BGS 5+5: Jim and Sam

Artist: Jim and Sam
Hometown: Santa Monica, California
Latest Album: Good on the Other Side
Personal Nicknames (Or Rejected Band Names): Jamantha, Double Lives, JS, Jim Hanft and Samantha Yonack, Sim Jam, The Dialogues

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

Before shows we do this “improv shake out” sort of thing where we both shake each of our limbs energetically 10 times while counting out loud while facing each other — and after we get through both legs and arms we count and shake to 9 and then 8 and so on. By the end it usually wakes us both up and we’re smiling feeling like idiots and totally loosened up to get on stage. I’m not sure, but I think it’s something Sam learned at acting school and she introduced it to me before one show where I was feeling a bit insecure and nervous to go on stage… and it worked. Since then we do it almost every time. It only gets weird if there are other people in the green room; however, usually people end up joining in. — Jim

Yes we shake our limbs but mainly we avoid each other. Jim goes and looks for a coffee and people to talk with, while I look for a room with no one in it to have a little quiet and get grounded. Our energies are opposite and we would make each other nuts… so right up until we go on… we usually take a little space. Then we shake. — Sam

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

SHOW UP FULLY… In 2017 we played one show every day for a year, and on the days where a show was canceled or we couldn’t book a show we would have to find a show. It was those impromptu shows that taught us that whether you’re in a beautiful ornate theater in Brussels performing to a sold-out audience or a dingy liquor store in London performing for the cashier, if you don’t show up it doesn’t matter, you may as well have stayed at home — but if you show up, if you’re fully present with the song, the room, the moment and the people or person you’re playing for, magic can happen. When we finished the tour we spent the following year making our film After So Many Days. It was during that process that we were reminded of the importance of showing up to the storytelling, the editing, and the music for the film. We now carry this with us wherever we are in the process of whatever we are creating at the moment.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

Throughout our year-long tour, we kept receiving the same advice from strangers to “keep going.” We still hear many of those voices in our heads on the days when not picking up the guitar or sitting at the piano feels easier than muscling through a hard day. A friend of ours also just shared advice he heard that a career is sort of like a brick wall, and the work you do whether it’s a song, album or a tour it’s all just a brick in a wall that you’re building… so don’t be too precious about one thing as long as it’s placed level with enough mortar, it’s really just a piece or a moment of a larger work of art.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

A lot of the songs on our most recent album were written during the first few months with our daughter, Hazel. The quiet walks with her in Temescal Canyon became a weekly ritual for us that always seemed to ground and reinspire us… similarly to the way a walk or hike while traveling on tour would always bring us back to earth. We are also lucky enough to live a few blocks from the beach and early in the morning we would walk her and our dog Pico down to the water to listen to the waves crash while the rest of the city was still asleep. The consistency of the waves (and the consistency that she has brought into our lives) is something that I think we were craving as two people that spent so many years touring. During these morning walks, Hazel would often fall asleep in her stroller. When we got home, we’d park her in the corner of the living room and use the remainder of her naps to write.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

I lost my dad to a tragic accident when I was 20. Up until that point I had written funny songs to try to make people laugh. It was when my father was in a coma that I turned to the guitar and to my notebook to express what I was feeling, and what the people closest to me were feeling. I recorded a demo of a song that I shared with my mom and friends and they connected and reacted to it in a way that I had never felt before. The song was then played for my dad on the final mixtape he heard in the hospital and then again at the funeral. From that point on, music has been a place I have always turned to when feelings have gotten too big to say or too big to just feel. — Jim

For as long as I can remember there was always music in my house. My dad was constantly playing the piano and writing my favorite songs. I would sit next to him and sing along… and eventually we would write songs together. He told me recently that he remembers when we recorded one of the first songs we wrote together at a studio… I poked my head out of the booth and said, “Dad, I really like this.” My mom was also a performer when she was younger so I was introduced to theater pretty early, too. I think the combination of all of it just created an innate desire to create that never went away. — Sam


Photo Credit: Mike Zwahlen

MIXTAPE: Jim and Sam’s Songs That Got Us Through Playing One Show Every Day for a Year

