By Thad Requet - Photos Courtesy of Brian Bruner
	 
	
	 When Dane Clark replaced Kenny Aronoff as the drummer in John Mellencamp's 
	band in 1997, he did so without missing a beat. Clark has been a key 
	musician for Mellencamp and his ever-changing music. But what many may not 
	realize is that when Dane isn't keeping the beat for Mellencamp, he is 
	writing, recording and performing his own music.
When Dane Clark replaced Kenny Aronoff as the drummer in John Mellencamp's 
	band in 1997, he did so without missing a beat. Clark has been a key 
	musician for Mellencamp and his ever-changing music. But what many may not 
	realize is that when Dane isn't keeping the beat for Mellencamp, he is 
	writing, recording and performing his own music.
	
	
Dane's Career
Dane Clark grew up in Anderson, Indiana. He started music at a young age. "I 
	actually started playing the piano in third grade. I learned how to read 
	music from that. I played it for a couple of years and then I started taking 
	guitar lessons. And then started taking drum lessons," he explained. Dane 
	was about 11 years old when he started playing drums. 
	Music always seemed to come easy for Dane. "It was a passion for me and I 
	knew at an early age that I was going to be doing this kind of stuff." He 
	wrote his first song when he was in sixth grade and played drums and sang it in 
	his sixth grade talent show.
	Dane said that as a writer, he has been influenced by music in the 1960's 
	and 70's. People like Bob Dylan, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Van 
	Morrison, Lou Reed. "All the great songwriters, especially the guys who were 
	lyricists...Donovan's early work, Leonard Cohen's early work," he 
	explained. 
	
	
	Dane's Band and Sound
	Dane has a five piece band backing him, guitars, drums, bass and a utility 
	guy who plays steel guitar, dobro, banjo and mandolin. His lead guitar 
	player also plays keyboards. He explained that he also has a guy who comes 
	up on certain songs and plays the harp. 
	Clark described his sound as "kind of a gritty back porch, rock-n-roll 
	that's leaning toward contemporary country." He and his band are currently 
	looking to expand their horizons on where they play. He says he has a really 
	great band and they have been busy promoting his latest album. "We have a 
	video out off the new album 
	
	Postcards From The Hard Road  its the first track called "Dream Stealing Town"," he explained. This is 
	Clark's fourth solo album. 
	He said he feels his sound has evolved to be a little more organic. "This 
	latest album leans a little bit more towards contemporary country," he said. 
	Dane produced his latest album and recorded much of it in his own home 
	studio. "There are a couple tracks we cut live at Static Shack, Bob and 
	Tom's studio, with my friend Alan Johnson. Drum tracks I always record 
	someplace else. There were other things we did when Mellencamp was out on 
	the road...the things that Troye (Kennett) Andy (York) and Jon E. Gee 
	contributed we did when we were out on the road. Larry Crane, from the old 
	band, is on a song. Jenny DeVoe, a singer/songwriter from Indianapolis 
	guested on three songs. And also band members from (60's rockers) Moby Grape contributed," 
	he said. Clark said things always take longer than expected, especially when you have 
	as many different projects going on as he does. He said he writes songs all 
	the time and already has 20 new songs written for his next project. "I could 
	finish it in a week if I had the available time. It's just a matter of 
	finances and things like that," he said.
                                                                                                                     
 
	
		
			| "Dream Stealing Town" from 
			Postcards From The Hard Road
 
 
 
 | "Over It" from Postcards From The Hard 
			Road
 
 
 
 | 
 
		
			| "Lucky Guy" from No Apologies
 | "Lady Blue" from No Apologies
 | 
	
                                                                                                                                     
	Dane wrote "Robert Johnson" and "Waylon And Johnny" in the same day. He 
	explains that they are similar songs but go in a different direction. "If 
	Robert Johnson comes after you that means you're dying, right? But didn't he 
	sell his soul to the devil? So if Robert Johnson is coming for you it might 
	not be a good thing. I wrote that song really quick and I'm really happy 
	with it. But I thought, I'm not sure this is how I want to go out. But then 
	I thought, going out should be more of a celebration, so let's go to a good 
	place. So then I wrote "Waylon and Johnny" where it says, "I'm going to live 
	my life, have fun and be free, till Waylon and Johnny come looking for 
	me"
	Dane explained that with the songwriting process, for him the words and 
	music both usually come about the same time. "Occasionally there will be 
	songs I write where the music comes first. Those are usually the most 
	complex. Then there will be songs where I'll get an idea and I won't have an 
	instrument and I'll have to get the melody for it later," he explained.
	He also explained how he has notebooks full of lyrics and ideas. "I found 
	one the other day from about 20 years ago. I didn't really like the chorus, 
	then I realized what it could be, and I finished it in about a half-hour and 
	it's great. I just didn't have the stamina, or whatever it took at the 
	moment, to finish it. But after a fresh look, it came together. Songs come 
	in all kinds of different ways. Usually the quick ones you can trust and 
	then you have the long distance ones you can figure out later," he 
	explained.
	
