Adam Green

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Singer, songwriter

Singer-songwriter Adam Green first gained minor fame among indie-rock fans for his darkly mischievous lyrics as one half of the anti-folk duo the Moldy Peaches. Green continued to play to a small but select fan base as a solo recording artist after 2002, but in 2007 reunited briefly with Kimya Dawson, the other Peach, when a duet they had written and recorded several years earlier appeared on the soundtrack to the box-office hit film Juno as the movie's best-known song. "Anyone Else But You" became Green's first mainstream hit after releasing dozens of other songs over the course of his career, but it maintained his quirky, signature style. "I want to write the next ‘Mary Had a Little Lamb’," he told Rolling Stone's Christina Saraceno. "I always wanted to write songs that are melodic and easy to sing. I guess I'm trying to write that kind of escapist stuff. A lot of times I'll think about a weird memory, or earliest thoughts or childhood fantasies and it'll end up in my songs somehow."

Green was born on May 28, 1981, in Mount Kisco, New York, and grew up in nearby Bedford. Both are located in the affluent, bucolic setting of Westchester County, just north of New York City, but the idyllic suburbs bred in Green an early unease. "I feel like I was a pretty pathetic character throughout my childhood," he told Saraceno in the Rolling Stone interview. As an adolescent, he began frequenting the handful of record stores in the area, where he made like-minded friends who introduced him to a wide range of music, from Hank Williams to Black Flag. One of those friends was 20-year-old Kimya Dawson; they met when Green was 13 and working at a Bedford pizza place near her job. With the seven-year age difference, Green explained that Dawson functioned as "sort of my babysitter," he told Larry Katz in the Boston Herald. "She knew about different bands that were playing, and my parents would give her money to take me to see concerts."

In 1998, Green headed off to Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts, but spent just one semester there before dropping out. He joined Dawson, who was living in Washington State at the time, where they played their first set as the Moldy Peaches in order to raise funds to pay an overdue electric bill. By 2000 the pair were both in New York City and began to find success with shows at a venue on the Lower East Side called the Sidewalk Café, which was already the hub of a new musical subgenre dubbed "anti-folk." Beck and Ani DiFranco are some of the anti-folk movement's most notable former members. Green and Dawson gained early notoriety as much for their comically profane lyrics as for the Robin Hood costume Green sported onstage at times, which was complemented by Dawson in a bunny suit.

Green and Dawson self-released their first LP, X-Ray Vision, but their first for Rough Trade had the unfortunate release date of September 11, 2001. The album featured 19 tracks, including audience favorites "Steak for Chicken" and "Who's Got the Crack," as well as "Anyone Else But You," the future Juno hit. Asked about it later, Green recalled that he began writing that song one day as he was walking in New York City, "and I had in my head a Skip Spence song," he told Laura Barton, a journalist with London's Guardian newspaper, referring to the late singer-songwriter who was once the drummer for the Jefferson Airplane. "I couldn't remember all the words so I started replacing them with lines I was making up…. and then I think me and Kimya were writing songs on my couch the next week, and I brought up that idea, and we wrote a bunch of lines, piecing around a lot of ideas from our notebooks. We finished the song in Tompkins Square Park on a bench."

In 2002, Green and Dawson decided to put the Peaches on indefinite hiatus, and later that year he released his first solo record, Garfield, on Rough Trade. He gained a wider following thanks to a slot as an opening act for Rough Trade label-mates the Strokes, one of the most dramatic rock success stories of that year, and returned to New York City to record his next work, Friends of Mine. Released in the summer of 2003, Green scored some good reviews, including one by Rolling Stone's Christian Hoard who asserted the LP "shows off his promise as a songwriter…and Green's surprisingly polished crooning."

Overseas, Friends of Mine debuted in the number-two spot on the German independent charts, and the European music press liked to point out Green's unusual connection to one of the greatest literary names of the twentieth century: his great-grandmother, Felice Bauer, was once engaged to the writer Franz Kafka. Their relationship endured mostly via correspondence between 1912 and 1917, when Kafka then took up with a friend of Bauer's; Bauer and her family subsequently fled Nazi Germany in the late 1930s and came to America. Kafka's biographers have written extensively on the relationship, and the voluminous correspondence has also been published separately as Letters to Felice.