“We discovered these songs right before we left home, while we were on the road, or soon after we got back from our 365-everyday tour. Each song is soaked in nostalgia and transports us right back into the wildest year of our lives. The songs of ours that appear on this Mixtape were born during or inspired by our tour.” — Jim and Sam, from the film After So Many Days

Jim and Sam – “After So Many Days”

On day 360, we were nearing Santa Barbara on our last cross-country trip of the tour. We were both feeling overwhelmed, sad, excited, and confused as we were inching our way back home to Los Angeles. We were listening to songs we had discovered while traveling throughout 14 different countries, when the last song came to an end. The car was quiet, tears were rolling down both of our faces, and we decided to pull over into a strip mall parking lot to take a break. We pulled out the guitar and a notebook, and this song came pouring out. We ended up using the original audio recording of this writing session as the soundtrack to the final moments of the film. When the tour ended, we tucked the song away for a while, and it ended up being the last song we recorded for the album.

Lucinda Williams – “Passionate Kisses”

This song captures so many of the simple things we want out of life and our career. Lucinda’s endless drive as an artist has always inspired us. “Is it too much to demand/ I want a full house and a rock-‘n’-roll band/ Pens that won’t run out of ink/ And cool quiet and time to think…”

Mulligan Brothers – “So Are You”

For 30 days we were on tour in Sweden with the amazing bluegrass band, The Mulligan Brothers. It took us all a few nights to get comfortable with each other, but once we did, the rest of the month felt like summer camp. Whether it was sitting on the stage after a show telling stories all night, late night fast food runs, discovering small Swedish towns together, or just listening to their amazing music night after night — having another road family for a month was a really magical and necessary part of the year.

Katie Melua – “Mary Pickford”

There was a week where we had to keep booking, cancelling, and rebooking our flight because our plans were changing. Every time we called up Norwegian Air, this song was playing in the background. What started out as an earworm became a song that traveled with us throughout the rest of the year and we now love. It’s also a beautiful song about the power of collaboration.

Jim and Sam – “Bloodstream”

The song is about trusting someone enough to let them see (and help you calm) your panic. It’s also about being there for the person you love in their most vulnerable moments. This song was co-written and produced by one of our best friends, Hustle Standard. HS had surprised us along the tour by attending several shows in LA, New York, and Houston. Knowing he had seen firsthand how we were struggling and changing during the tour, we knew we wanted to collaborate with him for the record.

Grateful Dead – “Brokedown Palace”

We got invited to play a birthday party at a farm filled with alpacas and goats in upstate New York, and were asked to play any Grateful Dead song we knew. Not being too familiar with The Dead we asked a Deadhead friend of ours what song we should cover… with no hesitation they texted back, “Brokedown Palace.”

Lauren Ruth Ward – “Did I Offend You”

We met Lauren playing on the same bill at Echo Park Rising in Los Angeles. We were first to go on that day and no one was in the room except for Lauren and LP. We stayed to watch Lauren’s set and were blown away by her power on stage. Even in the quiet moments she took up all of the space in the room. We’ve been a huge fan of hers ever since… This is one of our favorites.

LP – “Lost on You”

We met LP the same night we met Lauren. About a month later we went to watch her at an intimate venue in LA. We heard her sing a song called “Lost on You” (before it became the global hit that it is now). Jim and I turned to each other as we normally do when we both hear a song we love. About a year later, she was touring all over Europe and asked us to join her for a few shows during our year. After so many days of small and strange venues, playing to a sold out room of 3000 people in cities we had never been to was insane.

Rayland Baxter – “Yellow Eyes”

Something about the sound of this song reminds of the lines on the road when we’re leaving a city we just played in.

