a modest amount of success, but no matter what, we are in it for life, and I think to some degree this can be heard in the music," Taylor said, "There's something real about the music, there's something magical when we are on stage together. I think the magic comes from the fact that music is a real part of who and what we are as people".