Green found his own bit of notoriety with the song "Jessica," a whimsical diatribe against the pop singer Jessica Simpson that appeared on Friends of Mine. He had written it more than a year before, not really knowing who the pop singer was at the time, but finding himself entranced by a magazine cover she graced. Its lyrics include the lines "where has your love gone? It's not in your music" and "your fraudulent smile." Green's song was released just before Simpson and husband Nick Lachey debuted in an MTV reality series Newlyweds, and was seized upon as indie-music's retort to the manufactured celebrity of the pair. "I've heard through people that she's heard it," Green told Katz, the Boston Herald writer. "I don't know how I'd take it if somebody wrote such a thing about me. But if I ever met her, I'd be nice to her. I haven't seen her show because I don't get MTV, but I did see her on Jay Leno. I was actually sort of charmed by her."

Green's third solo release was Gemstones, followed by Jacket Full of Danger in 2006, which earned slightly better reviews than the much-maligned Gemstones. As with his previous records, Jacket featured short songs and lots of them-the LP's 15 songs clocked in at just under 30 minutes for the CD, and took Green nine days to record. Writing in the Sun, a London tabloid, reviewer Simon Cosyns claimed Green's latest "exudes hooks, confidence and marks the flowering of an extraordinary talent."

Dawson, meanwhile, was involved in her own solo releases and soundtrack work for various films. One of them was Juno, a sweet but unsentimental tale of a pregnant teenager, played by Ellen Page, and her dilemma. In the movie, Page and co-star Michael Cera (George-Michael from the cult-favorite Fox series Arrested Development) sing the duet together, and the movie's success propelled the soundtrack to the number one on Billboard chart not long after the film's December of 2007 release. Green and Dawson reunited to perform the song publicly in a promotional push, and even appeared on the ABC morning talk show The View in a bizarre stage set-up that mimicked the curbfront scene in Juno. Green described that event as "displacing," he said in the interview with Barton. "I think both me and Kimya-aside from getting to meet [View co-host] Whoopi Goldberg-would rather have been home eating lunch."

Green's next solo release was Sixes & Sevens, which was 48 minutes of 20 cabaret-influenced songs, including "Morning After Midnight" and "Drowning Head First," a duet with girlfriend Loribeth Capella. Of the 2008 record, Village Voice writer Lex Benaim claimed it "should help his reputation evolve" from the association with the Juno soundtrack. "The record is simultaneously stranger and more coherent than any of his previous albums," Benaim continued, "and the pan-flute playing on "You Get So Lucky" is one of the funniest moments in music this year." An article in the New York Observer mentioned that Green had been spending time in Nashville, and as a result "most tunes circle around Nashville's great contributions to the realms of country, blues and gospel, all in a laid-back, classic vernacular that wouldn't be out of place on the Leon Redbone or Bonnie Raitt album," its reviewer noted. "If that sounds like a tall order for the gawky, scrappy poet of the streets, it is, but then again why not? In a way the cadences of Mr. Green's lyrics are no less rollicking than these more staid precursors, and if at times they seem out of place, his presence somehow does not."

Selected discography

Solo
Garfield, Rough Trade, 2002.
Friends of Mine, Rough Trade, 2003.
Gemstones, Rough Trade, 2005.
Jacket Full of Danger, Rough Trade, 2006.
Sixes & Sevens, Rough Trade, 2008.

With The Moldy Peaches
X-Ray Vision, Average Cabbage, 1996.
The Moldy Peaches, Sanctuary Records/Rough Trade, 2001.
Music from the Motion Picture Juno, Rhino Records, 2007.

Sources
Periodicals
Boston Herald, January 30, 2004, p. 7.
Guardian (London, England), April 10, 2008, p. 28.
New Statesman, May 5, 2008, p. 38.
New York Observer, March 18, 2008; May 9, 2008.
Rolling Stone, November 20, 2002; August 7, 2003.
Spin, April 2008.
Sun (London, England), April 7, 2006, p. 74.
Village Voice, March 25, 2008.
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Singer/songwriter Adam Green is most known for his stint with the Moldy Peaches, but in the new millennium he also did the solo thing. His music is a sophisticated indie-folk mix, showcasing an appealing peculiarity similar to the likes of Leonard Cohen. In September 2002, Green marked his solo debut with the release of Garfield, followed by the next year's Friends of Mine, which contained the single "Jessica," about Jessica Simpson. In 2005 and 2006, Green released a pair of dynamic albums, Gemstones and Jacket Full of Danger, respectively. The following year, the singer found himself with a bit more mainstream attention thanks to his duet with fellow-Moldy Peach Kimya Dawson, "Anyone Else But You," featured on the hit film Juno, and in 2008 his fifth solo full-length, Sixes & Sevens, came out. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Adam Green (musician)

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Adam Green

Adam Green in 2005
Background information
Born (1981-05-28) May 28, 1981 (age 30)
Mount Kisco, New York
Genres Indie rock, Anti-folk
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Guitar, vocals, harmonica, keyboards, piano, tuba
Years active 1998–present
Associated acts The Moldy Peaches
Website www.adamgreen.net

Adam Green (born May 28, 1981, Mount Kisco, New York) is an American singer-songwriter, artist and filmmaker.

