Amandla’s ‘Laughing Hearts’ draws from a range of influences and experience

FOLLOW YOUR HEART: Ween drummer Claude Coleman Jr. makes his own music under the moniker Amandla. The varied yet highly accessible songs on 'Laughing Hearts' reflect the life experiences that eventually led Coleman to settle in Asheville. Photo by Edwin Lora

Laughing Hearts is the third album from Amandla, the project of Asheville-based musician Claude Coleman Jr. Though the album was quietly issued in digital form a year ago, Coleman is now overseeing a vinyl launch of Laughing Hearts and scheduling select live dates to celebrate that release. As part of a fundraiser for the SoundSpace initiative (a nonprofit started by Coleman and Brett Spivey, designed to help provide low-cost rehearsal space for local musicians), Amandla plays at Isis Music Hall on Friday, April 27.

Even though he’s best-known as the longtime drummer for eclectic rock band Ween — he’s been with the band since 1994 — Coleman is a songwriter and multi-instrumentalist who plays all of the instruments on his albums. For Amandla’s live gigs, he sings and plays guitar. His onstage band includes Ram Mandelkorn on rhythm guitar, keyboardist Simon Thomas George and drummer Jaze Uries (all from The Digs, a local outfit with which Coleman also performs as an alternate drummer).

Coleman’s melodic sense is on full display on all 11 of Laughing Hearts‘ songs. And, like Amandla’s previous releases, 2001’s Falling Alone and The Full Catastrophe from 2006, it’s a kind of document of where Coleman is emotionally.

Amandla’s 2001 debut has an informal, spontaneous character, one that’s a product of the way in which it was made. “It was recorded to tape,” Coleman says. “It’s as organic as it could have been.” He says that he spent very little time “nitpicking, tweaking, editing and so forth.” A busy schedule kept Coleman from working on a follow-up for some time.

And when he did get to sessions for the second Amandla album, outside circumstances intruded. “I had a near-fatal car accident in the middle of making that record,” Coleman says. “I was hospitalized about 40 days and in rehab about a year. I had to reacquire all of the technical abilities and skills I needed to play music again.” He says that the long, drawn-out process of recuperating and completing The Full Catastrophe took “the better [part] of 3 1/2 years.”

More than a decade passed before Coleman returned with a third Amandla album. The intervening years were filled with Ween touring and recording, but that accounts for only part of the long span between Amandla releases. “A lot of things happened in my life,” Coleman says. “There were a lot of breakdowns for me; I picked up and left New Jersey — the place where I was born, and my community, and my network — and tried to find and make a life somewhere else.” He describes the making of Laughing Hearts as “an epic adventure in its own right.”

Coleman says that Laughing Hearts is a breakup record, created in the wake of his 14-year marriage ending. “Everything had kind of fallen through the floor,” he says, “and I had no tether to where I was.”

He says he found himself with no reason to stay in New Jersey: “When things like that happen, it’s sort of a life-or-death situation, and that’s kind of how it was for me. So, I had to pack it all up, sell everything I had and try to make a life anew.”

Coleman landed briefly in Texas, and while there, he recorded Laughing Hearts. “Then I came back eastward, stayed in Asheville for a few days and decided to settle here,” he says. “That was the greatest life decision I’ve ever made for myself. I think this area draws people who are trying to renew, heal or restart.”

Looking at the three Amandla albums, Coleman characterizes them as “representative of different places and times in my life. Because of the circumstances surrounding those records, each one has an individualism.” Laughing Hearts‘ defining musical quality is that it’s all over the map, style-wise.

“That’s purely by happenstance,” Coleman says. “And that’s one of its strengths.” He notes that, in modern society, there’s less narrow interest in particular genres.

“No one is really a metal head, or a goth head, or a hip-hop head,” he says. “Everyone is really kind of across the board, with a lot of different styles, cultures and genres.”

While Coleman grew up on a steady diet of KISS and Santana, he was also immersed in the music of Ohio Players and Kool & the Gang. “And I was into a lot of country and folk, too. This stuff just sort of naturally comes out into writing,” he says. “There’s no plan about it.”

There is, however, a plan as far as future releases are concerned. Coleman has no intention of letting another decade pass before the next Amandla album. “I want to do an Amandla record at least once a year,” he says. “I’m a DIY artist, but I’m putting together a team so that I’ll be able to focus more on the art.”

WHO: Amandla with the Paper Crowns, Brett’s Milk, Zin Vetro, the Dirty Badgers and the Styrofoam Turtles
WHERE: Isis Music Hall, 743 Haywood Road, isisasheville.com
WHEN: Friday, April 27, at 8 p.m., $20 (proceeds go toward funding SoundSpace)

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About Bill Kopp
Author, speaker, music journalist, historian, collector, and musician. His first book, "Reinventing Pink Floyd: From Syd Barrett to The Dark Side of the Moon," was published in 2018. His second book, "Disturbing the Peace: 415 Records and the Rise of New Wave," was published in 2021. His next book, "What's the Big Idea: 30 Great Concept Albums" is due in 2025.

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