Editor's note: Chris Hauser,
the Evil Record Company Radio Guy
Mark Heard refers to in his Image
journal, and incidentally a devoted
Mark Heard fan, here very graciously
gives us his version of the "Play
Stupider Sessions."
I was the radio promoter at Myrrh
Records from the fall of '87 to
the Fall of '90. Having come from
Christian radio in Syracuse, NY
my favorite artist was, far and
away, Mark Heard. Victims of
the Age was a life-changing
album for me and I'd seen Mark perform
a couple of times in the '80's.
In fact, I went to the New Sound
Festival at Gordon College near
Boston in 1985 and had had a taped
radio interview with Mark cleared
by John Flynn before I got there. When
I found Mark at the festival, he
was in a dorm room lobby area sitting
alone. I introduced myself by telling
him how much his music had impacted
me and that his manager had set
up an interview. Mark said he was
too tired, had traveled all night,
and wouldn't be able to do the interview.
Without skipping a beat, I then
began to get out some radio liners
for him to voice, thinking that
would be much easier than a full
interview. He again politely, but
a little more sternly this time,
declined. I pushed a little harder
and will be forever embarrassed
about my insensitivity in that moment.
He then, more sternly, declined
and I backed away feeling very dejected
and embarrassed at how I'd acted
upon the first meeting of my musical
hero.
Fast-forward to 1987. I was a
huge believer in the Ideola project
and actually took a radio promotion
position for Myrrh Records and the
Myrrh Records/A&M imprint What?
Records. Maybe I'd actually get
the opportunity to work more directly
(on the inside) with Mark Heard
and have a chance to prove I'm not
such a jerk!
A couple of staff people told
me how hard it was to get along
with him and to not get my hopes
up.
The "play
stupider" sessions were based
around the career of Randy Stonehill,
a true father figure in the early
days of CCM and someone who'd had
a fair amount of success in the
industry but was not climbing in
new sales and radio play with his
newer records. He was a pop balladeer
from '81 through '86, then put on
an electric guitar and brought in
Dave Perkins as a producer to create
the balls to the wall rock & roll
The Wild Frontier album in
'86.
There was a bit of confusion
at the label and in the marketplace
as to who Randy's audience was.
Perkins produced Randy's 1988 project
Can't Buy a Miracle, featuring
a sweet ballad called "Coming Back
Soon." It tied a true-life story
about Randy's daughter missing her
dad while he was in Nashville making
a record, and connecting that to
the believer's cry for the return
of Christ. The song went to #3 on
AC Christian radio charts, and the
album probably had a couple of songs
in the top 5 at CHR and Rock.
But even with the radio success,
sales were not as strong as expected
for Stonehill, and nowhere near
what his talent deserved.
So Myrrh A&R man Tom Willet brought
in Mark Heard to produce Randy's
'89 project Return to Paradise
(a Top 100 CCM Albums Book pick).
The album, though gorgeous and featuring
great songs, had almost no radio
success and even worse sales.
In early '90, Tom Willet and
Mark Heard approached me to find
out exactly what kind of songs Christian
radio stations were playing at the
time and how they could get another
hit for Randy like we'd had with
"Coming Back Soon," and many other
top 5 songs he'd had in the early
to mid-80's. I told them that it
was sad but true that radio was
appealing (and I suppose always
has and always will be) to a lowest
common denominator sound and lyric
content. If they could come up with
a ballad that drew parallels between
a natural everyday experience and
the eternal - Christian radio would
eat it up.
They accepted the challenge and
seemed very concerned about not
"messing it up."Within a matter
of weeks, they brought back the
song, "Faithful," which would release
on an album that same year that
was half live and half studio. The
live tracks were Randy standards,
and the studio tracks were all new
songs.
The lyrics for "Faithful" were
absolutely lowest common denominator.
As it turns out, Mark Heard was
the writer but was so embarrassed
by the lyric, they listed the songwriter
as an Italian version of his real
name: Giovanni (John, Mark's real
first name) Audiori (Heard).
Tom Willet clued me in to the
studio process early on, and to
the "play stupider" line that was
being slung around. My point all
along had been, If you want to have
success at this format and don't
feel like it's compromising your
art, then this is what Radio wants.
I went over to Mark's studio
in a small outbuilding in his backyard
in Montrose, CA, just up the road
from where I lived in Eagle Rock,
to listen in on the session. I don't
exactly remember handling the faders
for the song but that could've happened.
A battle raged in me at the time
because I wanted so much to fit
in with this group of people. Tom
Willett was a brilliant A&R guy,
who was consistently attached to
records that remain some of my all
time faves (including Tonio K. and
The Choir). Stonehill and Heard
were huge influences for me and
I loved being around them but I
also felt embarrassed that I had
to be the bad news guy with the
report that many of their best efforts
would not be embraced by Christian
music radio and thus, consumers.
I wanted to have success in my
career as a radio promoter too and
worked very hard at getting as much
airplay as possible for all the
artists on the roster.
One thing that is just not true
in Mark's Image journal entry:
he writes that after "Faithful"
was turned in, I called him and
said, "Mark, we had no idea you
were capable of such brilliant production."
I knew Mark was completely capable.
But he and the artist and the label
all were trying to "Keep It Simple,
Stupid" (the KISS theory) to get
Randy back on the map of successful
CCM artists. ("Faithful" peaked
at #2, but Randy's album and accompanying
full-length concert video did not
sell up to expectations.)
Every time I was around Mark
Heard, I was a bit in awe and would
never say something so condescending
to him as "We had no idea you were
capable of such brilliant production."
I felt a little stupid being
the guy that represented the stupidity
at Christian radio and didn't have
many more dealings with Mark before
his death. I saw him perform at
Cornerstone '90, and stopped by
his record table afterwards. Much
to my surprise, he grabbed my hand,
pulled me in close, and acted like
we were old friends. He said, "Hey,
we've got to get together sometime.
I'll call you soon." I didn't expect
a follow-up, but sure enough, he
called me within a month and took
me out to lunch. I still remember
various subjects we discussed, but
I simply hold those in my heart.
My thoughts on Mark as an artist:
I bought Appalachian Melody
in 1980 at a used record store only
because I'd seen
ads for it in CCM Magazine and
was completely taken in. 1981's
Stop the Dominoes did more
for me but it was 1982's Victims
of the Age along with Mark's
production of Pat Terry's Humanity
Gangsters and my getting married
in May of '82 ... more than at any
other point in my 22 years of life,
those three events brought me face
to face with what a fallen and selfish
person I was (am) and what a messed
up world we live in.
I feel his best work was from
'80 to '87 and I know I'm in the
minority with most Orphans of God
on that one. When I was in Christian
radio from '80 to '87 I found ways
to play his music on the air. Even
though it was not as slick and pop
sounding as other better selling
projects, to me it was life giving.
I wish radio and thus, the Church,
embraced the music and convictions
of Mark Heard and his ilk. By and
large, in my career, I have fought
for the underdog and those artists
that are truly connecting with their
audience no matter how small, on
an intellectual and visceral level.
To me, Mark Heard will always
be near the top of that list. He
was too good, too smart, and too
honest for much of the Christian
music industry. I wish I could have
gotten to know him better and without
the attending drama of being the
guy who asked him to dumb down his
gifts and talents, for the sake
of a hit. But on the other hand,
I wouldn't have told him to do that
if he hadn't asked me HOW to do
it in the first place!
INTERVIEWS
& ARTICLES
ARCHIVE