Chris Klimecky
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Chris Klimecky

Seattle, Washington, United States | Established. Jan 01, 1994 | SELF

Seattle, Washington, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 1994
Solo Rock Alternative

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Music

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"Interview with Producer and Musician Chris Klimecky"

1. What do you enjoy the most about your career in music? Playing live, producing, something else? and why?
CK: There is a magic for me in songwriting, developing the vision for that song, and then recording it. Very much like caring for a seed through to seeing it bare fruit as a mature tree. Creativity and then the realization of that creativity as something tangible and permanent in the world brings me real, lasting joy.

2. For your upcoming CD This Journey, released on March 27, you said that it’s the realization of a rock sound you’ve had in your head for 20 years. Why the wait to record it, and can you describe the process from taking it from a sound in your head to producing it?

CK: Great question, and one I’ve reflected on quite a bit since solidifying the vision for this record about halfway through recording it. “Why didn’t I do this sooner?” is a more complex question than it may seem. I think I’ve touched on this vision in many ways throughout my 4 previous albums (two with a band, and then two solo), but the influences of other band members and collaborators along with distractions of life and lack of time and creative discipline to really make it happen on this level, prevented that vision from having the impact that it does on This Journey. When you’re in the thick of just doing the best you can with what you’ve got in front of you, it’s easy to lose your perspective. In some ways I think I needed the maturity that came from refining and improving for 20 years, along with the time to see it through, in order for it to become real in this focused a manner. It took a re-examination of everything I had done previously, and then a determined, conscious effort to get it done. It was both a painful and wonderful decision to say, “I can do it. I will do it. This is the time.” It was hundreds of hours of hard work to get from the sound in my head to producing it.


3. Can you tell us more about Songwriters in Seattle? From my understanding it’s now a charity organization, what is its mission?

CK: Our stated non-profit mission is that Songwriters in Seattle is “…dedicated to the education of musicians and cultural enrichment of the Pacific Northwest region.” What that means is that we take the incredible talent of the Pacific NW and help move each other forward (whatever that means for each person’s goals) for everyone’s benefit. “Educate, Connect, Inspire” are the three words I try to hammer into people’s heads – let’s improve, learn from each other, support each other, build a sustainable musical community and culture that cities like Nashville and Austin have, and ultimately be able to rally the public around the talent and history that Seattle has. The pieces are all here, they just haven’t been organized in a grassroots and lasting manner before.


4. I read a quote describing your music as “Modern rock with heart like Switchfoot or Foo Fighters without the screaming”, do you think of that as a compliment and do you feel it’s accurate?


CK: Those are a couple of my current favorite bands, who are both extremely successful, so I definitely take it as a compliment! It’s a descriptor that people understand quickly, esp. with regards to Foo Fighters due to their popularity. It’s accurate in that it’s guitar driven and accessible/melodic modern rock “with heart” meaning there’s some depth and emotional honesty to the subject matter. Also accurate that I’m not a screaming singer! There’s more to it than that, of course, and there are certainly differences, but it’s a nice quick summary to give people the general idea. Everyone has their own perspective and ideas about who they think it sounds like once they hear it, which ultimately tells me that it sounds like me, but as an indie artist still being introduced to most people, it’s good to have some reasonable reference point people can identify with.


5. What’s your understanding of music theory? Chords, keys, etc. Is it part of playing or do you s - Guitarist Nation


"Interview with Producer and Musician Chris Klimecky"

1. What do you enjoy the most about your career in music? Playing live, producing, something else? and why?
CK: There is a magic for me in songwriting, developing the vision for that song, and then recording it. Very much like caring for a seed through to seeing it bare fruit as a mature tree. Creativity and then the realization of that creativity as something tangible and permanent in the world brings me real, lasting joy.

2. For your upcoming CD This Journey, released on March 27, you said that it’s the realization of a rock sound you’ve had in your head for 20 years. Why the wait to record it, and can you describe the process from taking it from a sound in your head to producing it?

CK: Great question, and one I’ve reflected on quite a bit since solidifying the vision for this record about halfway through recording it. “Why didn’t I do this sooner?” is a more complex question than it may seem. I think I’ve touched on this vision in many ways throughout my 4 previous albums (two with a band, and then two solo), but the influences of other band members and collaborators along with distractions of life and lack of time and creative discipline to really make it happen on this level, prevented that vision from having the impact that it does on This Journey. When you’re in the thick of just doing the best you can with what you’ve got in front of you, it’s easy to lose your perspective. In some ways I think I needed the maturity that came from refining and improving for 20 years, along with the time to see it through, in order for it to become real in this focused a manner. It took a re-examination of everything I had done previously, and then a determined, conscious effort to get it done. It was both a painful and wonderful decision to say, “I can do it. I will do it. This is the time.” It was hundreds of hours of hard work to get from the sound in my head to producing it.