Jim and Sam – “Cold Cold Blood” (feat. Good Harvest & Rob Lewis)

A good friend of ours, Jono Hart, was putting on shows in churches throughout the UK. We actually met him right before our tour began. He said to us, “Any time you’re in the UK let me know, and if you need a church or a show, give me a call.” He ended up booking us some of our favorite shows on the tour, and he also gave us the key to this gorgeous church in Stoke Newington, London, to record. In the pouring rain, our friend, composer and cellist Rob Lewis, kindly let us borrow his gear and talent and we recorded this version in about 45 minutes before we had to leave. We then asked one of our favorite duos from Sweden, Good Harvest, to contribute their incredible harmonies to the track about 200 days later in another church, this time in Falun, Sweden. Finally, we had Tyler Chester record guitars in a garage in LA and Ryan Lipman mixed the track somewhere in Highland Park.

William Fitzsimmons – “Second Hand Smoke”

A year after our tour we got invited to support William Fitzsimmons throughout North America and Europe in a few venues we had always dreamed of playing. Picking a favorite from William is hard, but even after 40 nights of hearing his set… we’d usually always stand in the wings to listen to this one.

Tom Petty – “Walls”

Tom Petty passed away during the last month of our tour and became the soundtrack of our final month while driving home. We still quote this song everytime we are having a bad day… “some days are diamonds, some days are rocks.”

Chimney – “Paintings Are the Only Place You Never Lied to Me”

Chimney (aka Dan Molad) is a longtime friend of ours and also the producer of our Yeah Whatever Young Forever EP as well as the soundtrack tracks, “Unravel” and “Saturday Night (Low).” Jim wrote this song with Danny about our mutual friend who passed away. A few months before the tour, Danny had Facetimed Jim asking to help expand on an idea he started. One hour later, the song was finished, and 48 hours later Danny had recorded the song for his debut record.

Indigo Girls – “Closer to Fine”

We often roll the windows down and unapologetically sing this song at the top of our lungs like two high school girls getting ready for choir practice.

Jake Hill & Deep Creek – “High & Low”

Jake Hill is one of our oldest friends and remains a songwriter who is constantly inspiring us with whatever he’s creating. During our tour he hosted us for an event called Supper & Song in Plymouth, Massachusetts, where he would prepare an incredible three-course meal for a room full of people in a building from the 1800s…he would then play a few of his amazing songs and introduce another artist to perform. This was easily one of our favorite evenings on the tour and this is one of our favorite Jake Hill songs.

Jim and Sam – “Witch in a Window”

Upon returning home to LA from the tour we felt some whiplash; we had just emerged from feeling so inspired after having such intimate and real connections with strangers all around the world, then all of a sudden were thrown back into a city and industry obsessed with first impressions and fueled by small talk. Everything felt magnified. We began noticing people morphing into different versions of themselves to fit in or get ahead. We love LA; however, “Witch in a Window” is our tribute to the trickery and disguise the city perpetuates and makes us all believe we have to keep up with.

Rob Lewis – “The Sea”

We first heard this song from our friend Rob Lewis as a demo in his car on a rainy night in London. This song and all of Rob’s music is ethereal, calming, surprising and inspiring. Rob played cello on a few songs on our album and also contributed a few stunning score pieces to the film.

Starship – “Nothing’s Gonna Stop Us Now”

Self explanatory.


Photo credit: Mike Zwahlen

 

Album Stream: Jim and Sam, ‘This Is What’s Left’

Stop us if you've heard this one before … A Jim walks into a Sam at a comedy show in L.A. and Jim says, “Hey, I like you. Let's start a band.” And Sam says, “Cool. Okay.”

So they hop the pond and make an EP they call This Is What's Left about which Jim says, “We recorded these songs in Denmark with Swedish producer Lasse Marten, multi-instrumentalist Anders Pettersson, and drummer Magnus Olsson. We are not Swedish.”

To which Sam adds, “It's all about transitioning. These songs, these recordings, life, our relationships to each other and to the music. What's relevant to you at one time shifts so quickly. It's why we love it and what makes it so hard. Recording these songs was like being at summer camp. It all makes sense when you're there. You're all in the moment. It's magical and you become something you can only be when you're away from home. Then you come home and it's hard to describe in words what happened.”

And which Jim concludes, “So you do the laundry, go to the grocery store, and realize, 'This is what's left.'”