Adam Granduciel of the Grammy-winning band The War on Drugs finds musical inspiration on the course – GolfDigest.com

Posted: April 29, 2022 at 3:55 pm

Now Im finally feeling free Im living down by an old par 3/You know Ill be playing

The last lyric that came to Adam Granduciel for the latest The War on Drugs album is the one hes most proud ofand the one he most enjoys singing. But the frontman and creative force behind the Grammy-winning rock band didnt need to take any artistic license in coming up with it.

Granduciel actually lives down by an old par-3 course, and it played a crucial role in his bands most recent creation. After moving to the Studio City area of Los Angeles in 2020, Granduciel stumbled onto Weddington Golf Course while on a walk with his then infant son, Bruce (named in part for one of Granduciels music idols, Bruce Springsteen). It soon became a place to unwind after the baby was put to bed, but it also morphed into an important part of his creative process, both for the bands fifth studio album, I Dont Live Here Anymore, and for the albums 10th and final track, Occasional Rain, on which he sings about his golf oasis.

Id go at night and just park the car behind the huge net and sit there listening to the music we were working on or voice memos of ideas I had and watch people tee off, says Granduciel, whose band won a Grammy for best rock album in 2018. It was just real meditative, and it was a nice routine I had.

As with many others, the pandemic played a role in Granduciel getting (back) into golf. The future rocker first fell in love with the game as a sixth-grader caddieing at Wellesley Country Club outside of Boston, taking advantage of Monday playing privileges while using his dads old set of clubs. As a teen he cobbled together his own setin some cases by ordering parts and using a blowtorch in the basement.

But Granduciel stopped playing when he was too old for the junior golf rateby then he was spending nearly all his free time playing guitar anyway. He thought about getting back into the game after college until his father informed him that his clubs had been thrown away. (Empty nesters like that nest empty.) A few decades later, the 43-year-olds latest move not only brought him close to that par 3 but to a neighbor who happened to be looking for a fourth.

It was just such a great thing to do every week, Granduciel says, to get outside and forget about whatever was going on, and I just really love it. And it was just great to connect with something from when I was younger.

Granduciel raves about the public golf courses in the L.A. area, even if he has to pay full freight these days. His Friday game has become a fixture on his calendarwell, when hes not touring, like during a recent two-month stretch that included his first time playing Madison Square Garden in January. He says the next steps in his golfing evolution are converting his bandmates and bringing his clubs on the road.

What a great way to see a city, too, or a town, Granduciel says. A couple years ago youd go to the local record store or youd find the great coffee shop or restaurant. But now, Im just going to try to find the great course.

In the meantime, Granduciel is just happy to have found the game again after all these years.

You cant really choose the things you get obsessed with. It was the same feeling I had when I was in sixth grade, and my friend invited me over to his house to jam for the first time . . .I couldnt wait for him to invite me over again, Granduciel says. I dont even know what Im doing out there half the time, but its the getting there thats the fun part.

Granduciel calls playing the guitar an extension of himself, but he says his golf game is very much a work in progress. After recently shooting a career-best 84, though, hes at least begun entertaining the possibility of playing the celebrity pro-am circuit.

When you see these highlights, and there are thousands of people watching you hit a 6-iron out of a fairway bunker to two inches, I cant even imagine how that feels, Granduciel says. You must feel like a god or something.

Of course, most people think the same thing about rock starseven rock stars who just bought their first pair of golf shoes. Yep, theres no turning back now. Adam Granduciel is all in as a golferjust listen to his lyrics.

We just played in L.A., so my golf buddies all came to the show, and I sang the line, and I pointed to them, Granduciel says. So it was a cool, full-circle kind of event.

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Adam Granduciel of the Grammy-winning band The War on Drugs finds musical inspiration on the course - GolfDigest.com

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