Music Rob ThomasRob Thomas’ new CD, “Cradlesong,” reveals a more complex side of the singer: Themes of despair, and even death, are explored in various songs.  While it may suggest a darker mood, the 37-year-old, best known as the frontman for Matchbox Twenty and hits like his “Smooth” collaboration with Santana, says it simply reflects life from a more mature vantage point.  “As you get older, your themes change and the things that are important to you change, your focuses change,” said Thomas as he talked about his sophomore CD, which was released last month.  “And so there’s a lot of stuff on here about — obviously, not about being old, but just about being older. And the things that were important to you maybe not being as important to you now, and you have a whole new set of burdens to bear as you take on the responsibility of family, the responsibility of wanting to be an adult — not just getting older, but being an adult, which are two separate things.”  The first single, “Her Diamonds,” was written for his wife, Marisol, who suffers from an autoimmune disease. It deals with his sadness over her health challenges (the music video features Alicia Silverstone).  Thomas said that to him, the process of making music is fundamentally about being honest.  “That’s my job as a songwriter,” he said. Thomas also mused about his starkly dramatic album cover, which features a haunted-looking Thomas, his face half-shadowed, embellished by artwork. Thomas says he was inspired by French surrealist paintings.  “Like, some people hate it, and I think I love that. I can’t remember the last time that people have cared about an album cover enough to hate it. So I think I’ve done something right,” he said. “But I think it’s a striking image.”   Thomas begins rehearsals for his tour in support of “Cradlesong” in September. But even in the midst of developing his solo career, Matchbox Twenty isn’t far from his mind. Thomas said before he hits the road, he plans to meet with his bandmates and start hashing out ideas for the next album to keep their “forward momentum” in high gear.

More about Rob Thomas’
As the lead singer and principal songwriter for Matchbox Twenty, Rob Thomas found success with a blend of ’70s rock influences, slick hooks, and 1990s post-grunge crunch. The Florida-based band broke through in 1996 with “Push” and never looked back, issuing single after single, scoring hits in various radio formats, and watching their debut LP, Yourself or Someone Like You, go platinum 12 times over in the U.S. Thomas himself won numerous songwriting awards as the scribe of such Matchbox hits (including “Real World,” “If You’re Gone,” “Bent,” and “Mad Season”), and he later parlayed that success into a career as a solo artist. Rob Thomas was born February 14, 1972, on an Army base in Landstuhl, Germany. His parents divorced, and the ex-Army brat spent most of his childhood in South Carolina and Florida. After dropping out of high school at 17, he bounced around the South singing in pickup rock bands before relocating to Orlando in 1993. There, he helped form the band Tabitha’s Secret, a precursor to Matchbox Twenty. Although the group enjoyed some regional success, Thomas eventually left the lineup with bassist Brian Yale and drummer Paul Doucette in tow, and the departing musicians formed Matchbox Twenty with guitarists Adam Gaynor and Kyle Cook. The band’s multi-platinum debut, Yourself or Someone Like You, established Matchbox Twenty as a superstar act, but Thomas wasn’t individually well known. That all changed when Thomas co-wrote the chart-topping single “Smooth” for the Carlos Santana album Supernatural. “Smooth” was ubiquitous in 1999, and it made Thomas a star. The track took home three Grammys, including the coveted “Song of the Year” award, and Thomas landed on People’s “Most Beautiful People” list. Meanwhile, he also married model Marisol Maldonado. Mad Season (2000) and More Than You Think You Are (2002) continued Matchbox Twenty’s success, but after years of touring in support of both records, the bandmembers decided they needed a break, and Thomas used the hiatus to write and record his first solo album. When “Lonely No More” debuted in early 2005, its sleek and funky dance-pop sound was closer to Justin Timberlake than Matchbox, and it helped stir up anticipation for the April release of the chart-topping Something to Be. Rob Thomas returned to the Matchbox Twenty fold several years later, but he also maintained work on his solo material, the second batch of which arrived in 2009 under the title Her Diamonds

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