Give Vance a Chance Song Clinic

GIVE VANCE A CHANCE

Throughout this podcast series, I’ll be joined by many old friends and former colleagues - to give everyone an opportunity to hear the remarkable stories behind some of your favorite songs, from the mouths of the people who had a direct hand in crafting them. Beyond the anecdotes, we hope to impart you with some really practical songwriting tips, general tools and inspiration for how to succeed in your songwriting career.

Episodes

  1. EP: 10 Marc Jordan - GVAC Song Clinic

    08/17/2022

    EP: 10 Marc Jordan - GVAC Song Clinic

    Marc Wallace Jordan was born March 6, 1948 into a musical household in Brooklyn, NY. His dad Charles was a successful Canadian singer who moved back to Canada soon after Marc was born, which makes Marc an American-born Canadian singer-songwriter, record producer, session musician, and actor. Covering a wide variety of genres, he has written songs for a number of well-known artists, including Diana Ross, Rod Stewart, Cher, Bette Midler, Chicago, and Josh Groban, to name a few. In 1977 Jordan reached a U.S. deal with Warner Bros. Records.[1] This period with Warner spawned the Canadian hit songs "Marina del Rey" and "Survival" from the record Mannequin; a second record produced by Jay Graydon called Blue Desert was released 1980, and is regarded as a classic of the West Coast Sound of the period. He was named best producer with Steven MacKinnon at the Juno Awards in 1994 for "Waiting for a Miracle" (from Reckless Valentine). In 2014 the Canadian Film Centre appointed Jordan as the Musical Director of its Slaight Family Music Lab.[2] In the 1980s, Jordan was signed to RCA for two records. Paul De Villiers produced the first, Talking Through Pictures, and Kim Bullard the second, called C.O.W.. In 1988, Jordan sang and co-wrote the theme song to the hit Australian movie Boulevard of Broken Dreams which was nominated for an AFI Award for Best Film. After independently releasing the critically acclaimed recordings Reckless Valentine and Cool Jam Black Earth, he was signed to Blue Note/EMI Canada in 1999, and followed up with two more jazz-oriented CDs, This Is How Men Cry and Make Believe Ballroom. Jordan is also an actor and he made his acting debut in Michael McGowan's 2010 sports musical Score: A Hockey Musical, where he plays Edgar Gordon, a pacifist father who along with his wife (Olivia Newton-John) have a 17-year-old son who has a talent for hockey. He is married to fellow singer-songwriter Amy Sky. They live in Toronto and have a cottage in Muskoka with their two children, Ezra and Zoe. Jordan and Sky are both national UNICEF Goodwill Ambassadors for Canada. He is currently finishing up a duets album with Amy whilst also writing for George Benson’s next record and a handful of cuts on Rod Stewart's upcoming record. He’s also in the middle of his next solo record which features the Prague symphony who also played on his last record "Both Sides"...

    27 min
  2. EP:01 Tommy Sims - GVAC Song Clinic

    11/23/2021

    EP:01 Tommy Sims - GVAC Song Clinic

    It would not be hyperbolic to say Tommy Sims has “changed the world” with his songwriting. In addition to famously co-penning that iconic 1997 Grammy-winning Song of the Year by Eric Clapton, Sims has written dozens of other brilliant tracks for the likes of Bonnie Raitt, Kelly Clarkson, Garth Brooks, Cher, Toni Braxton, and many others. Born in the 60s, Sims’ childhood home was brimming with a uniquely eclectic range of musical influences, from his mother’s religious gospel music, to his father’s rock & roll and R&B records (Led Zeppelin, Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, etc.). From a young age, Sims says he had that “wild” mix of music constantly permeating his mind and consciousness. By the time he was 16, he fully understood that music could not be simply boiled down to a dichotomy of sacred versus non-sacred. “Music has to just be music.” Through his own experiences, Sims saw that music could be a catalyst for positive things to happen. “Music leads to thinking good thoughts, [and] doing good deeds” he explained. “Both philosophically and spiritually, as well as economically, music could be a way out of ‘the hood’, a route to a better life.” He recalls writing his first “song” at the age of thirteen, when he simply removed the lyrics from “Sweet Love” by the Commodores, and replaced them with his own words. “I thought I had written a song, but really that was just plagiarism,” he quipped. While he lacked any personal connections in the music industry, he always trusted that as long as he improved at writing songs, he could ‘make it’ as a songwriter. “I remember this euphoric feeling of picking up a guitar, playing my own chords, and singing my own lyrics. There was nothing like that feeling. That was the feeling of, ‘I can really do this if I just keep working at it.” “Change the World” The fascinating story behind “Change the World” is a testament to the collaborative and unpredictable nature of songwriting. Though undoubtedly his most notable songwriting credit, the song’s massive success was what both Sims and our host, then president of Interscope Music, Ronny Vance, termed “bittersweet,” as the final cut recorded by Clapton and produced by Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds was a significant deviation from the original meaning of Sims’ lyrics. The earliest version of “Change the World,” written by Sims as a teenager, was about “tikkun olam,” explained Vance, “the Jewish concept for repairing the world.” Over the years, the song evolved through two more versions. The most updated rendition sent to Clapton was deeply rooted in Beatles/Paul McCartney influences, to reflect what Sims’ then-studio-session-mates, Gordon Kennedy, Wayne Kirkpatrick and Chris Rodriguez, were looking for when they asked him to fill in on bass for the recordings they were making for a potential deal with RCA. Ultimately, ”the rewrite/re-record with Clapton was clearly a love song,” said Vance, “and we were both underwhelmed.” Recalling the day in Nashville when he and Vance received Clapton’s final copy that they had been anticipating for many months, Sims shared his mixed emotions: “Going back to that moment, I do remember feeling like it had turned into quite a different record from the original demo. The whole McCartney-esque feel was gone. The funny thing is, I saw later interviews with Clapton where he literally mentions feeling the need to “de-McCartney” the song. I think the term he used was, ‘to put some “black” into it’, which was hilarious to me. The irony, that I had apparently done the reverse thing, by taking some of the “black” out of it and putting in the McCartney feel, as the [2nd] version I did with my band had a Prince/funk feel that didn't have a lot of McCartney in it either. After Clapton’s song was released, Sims began playing the song out on songwriting nights. One evening, an audience member who was somehow aware of the original version from Sims’ teenage years, asked him to play that rendition, featuring his original, inspirational lyrics: State of the world before you Knowing we ain't got much time To do some of the things that we must do If you listen you can hear the change I still believe we can make it there, We might change the world Who’s got a dream you can give away.... As a dreamer first, I think we might change the world “Peace and Love” Sims released his solo project, entitled “Peace and Love” in August 2000. It was filled with great songs he had written for a number of renowned artists, including Al Green, Stevie Wonder, and Earth Wind and Fire. However, stepping out from behind the scenes represents a serious challenge for many songwriters, and for Sims, the record marked a difficult transition into the spotlight as a solo artist. “The album for me was a very strange thing. I was very hesitant, as I didn't consider myself a singer. I still don’t, although over the years, I do feel like I finally found my voice as an artist. But back in those days I wasn’t at all comfortable being in front of the mic. I was too big of a fan of all the great singers to even try [to sing] most of the time, except for the purpose of my demos. When I couldn't get a demo singer I’d sing it in my own pseudo- strange falsetto-y voice just to ‘eek’ out the melody. Peace and love began out of that.” It was with Vance’s encouragement that Sims ultimately gained the confidence to release his own material. “I knew the world needed this record,” said Vance. Despite his impressive career achievements, Sims clearly remains humble and appreciative of those that helped him along the way. “You are one pivotal guy in my life,” he says to Vance. “You were a great catalyst in saving my life, and you had a lot, if not everything to do with me turning into a so-called ‘songwriter.’ My love and affection for you is eternal.”

    41 min

About

Throughout this podcast series, I’ll be joined by many old friends and former colleagues - to give everyone an opportunity to hear the remarkable stories behind some of your favorite songs, from the mouths of the people who had a direct hand in crafting them. Beyond the anecdotes, we hope to impart you with some really practical songwriting tips, general tools and inspiration for how to succeed in your songwriting career.