Genre and Style:
Rock, Folk Rock
Song Samples:
1. Take
Your Breath Away
2. Flood
3. Your
Love
4. Wish
You Were Here
Biography
It goes like this: you fall in love with music.
You listen to the radio like the DJ is pouring the music right
into your head. One day you think “How hard can it be to do
this myself?” and you pick up a guitar.
If you’re Jeff Eaton, you’re only nine years old when you
get that guitar, and you’re in your first band by the seventh
grade.
Jeff grew up in Oregon — “wild, to put it mildly” — and
stayed wild into adulthood. He partied hard, and music was
always there. “We’d go to the bars, get drunk, go home and
get our guitars, go back to the bar and play,” he says of his
days in Mississippi.
So when it was time to clean up his life and ditch the drugs and
the drinking, music had to go, too. Cleaning up meant leaving
his old life: the people, the places he used to hang out, and
the music.
“When you’re getting away from something, when you’re
trying to get to a safe zone, you go as far as you can in the
opposite direction,” he says.
It was eight years before Jeff could come back to music without
worrying it might pull him back over to the wrong side of the
road. When he did, he was tougher and wiser, and had a deep wish
to reach people, relate to them and comfort them through music.
Deciding that “music isn’t just a bunch of fun and games,”
he teamed up with Top-40 producer Ken Mary (who has worked with
Trik Turner, Alice Cooper, The Phunk Junkeez, and LaRue) for his
second release, the approachable, thoughtful “Wish You Were
Here.”
The album is polished, warm and distinctly American: rootsy
guitar, soaring harmonies and earnest vocals layered over
driving rock. The album’s candid lyrics and passionate,
yearning songs tap into Jeff’s struggle of getting his life
back under control: “They’re about some of the helplessness
and powerlessness I felt when I was trying to walk away from
that life,” he says.
They’re also intimately connected with his own faith, which
gave him the strength he needed to clean up his life.
“I don’t want to just preach to the choir,” he says. “I
like to write songs you can’t pigeonhole, not just praise and
worship songs. That’s where the subtlety comes in. People can
take a lot from the songs — there’s enough there that when
they think about it, they think ‘Hey, he wasn’t just talking
about my relationship with my girlfriend,’ or whatever.”
Ultimately, though, the songs are meant to make a connection.
“People get overwhelmed sometimes by an emotion, and they can
only feel relieved if they can find music that completely
captures it. I know how they feel; I’ve been there.”
www.jeffeaton-music.com