3. Can you tell us more about Songwriters in Seattle? From my understanding it’s now a charity organization, what is its mission?

CK: Our stated non-profit mission is that Songwriters in Seattle is “…dedicated to the education of musicians and cultural enrichment of the Pacific Northwest region.” What that means is that we take the incredible talent of the Pacific NW and help move each other forward (whatever that means for each person’s goals) for everyone’s benefit. “Educate, Connect, Inspire” are the three words I try to hammer into people’s heads – let’s improve, learn from each other, support each other, build a sustainable musical community and culture that cities like Nashville and Austin have, and ultimately be able to rally the public around the talent and history that Seattle has. The pieces are all here, they just haven’t been organized in a grassroots and lasting manner before.


4. I read a quote describing your music as “Modern rock with heart like Switchfoot or Foo Fighters without the screaming”, do you think of that as a compliment and do you feel it’s accurate?


CK: Those are a couple of my current favorite bands, who are both extremely successful, so I definitely take it as a compliment! It’s a descriptor that people understand quickly, esp. with regards to Foo Fighters due to their popularity. It’s accurate in that it’s guitar driven and accessible/melodic modern rock “with heart” meaning there’s some depth and emotional honesty to the subject matter. Also accurate that I’m not a screaming singer! There’s more to it than that, of course, and there are certainly differences, but it’s a nice quick summary to give people the general idea. Everyone has their own perspective and ideas about who they think it sounds like once they hear it, which ultimately tells me that it sounds like me, but as an indie artist still being introduced to most people, it’s good to have some reasonable reference point people can identify with.


5. What’s your understanding of music theory? Chords, keys, etc. Is it part of playing or do you s - Guitarist Nation


"Chris Klimecky – This Journey (CD)"


Few performers that have been in the music industry as long as Chris Klimecky would be able to break free of their influences and create an innovative album like This Journey. However, each cut on This Journey provides listeners with something catchy, familiar, and utterly unique. The style of alternative rock that Klimecky includes here is based on the work of acts like Fuel, Incubus, and the Foo Fighters; Klimecky’s contribution to the genre comes in the technical virtuosity that he exhibits throughout. Where compositions like the Goo Goo Dolls’ Slide are tremendously infections, Klimecky’s Arrival captures that same ear-worm flavor with compositions that will make fans think.

Sunshine and Misery continues this same confident approach, but Klimecky is able to provide listeners with a sense of the dichotomy present in the titular relationship. This comes forth again during Not Your Hero, a track that possesses a double meaning. The first is straight-forward, that Klimecky is not a perfect individual, but the second – that he needs to be on his own – comes forth. Ride The Wind is a late-disc track that ratchets up the album’s momentum considerably. Fueled by the inimitable guitar work of the aforementioned track, Afterglow rocks out until its final strains.

This Journey soars not only on the arrangements of Klimecky, but also on the tight production present on each of the album’s tracks. This production, helmed by Klimecky, highlights every guitar line and drum beat. What was always going to be a solid album is ratcheted up into a collection of hits that are ready for rock radio stations. Make sure to pick up a copy of This Journey if you like solid musicianship and an always-compelling approach to the alt-rock genre.

Top Tracks: Sunshine and Misery, Not Your Hero

Rating: 8.2/10
- Neufutur


"Chris Klimecky – This Journey (CD)"


Few performers that have been in the music industry as long as Chris Klimecky would be able to break free of their influences and create an innovative album like This Journey. However, each cut on This Journey provides listeners with something catchy, familiar, and utterly unique. The style of alternative rock that Klimecky includes here is based on the work of acts like Fuel, Incubus, and the Foo Fighters; Klimecky’s contribution to the genre comes in the technical virtuosity that he exhibits throughout. Where compositions like the Goo Goo Dolls’ Slide are tremendously infections, Klimecky’s Arrival captures that same ear-worm flavor with compositions that will make fans think.

Sunshine and Misery continues this same confident approach, but Klimecky is able to provide listeners with a sense of the dichotomy present in the titular relationship. This comes forth again during Not Your Hero, a track that possesses a double meaning. The first is straight-forward, that Klimecky is not a perfect individual, but the second – that he needs to be on his own – comes forth. Ride The Wind is a late-disc track that ratchets up the album’s momentum considerably. Fueled by the inimitable guitar work of the aforementioned track, Afterglow rocks out until its final strains.

This Journey soars not only on the arrangements of Klimecky, but also on the tight production present on each of the album’s tracks. This production, helmed by Klimecky, highlights every guitar line and drum beat. What was always going to be a solid album is ratcheted up into a collection of hits that are ready for rock radio stations. Make sure to pick up a copy of This Journey if you like solid musicianship and an always-compelling approach to the alt-rock genre.

