Dahlia Fiend
Sacramento, California, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2016
Music
Press
Another noteworthy addition to Sacramento’s music scene makes its mark with an upcoming album drop. Dahlia Fiend’s Beautiful People in Ugly Places is haunting while it pounds with a driving beat, and could be described as the love child of Depeche Mode and the Violent Femmes. It is as dark as it is elating, alternating between pulsing and soaring crescendos that level out with slower, melodic dirges. Dahlia Fiend is primarily the work of Sherman Baker, along with Sam Coe, previously of Low Flying Owls, lending drums to tracks engineered by John Baccigaluppi. The album release party goes down upstairs from Harlow’s at the MOMO Lounge on Saturday, Aug. 19 at 6 p.m. The event is all ages, and DJ Lady Grey and Blue Oaks will be opening. Stream the album at Dahliafiend.bandcamp.com and get your tickets to the release party at Momosacramento.com. - Submerge
Sherman Baker, solo artist, and this month’s curator of the ‘What I’m Listening To’ playlist, is making a big change. The former folk singer is moving away from his old sound and towards the digital horizon of electronic music under the name Dahlia Fiend. “For a while now I’ve wanted to make electronic music. This year I buckled down and started developing my skills more a[s] a producer … This all sounds pretty typical,” he says with a laugh, “‘Oh no, here we go again with the folk dude making beats,’ but I’m really pleased with how the music is sounding and I think it really is deserving of a name other than my own. It is its own entity.”
Baker got into music reluctantly. He was forced to take piano lessons as a child, and like many children compelled to play an instrument, hated it.”[I]ronically, I love piano now,” he says. He escaped the ivory keys at sixteen by switching to guitar lessons and played in garage bands in high school. “[I] secretly wanted to be a singer but I ended up studying theater and acting for about six years until 2001 when I committed to music fully.”
He would go on to form a number of bands before becoming a solo name. Though he admits he has not played much as a sideman, he would like to someday remedy that and perhaps become a producer. In the course of his career so far, Baker has played with many musicians including Adam Wade and Nick Swimley before they formed The Golden Cadillacs. “My last band and easily the best group I’ve had was Sam Coe on drums, Julie Meyers on bass and Steve Randall on guitar.” Although he says his “favorite odd collection of musicians” he has ever played with was at a show he did at the Torch Club with Jackie Greene on the drums and Joseph Davancens of Tycho on guitar.
Then last year, Baker’s life took an unexpected turn when he was diagnosed with testicular cancer. “I noticed early on in the year that something was drastically wrong, at first I thought it might be related to how much cycling I was doing,” he says with a laugh. “I was very familiar with Lance Armstrong’s story though and sadly I lost a friend to testicular cancer about five years ago so it was a very scary thing to realize.” Once he went to the hospital, his condition was quickly diagnosed and a few days later they removed his left testicle. “[Y]ou would think, as a man, that nothing could be more painful. It wasn’t very much at all and I was home a few hours after waking up from surgery.” Unfortunately, the cancer had already spread to his stomach. “This meant chemo. Specifically a kind of chemo that has an effect on hearing and can cause numbness in the hands and feet. Not great news for a musician.”
While searching alternatives, Baker discovered that as a cancer patient, in addition to fighting the disease, you also have to be very thorough when researching treatment options. “You absolutely have to research your illness in detail and find out who the best doctors, specialists … etc are. Failing to do this results in either death or a drastically compromised treatment plan.” So he contacted Lance Armstrong’s former surgeon through Facebook and eventually went to the UCSF hospital in San Francisco for the second phase of his treatment. He met with an oncologist and then with a surgeon who performs a difficult five hour operation called RPLND. RPLND or Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection is a procedure that removes the abdominal lymph nodes. “In my case, they discovered that the operation had about an 85 percent chance of eliminating the cancer and need for chemo. The flip side was it could affect my ability to have children. I decided to take my chances.” The surgery went successfully and without incident but was very painful. “I woke up sobbing in pain. I cried the first time I tried to walk across my room. Long story short, I have been in remission since late last year and statically my chances of recurrence are pretty low.”
“The whole experience seems very weird and distant to me now,” says Baker, and he is unsure whether it has affected his music at all. “People go through all sorts of horrible trauma and come out not much better or different as artists than they were before. It makes for a good press release perhaps.” However, it has made him more focused on his music and less on the “exterior life stuff that musicians, and people in general can often get caught up in. When it hits you that your time on earth may be expiring, it does have a dramatic effect on what and who you value. For some, that might be their kids or their profession. For me, it’s my music. Everything else is secondary. Except for my cats. They come first.”
Musically, he is moving firmly away from his previous work as Sherman Baker. “Dahlia Fiend is entirely my focus now and probably will be for the next few years at least … I don’t think I have it in me to do the open mic/folk stuff anymore, honestly. I find that music boring and depressing both to play and to listen to.” Although the name and style is far from Baker’s previous work, he has no interest in creating a new persona around it. “I don’t care for personas or personality much. There’s enough of that going around in every facet of society now. I’m pretty sure Taco Bell has an Instagram. The more I see an artist doing that, the more I suspect a cover up for something that is missing musically on the talent/originality/output side of things.”
The name Dahlia Fiend is an amalgamation of interests. “I liked the word ‘fiend’ because I am very fiendish and obsessive in general. Dahlia Fiend sounded cool, [and] has associations with both a sad, tragic and macabre Los Angeles true crime (an interest of mine) and pretty flowers. We are surrounded by violence and beauty daily. I wanted a name that had both those things.” Despite being a veteran singer/songwriter/musician, Baker says the challenge he faces is “framing everything in way that the public will hopefully give a shit about to some degree. It goes without saying that I work to inspire myself first, but when I put out music I want it to have an effect on people beyond my chin scratching musician friends.” - Tube. Magazine
Discography
Still working on that hot first release.
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Bio
Dahlia Fiend is the moniker for singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer Sherman Baker's electronic based music. After over a decade spent steadily writing and releasing records in the folk, roots and indie-rock genres Baker was diagnosed with cancer and subsequently spent months undergoing surgeries and traveling between his current home, Sacramento, and San Francisco. It was during this time, while recovering, that Baker began delving back into the harder edged, beat and synth oriented music he grew up with in the nineties. DJ Shadow, Tricky, Bjork, Aphex Twin, Massive Attack, New Order and Depeche Mode were all touchstones but with the mind that Dahlia Fiend would be it's own entity with an emphasis on classic songwriting.
The debut Dahlia Fiend LP Beautiful People In Ugly Places was released during the summer of 2017.
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