|
Inside
the
Summer Issue:
Home
Page
Harry
Chapins
Ripple of Influence
Grows Every Day
Jen Chapin Leads Us
On A Lushly-Written
Journey Into Her Life
In Ready
WHY Takes Holistic
Approach to Fight
Hunger & Poverty
DMCs New Disc
Strikes Many Chords
Hard Rock Café
Serves Up Benefit CD
to Fight Hunger
When Howie Met Harry:
Catching Up With
Drummer Howard Fields
Performing Artist
Inspires Audiences
Through Prose
Celestial Cross-Pollination
Yields a Harry Chapin-
Dante Anthology of
Student Essays
Amish Farmers Co-op
Finds Innovation in
Simpler Ways
Still Wild About Harry
Behind
the CD Cause
Do Something!
Goat
Tales
Circle! Calendar
Click
below
to read previous
issues of Circle!
|
DMCs
New Disc Strikes Many Chords
by Mike
Grayeb
It should be no surprise that the music in Darryl DMC McDaniels
new CD Checks, Thugs and Rock N Roll crosses many boundaries.
After all, DMC was a member of the legendary hip hop group Run DMC,
which broke down the barriers between rock and rap music and brought together
generations of fans from diverse cultures with its smash 1986 remake of
the Aerosmith song Walk This Way.
But the tracks on this record include some socially-conscious, sometimes
dark, and often very personal themes that one might more expect to find
in a Harry Chapin album than in a hip-hop disc finding ones
purpose in life, the deadly price of war, the realities of adoption, and
even suicide.
 |
Darryl
DMC McDaniels performed Just Like Me with
Jen Chapin at the annual World Hunger Year (WHY) awards ceremony in
New York. McDaniels received the 2006 ASCAP Harry Chapin Humanitarian
award for his socially-conscious music and work.
(AP Photo courtesy of Diane Bondareff). |
McDaniels
explained how he came up with the title for the CD. I was looking
at what a lot of hip hop is about today the checks that come from
hard work and talent, and the thugs image thats all part
of the equation but its not everything, McDaniels said.
Whatever happened to the hip hop album that didnt talk about
the car hes driving? I wanted to make a record that focuses on the
music.
The CD, which features many special guests, includes a cover of Jimmy
Hendrix classic All Along the Watchtower, featuring Josh Todd
from the group Buckcherry; Joey Kramer and Tom Hamilton from Aerosmith;
and Eliot Easton from The Cars.
McDaniels said he initially had reservations about including a timely
version of another Hendrix song -- Machine Gun.
I didnt want to be political. I didnt want the CIA and
the feds to be tapping my phones, he said. My producer said
you dont have to be political but if youre going to
be socially conscious, youve got to be aware of the war. Think about
the songs of the 60s the Dylan songs. Youre a baby
of the war generation.
Although McDaniels didnt know anyone personally whod lost
their life in the war in Iraq, he turned to the feelings he experienced
when he lost his longtime friend and bandmate Jason Mizell (known as Jam
Master Jay), who was murdered in 2002.
My thing is not about whats right and wrong in the war
but that people are dying, he explained. You can sit here
all day and talk about the reasons for the war, but I dont hear
people talking about whos dying and how were going to stop
the war.
To share his feelings of loneliness and his search for a sense of purpose
in life, he teamed up with Kid Rock on the track Find My Way,
which features a heartfelt nod to his fallen friend Mizell.
One of the most poignant tracks on the CD is McDaniels song Just
Like Me, a song he recorded with Sarah McLachlan and which features
the chorus from Harrys Cats in the Cradle to tell his
own personal story of adoption.
Ten years ago, I was saying to myself, am I just here to be
DMC?, he explained. I had suicidal thoughts. I dont
think I would have actually done it, but there was a part of me that was
missing and I didnt know what it was. It was then that he
heard McLachlans song Angel on the radio and he said it saved
his life.
Her song said its good to be alive. When I met her I told
her that it saved my life. She thanked me and told me thats what
music is supposed to do.
Years later, when McDaniels found out he was adopted, he went through
a range of emotions from hurt to anger. Then, as he reflected on
the choices his natural parents made for him, he came to realize the opportunities
that twist of fate meant for him first with Run DMC and
then for something bigger.
When he decided to tell his personal story of adoption through song, McDaniels
remembered the three songs from his childhood that stayed with him through
his adult life Elton Johns Bennie and the Jets, The
Beatles Yellow Submarine, and Harry Chapins Cats
in the Cradle.
He contacted McLachlan and asked her to join him on the song and she instantly
agreed and invited him to her home studio in Vancouver, Canada,
to record it. I was thinking I must have really committed suicide
because Im in heaven.
After we finished the record, she turned to me and told me that
she was adopted too. Thats when I knew I had a purpose and a destiny
much bigger than anything Id done before.
Fan reaction to the song has been overwhelming for McDaniels. Its
so crazy. They tell me they get chills up their backs. They can feel me
because its like theyre discovering something about themselves
whether they were adopted or not, he said. I had one
guy in Los Angeles come up to me and he hugged me for five minutes and
said thank you for everything. People are touched by this story.
McDaniels said he has been receiving emails from young kids who were adopted
and who tell him the song has helped them learn more about themselves.

View the video for Just Like Me at www.me-dmc.com).
His emotional and successful search for his natural mother was the subject
of a VH1 television show, which was watched by millions of people. I
just needed to know where it all began. The emotions became overwhelming.
I have sessions with the adoption group that show the whole spectrum of
what its like to go through that journey the anger, the shame,
the guilt, he recalled.
McDaniels is putting his music where his mouth is helping others
in more ways than one.
Inside the booklet of his Checks, Thugs, and Rock N Roll
CD, fans will find a page full of information about WHYs (World
Hunger Years) Artists Against Hunger & Poverty program, of which
McDaniels is a dedicated member who helps to raise funds and awareness
for the cause. He also donated the use of the track Just Like Me
for WHYs new benefit CD with the Hard Rock Café, called Serve.
McDaniels has also performed that song (and joined in for a chorus of
Circle) at recent Harry Chapin tribute concerts, which were
benefits for WHY.
And McDaniels work to help others doesnt stop when the music
does.
He works with the New York Foundling on behalf of adopted children everywhere.
He has served as Ambassador for DKMS (the largest private bone marrow
donor foundation in the world) and helped raise funds for the fight against
leukemia. He has even rolled up his sleeves and led the Timberland Community
Builders tour to improve the surroundings of kids in communities around
the country.
Last month, DMC was presented with the 2006 ASCAP Harry Chapin Humanitarian
Award for embodying the spirit and legacy of Chapin through his socially-conscious
music and humanitarian actions.
 |
| Sandy
Chapin with Zuri McDaniels (wife of Darryl DMC McDaniels)
join in during the audience participation of DMCs live performance
of Just Like Me at the 2006 WHY-Chapin Awards dinner. McDaniels was
awarded the ASCAP Harry Chapin Humanitarian award for his support
of WHYs Artist Against Hunger & Poverty program as well as his
other efforts to help people in need. |
Watch
for the Next Issue of Circle! on September 7
|