Our Resident Bluesman Will Grace the Cover of Rolling Stone (March 2010)
Ryan Ross Hernandez in His Own Words : Rolling Stone Interview
Ryan Ross Hernandez may be the king of the confessional on his records, but all his heart-grouching, soulful missives about relationships, love, the lack thereof and being the occasional a--hole don’t measure up to the explosion of deeply personal details he reveals to Christopher Montgomery in the new issue of Rolling Stone, on sale at your local newsstands out February 23.
Given the type of news coverage he gets, it may surprise you to learn that Ryan Ross Hernandez is also a musician. He made his name with rock/pop band,
PANIC!, for most of the past 6 years and within two years he was rewarded with his first Birdie win, followed by praise from every corner of the music industry as the lead guitarist, main composer, co-lyricist and occasional vocalist for the group out of Tennessee. From blues masters to rock stars to Nashville standouts. His gentle voice and introspective lyrics looked back to 1970s songwriters like James Taylor, and his guitar playing was versatile and masterful.
If Hernandez was mute, and only let his music do the talking he would be universally loved. Unfortunately, that isn't the case. In early-2007, PANIC! broke through the music charts. With the release of their third studio album,
Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner, a record that some have called "
pop-punk perfection", the band quickly became loved by tweens around the world. When they began to top the charts around the world, Ryan Ross Hernandez' wallet started expanding. By 2008, he was out of his quiet two-bedroom apartment in the outsides of downtown Nashville to a multimillion dollar nine-bedroom villa in a gated community outside L.A known to house many fellow celebrities. As soon as he started making many famous friends, dating A-list Hollywood actresses, and seen out-and-about at nightclubs and dining at 5-star restaurants in Los Angeles, New York City, and Miami, Hernandez became a media-sweetheart.
Despite all those new distractions, Ryan never stopped making music. In 2008, Hernandez' announced his solo career which just continued his bands' footsteps, success-wise. There hadn’t been a new solo male rock star in the music business since Lenny Kravitz, and Hernandez fit the bill. He wrote hit songs—the ballads “
Your Arms Feel Like Home,” which went to number one, “
A Never-Ending Trip to Heartbreak” and “
(I Know) The World Is Black & White,” the peppy and clever “
From Now On We Are; Friends, Lovers, or Enemies,” the bluesy “
Loneliness Is My New Best Friend” and the soulful “
Something's Missing”—that were solidly constructed from warm sentiments and sophisticated music detail. He wrote “
some of the most women—friendly anthems this side of Eve Ensler,” one journalist swooned. Not since Sting had a male singer been both so popular and so respected.
And so handsome, too. Hernandez, a taut six-foot-three, was soon dating the kind of beauties who populate magazine covers. For the last 2 years, we've only seen the much wanted bachelor with equally wanted A-list Hollywood celebrities around his arm;
Rachel MacDonald,
Michelle Flanagan,
Jill Casey,
Katie Beckett, and most recent
Emily Williams. Which has lead the media to speculate he only dates fellow celebrities to bring himself more attention. Alongside his music career he’s lately had a parallel life as a tabloid topic, due to his romance with actress Emily Williams. They were together from March 2009 to January 2010. Right before he and Williams split, Hernandez released Dark Secret Love, the best record of his career, a set of related songs in which he mourns lost love, rejoices in his independence and castigates himself for romantic failure. The album has been rumored to have fueled problems between the two.
Hernandez grew up in Miami, Florida, a only child raised by his single-mother. Ryan has never been willing to talk much about his childhood, the only thing we know is that he has never meet his father and that he considers his grandmother as more of a mother than his birth mother. Ryan's musical knowledge led him to Middle Tennessee Sate University, which he left after two semesters after he joined a band called
Secret Lovers, which later became known as PANIC!. He admits to being really shy, up until he was sixteen, he has said in past interviews that he didn't have his first kiss or girlfriend until he was seventeen. He is beloved (though not universally) as one of the few uncensored stars, speaking with wit and impetuousness. He fills his Twitter feed with quips and advice, returning often to a few favorite topics: his dreams, his love of junk food, criticizing the music his fellow peers make and having sex. Hernandez has been “
creating a new paradigm of fame,” veteran music blogger Bob Lester for Spin Magazine wrote. As another journalist puts it, “
Hernandez takes self-awareness to new postmodern heights,” like a american football player who provides “
color commentary on his own career.”
Rolling Stone contributing editor met with Hernandez twice: first at the singer’s $19.5 million nine-bedroom villa in a gated community outside L.A., where Hernandez poured glasses of 16-year-old Lagavulin neat; and then over lunch in Brooklyn a few hours before he taped his performance for VH1 Storytellers. Montgomery reports, “
Ryan Ross Hernandez talks the way he plays guitar solos—the words tumble out fast, like notes, and he may go on for as long as five minutes. He’ll jump out into different themes and suddenly slip in a new idea, but he always returns to his initial theme. He’s a prodigious talker, and he always brought up touchy subjects—his relationships with ex-girlfriends, or his reputation as a douche bag—before I mentioned them, to show he wasn’t afraid to address them. From his soft-spoken songs you can’t tell how stubborn and defiant he is. Or how much he loves talking about sex. Or how mischievous he is. When I met him in the kitchen of his L.A. home he was talking about not talking anymore: ‘I think the world would be better off if I stopped doing interviews,’ he said. So we started there.”
PART ONE ; up later tonight
Edited by user 19 February 2010 14:19:37(UTC)
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