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Nashville songwriter/producer Jon Vezner is a consummate
musical craftsman whose songs have been recorded by such artists as
Faith Hill, Patti Page, Martina McBride, and Vezner’s wife,
Grammy-winning singer Kathy Mattea. But when we caught up with him,
he was on his way to pick up supplies for a different kind of craft:
woodturning.
So, is there a symbiotic relationship between working with songs
and working with wood?
“Absolutely,” says Vezner. “In both cases, you just have to get
out of the way! I haven’t been doing woodturning for very long, but
I’ve learned you have to let the wood speak for itself. I might have
a general idea of the shape, if I’m making a lamp or a bowl or
something like that. But it’s the same as writing a song—you just
need to let it go where it wants to go. You can’t force it.”
Jon has been amply rewarded for his patience in letting his songs
be what they want to be. He recalls one challenging—but ultimately
triumphant—example: “There’s a song I wrote called ‘Ashes in the
Wind,’ which Kathy [Mattea] recorded on her 2002 album, Roses. It’s
gotten a lot of attention, and I think it’s one of the best things
I’ve written. But I tried to write that song for ten years! Every so
often I’d get a little piece, a line or two. It just took that long
to come out the way it did.”
Vezner’s educational background also factors into the songwriting
process. “I was a music theory and composition major, so I have
always thought in terms of arrangement,” he explains. “I’ll write
the songs, then I’ll go into a mode where I arrange them. I do
compartmentalize to some extent, but then again I think of
arrangement all the time when I’m writing.”
In addition to writing songs, Jon has been busy
as a producer in recent years. He’s produced three Patti Page
albums: Brand New Tennessee Waltz, the recently released Sweet
Sounds of Christmas, and a new children’s’ record, Child of Mine.
And he’s working on a new songwriter album of his own—his first
since 1994’s Who’s Gonna Know—which can be previewed on his website,
www.jonvezner.com.
Despite his success, Vezner sometimes considers his work to be a
bit outside the standard Nashville format. “I do what serves the
song, not what I think someone might want to hear,” he says. “For
example, when Don Henry and I wrote “Where’ve You Been,” I sent him
some ideas, like we should do this with classical guitar and cello.
So that’s the way we demoed it. It definitely wasn’t the typical
instrumentation for a demo.”
Yet Vezner has no regrets about such independent thinking. “I
don’t get a lot of cuts on records,” he notes, “but I get nice cuts,
including a lot of singles. The way I look at it, if everybody else
gives a producer something that’s painted red, and I give them
something that’s painted blue, it’s not going to blend in. It either
makes it to the record and it’s a single, or they love it but they
can’t make it fit. A lot of times I’ll end up having the last
single—they’ve established the record already, so they can afford to
go with something a little different. But then sometimes they’ll end
up selling records with that single.”
Vezner considers his Yamaha PSR keyboards essential tools for
writing and arranging. “I love them,” he says. “I started with a
PSR100 and a 150, and then I got an 8000 and a 9000. I basically
build tracks on my PSRs. They’re great for working out
arrangements—I’ve done complete demos with them. For example,
Michael McDonald and I wrote a track called ‘There You Are,’ where
we built the whole song except the guitars on the PSR. It’s a
great-sounding track. I’ve also done songs where I’ve written an
arrangement on my PSR and exported the MIDI files to a sequencing
program, then played it back on Michael McDonald’s Yamaha Disklavier
and recorded it live. Then I built up the tracks on top of that
initial piano track.”
Sometimes, says Jon, the PSR’s onboard sounds can blur the lines
between songwriting, production, and arrangement: “Those things can
become very intertwined. And that’s what’s so good about the PSR. A
lot of times, the work tape I do when we’re writing a song gets
translated straight into the finished demo, where I’ll lay out
tracks and bang—it’s done.”
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