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ABOUT FFF
- Biography
- Interviews

ALBUMS
- A Message for Albert
- America Town
- The Battle for Everything
- Two Lights
- Collaborations

MULTIMEDIA
- Message Board
- Chat Rooms
- Photo Gallery
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ABOUT BFE.com
- About Us


 

TRACKS
(click for lyrics, tabs, etc.)

1. Freedom Never Cries
2. World
3. California Justice
4. The Riddle (You & I)
5. Two Lights
6. 65 Mustang
7. I Just Love You
8. Policeman's Xmas Party
9. Road to Heaven
10. Johnny America

" I hope this album finds you well in your worlds. This time around I've been luck to find two great songwriters to help in the writing of this record. My daughter Olivia gave me "I Just Love You" on a late night phone call, and on the way to his grandmother's funeral, my son Johnny asked, "What if there was a road to heaven"...
Thank you to those who sat down and gave me their insights while doing this album, particularly a certain young Lieutenant and father who inspired "Two Lights."
The saga of the "Policeman's Xmas Party" is real,as is the '65 powder blue Mustang that grazes in my driveway.
May your lives be filled with riddles and reasons... Till next time,
John "

ALBUM CREDITS
Performance Credits

John Ondrasik - Vocals, Piano, Guitars, Keyboards

Curt Schnider - Bass, Guitars

Andrew Williams - Guitars

Joey Waronke - Drums, Percussion

Additional Musicians:

Michael Ward - Guitars

Bruce Watson - Guitars

Luis
Conte - Percussion

Rob Arthur - Keyboards

Dave Palmer- Keyboards

Produced by
John Ondrasik, Curt Schnider, Andrew Williams

Mixed by Mark Endert

Recorded by
Curt Schnider

Additional production on "The Riddle" and "World" by
Mark Endert

String Arrangements:
Jorge del Barrio, John Ondrasik, David Campbell

Management:
Jim Grant/JGM

A&R:
Gregg Latterman, Evan Lambery, Lee Dannay

Booking:
Larry Webman and Marty Diamond at Little Big Man Booking

Recorded at
Revolver Studios, Curt's Garage, Capitol Studios, and John's House

Pro Tools Engineers:
Mikal Blue, Curt Schnider

Mixed at
Scream Studio

Mixing Assistant:
William Rivera

Mastered by
Stephen Marcussen

Digitally edited by
Stuart Whitmore for Marcussen Mastering, Hollywood, CA

Album Coordinator:
Mat Hall

Art Direction:
Dave Bett & Steve Byram

Photography:
Jim Wright. & designartbyram

John plays Yamaha Pianos

 


TWO LIGHTS
RELEASED
8/1/06

SONY

Two Lights
It requires considerable artistic agility to write deeply personal songs that also reflect the broader world. That's just what platinum certified Grammy-nominated singer/songwriter John Ondrasik with his band Five For Fighting has consistently accomplished on each of his previous CD's. Now with Two Lights, his new Aware/Columbia release, John delivers his most personal album to date, creating nothing less than an American family portrait.

John's Grammy-nominated song "Superman (It's Not Easy)," from the America Town CD, was already a hit when 9/11 happened. Afterwards, the song became a spiritual national anthem, and John joined superstar headliners Mick Jagger, Elton John, Paul McCartney and others for the post-9/11 fund-raiser The Concert for New York. "Here's a kid just getting over shock of hearing himself on radio for first time," recalls John, "sitting at a piano in Madison Square Garden playing a song that seems to provide solace to the emergency workers and their families. Half way through, seeing these burly

firefighters with tears rolling down their faces: it was the most important thing I'll ever do musically."

In 2004 he recorded The Battle For Everything, which yielded the hit "100 Years," once again proving Ondrasik's ability to craft inspirational songs with a social message. "It means a lot as a writer when your songs find their way into everyday lives," he says. "To hear mp3s of 100 Years' sung at graduations, or to speak to folks about how certain songs helped out, inspires me to keep on swinging."

Two Lights should yield no less.

Produced by John and band mates Curt Schneider (bass, guitars) and Andrew Williams (guitars), the album was inspired in part by conversations John had with ordinary Americans. Cops and cruisers, soldiers and surfers all have a place in John's America. Overall the CD is classic Americana, grittier and riskier than his previous work. That's especially so on songs like "California Justice" and the darkly comic "Policeman's Xmas Party," both based on real events.

Yet he also touches unflinchingly on the personal. The CD's debut single "The Riddle" is a song he wrote for his children, while the companion video features his beloved blue Mustang (a car passed down to John from his father and the inspiration for the song "65 Mustang). Says John of the single, "A lot of my songs touch on mortality, but at its heart it's a love song from a father to his son."

The father-son motif is most poignantly expressed in "Two Lights," a song that came to John after having dinner with a young soldier, bound for Iraq, and the soldier's father, a Vietnam veteran. "I talked with the kid's father," John remembers. "In that moment, I saw a mixture of pride and fear in the old man's eyes. I wanted to write a song that talked about the reality of how these parents feel. The simple thing of 'Two Lights' is two lives: the father's and the son's. That's what inspired this song, the look of pride and fear in a father's eye."

Whatever subject he tackles, John's music is always infused with an empathetic spirit and sung in one of the most richly distinctive voices in contemporary pop. Still, the new CD may surprise those unaccustomed to the sharper edge of John's musical persona. "Producing is rewarding but also an extra slice of pain and suffering," he says. "Songs like The Riddle' and California Justice' are 90 percent craft, whereas others like Road to Heaven' and I Just Love You' are essentially live takes. In either case, the band has to be in the room, the clock has to be turned off, and the red light (or hard drive)...blinking."

John Ondrasik was born in L.A.'s sprawling San Fernando Valley, and grew up in a musical family. At two, he began studying piano and later added guitar. He majored in Math at UCLA, but his heart was always in music. His hard work paid off, and today he's right where he wants to be: a working touring musician with a great family to come home to. "Being in a band," he says, "you spend a lot of months on a bus rolling through America. Unless you do that you don't' have a sense of the expanse and the differences that make it so great. My music just comes from my experience putting the miles on tires."

In addition to his work with Five For Fighting, John Ondrasik has also been busy with film work and co-writing with some of Nashville's top songwriters to create music for other artists. He co-wrote with Brooks & Dunn "Keep On Swinging," for the film Everybody's Hero (he also wrote and produced the theme song, "The Best"). In addition, John produced and wrote the song, "Break," to be sung by Jonathan Rhys Meyers in the upcoming August Rush. Although primarily known for performing his own compositions, John recorded a compelling new version of the classic Jimmy Webb composition, "All I Know" (a chart-topping pop hit song for Art Garfunkel in 1973), for the hit Walt Disney Pictures Film, Chicken Little.

But right now, Two Lights remains first and foremost in his musical life; that, and reaching out to an ever-expanding audience of admirers, whether in a darkened concert hall or on an iPod during morning rush hour. "I just try to get better as a songwriter," he says. "That's all I can do: try to write things that matter. At the end of the day all you can do is say what you believe."