Illinois Entertainer April 2017 | Page 41

Continued from page 26 Havok, for his part, keeps the wordplay moody, ethereal and decidedly non-specif- ic. The thundering chorus of “I Confess,” for instance builds from skeletal verses yet only hints at any kind of confession – the perfect Gothic-cathedral metaphor to con- jure up a miasmic sense of mystery with- out having to get political or even explain itself in too much detail. The singer penned all the lyrics, and penned them fast, says an awestruck Kanal, sometimes overnight. Ergo, listeners can get suitably creeped out by Dreamcar without fully comprehending why. Or how. And he’s suitably proud of the album, he says. His litmus test? He can still play it, over and again, without once getting tired of it. But he wants to clarify one thing. “We never set out to make something that people would refer to as ‘80s-sound- ing,’” Kanal swears. “It was more like, ‘Let’s just see what happens.’ But I think inevitably, because we grew up during that (New Wave/Post-punk) movement, that time was so much a part of the fabric of our lives, it was influential and inspiring. Because those are the years when you’re a teenager and that stuff just really embed- ded itself in us. So it’s going to come out. And it’s good to acknowledge that, and that was just the natural direction tat we started going in. There was never an over- riding concept of what the band would be – it’s only now that we can look back and see that that was the direction it took, although we never intended it. It just kind of came naturally.” And what of No Doubt? On March 14, Kanal celebrated his 30th anniversary with the band by posting an online clip recalling how former member Chris Webb invited him to the future supergroup’s first club show, and suggested that he try out as their new bassist. Again, kismet – by the next week he had joined Stefani, whom he would wind up dating, then breaking up with, ironically leading to some of the group’s biggest heartfelt hits. So No Doubt, will continue – ahem, no doubt – with its schedule not only dependent upon Stefani’s, but that of Dreamcar, as well. The album is that good, their future that rosy. “When you’ve been playing music for a long time, you just realize that what you do is, you keep putting out stuff, you keep working to create this continued history and legacy,” he says. “And Dreamcar is now a part of that. And I am so proud of what we accomplished, and how we got to this point.” Through a serpentine journey that all started with a feral tabby. And yes, the zen- like Kanal wholeheartedly agrees, every- thing in life happens for a reason. One that perhaps only the universe understands at that particular meowing-at-the-back-door moment. “I don’t think we can ever figure it out,” he says, comforting himself in the process. “We only get glimpses of clarity every once in a while…” april 2017 illinoisentertainer.com 41