| Swervedriver |
Swervedriver in a
promotional photo taken in 1997 (front to back)
Adam Franklin, Jez Hindmarsh, Steve George, Jimmy Hartridge
|
| Country |
Oxford,
England |
| Years active |
1989 – 1999 |
| Genres |
Alternative rock
Shoegaze
Alternative metal |
| Labels |
Creation Records (1990-95)
Geffen Records (1996-97)
Zero Hour
Records (1998-99) |
| US distribution |
A&M Records (1991-94)
Zero Hour Records (1998-99) |
| Members |
Adam Franklin
Jimmy Hartridge
Jez Hindmarsh
Steve George |
| Past members |
Graham Franklin
Adi Vines
Paddy Pulzer
Graham Bonnar
|
| Website(s) |
www.swervedriver.com |
Swervedriver was a 1990s alternative rock
band from the United Kingdom. Their sound was
frequently compared to Sonic Youth, The
Stooges, Dinosaur
Jr, The
Who, Catherine Wheel, and
former labelmates My Bloody Valentine
and Ride.
The band enjoyed modest success, particularly on college radio and on
tour in the U.S. & Australia, during its approximately
decade-long career. After experiencing problems with several record
labels, the band went on hiatus in 1999 without having reached a
mainstream commercial audience.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Early
years
- 1.2 First
album and possible breakup
- 1.3 Release
of Mezcal Head
- 1.4 Ejector
Seat Reservation
- 1.5 Final
years
- 2 Post-Swervedriver
activity
- 3 Origins
of name
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 Albums
- 4.2 Singles/EPs
- 5 Compilations
- 6 Home
video
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
History
Early years
The band started in Oxford in 1984, with the formation of a group
called Shake Appeal, named
after a song by one of their main acknowledged influences, The Stooges.
Consisting of vocalist/guitarists Adam
Franklin and Jimmy Hartridge, lead vocalist Graham Franklin
(Adam’s brother), bassist Adi Vines, and drummer Paddy
Pulzer; Shake Appeal wrote what would become Swervedriver’s
first classic, "Son of Mustang Ford."
The band began to fall apart when Graham Franklin and Pulzer left. They
are known to have only released one 7" single, 1987's "Gimme Fever"
(the name being a pun on The Stooges' song "Gimme Danger"), on Notown
Records.
The remaining three members drafted drummer Graham Bonnar. The new lineup had a
new name, Swervedriver. Their hometown colleagues Ride passed their
re-recorded demo of "Son Of Mustang Ford" to Alan McGee
of Creation Records, who, as legend
has it, played the tape for the first time while cruising the streets
of Los
Angeles in a limo. The experience caused him to sign the band
immediately.
First album and possible breakup
The group debuted with a series of 12" EP's between 1990 and
1991: Son Of Mustang Ford, Rave Down
and Sandblasted. They then issued their debut album
Raise in 1991. On February 6, 1992, Bonnar abandoned the band at the Canadian
border only a few dates dates into a two-month headlining tour of the
U.S. Tour manager Phil Ames called on Danny Ingram from Washington,
D.C. band Strange Boutique, to fill in on
drums for the rest of the U.S. tour and a short tour of Japan. Rather
than replace Bonnar permanently, the band had Ingram move to London for
a U.K. and European tour. In April 1992, the group, with Ingram still
on drums, did a U.S. tour in support of two American A&M
labelmates, Monster Magnet and Soundgarden.
Following an appearance at the Hultsfred festival in Sweden on August 8, 1992, Vines departed
to form the heavy metal-oriented Skyscraper,
which would split in 1997. (Vines has since worked as guitar tech for
various U.K. bands including The Darkness, Feeder
and The
Prodigy.) Swervedriver’s final release with the original
lineup, 1992's Never Lose That Feeling 12" EP/ 7"
single, appeared to be the group's last.
Release of Mezcal Head
In 1993, Swervedriver re-emerged with the core of Adam
Franklin and Hartridge, along with newly-recruited drummer Jez Hindmarsh (a.k.a. "Jez"), and
released the album Mezcal Head. The
album gave them their most successful single, "Duel" (NME's
Single Of The Week), for which a music video was released. "Never Lose
That Feeling" was tacked onto the end of CD copies of the album, along
with an extended krautrock/drone/saxophone piece called
"Never Learn." They toured U.S. arenas with Smashing
Pumpkins and Shudder To Think in October and
November 1993. Swervedriver covered The Who's "In The City" on the Who
Covers Who tribute compilation, and later covered The Who's
"Magic Bus."
Ejector Seat Reservation
1994 found the band adding new bassist Steve
George, along with extensive touring of the U.S., Japan and Europe. Creation
Records dropped the band one week after the U.K. release of 1995 album Ejector
Seat Reservation and deleted the record from print. This was
said to be due in part to the label's decision to focus on its new
best-seller, Oasis. Ejector Seat Reservation was
never officially released in the U.S., though it was reissued on CD in
2003 by Sony International. It incorporated a wider number of
influences from 1960s rock bands such as The Beatles, and 1970s power
pop bands like Big Star and The Raspberries. Despite receiving
widespread critical acclaim
and featuring their most radio-ready batch of songs, it received little
to no record company support and ended up their poorest-selling album.
