At a time when division is high and negativity seems to be infesting every corner of people’s day-to-day lives, Lake Street Dive have instead chosen to go down a path of positivity.
That’s the mindset on “Good Together,” the quintet’s recently released eighth full-length outing. As founding member Rachael Price explained in a recent interview, the seed was planted when the band decided to engage in a songwriter’s retreat at drummer/backup vocalist Mike Calabrese’s Vermont home in early 2023.
“We came up with this general concept that we started calling joyful rebellion,” she recalled. “It came out of…not feeling like we were in the mood to be writing sad songs, negative songs or angry songs and wanting to lean into more joyful subjects, but also not wanting to write a fluffy record, either.
“We didn’t want to shy away from the things we were feeling. We just wanted to put a lot of positivity into the songs. That’s where things like ‘Help Is On the Way’ was inspired by that concept. ‘Twenty-Five’ was directly inspired by that concept. ‘Good Together’ is obviously about two people who have had bad luck in past relationships and maybe haven’t been great people themselves, but then they find themselves having better habits when they’re together. We sort of kept taking that idea and putting that twist into the songs.”
The group is slated to play the Troubadour in West Hollywood on June 25 and Great Park Live in Irvine on June 27.
Aiding and abetting in the group’s new concept was producer Mike Elizondo (Dr. Dre/Fiona Apple), who also produced Lake Street Dive’s 2021 effort “Obviously.” For Price, if the band was going to change things up by working together for the first time ever in the earliest and most vulnerable stages of songwriting, then Elizondo was the person who would help it all come off successfully.
“We’ve done co-writing in the past, but have never sat down in the same room as each other and looked at each other and basically stared into the empty canvas of what a song could be and come up with ideas with each other on the spot,” Price said.
“Going into this process again, we had a lot more trust that [Elizondo] would be able to hear all the demos of the songs we’d been working on and know which ones were going to make the record. He’s just a really confident voice and he doesn’t ever really put out bad music. When you have somebody like that saying a song is good and he knows he’s going to be able to make it sound good or that he knows how to get a great performance out of all of us, it just puts us at ease.”
What also made this recording experience all the more special for Price was that she got to share it with her newborn daughter.
“It was the first thing I did after I had my baby,” she shared. “She was there with me, and I had been at home with her for many, many months prior to that. For me, the most fun part was integrating her into that part of my life for the very first time, and it was really exciting.”
Lake Street Dive Mike Calabrese, James Cornelison, Rachael Price, Bridget Kearney and Akie Bermiss perform at the Season 8 Centerpiece event during SeriesFest at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, Colorado. (Photo by Tom Cooper/Getty Images for SeriesFest)Those positive vibes, combined with the Elizondo/Lake Street Dive chemistry, is on full display on “Good Together’s” 11 cuts, which also showcase the band’s musical range. “Seats At the Bar” coasts along on a bouncy tropicalia vibe, and “Dance With a Stranger” gets juiced by a new jack vibe and airy ’80s-kissed synths. Meanwhile, “Get Around” has a slinky, nasty funk vibe that makes this jam sound like an outtake from Sly & the Family Stone. Elsewhere, Lake Street Dive delves into the good feelings with cuts like “Twenty-Five,” a piano ballad that serves as a love letter to a past relationship that didn’t work out.
The prospect of bringing these songs to a live music setting has Price and her bandmates happy to be on tour.
“The set is just a lot more fun and it expresses the band’s personality in a visual way unlike anything we’ve been able to do before,” Price said. “We’re just excited to play around with the show and the way it’s all going to come together. We also have a percussionist coming out with us for a lot of the shows. And we have a full horn section, three horn players— the Huntertones—who are on the record and are going to be playing a lot of the shows with us.”
Formed in Boston in 2004, Lake Street Dive first gained attention when a video of a street corner performance of Jackson 5’s “I Want You Back” was posted on YouTube in 2012 and went viral. It was at this point that the band members committed to working full time as Lake Street Dive, and the band’s widely praised third album, 2014’s “Bad Self Portraits,” served as a launchpad for future success.
The group’s profile has grown steadily since then, to the point where the band is prepared to headline New York City’s Madison Square Garden in September. Price and her bandmates have kept their feet on the ground thanks to a small piece of advice from their drummer’s father.
“I think the best piece of advice I’ve ever been given was right before we went on stage for one of the biggest shows we’d played to date,” Price said.
“We were all really nervous, and Mike Calabrese gave us a quote from his dad. ‘Nothing matters and nobody cares.’ I think people understand that sort of sentiment. You just need to be yourself and to do what’s fun for you. It’s just one of those things where you need to stop thinking about yourself and just have a good time. Nothing matters and nobody cares, so just have fun.”
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