From MomShack.com
Drake Bell will perform for one lucky fan
By
Dec 6, 2006, 13:59
To celebrate the release of It's Only Time, Drake will perform an
acoustic performance for one lucky fan and ten of their friends at the
winner’s home!
- Entry form and all rules
"Live how you want to live/If you wanna be free." "Do What You Want"
For a 20-year-old, Drake Bell is an old soul when it comes to the music
he listens to and plays on his Universal Motown Records debut It's Only
Time.
Songs like the first single, "I Know," which sounds like it could have
come off Rubber Soul, and the empowering, Elton John-like rocker "Do
What You Want" boast a bittersweet pop sound, with catchy harmonies and
plenty of exuberant vocal hooks, which is no wonder considering the
Newport Beach, CA, native, whose mother is two-time world champion pool
player Robin Dodson, was raised on the classic rock of the '60s.
"I'm a huge fan of the Beatles, the Beach Boys, Buddy Holly and Elvis
Presley, everything about them," he enthuses. "The songs, the way they
were as people, their style. I love all those old vinyl albums."
Learning how to play guitar from The Who's Roger Daltrey, with whom he
worked in the 1998 movie Changing Destiny, Drake proved a natural
student.
"He was just shocked, because here was this 12-year-old kid who knew
about his band playing the Isle of Wight," says Drake. "He was not your
quintessential rock star. He was just so real and cool. When I began
playing guitar and writing songs, I fell in love with it right away. I
started putting these little bands together and just kept going."
A child actor who began appearing in commercial and feature films when
he was 5, Bell says: "I was always an entertainer. I loved being the
life of the party. I watched all the old TV shows, Dick Van Dyke, Bob
Newhart, Mary Tyler Moore, and the Osmonds. When I was a kid, I wanted
to be Elvis Presley so I could star in movies and TV while also playing
music."
He was John Cusack's son in the HBO film The Jack Bull, receiving a
2000 Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Young Actor in a TV Movie
or Pilot. He also had a memorable role in Jerry Maguire, as the son of
a hospitalized hockey player client of Tom Cruise’s sports agent who
got to tell the superstar to "eff off" because he tried to talk his
father out of retiring because of recurrent concussions.
"He's the nicest guy," says Bell about Cruise. "He was so good to me.
He invited me into his trailer to play computer games. He treats
everyone the same way."
Bell went on to roles in the feature films High Fidelity and Yours,
Mine and Ours as well as the TV series Seinfeld, The Drew Carey Show,
The Pretender and Home Improvement while appearing in the cast of
Nickelodeon's sketch comedy series The Amanda Show, which led to his
starring role on the network’s popular The Josh and Drake Show.
Bell says his character Drake Parker is merely an extension of the
musical persona he has in real life, composing all the songs he plays
on the show and penning its theme, "Found a Way."
"The character on the show is pretty much me," he says. The series just
completed its fourth, and final, season on the air, leaving room for
Drake to pursue his musical career.
"It's really convenient my schedule is working out that way," he says.
"Now that the show is over, I have plenty of time to go out and promote
the album by playing live."
Bell put out the indie release Telegraph on his own last year,
recording it in his home studio with
singer/songwriter/guitarist/producer Michael Corcoran, who also
collaborated with him on his major-label debut. "We did this album in
the same grass-roots way," explains Drake. "Playing all the
instruments, Paul McCartney Ram style, except its more complex
instrumentally and more orchestrated than Telegraph."
That can be heard on the album’s centerpiece four-song suite—"Fallen
for You," "Rusted Silhouette," "Break Me Down," and "End It Good"—
forming a narrative about the ups and downs in three different
relationships, an admitted homage to the second side of the Beatles’
Abbey Road.
"We like to experiment, mess around and see what comes out," says Drake
of the creative process. "There’s not really a lot of planning
involved, but doing it as we go along, putting it together like a
puzzle. It’s a lot of fun."
Much of the joy on It's Only Time comes from Bell's survival of a
head-on collision late last year in his '66 Mustang on the Pacific
Coast Highway as he was sitting at a light, suffering a broken jaw,
fractured neck, six lost teeth and a six-inch gash to his chin. "That's
one of the reasons this album is so upbeat and fun," he says. "I wake
up every morning thinking I’m lucky to be alive."
That spirit comes through loud and clear during Bell's live shows with
his band, which has performed at the House of Blues in Atlanta, Anaheim
and San Diego as well as the Roxy in L.A., helping ignite a bidding war
among labels won by Universal.
"When we play concerts, we have everyone from five and six-year-olds to
teenagers to their parents and grandparents," he says. "The older
people come up to me and tell me they enjoyed themselves as much as
their kids."
"When you come to one of our shows, you can tell immediately we’re not
fake. The way we sing and play our instruments on-stage, no one can say
it’s contrived or pre-fabricated. It’s real."
One listen to It's Only Time and you know... Drake Bell's time is now.
- Drake Bell Official Website
- Drake Bell Myspace Page
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