Top Tracks: Sunshine and Misery, Not Your Hero

Rating: 8.2/10
- Neufutur


"Chris Klimecky: “This Journey” (Review)"

Chris avoids falling into the morass of sameness plaguing many of his faceless post-grunge brethren and instead quietly establishes himself as one of the more intellectually stimulating progressive indie rock acts around. On “This Journey” Chris Klimecky consistently displays a deceptively simple approach that avoids bandwagon-jumping and instead focuses on hook-laden, guitar-driven manna with the occasional philosophical observation.

Avoiding any hint of didactic pretensions, Chris’s songwriting often touches on simple truths, be it his persevering experiences and the quest for guidance in the title track “This Journey”, the anguish and torment of delusion on the moving “Sunshine and Misery”, or the glory of inner-awareness addressed in “Age Old Story”.

Many of the songs included on this collection continue down the path of introspection, with rhythmically hard-hitting approaches and galactic vocal harmony arrangements very reminiscent of supergroup “YES”. In fact it is Klimecky’s elaborate musical arrangements which ultimately makes this album stand out amongst the competition.

“Not Your Hero” seeks out a sense of security in an unsure future, while the quieter “Ride The Wind” displays an insistent acoustic guitar groove over a declaration of goodbye’s and new tomorrows.

I particularly like the melodious verses and boisterous, bouncy bridges and chorus lines of “Afterglow”.

Throughout the album Chris, whose vocal timbre is somewhere between platinum selling AOR bands Styx and REO Speedwagon, always keeps his musical arrangements raunchy and abundant. And whenever he has the occasion, he throws in some mighty slick guitar solos to spruce things up even further.

On “This Journey”, Chris Klimecky proves that melodies, guitar hooks and brainy concepts needn’t be mutually exclusive of each other. - Jamsphere


"Chris Klimecky: “This Journey” (Review)"

Chris avoids falling into the morass of sameness plaguing many of his faceless post-grunge brethren and instead quietly establishes himself as one of the more intellectually stimulating progressive indie rock acts around. On “This Journey” Chris Klimecky consistently displays a deceptively simple approach that avoids bandwagon-jumping and instead focuses on hook-laden, guitar-driven manna with the occasional philosophical observation.

Avoiding any hint of didactic pretensions, Chris’s songwriting often touches on simple truths, be it his persevering experiences and the quest for guidance in the title track “This Journey”, the anguish and torment of delusion on the moving “Sunshine and Misery”, or the glory of inner-awareness addressed in “Age Old Story”.

Many of the songs included on this collection continue down the path of introspection, with rhythmically hard-hitting approaches and galactic vocal harmony arrangements very reminiscent of supergroup “YES”. In fact it is Klimecky’s elaborate musical arrangements which ultimately makes this album stand out amongst the competition.

“Not Your Hero” seeks out a sense of security in an unsure future, while the quieter “Ride The Wind” displays an insistent acoustic guitar groove over a declaration of goodbye’s and new tomorrows.

I particularly like the melodious verses and boisterous, bouncy bridges and chorus lines of “Afterglow”.

Throughout the album Chris, whose vocal timbre is somewhere between platinum selling AOR bands Styx and REO Speedwagon, always keeps his musical arrangements raunchy and abundant. And whenever he has the occasion, he throws in some mighty slick guitar solos to spruce things up even further.

On “This Journey”, Chris Klimecky proves that melodies, guitar hooks and brainy concepts needn’t be mutually exclusive of each other. - Jamsphere


Discography

Falling Star EP (2021)
Crystal Monkey Project - Are We Enlightened Yet? (2021)
Chris Klimecky Band - Before Light Breaks (single) (2015)
This Journey (2012)
Bankrupt Generation (2010)
Marooned (2001)
Jester's Crown - Away (1998)
Jester's Crown - Where Daydreams Play (EP) (1996)
Jester's Crown - Above the Storm (1995)

Photos

Bio

Rock n' Roll guitar hero, choir boy, songwriting savant...but enough about Dave Grohl. Good to have aspirations, right? When Chris isn't extolling Dave's virtues, he does his best at the guitar/singing/songwriting/producing stuff, too. It's a lot. He's exhausted much of the time, but a steady dose of sex, drugs, and rock n' roll...well, there's never been drugs, and frankly he's been married a long time, so the sex is none of your business...hmm, let's go with chocolate. A steady dose of chocolate and rock n' roll keep him energized and coming back for more.

Influences

Chris has a variety of guitar-oriented rock inspirations and influences with a mix of prog rock, classic rock, hard rock, and modern pop rock. Among his favorite bands are Foo Fighters, Switchfoot, Green Day, Collective Soul, Staind, Tonic, Fuel, Alter Bridge, Alkaline Trio, Breaking Benjamin, Rush, Yes, Genesis, Van Halen, Ozzy Osbourne, Steve Vai, and Joe Satriani.

Discography

https://chrisklimecky.bandcamp.com


Band Members