This began a protracted period of record label problems for the band.
Final years
In 1996, Swervedriver signed to Geffen
Records with a multi-record deal, and began recording its fourth album.
However, their contract was terminated when their A&R (Artists
& Repertoire) representative was fired in a corporate
downsizing. Geffen released promotional CD copies of the band's fourth
and final album, entitled 99th Dream, but these
were quickly withdrawn and the label never officially released the
album for sale. Once the legal dust settled, the band was awarded its
own recording studio along with the finished album.
99th Dream was finally given an official
release in early 1998 after the band signed to fledgling U.S. label Zero Hour
Records. The title track was written as a prequel to Bob Dylan’s song
"115th Dream".
(The only differences between the Zero Hour and Geffen versions was a
new version of "These Times.") Despite 1998-99 tours of the U.S. (with Hum),
Britain, and Australia
(where the band had its most diehard fanbase), they did not break out
beyond cult status. The Wrong Treats EP, released
in 1999, was the band's last body of work as an extant group; they
announced a hiatus later that year that persists to this day.
Post-Swervedriver activity
Adam Franklin has released several albums under the solo alias
Toshack Highway, and has
performed select Swervedriver songs on tours. In June of 2007, Adam
released his first album under his own name called "Bolts of Melody" on
Hi-Speed Soul Records out of San Diego, CA. This release is a return to
a more guitar/song driven sound in the vein of Swervedriver.
In 2005, with most of the band's discography out of print, Castle
Music released a 2-CD Swervedriver anthology entitled Juggernaut
Rides. It brought together 33 songs, including many only
available on rare EPs/singles, and four that were previously
unreleased, such as the 10-minute "Neon Lights Glow," which features
accompaniment by an orchestral string section.
In early 2007, Interpol drummer Sam
Fogarino joined with Adam Franklin to form side-project band The Setting
Suns, who have not yet unveiled any release dates or tour plans.
Origins of name
Whenever questioned during interviews on the topic of its
name, the band would simply respond that it was "just a name." Songs
from Mezcal Head were
later used in the popular video game Road Rash for the Sony Playstation, Sega
Saturn, and PC. A&M Records released "Swervedriver On Board"
suction-cup automobile signs to promote Raise in
1992, as a spoof of the once-popular "Baby
On Board" signs. The band is often called "Swervie" or "The Swervies"
for short.
An unrelated band released an album in 1995 under
Swervedriver's original moniker of Shake Appeal; both bands presumably
took their name from the same Stooges song.
Discography
Albums
Raise: Swervedriver's first
album, released 1991.
- Raise
(1991, Creation/ A&M) (initial copies came with free 7")
- Mezcal Head
(1993, Creation/ A&M)
- Ejector Seat Reservation
(1995, Creation) (initial copies came with free 7") (reissued 2003,
Sony International)
- 99th Dream (1997,
Geffen [promo CD only]/ 1998, Zero Hour) (initial copies came with free
7")
Singles/EPs
- Son Of Mustang Ford 12" (1990, Creation)
- Rave Down 12" (1991, Creation)
- Sandblasted 12" (1991, Creation)
- "Surf Twang" (b/w "Deep Twang") free instrumental 7"
included with initial vinyl copies of Raise (1991,
Creation)
- Reel To Real 12" (1991, A&M)
- Never Lose That Feeling 12"/ 7"/ CD EP
(1992, Creation)
- "For Seeking Heat" (b/w "Duel") 12" (promo) (1993, Creation)
- Duel 7"/ CD EP (1993, Creation/
A&M)
- Last Train To Satansville 12"/ CD EP
(1993/1994, Creation/ A&M)
- "My Zephyr (Sequel)" (b/w "Mars) 7" (1994, Flower Shop)
(1000 copies only)
- "Magic Bus" (1994) — from Day Tripper
movie soundtrack
- "Plan 7 Star Satellite 10" (b/w "Flaming Heart") (1995,
Creation) free 7" with initial vinyl copies of Ejector Seat
Reservation
- "Bring Me The Head Of The Fortune Teller" (b/w "The Birds")
12" (promo) (1995, Creation)
- Last Day On Earth 12" (initial copies on
white vinyl)/ CD EP (1995)
- "Why Say Yeah" - Swervedriver/ Sophia split double 7" (1996)
- "93 Million Miles From The Sun… And Counting" 7" (1997,
Sessions)
- "Good Ships" (b/w "Hate Yr Kind") (1998, Zero Hour) free 7"
with initial vinyl copies of 99th Dream
- Space Travel Rock 'n' Roll 12"/ CD EP
(1998, Zero Hour) (came in anti-static foil wrap bag)
- Wrong Treats (1999)
Compilations
- Juggernaut Rides '89–'98 (2005, Castle)
2-CD best-of collection
Home video
- On The Road With Swervedriver: A Rockumentary
(promo VHS, 42:51 total time) (1992, A&M) Features live
footage, interviews, and all of the band's music videos up to that point
References
-
http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/page/news/Ryan_Adams_Plays_Stonehenge
External links