Categories
Culture Fashion Featured Music NYC

Rebel Rebel

In John Varvatos’s world, music and fashion combine to create a lifestyle brand for those about to rock.

by Deborah L. Martin photography by Andrew Matusik

 

JOHN VARVATOS IS A ROCK AND ROLL guy, and he arrives at his Bowery flagship store
for our 8 am call time looking the part: skinny jeans, leather jacket, stone-cold stare. It’s clear that he hasn’t been in the store in a while and he busies himself with his team, doing some merchandising. “I don’t want these shirts like this. People don’t shop this way.” He’s walking around the store doing something that people who know retail understand. He is shaking things up. When we sit down to talk, I nd that this is a phrase he uses often, and it’s something he is proud of. “In my company, we hire a lot of young people, in the design studio, in sales, in the stores. It’s inspiring to be around. I’m someone who loves change and I’m so in there with them. I just want to shake shit up. I say it all the time, it’s in my DNA.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos by Andrew Matusik

 

As it turns out, the stone-cold stare is the public face, and behind that is a warm, funny guy who is a bit verklempt, and grateful, for the way his life has turned out.

John Varvatos the brand, and John Varvatos the man are both known for their rock and roll edge—from the musicians who have appeared in his ad campaigns to the New York flagship location in the former home of CBGBs, Varvatos has managed to weave his passions together in a way that eschews the normal ebb and ow of “fashion.” He says, “Music was my energy force as a young kid growing up in Detroit, in a 900-square-foot home with seven people. My escape was to put my headphones on—it transported me someplace else.” That love of music is the baseline for everything he does.

“I don’t really use the word fashion,” he says. “I talk about style. Our designs are inspired by my sense of rebelliousness and toughness, which is what rock and roll stands for.” He knows his customer. “Our guys range from Wall Street and business people to music artists, but they all have that creative bone.” He continues, “We don’t think about fashion of the moment. For me, style is more timeless. Our customer doesn’t need something obvious. They are the anti-obvious.”

And what about those musicians?

“They are probably the smallest part of our business, but thank goodness we have them, because they add a cool vibe.” Varvatos has called on some of those rockers to star in his ad campaigns. “All those people have become friends. They do it because they want to be associated with the brand. There’s no real money of any consequence attached to it, but they like the association, they like me, and we have a relationship. Like anything else, it has to be good for everyone. and it is good for them, as well.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos by Andrew Matusik

 

The list of names who have appeared reads like a list of inductees at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Ziggy Marley, Ringo Starr, Kiss, Iggy Pop, Chris Cornell, Alice Cooper, Dave Matthews, Questlove, ZZ Top, Jimmy Page—the star-studded roster goes on and on. Varvatos says, “The guys from Kiss invited me to their farewell tour, and it’s the friendship that’s important. The thing I’m proudest and most humble about is that they consider me one of their own, and not just some fashion guy that’s trying to get rock stars to be in his ads.”Varvatos isn’t just “some fashion guy.” He started in Midwest sales for Ralph Lauren in 1983, and moved his way up the ladder, eventually taking a design post in New York. In 1990, he joined Calvin Klein, where he launched the menswear collection, the cK brand, and the hugely successful underwear line, in the process gifting the world with Mark Wahlberg in boxer briefs (which he invented by cutting the legs o long johns). After a short stint at London Fog, he rejoined Ralph Lauren as vice president in charge of men’s design for all Polo Ralph Lauren brands. In 1998 he joined Nautica Enterprises, who agreed to back his own brand, which launched in 1999

“These were great learning places for me.

I’m still close with Ralph and Calvin, and they respect what I do. When your mentors give you cred, it’s a humbling thing.” He chokes up a little when he says, “My wife ran into Ralph in the park and he told her, ‘I’m so proud of John, he really did what he said he was going to do.’”

He views the brand as a culture, and the Bowery store—once the site of one of the most infamous clubs in music history, CBGB & OMFUG—is a big part of that culture. “We are really thrilled with the people who come to visit the store because of its history. They want to come in and hang out and it’s all about the culture. That’s why we do concerts in the space. We clear out all of the clothes and turn it into a club again.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos by Andrew Matusik location WTC 3

 

In addition to the clothing, there is also the punk documentary produced with Iggy Pop, a music label, the annual Love Rocks concert for Gods Love We Deliver, relationships with AMFAR and Stuart House in LA, and a brand new tequila launch with friend, Nick Jonas. “I started the music label about four years ago, with Universal and Republic records. We signed the Zac Brown Band, and we had a multi-platinum album right out of the gate.” After leaving Universal, Varvatos teamed up with Scott Borchetta and created Big Machine John Varvatos Records. The label’s first band is a young group called Bad ower. Varvatos says, “They are one of the most incredible bands I’ve heard over the last 10 years. I was in LA in the spring and the kids were lining up for four hours before the show because they wanted to get the best place in the theater. When I saw that I had goosebumps. For me, it’s about helping young artists and their voice.” The label has just added another band out of Wales called Pretty vicious.

