My "My Yahoo" page ran this AP story today.  Happy Thanksgiving to all!

George, On Higher Ground

Wednesday November 22 2:32 PM ET
Doobie Brothers Have New Album 

By MARY CAMPBELL, Associated Press Writer 

NEW YORK (AP) - Despite the title of their new album, ``Sibling Rivalry,'' 
there have never been any brothers - or anyone named Doobie - in the Doobie 
Brothers.

The personnel changes have been so frequent since the rock trio, now a 
quintet, was founded in 1969, you'd need a score card to keep track of them 
all.

The Doobie Brothers, who were at the height of their popularity in the 1970s 
with such No. 1 hits as ``Black Water'' and ``What a Fool Believes,'' have a 
new CD out and a four-CD retrospective set.

Band members were so in demand for interviews this fall, they broke up into 
two groups to handle the media. Patrick Simmons, Michael Hossack and John 
McFee were talking in one room of a hotel suite, while original lead singer 
Tom Johnston and Keith Knudsen held forth in another.

``Before I was in the band, I was a fan,'' said McFee, who joined in 1980. 
``I always thought the Doobies were one of the best bands.''

Work on the new CD started before compilation of the four-CD set, ``Long 
Train Runnin': the Doobie Brothers (1971-1999),'' which was released by Rhino 
in September.

The idea for ``Sibling Rivalry'' was to present the sound before 1974, when 
musician-singer Michael McDonald joined. McDonald set the tone until a 1982 
breakup. The band re-formed in 1988.

``The whole reason we got back together in the first place was to do a 
reunion show for the Vietnam Veterans Aid Foundation,'' said Hossack. ``That 
kind of got things started. And our former producer wanted to do a record 
with the original band.''

``Sibling Rivalry'' was released in October by Pyramid Records. For the first 
time, the band produced its album, with each writer being strongly involved 
in the production of the songs he wrote.

``I think everybody made suggestions,'' Simmons said. ``I have to say, for my 
own tunes, I think the other guys have as much to do with completing the song 
as I do. You can make suggestions of what to play. In the end, it is their 
performances that really makes it. What you hear in your mind is changed by 
the way it comes out.''

When it came to choosing the 13 songs for the CD, which includes ``Ordinary 
Man,'' ``Jericho'' and ''45th Floor,'' the band members didn't argue, McFee 
said.

``We tried to pick the best songs,'' Hossack added. ``We looked at each song 
on its merits. It didn't matter who wrote it.''

When people think of the Doobie Brothers, he said, they think of the hits ``I 
Listen to the Music,'' ``Black Water,'' ``China Grove,'' ``Long Train 
Runnin','' ``Takin' it to the Streets'' and ``What a Fool Believes.''

``A lot of people think of soulful guitar playing, rhythmically not exactly 
James Brown, that chucka-chucka guitar playing, is something people have 
associated with our band,'' Simmons said. ``We've been associated with blues 
influence, opposed to real pop. And the vocal blend identifies us. We have an 
emphasis on harmonies.''

The quintet went ``a little bit further'' on the new album, he said.

``It's a little more thoughtful lyrically than sometimes. We have written 
some socially conscious songs; there's more of that going on in this record. 
I think we moved on to a more experimental direction in some songs, with some 
fusion, contemporary rhythm-and-blues and hip-hop happening.''

The Doobie Brothers play about 90 shows a year. They started touring the 
United States at the end of May. Before that, they played New Zealand. 
``We've been all over the world at different times,'' McFee said.

``The highlight of being on tour is getting up on stage and playing,'' said 
Hossack. ``Getting there and leaving are hard work.''

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