"David Clement has had one hell of a journey in music. Discovered by Liz Phair when she promoting her "Exile in Guyville" album, she encouraged him to sing and play out. He went to a open mic in NYC,got signed to Mercury Records and recorded an album. While he waited for it to get released, he formed a killer band and continued playing out.

Mercury was bought by Univeral and David was dropped w/out his album being released. Clement moved on, writing and recording more music which appeared on Dawson's Creek, Popular and Gilmore Girls. David got back his ill-fated record back and this fine effort was worth the wait. YOUR FREE GIFT is a great pop album, full of great hooks ala The 6ths and They Might Be Giants"
-
MICHAEL SULLIVAN HERENTHERE MAGAZINE


"The fact that YOUR FREE GIFT, by the American singer David Clement, has ever seen the light of day may be seen as a small miracle. His acoustic debut, Be More Like Me, got some great reviews and got him a contract with the major label Mercury Records. By the time Clement had finished recording his second CD, Hard Candy, it appeared that this contract was worth even less than the paper it was written on. Mercury was taken over by Universal, "reorganized," and Clement was put aside in a dishonorable way. The release of Hard Candy was postponed without any concrete promises for the future; the album seemed lost forever in the legal battle that followed. After a few years and many lawsuits,Clement has claimed his right to RE-record Hard Candy, and the result is an astonishingly good album titled Your Free Gift."
- EELCO VAN KAPPEN for <i>KINDAMUSIK</i>
translated from Dutch by Piete

liz and Dave

David likes to think that he moved to New York to work for visual artists NANCY SPERO and LEON GOLUB ,while interning as a lithographer at SOLO IMPRESSIONS,.

That's half the story.

He abandoned his graduate studies in art in Northampton MA when he fell for an East Village poet. Once he was safely ensconced in New York, he was lucky to find some great jobs.

Mere weeks after arriving, Clement was a single man in The Big City.

With all his newfound freetime, he volunteered in the youth programs at the Lesbian and Gay Community Services CENTER, conducting workshops in visual art, creative writing.

 

Then, a visit from a high school classmate changed his life. LIZ PHAIR recognized her friend's talent and remembers saying, “You should be doing this.”

The next week, he performed at an open mic.

This was the first time that he was heard by the A&R guy who would eventually sign David to Mercury Records.

 

Dozens of hootenannies later, David played his first solo gig and was soon playing regularly around the city.

He wrote and recorded songs when he could afford to -two or three songs here and there- until he had enough songs for an album. His first CD, Be More Like Me (Wild Monk Records) was a lo-fi hodge-podge and garnered critical acclaim; it was picked as “critic's choice” by Billboard.

Next came the first band:

  • Chris Cochrane: avant guitarists (Suck Pretty, No Safety)
  • Marc Ribot: guitar(Elvis's attractions, etc.),
  • Richard Dworkin: drums (Alex Chilton, etc.)t
  • Mike Stanzillis: bass (Sandra Bernhard)

Then some recording with:

  • MARTY BELLER:drums (They Might Be Giants,The Negro Problem),
  • ROB BAILEY: guitar (Anastasia, Jive, and even Mandy Moore, but didn't play bass for AC/DC).

After a series of live gigs, demo projects, and eventually signing with Polygram, David met Jeffrey Lesser, the eclectic producer of such varied artists as Lou Reed, Joni Mitchell, the Prissteens, and even Streisand.

The result was to be Beauty/Mercury Records' first release, David Clement's Hard Candy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Making his way back East, Clement stopped in Chicago and played some gigs at SCHUBA'S, and METRO. Those shows got him an invitation to play at STEPPENWOLF THEATRE'S as part of their TRAFFIC SERIES.

Finally back in NYC, David added cellist ERIN HALL to his band and played residencies.

Hard Candy was never released and the finished CD was in legal limbo for years.

Needing a change, and following his heart again, David headed west to L.A. where he played at: THE GIG, THE MINT, and a particularly surreal show at the CINEGRILL,

In California, David found some larger outlets for his music when it was featured on the WB's Jack and Jill, and Dawson's Creek.

(Clement eventually self-released 12 songs from Hard Candy as YOUR FREE GIFT in 2002.)

 

 

 

David and Rob Bailey have recently finished the score for PURPLE STATE OF MIND, an indie documentary making the rounds in '08.

 

 

 

 

Still Here ?

 

 

EARLY YEARS

 

HIGH SCHOOL