Darryl Holter Sings About Crooked Hearts
From Car Master to Los Angeles Roots Rocker
Interview by Ryan Vaillancourt | Los Angeles Downtown News
15 Apr 2013
Darryl Holter is known around Downtown primarily as the double-breasted suit-wearing executive who manages the Shammas Group’s small empire of Figueroa Street auto dealerships.
So it might come as a surprise that under the white collar veneer, Holter’s a guitar pickin’ working man’s working man with a penchant for progressive politics. He even wrote a song called “Looking for Health Care Reform” for a musicians union fundraiser.
Darryl Holter has spent increasing time in recent years with his six string. Last month, he released his third album, Crooked Hearts, a roots rock exploration of relationships gone awry. On the record he is backed by a lineup of top notch musicians, including Blasters guitarist Dave Alvin and fiddle wizard Gabe Witcher of the Punch Brothers.
Darryl Holter has a residency at Seven Grand, downtown. He spoke with Los Angeles Downtown News about his business and his music.
Los Angeles Downtown News: You’re known as the de facto president of Auto Row. How and when did you get into music?
Darryl Holter: My father taught me when I was a kid. I grew up in Minnesota and I started playing around the state at hospitals and talent contests and even television shows. I primarily did country western music when I was really young. Then I was very interested in the folk music revival in part because Bob Dylan came from Minnesota, so there was a direct connection. I went through literally doing every Bob Dylan song that ever existed. Then I was involved as a student in the civil rights and the anti-war movements, so I used a lot of my music there. I found that music was a really interesting way to connect with people. Over the years I’d written a lot of songs and I decided about five years ago that I might like to record them. I thought if I don’t do it now, I’ll never do it.
Q: Starting with Dave Alvin, Crooked Hearts has some heavy hitter musicians. How’d they end up on your record?
A: When I decided to record, I said to [co-producer Ben Wendel], “Look, I want to do this right.” We went and got the best guys we could. I’ve been playing music since I was a little kid but usually it’s been by myself. In doing the records I was able to play with really great people. It has allowed me to see my own creations in a totally new way.
Q: Do you expect your colleagues and friends in the Downtown business world to show up at your Seven Grand gigs?
A: A lot of them want to although the shows are kind of late for a lot of them, you know, ten o’clock on a Monday or Wed night. But I don’t make it mandatory. I do this for fun.
Seven Grand is at 515 W. Seventh St. Darryl Holter’s Crooked Hearts and show schedule are available at darrylholter.com
– Ryan Vaillancourt – Los Angeles Downtown News
See Darryl Holter Live Wed May 8th, 2013 At The Seven Grand, Downtown LA
Darryl Holter at 10pm With: All Spots To Black at 11pm
The Seven Grand:
515 W 7th St, Los Angeles, CA 90014
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Darryl Holter
Darryl Holter grew up playing the guitar and singing country and rock and roll songs in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His current brand of Americana music draws from country, blues and folk traditions and often tells stories about people, places and events.
Besides his music, Holter has worked as an academic, a labor leader, an urban revitalization planner, and an entrepreneur. Darryl Holter is also a historian who has written on Woody Guthrie and a contributor to the Los Angeles Review of Books.