How Everclears Art Alexakis combines rock and comedy to fight MS
Stand-Up Comedy
Julie Seabaugh March 27, 2024
Pasadenas Art Alexakis, singer-songwriter and guitarist of
longtime
Los Angeles
alt-rock
band Everclear, finds himself this month somewhere between dealing with the aftermath of a March windstorm decimating his wifes BMW and rehearsing his
rendition of
Diamond Dogs
number
for a benefit tribute to David Bowie. Theres also plenty of self-care and a fair share of looking back.
In 2016, Alexakis was diagnosed with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis after likely experiencing the autoimmune disease for a decade prior. Nearly 3 million people affected with nervous system impairment around the globe have included Christina Applegate, Selma Blair, Montel Williams, Jamie-Lynn Sigler and the late Richard Pryor.
Born and raised in Santa Monica, Alexakis continues his National MS Awareness Month tradition of kicking off the third annual 24-hour online Dystopia Tonight Stream to End MS starting
March 27 Wednesday
at 6pm Pacific. All funds raised benefit the National MS Society.
Previous
Event highlights
from the event’s previous years
include a That 70s Show reunion with creator/showrunner Mark Brazil, Tommy Chong and Kurtwood Smith; Jimmy Vivino showing up with “Letterman” sidekick Paul
Schaffer Shaffer
and the Four Seasons Lee Shapiro; video messages from comedians Lewis Black, Rita Rudner and others. Last years final quarter featured a
Nineties ’90s
alt-rock gathering with members of Barenaked Ladies, Toad the Wet Sprocket, the Gin Blossoms and Sister Hazel.
2024 musicians expand to Wednesday night’s event features performances from
New Zealands Ladyhawke and Englands Frank Turner
along with
comedians Robert Klein, Robert Smigel, Colin Mochrie and Jamie Kennedy.
A
ctors Ed Begley Jr. (Young Sheldon), Beth Broderick (Sabrina the Teenage Witch), Dedee Pfeiffer (Big Sky) and viral Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield
will also make cameos
.
Comedian and Dystopia Tonight host
John Poveromo
expects more than 80 guests over 24 hours. His personal circle of MS Warriors range from his mother to
an
opera-singer friend. Poveromos original pandemic-era fundraising attempt ended up streaming 93 hours to break a Guinness World Record.
Ahead
of the “Dystopia Tonight” streaming event of Everclears autumn Nineties-reunion tour,
Alexakis discusses his MS experiences, fundraising,
his band’s upcoming album anniversary tour of “Songs From an American Movie”
and doing bad things at the Whisky a Go Go.
How did you originally connect with comedian “
Dystopia Tonight” host John Poveromo
over the issue of multiple sclerosis?
I was diagnosed in 2016 with RRMS. I started treatment and told friends and family, but I wasnt really public about it with other people. I wasn’t hiding it; I just wasnt talking about it publicly. Then in 2018, I wrote a song about it called The Hot Water Test that was on my solo record [Sun Songs] that came out in 2019, and I knew I was going to have to talk about it.
Jodie Sweetin channels Full House dad Bob Saget with her inappropriate and dark comedy
I sent a letter out to all my social media, and within two or three hours, I was getting calls from Variety, Rolling Stone, the L.A. Times, even Good Morning America, just to talk about it. L.A. morning shows as well. I guess it went viral in a sense, but it brought a lot of attention to MS in a positive way. Since being diagnosed, I made a video for the song Hot Water Test with people singing my lyrics along with me that were diagnosed with MS, ranging from being really young and different ethnic backgrounds. It came out really cool for a $5,000 video, and that got a lot of traction as well. When I play shows, every dollar from every show goes to the Multiple Sclerosis Society or Sweet Relief, because they do great work as well. Thats how I got involved and why I was on Johns podcast; he asked me because it was for MS.
What does your day-to-day look like now?
It changes. It progresses. Its going to progress for the rest of your life. Through medication or not, its going to progress. Thats just what it does. They say if you live long enough, youre going to be in a wheelchair. I want to push that date as far away as possible. So I swim every day. I try to eat a low-inflammatory diet, get a lot of sleep, drink a lot of water, physical therapy. I take medication. I get an infusion once a month. Im doing everything I can to keep getting onstage.
How would you prepare for a performance like the bands Live at the Whisky a Go Go taping?
You play almost 100 shows the year before doing your 30th anniversary tour. We play a lot. We dont rehearse a lot unless were trying to learn something. We dont need to rehearse. And thats not arrogance. Its just were all guys in our 50s and 60s; weve been doing this for a while. I hadnt planned on doing a live album, but we were playing a show at the Whisky. Which incidentally, growing up in L.A. and being a musician the whole time, I went to the Whisky, I did bad things at Whiskey, but I never played the Whiskey ever. So we played and we recorded it. Usually when people record for live albums, they record three or four shows. We only recorded one. I had to tweak three or four things, but theres really not a lot of Auto-Tune. Its pretty honest. I can hear some notes that I dont hit, but were dinosaurs. We do it the old school way. What would be the analogy for comedy? With all these comedy specials, they make em look like theyre not stopping or redoing jokes, but they are. And why wouldnt they? Theyre recording this for posterity. You want it to be the best as possible.
What else does 2024 hold for you and the band?
Were going to do a tour in the fall honoring the 25th anniversary of making the album Songs From an American Movie, which has Wonderful, AM Radio, several different songs on it and did really well. But its also just going to be an old school Everclear tour. Were going to take a couple of bands, friends of ours from the ’90s.
Our audiences have been skewing a lot younger lately, which you really dont really expect. But theres a lot of younger people who are dissatisfied with contemporary music, and they are looking for rock ‘n’ roll. So they gravitate to the
’90sNineties
. What a surprising thing at my age to be able to go out and still for a living play rock ‘n’ roll, which for a lot of people is the dream. It was for me.
Its fun when you can see that fire in their eyes when they still get the buzz off it. Im in my 60s; I still get the buzz. I played with guys in their 70s last night. They still get the buzz. I bet you Robert Klein still gets the buzz.