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 Childhood hero produces tracks that bring singer-songwriter home.

 

Former The Loved Ones frontman and guitarist/vocalist of the Falcon Dave Hause was raised around constant music — The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Dire Straits. But it was when he first heard the record Nervous Night by the Hooters that Hause realized he was going to be a musician for life. “They felt like ‘my’ band,” he said. “My uncle took me to see them play at The Tower Theater and it blew my mind.” Now a full-fledged rock & rolla, Hause feels like he’s come full circle; Eric Bazilian, The Hooters’ singer, songwriter and guitarist, produced his third full-length album, Bury Me In Philly.

The set is a love letter both to his hometown as well as the larger-than-life rock acts he grew up worshiping as a teenager. There’s folksy singalongs and hard-groovin tracks, but more than anything else, Bury Me in Philly is a sonic journey.

Hause tells Myspace how it all came together. Hop to the next page to read the full interview.

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