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Jaded Era's transformation from invisible indie to hit songwriters.
By Andre Calilhanna

July 2006
Jaded EraJaded Era must be getting used to attention. Just last year, Cleveland Scene Magazine voted the group "Cleveland's Best Rock Band" for the third year in a row, they opened for Bon Jovi (to add to their list of notable stage shares), and they performed as a finalist in Disc Makers' Midwest IMWS showcase in Chicago. Now their song "Invisible," written and released by the band in 2002, is chart-topper Ashlee Simpson's current single.

Simpson, who has co-written all of her material to date, isn't just covering the song. Geffen Records is using "Invisible" as the vehicle with which to re-release Simpson's sophomore album. I Am Me went platinum two months after its October 2005 release, but Geffen is hoping to approach the triple platinum success of Simpson's debut, Autobiography .

"It was a tough decision to make at first," explains Kira Leyden, Jaded Era's vocalist and co-writer of the song. "Ron Fair (Chairman of Geffen A&M Records) had come asking for the song for other artists in the past. Then we get word that Ron wants to fly us out and have a sit-down conversation and clear the air and talk about the song for Ashlee Simpson. The fact that he would do that and that he wanted the song so much meant a lot, and it changed our perspective.

"It's always been a huge compliment that he liked the song, but I was always thinking 'Why can't we do it ourselves?' But it totally changed when we talked to Ron. This was such a different level from any previous situation because they wanted to use it as the single and make it the driving force for re-releasing the album. That made a big difference."

Fair, whose credentials include production and A&R for Christina Aguilera, Black Eyed Peas, Mary J Blige, and Counting Crows, discovered the song three years ago and has been trying to place it ever since. On a video clip on Geffen's web site, Fair explains that he told Simpson "I have this magnificent song that I've always loved and I think it's a perfect fit."

Ashlee SimpsonConsidering Simpson's fall from pop grace after the lip-synching affair on Saturday Night Live in 2004, the song's teary yet defiant message fits Simpson's situation on many levels. For Jaded Era, it's another stop along a path to success that has never been a straight line.

"It goes to show that the best thing a band can do is play and play and do everything you can to get yourself out there," says guitarist Jeff Andrea, who co-wrote the song. "We played this gig in Akron one night - we almost didn't - and it turned out there was guy in the crowd who used to work for Arista. He came to us after the show and said, 'Hey I really liked that one song you guys played, can I have a CD?' We figured we would never hear from him again.

"He gives us a call a couple of weeks later and says, 'I've got some people I'd like to show this to. Then it lands on Ron Fair's desk and a week later we're being flown out to showcase. Originally, it was a record deal for the band on the table, but that went cold. We learned a lot from that situation. I'm glad it turned out this way. We're in a much better place."

Once Leyden and Andrea gave the green light for the song, Simpson's team wasted no time getting it recorded and released. The meeting with Fair occurred in late February, and the song and video were released in June. As a testament to the original composition, Simpson's version doesn't deviate from Jaded Era's. "I don't think they changed a note," asserts Andrea.

All of this has had a rather immediate impact on Jaded Era. Suddenly, the band isn't quite so anonymous, and Leyden and Andrea recognize this window of opportunity needs to be taken advantage of. Indeed, such potential opportunities were a major factor in their agreeing to the song's use.

As Andrea puts it, "People are looking at us in a whole different light. You can tell there's a different level of respect. They're listening to us."

"How many times do you get to sit face to face with the head of a major label?" Leyden chimes in. "And not only that, if we call him, he calls us back. It's a different place. It doesn't happen often for an unknown band, but we're doing this so that we will be known."

At the moment, Jaded Era are in the closing stages of signing a contract with a producer they've met through their new connections. The band's plans are to go into the studio to cut four songs and pitch them back to Fair and company.

"We're really happy we stuck to our guns and didn't just sell the song to some unknown artist," Andrea asserts. "The most important thing to us was 'What's the best opportunity for this song to get heard?' That's what sealed the deal. When Ron told us just how much exposure this song would get, we felt it deserved that chance, even it if wasn't for us. To get out there, on this level - we'll never get this sort of chance again. Especially being an independent artist. Something like this can help us so much."

"It's awesome to see it out there on TV every day," adds Leyden. "I was skeptical about how I'd feel to see someone on TV doing one of our songs. But when I see it, I'm like "That's my song!" It feels so cool. I never thought I'd feel like that, but I'm completely happy about it."

IMWS Finalists Jaded Era hail from Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, and have just released a DVD/CD combo featuring two new videos. The band's independent CD releases include Invisible in 2002 and Study of The Human Race in 2004. Learn more about Jaded Era at www.jadedera.com and www.myspace.com/jadedera.

 
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