Varvatos friendship with Nick Jonas goes back to a dinner party where they were seated together.

“We realized we had a lot in common, including a love of tequila. The next day he called me and said ‘I’m in the recording studio and I’d like to play you some of the new music.’ When I got to the studio, there was a bottle of tequila sitting on the soundboard. For the next few hours, we drank tequila and talked about life.” The friendship developed into a fashion and fragrance collaboration and just this summer, villa One tequila was born. Varvatos says, “I’m proud of it, and of my friendship with Nick. He’s half my age but he has the heart and soul of someone who is much older.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos

 

The success of the brand, and his passion for music have taken him on a wild ride. “To quote the Grateful Dead, it’s been a long strange trip. It was never a plan.
I wanted to be a musician but I wasn’t a good musician, I didn’t have a great voice. But I lived through the music and organically this happened.” He continues, “We didn’t even talk about rock and roll when we started the brand. And then suddenly Jimmy Page is calling and telling me he’s coming to New York and says he loves my stuff and wants to meet up. These people become friends because we have a similar core ethos.”

Varvatos is at the top of his game, enjoying the adventure, challenging himself and his brand. “Success isn’t just about the product. It’s about what you do that’s different from the rest. If you don’t do something different, there’s no reason for being. I am so blessed. I get to do all of these cool things that I never could have dreamed of as a kid. I’m so blessed.”

 

 

https://www.dtm.wix2wp.site/easy-rider-celeb…-city-music-hall/

Categories
Featured Music

The Jonas Brothers and Ryan Tedder Talk Growth, Family, and Healing

October 9th, 2013 brought heartbreak for millions of teenage girls when it was officially announced that the wildly popular, Grammy-nominated Jonas Brothers were breaking up. The three brothers went their separate ways, citing “a deep rift within the band” and “a big disagreement over their music direction” as the reasons for the split.

Following the band’s split, Kevin, Nick and Joe continued to exist in the public eye, Kevin for the reality television show about his life with wife Danielle Jonas, Nick for his successful solo music career, and Joe for his funk-pop band DNCE.

However, on February 28, 2019, six years after the break-up, the Jonas Brothers announced their reunion as a band. They debuted their first single since the band’s absence, ‘Sucker,’ the next day. Their new fourteen-track album, Happiness Begins, and the Amazon Original documentary following their journey as brothers, Chasing Happiness, were released on June 7, 2019.

Despite the overwhelmingly positive reaction to the reunion of the beloved group, fans still had a lot of questions about why the band decided to get back together, why they broke up in the first place, and what this new era will bring for the band.

Kevin, Nick and Joe, joined by OneRepublic frontman and Happiness Begins’ executive producer Ryan Tedder, tried to answer some of these questions to a live audience of press and fans at a TimesTalk in Tribeca on June 13, 2019. The event was a part of The New York Times’ live conversation and performance series.

Nick Jonas, Kevin Jonas, Ryan Tedder, Joe Jonas, The Jonas Brothers

Tedder and the three Jonas’ covered topics like their collaboration, the new album and its influences, and most importantly, the growth of the Jonas Brothers as a band and as a family during their break.

The new era for them began with the intention to just do a documentary, they explained, to share more about their lives and growth with fans and the world, and it evolved organically into the official reunion of the band.

A recurring theme during the hour-long session was healing. The brothers discussed the personal rifts and the factors that caused them, which developed between them before Nick’s decision to pursue a solo career- the ultimate catalyst in the band’s break-up. It was a difficult decision, but one they all felt necessary, as Nick said. He carefully articulated the importance of the break and how it allowed each of the band members to discover who they were as individuals, rather than basing their identity solely on the band.

Nick Jonas

“I never felt like I gave up on our friendship, our brotherhood or any of those moments, but I needed to take a step away from it. And it took a lot of time, it took a lot of healing for me personally. And I will say it was hard. There were times where it was tough to watch them succeed. But I started to realize that I was succeeding so much and growing so much as a person,” Kevin said of the growth the hiatus forced them to undergo.

Part of that growth meant distancing themselves from Disney. Nick assured that they were thankful for the platform that Disney had given them but said that “The flip side of that too was that it was limiting, at a certain point. When we wanted to grow and evolve as artists, it started to insulate because we felt like people that we wanted to work with, like the Ryan Tedders of the world, maybe they wouldn’t want to work with us because they didn’t take us seriously.”

Tedder laughed at the comment and went on to say the Jonas Brothers are one of his favorite bands to work and write with for several reasons, one being their priorities. All three brothers are now married, and Tedder, who also has a family of his own, described his respect for their dedication to getting home for dinner with their families and keeping themselves grounded. The reason that their return to the group and making music together works, they said, is that the band is no longer the most important thing in their lives and no longer ranks above their relationship as a family.

Nick Jonas, Joe Jonas, Kevin Jonas, The Jonas Brothers

Tedder collaborated with the band to write several songs on the new album, including ‘Sucker’. “What they brought to ‘Sucker,’ what they added to it, is something that I never could’ve done, and no act on earth would’ve done it better than them. And it changed the temperature on the record. You have to acknowledge the right artist and the right song,” he said.

