The
Joel Frankel Story (in 1999)
Joel
Frankel is a serious songwriter and a big kid.
Like many musicians, Joel left New Jersey for Los Angeles. There
he found some success with songs for film and television (Big,
The Heights), founded a band that was courted by the major
labels, and wound up in Chicago putting out recordings for adoring
consumers under three-feet tall.
"I
wanted to learn guitar when I was six. To prove to my father that
I'd sit and practice, he had me hold my big sister's violin thirty
minutes everyday for a month to show I'd stick with it." He
stuck with it. His childhood included living in Oklahoma, Denver,
North Dakota, St. Louis, New York and Washington D.C. and eventually
an adolescence in Princeton. "I used to sing obituaries as
a kid. It got me interested in songs about life and death. It's
how I started writing songs." It wasn't until college that
the allure of free beer was enough to entice Joel to perform in
public as a solo acoustic instrumentalist. Upon earning a degree
as a dietician, he moved to Philadelphia and started a more appetizing
career choice, that of a rock musician. He formed his own band,
Enuchs From Munich, to play his songs. On a personal trip to L.A.
he succeeded on his very first attempt at selling a song. The
publisher was Dave Gillutin, known for his early association with
Neil Diamond.
Enticed to move to the West Coast, he bought a van with New Jersey
slide guitarist Jon Spiegel. A stopover in Chicago turned
into a winter residency. He made musical connections in Chicago
and started working again with a friend from back East, keyboardist
Eddie Ganet. He also met the woman he would eventually
marry.
Arriving in California, he landed his first job as an engineer's
assistant for songwriter Barry Mann and producer/publisher
Steve Tyrell. Early on he experienced a strange taste of
glamour by receiving a Grammy. Granted, it was a UPS driver attempting
delivery to the truly deserving Barry Mann. While attending the
Grove School of Music for his first real musical training he was
joined again by Eddie Ganet, himself a Berklee graduate. They
formed a band called Down Boy Down. They worked with Bill
Graham Management, were the first band to ever play the China
Club, and appeared live on KCRW. But Joel had always been
doing more than rock'n'roll.
Back East he had been performing children's concerts and found
his impish enthusiasm even more in demand in Hollywood. "I
was teaching at a place called Dance & Jingle. One of my songs,
'We Go Together,' was on a tape they used. The music supervisor
for the film Big heard his kid playing my song over and over.
So he used it right before the classic keyboard dance scene, way,
way, way back in the background. I didn't even hear it the first
time I saw the film." Through his published works and growing
industry interest in Down Boy Down, more of his songs made their
way into movies and television (e.g. MTV's Catwalk series).
The band worked with Elton John's arranger Paul Buckmaster
and producer/engineer David Holman, best known for his
Olivia Newton-John credits. Upon the birth of his daughter, Layla,
Joel moved to the hometown of his wife to raise their family in
Chicago.
Upon his return to the Windy City he began teaching at the Old
Town School of Folk Music. Soon after Down Boy Down was reformed,
this time with Bad Examples lead guitarist Tom O'Brien,
when Eddie Ganet relocated to Chicago. But Joel found himself
concentrating ever more heavily on his children's music career.
"I love working with kids. I'm so child-like as a person that
it feels natural. It has real meaning for me spiritually, even
if the chord changes are pretty damn easy." He released two
cassettes on his own Crunchy Records: Don't Sit On A Cactus
and I Can't Sit Still. Billboard's Moira McCormick
wrote in the Child's Play column that the latter was "...one
of the most delightful, original children's cassettes we have
come across in recent times." And those children's cassettes
were finally issued on compact disc in late 1998. A third album,
JoJo the Scarecrow, was issued by Digital Generation
Entertainment in 1999.
Realizing success with his children's career he felt that now
was the time to make sure he is known as a serious songwriter
as well. "I'm also a mature person who wants to write about
a drought, coffee, or getting laid. These are not necessarily
kids' issues. I believe that songs have their own will and energy
and that I have an obligation to let them go." Ralph Covert
of The Bad Examples had been a longtime fan and was always
prompting Joel to make a record. "Since Ralph knew and loved my
songs he made the perfect producer. I needed the discipline."
Covert assembled an ensemble of musicians from Chicago's best
bands. Credits include Larry Beers (Champaign, Charming Beggars),
Lenny Marsh (Big Shoulders), John Rice (Insiders), Buddha Slim
(Remainders), Pickles Piekarski (John Prine's Famous Potatoes,
Bad Examples), the aforementioned Tom O'Brien and Eddie Ganet,
plus two members of Brother Brother: Jon Spiegel and keyboardist/guitarist
John Zdon, who also engineered the sessions.
If
Peter Pans Out is the compact disc debut of Joel Frankel,
who has temporarily grown up.
Addendum:
Joel has returned to writing and performing children's music has
since the time the above bio was written he's released the splendid
Sea Of Chocolate Chips compact disc.
Visit www.joelfankel.com
for more details.