 The Music Development Process
The Music Development Process
	He said he enjoys all the stages of the development of music, from writing 
	to recording to performing. "I will say the mixing process can become very 
	grueling. I don't really like that. The problem is you've already heard the 
	song a million times. Because you are trying to figure out what parts are 
	sounding right and what aren't. After one of my records comes out, I won't 
	listen to it for a year. I'm usually off on my next project," he explained.
	He also talked about the challenge of taking 18 or 19 songs and narrowing 
	them down to 10 or 12 for a new record. "It's a big challenge. I'm not very 
	good at it. I think you need other people to help you and say "this one 
	should go, this one should stay." Bob Dylan is a good example of that. If 
	you are familiar with the Bootleg Series...all those songs he left off 
	
Infidels like "Blind Willie McTell" and Foot  Of Pride...I mean, are you 
	kidding me?" He left "Series Of Dreams" off of 
Oh Mercy. I've tried to learn 
	from that with my own work. 
	
With John Mellencamp
	Dane joined the John Mellencamp band in 1996, but it wasn't the first time 
	he had worked with Mellencamp. He did a lot of work on 1992's
	Falling 
	From Grace soundtrack. Dane 
	was playing with Larry Crane in 1990 in a side band while Larry was still 
	with the Mellencamp band. "Kenny was off playing on...I think it might have 
	been an Elton John record in 1990, so he was gone. They needed somebody, and 
	I'd done a ton of studio work in Indiana. I did five songs, maybe six on 
	that soundtrack. I was there for three days," he said. "I added drums to a 
	John Prine song "All The Best". A few months later down at the Blue Bird 
	bar in Bloomington, IN drinking a beer and leaning against the cigarette machine, talking to 
	John Prine and he was telling me how much he liked what I did on his song. 
	That's one of my favorite moments in time," he said. 
	Before that, Dane had played in a band called the Indy All-Stars which had 
	Toby Myers on bass, and John Cascella was in the band. "So I knew all these 
	guys. So it was a situation where Kenny was leaving and they auditioned all 
	kinds of guys. I prepared two songs. One of them was the original version of 
	"Love And Happiness" and the other one was "Paper In Fire". I went in very 
	prepared," he said.
	"When I got there the band told me that John wasn't even going to be there, 
	I was just going to play with them. And at the last second John walks in and 
	sits right in front. I played "Love And Happiness" first and then John said 
	"hey why don't you come up here" where he was. I had pretty long hair at 
	the time, what John called my Contemporary Christian cut. He said "I think 
	you'd look pretty good with that hair cut off"; and I said "I'll shave my 
	whole body, I don't care."
	"The thing was, he thought I was funny, I went in there and did great on the 
	drums, and they all knew me," he explained. So those three things all made 
	it make sense for him to choose Dane. He explained how it's important for 
	band members to be able to get along. "You're going to spend more hours 
	talking about your families than you are playing the songs. We all got 
	along, so I think that helped with me getting in the band," he said.
	Dane talked about the first time he played in front of an arena size crowd. 
	"I'm not going to say it wasn't a rush, because it really was. But once 
	that's what you do, you'd flip yourself out if you sat around and thought 
	about what you were doing. Hey I'm going to go out and play for 40,000 
	people tonight...wow! You can't sit around and think that way, you have to 
	just be like "hey I'm going to walk in here and play the drums today."
	That's how I approach those things," he said. 
	Dane has played Madison Square Garden in New York City and then played a 
	street fair in Illinois the next day. "I've enjoyed both, they both pay and 
	both were fun," he said.
	Clark said when he first got in the band, John was a little tough on him. 
	"He was wanting something different. He was tired of the sound of the 80's. 
	Those records were great, but John didn't want to hear that anymore. He 
	wanted to deal with the groove, and have something a little more earthy 
	sounding. It took me awhile for me to figure out what he was wanting, but 
	not too long. The VH1 
Backyard 
	Barbecue (one of Dane's first public gig's with John) went over real 
	well," he said. Rolling Stone magazine gave it a good review and said 
	positive things about Dane's performance. "I was never trying to compare 
	myself to Kenny Aronoff. I was just trying to do my thing and give the music 
	what John wanted. There are great drummers everywhere. There are guys in 
	their 20's that would make you want to quit drumming and start selling 
	bumper stickers," he said. "Many times John wants something that he's never 
	heard before, especially in the studio. And that can be very challenging, 
	but it's cool," Clark said.
	
	 No Better Than This Tour
No Better Than This Tour
	During the very long and successful
 
	No 
	Better Than This Tour that 
	took place over the last three years, Dane spent two-thirds of the 
	two-plus hour show playing a cocktail set. A smaller and simpler drum set 
	that is played standing up, often seen in lounges and quieter musical 
	settings  than a rock show.  "I loved it. People kept telling 
	me that they hadn't heard that thing played like I played it on that tour. I 
	haven't seen that many guys play it. Obviously Steve Jordan (who's played 
	with Saturday Night Live Band, The Blues Brothers, Keith Richards, and Eric 
	Clapton among others) plays it. He approaches it a lot more mellow than what 
	I do. I'm hitting that thing like a rock drummer."
	
	Dane said he thinks part of it might be a visual thing that Mellencamp 
	likes, with the cocktail set and the upright acoustic bass. "But it also pares things 
	down. It';s cool to try to figure out how to do something different with 
	less. And John's always been for that. He took all of Kenny's toms and 
	cymbals away...well he did the same thing to me. That was fine, I didn't 
	mind that," he said.
	Describing the challenges of playing the cocktail set, Dane 
	explains..."you're leaning on one foot, so you can';t use it. You basically 
	have a snare drum and a little tom drum, a ride crash cymbal, a hi hat 
	cymbal and a piece of wood to 
	bang on...good luck pal. I think I might have invented a different way to 
	play that on that tour.
	Dane said that always recreating the sound and style is a cool thing to be a 
	part of. "I think that's what has made John a strong survivor of the music 
	business all these years, is that he has changed and tried to do things 
	differently. 
	
	 Favorite Mellencamp Record He's Played On
Favorite Mellencamp Record He's Played On
	Dane has played on eight studio albums for John Mellencamp, not counting the
 
	Falling 
	From Grace  Soundtrack. When asked if he had a favorite he mentioned 
	a couple. 
	Trouble No More was 
	a fun record to make. That one was very cool. We did it really quick. I 
	think we rehearsed for a week with just Andy (York), Mike (Wanchic) John and 
	I. I think Toby still played upright bass on that. So we brought him in for 
	a few days and Jon E. Gee in for a few days. At that point we were two weeks 
	in. We brought an engineer in and then I think we recorded for a week and a 
	half. The whole thing only took a month," he explained. 
	Another favorite that Dane mentioned with 
	Life, Death, 
	Love And Freedom. "Working 
	with T-Bone Burnett, he was really fun to work with. I thought those tracks 
	really came out unique and cool. And I used the cocktail kit on that 
	record," he noted. "It was cut in less than 10 days. I don't think we played 
	any song more than twice...maybe three times. And a couple times, he'd take 
	the first half of one, he'd snip it and take the second half of another 
	take. And he already knew what he wanted to do when we came back in the 
	room. He's pretty amazing," Dane said describing Burnett. 
	
Ghost Brothers Of Darkland County
	Dane played live during the performances of John and Stephen King's musical 
	Ghost Brothers Of Darkland County. He describes that experience and what all 
	it entailed. "I used a different drum set on that than I've ever used 
	before. That's a hybrid cocktail drum set. I deliberately used bigger drums 
	and a deeper sounding snare. I didn't use any drum sticks at all, except on 
	the last song I used one. The rest of the time I either used mallets with 
	rattles in them or brushes. It was an entirely different kind of feel, and I 
	wasn't playing very loud at all. I never had a bead of sweat on my forehead. 
	It's because of the nature of what you're trying to do, you have to be 
	quiet. It was just creating an entire different thing and T-Bone loved it. 
	It was a really fun band, we had Dave Roe (Johnny Cash, 
No Better Than 
	This Sun Studio sessions) playing bass. He is 
	a master of the rockabilly bass sound."
	"I was down in Atlanta for a couple of months. I was recovering from 
	(shoulder) surgery, rehabbing my shoulder. It was a great way to play drums, 
	but I didn't have to work so hard. It was a great thing, I was able to keep 
	my chops up and at the same time I really enjoyed it."
	He explained that the musical was a very dark thing. "It's been re-written 
	since we did it down there and it's been workshopped in New York City. The 
	changes are fantastic that Stephen King did with the dialogue. I hope it 
	goes to Broadway," he said. 
	
Meeting Others Through Mellencamp
	Dane talked about some of the people he's had a chance to meet and work with 
	while playing with John. People such as Bob Dylan and Donavon. "Donavon and 
	I have worked together and wrote some songs together for his last record. 
	It's incredible. It's like when Fogerty toured with us back in 2005. He got 
	up on stage with us every night and I got to play "Green River" with him." 
LEARN MORE ABOUT DANE - 
www.daneclark.com
	