As far as questions about the new album, they described their new music as a balance between all of the brothers’ styles and cited Stevie Wonder, The 1975, Post Malone, and Prince as some of the influences on their new sound.

The Jonas Brothers are a rare example in the media of growth and an authentic familial bond, on top of being one of the millennial generation’s most beloved bands, and I, for one, am excited to continue to watch them grow. Be sure to check out Chasing Happiness on Amazon Prime, and blast Happiness Begins all summer long!

Categories
Events Featured

Jonas Brothers and Ryan Tedder Discuss Collaboration at June 13th TimeTalks

Excitement is in the air with the return of the hit pop group the Jonas Brothers alongside OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder.

On June 13th, The New York Times live conversation and performance series will be hosting a conversation between multi-platinum selling band the Jonas Brothers and Ryan Tedder, the Grammy award-winning singer, producer and songwriter.

Tedder wrote the hit song “Sucker” with Nick, Joe, and Kevin Jonas. It was the group’s first song together as the Jonas Brothers in six years. Together the group will discuss their chance meeting, creative collaboration, and musical development over the last decade, in addition to the Jonas Brothers’ exciting reunion.

This TimesTalks event will take place on June 13th at BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center and will be live streamed on TimesTalks.com and the TimesTalks YouTube channel starting at 8PM EST. Select media passes are available. Tickets are available at this link. This is a conversation that you will not want to miss!

Categories
Culture Entertainment Music

Q&A with “And The Writer Is” host Ross Golan

Ross Golan animated

A Chicago native who studied music at the University of Southern California, Ross Golan has worked with many of music’s biggest artists. His credits include Maroon 5, Justin Bieber, Nicki Minaj, Michael Bublé, Keith Urban, One Direction, Idina Menzel, and Linkin Park. Ross has also had multiple record deals as an artist, and is the writer of Ovation Award-winning musical The Wrong Man, which will soon be recorded and released by Interscope Records.

Those credits would be enough for most artists, but Ross is also the host of the And The Writer Is podcast. Launched in January, And The Writer Is — as produced by fellow hitmaker Joe London (Thomas Rhett, Jason Derulo, Pitbull) — features exclusive conversations with other notable songwriters. The first episode, for example, featured Benny Blanco, as known for his work on Ed Sheeran’s “Don’t,” Ke$ha’s “Tik Tok,” Maroon 5’s “Moves Like Jagger” and Katy Perry’s “Teenage Dream.” In turn, listeners get to hear great creative minds talking shop and plenty more.

Ross can be followed on Twitter via @RossGolan, while more on his podcast can be found at www.andthewriteris.com.

How did you wind up in the co-writing game? When did you realize it exists?

Ross Golan: There are two kinds of songwriters — the ones that were artists and the ones that want to be artists. Both Joe and I were in bands. We had been collaborating with other musicians for years but you get in the game when someone introduces you to the game. For me, it was Evan Bogart and Ryan Tedder. Evan, who wrote “SOS” for Rihanna and “Halo” for Beyoncé, was my booking agent and Ryan, lead singer of OneRepublic, and I played shows around L.A. While I was handing out CDs at shows one club at a time, their songs were getting played around the world. Songs tour faster.

What was your first cut that had you excited?

RG: I co-wrote a song called “Here Comes Trouble” for the band Honor Society. They were opening for the Jonas Brothers during their prime arena days. They named their headlining tour Here Comes Trouble. That was like getting called up to the pros from the minors and pinch hitting a single. In itself, it didn’t move the needle much. But it assured me that with enough at bats, I might be able to hit one out.

When it comes to songwriting, do you treat it like a day job where you can do it anytime? Or do you need to feel inspired?

RG: Amateurs look for inspiration. If you’re an artist, you can do whatever you want. But if you want to be a professional writer, act like one.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NSZ2-aajsI

How many songs a month do you write on average?

RG: Depends on the month. Anywhere from one to twenty. But never zero.

What was the impetus for this podcast? Has there been a highlight for you so far?

RG: I have a book that everyone signs at the end of a session. It’s basically my yearbook. It has signatures from Bon Jovi to Michael Buble and Lamont Dozier to Max Martin. These people are fascinating. What are the odds that a kid from the north suburbs of Chicago would end up in a room with them? I suppose that’s the question I’m trying to answer. So, in that sense, all of the interviews are highlights.

Podcast aside, what’s coming up for you career-wise?

RG: The Wrong Man, my musical, signed to Interscope at the end of last year. We’ll be recording it this summer. That’s a 15-year project that keeps on ticking.

When not busy with music, how do you like to spend your free time?

RG: I’m a husband. I have a pug. I play ice hockey and golf. I eat. I drink. I feel like there’s a concept in all that.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

RG: Morimoto, if you’re paying.

Finally, any last words for the kids?

RG: The ONLY thing in the music industry that matters is a hit song. You get that, and all of the other things will follow.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHTzhBKTFug