Catching Up With Patrick Sweany
“Close to the Floor is your basic American blues- and soul-influenced Rust Belt bummer rock record.” This is how Nashville-by-way-of-Ohio musician Patrick Sweany describes his new album, which will be released in July. Anyone who has seen the goofy, good-natured fellow play guitar can attest that a transformation occurs when he gets on stage or picks up an instrument—the man is a beast, to say the least. You know how you have your favorite musicians, and then they have their favorite musicians? Well, Sweany is one of them. A musician’s musician, but one whose genius is accessible to all of us. We caught up with him for a few words about the new album and life in general.
Paste: You’re known as a blues man, does that hold true with the new stuff?
Sweany: There are songs on this album that you could call blues. I hesitate to call myself anything but a rock-and-roller, out of my deep respect for real blues music, and just where I ended up on the ethno-musical timeline. I definitely wear my influences on my sleeve. I apply those influences against more modern structures like soul music and rock and roll and just make the noises a guy like me would naturally make.
Paste: What were your influences and inspirations?
Sweany: Lightnin’ Hopkins is always there. I like to think “Deep Water” is really a tribute to his playing and singing. “I’m Slipping” is my homage to Bobby Blue Bland in the same way. Eddie Hinton is always there. Rev. Gary Davis is always there. Ray Charles is always there. Dan Penn is always there. Jimmy Reed is always there. Solomon Burke is always there. B.B. King is always there. Short answer: the proverbial trunk of my songwriting car is filled with the literary car stereos of Chess, Stax, Atlantic and Duke recording artists.
Paste: Do you do most of the writing yourself?
Sweany: I have always written by myself, and wrote every song on every one of my albums. Joe V. McMahan, the producer, wrote the instrumental bridge on the “The Island,” which is the extent of my collaboration. I am way too insecure to be comfortable enough to develop my story for human consumption in front of somebody else. If it’s my name on the jacket, I feel like it’s important that it’s just me, the way it’s always been. That way I know exactly what I’m saying to you, and I’m responsible for it. That’s not to say I don’t want to collaborate with other artists on other projects, I really want to, and I want to be more comfortable doing exactly that. I just feel for “Patrick Sweany” music it’s gotta be just me.
Paste: What’s your process?
Sweany: I can carry around a little three- or four-second vocal melody or guitar line for years, or sometimes they come to me really fast when I am actually in the “sitting down and actually writing” process. I’ll make a note, sing a melody that may have a phrase attached to it and sing it into a portable tape recorder, or cell phone or whatever’s handy. I know if I want to stay alive, I’ve got to put out albums at a semi-regular basis. When it’s approaching “Make an Album” season, I start editing all the ideas into song structures. The ideas are usually attached to a melody or phrase, or both, which helps me refine the language to the main point of the song, which in turn helps me refine melody, which then helps me to better refine structure. Some of the songs get a little road-tested; some don’t. There are exceptions to every rule. A couple things got changed or rearranged in the studio. I try to work with people who aren’t afraid to hurt my feelings about whether or not a song or its arrangement is cohesive or effective for the record. I trust Joe McMahan’s instincts as a producer, but I’m always ready to fight for something if I believe it’s worth saving.