Jeff
Finlin:
Crossing
Music Row's fine line
Molly
Malone's can be a brutal place to have a gig. Veterans of the tiny
stage
in this otherwise comfy neighborhood pub in L.A.'s Fairfax district are
quick to recommend playing electric, and loud, because unless you're
playing
Irish traditionals, the patrons often seem more interested in finding
the
bottom of the pint glass than they are in finding new music.
Jeff
Finlin isn't playing any Irish jig, but he is playing loud. With the
help
of a three-piece band, Finlin rattles home some gritty folk-rock that
actually
does earn him some applause from the dozen folks paying attention. For
Finlin, a Nashville resident, the Molly's gig might not be his only
fish-out-of-water
musical experience. The factory town he calls home manufactures
country,
and he's a songwriter whose sweaty, strummy, literate creations steer
more
toward Greenwich Village or Asbury Park than Music Row.
"It's
always been this big underdog thing being in Nashville and playing
something
different than straight country. I just ignore it," he shrugs, more
interested
in the biscuits and gravy the waitress at this Burbank breakfast joint
is serving up than offering verbal lashings about his city's
narrow-mindedness.
"I pretty much decided that if I can't do what I want, then it's not
worth
doing. I'll work in a restaurant or something. There's not much sacred
in this world. If you start trampling on those things, then you've got
nothing left."
Finlin,
the son of Irish railroad workers from Ohio, started writing songs
around
1990 after a stint as drummer in the Thieves, a rock band that saw one
record die on Capitol. "I thought, 'What would be the most challenging
thing I could possibly do?'" he recalls. "So I decided to write and put
out a record on my own. Amidst a lot of giggles from the Nashville
songwriting
scene, I did it, and I ended up getting a publishing deal and getting
signed
to MCA."
The
MCA sessions never saw daylight, but his self-released 1994 album
Highway
Diaries did. A year later, it was picked up by L.A.'s Little Dog
Records,
home to producer Pete Anderson and other rootsy up-and-comers.
Judging
the book by its cover, Highway Diaries suggests another collection of
world-weary
ramblings by a poet with an acoustic. But Finlin carves his own little
folk-rock nook with a healthy shot of blue-collar, bar-band muscle and
a razor-sharp, even Axl Rose-ish(!) vocal delivery that snarls as much
as it yearns.
His
romantic tales range from playful to desperate; imagery often travels
time
as well as space. One character flirts with Napoleon's lover, another
glamorizes
Jesse James' outlaw existence. In "Idaho", Finlin imagines the carnage
resulting from pioneers' attempts to settle in such rugged terrain.
Then,
awestruck, he warns, "If you think you make a damn/To the grand in the
plan/You better take another look at the show/They got in Idaho." Some
things are bigger than all of us.
Like
the music biz, for instance. Finlin is no exception: As with most other
aspiring performers, he faces day jobs ("Shoveling shit, digging
ditches,"
he says of ways he's provided for his wife and year-old son),
near-obscurity
and semi-attentive audiences in local dives.
But
the reward is songwriting. Finlin considers it his gift. "I'm a firm
believer
that you get a gift when you're born and you're supposed to use that
gift
and follow it. And that's the key to happiness, you know?" he says. "It
took me a long time to figure that out."
Neal
Weiss
No
Depression magazine #5
Sept/Oct
1996

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