Eric Pollard says he hadn't touched marijuana for four years — through the duration of his probation for drug charges — when he lit up a popular strand of legally distributed weed during a California stayover. The pot struck him hard, and so did California.
"I wrote the songs 'The City Is an Ocean' and 'Faded Days' right then and there, and I thought, 'I could write a whole album like this,'" said Pollard, best known to Minnesota music fans by his nom de strum Actual Wolf.
While he downplayed any overt influence weed had on his latest album — there are no seven-minute guitar solos or bongo drums — Pollard did not hide the great sense of freedom he felt by lighting up and moving out to California. That liberated vibe fuels the delightfully breezy, laid-back, '70s sonic vibe on "Faded Days," his gorgeous new Actual Wolf album for Red House Records.
Probably more than any record by a Minnesotan this year, this one deserves to be heard in its vinyl format, the release party for which is Friday at the Turf Club (it was issued digitally in June). The songs have an old analog-style glow to them, and the music alternately echoes "Harvest"-style Neil Young, Tom Petty, and modern '70s-channeling rock darlings such as the War on Drugs and My Morning Jacket.
"I'm up on all the cool bands, but I'm still very much a classic-rock kind of guy," said Pollard, 37, who has served as drummer in recent years for the likes of Sun Kil Moon, Nikki Lane and Retribution Gospel Choir.
Originally from Grand Rapids, Minn., and a proud product of Duluth's music scene, Pollard actually moved to Nashville before he landed in Oakland, Calif. He still figures he could make a living as a full-time drummer in Music City U.S.A. In his pervasively wry way, though, he said, "I really think the world needs another singer/songwriter."
To help fund his music, Pollard turned to the work that nearly landed him in jail when he still lived in Minnesota: growing and harvesting marijuana.
He took a job at a dispensary in Oakland, in the state with the most liberal marijuana laws. It's all completely on the up and up, and it's about as steady a job as you'll find in the Bay Area nowadays.