Green's off-kilter style has achieved a moderate college radio following in the United States, and enjoys increasing popularity in a number of European countries, particularly Germany.[1]

Contents

Career

Music

Green attended Emerson College for one semester in 1998 before leaving to concentrate on his music, going on to co-found The Moldy Peaches with Kimya Dawson. In 2004, the Moldy Peaches went on hiatus, and both Green and Dawson embarked on solo careers.

Green released several albums on Rough Trade Records. Among his better known songs are "Jessica" (about singer Jessica Simpson), "Novotel", "Friends of Mine", "Dance with Me", "Carolina" and "Emily", and in the UK, his cover of The Libertines track "What a Waster". "Jessica" (#63, 2004) and "Emily" (#53, 2005) both appeared in the UK Singles Chart.[2]

Prior to Jacket Full of Danger in 2006, all of Green's albums had been released on the 22nd of the month.

In January 2008, The Moldy Peaches began having a resurgence in popularity, due to their music being included in the hit indie film, Juno. Most notably, a duet between Green and Dawson, the Moldy Peaches song "Anyone Else But You" was featured in the film, and also in a scene which featured the film's lead actors, Michael Cera and Ellen Page performing the song together. The soundtrack album reached #1 on the Billboard 200 chart on its third week of release.

Art

In 2005, Green entered the professional art world with his exhibition of a series of drawings titled “Animal Dreams” at Loyal Gallery in Stockholm.[3] Green’s art exhibition “Teen Tech” was displayed at New York’s Morrison Hotel Gallery for 10 days in April 2010 and consisting of twelve plaster sculptures, eighteen watercolor and acrylic large-scale (30” x 40”) paintings, nineteen drawings, twenty collages and papier-mâché and mixed-material works.[4] A portion of “Teen Tech’s” proceeds went to benefit Artists for Peace and Justice, an effort to re-create and cultivate sustainability in Haiti.[5] In 2012 Green announced plans for an exhibition of new works titled “Cartoon & Complaint” at the Intercourse in Red Hook, Brooklyn[6]

Film

On April 4, 2011, Green released his first film, entitled The Wrong Ferarri. The project, shot entirely on iPhone, was written, directed, and performed in by Green who claims to have conceived it under the influence of ketamine.[7] Others appearing in the film included BP Fallon, Alia Shawkat, Devendra Banhart, Pete Doherty, Dev Hynes, Jeffrey Lewis, Sky Ferreira, Cory Kennedy and Macaulay Culkin.[8]

Personal life

Although Green was brought up in a secular Jewish home, his grandparents were very religious.[9][10] His great-grandmother, Felice Bauer, was engaged to Franz Kafka; her family fled the Nazis in the late 1930s and relocated to New York.[11]

Green's brother Joel, an astronomer, has appeared as an accompanying musician on several recordings.[12]

He was married, for a short period in 2008, to Loribeth Capella.[13]

Green is a friend of the musician Carl Barât, appearing in a documentary with him in 2005. It followed the pair on a night out in London, for the European television culture channel Arte.[14]

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Baby's Gonna Die Tonight" (Promo 2002)
  • "Dance With Me" (2002)
  • "Jessica" (2003)
  • "Friends Of Mine" (2004)
  • "Emily" (2005)
  • "Carolina" (2005)
  • "Nat King Cole" (2006)
  • "Novotel" (Promo 2006)
  • "Morning After Midnight" (Promo / Download 2008)
  • "Twee Twee Dee" (Promo / Download 2008)
  • "What Makes Him Act so Bad" (Promo / Download 2009)
  • "Buddy Bradley" (Promo /Download 2010)

Collaborations and compilations

Books

Films

  • The Wrong Ferarri – directed by Adam Green (2011)

References

  1. ^ Benaim, Lex (2008-03-25). "Adam Green's Teutonic Love". Village Voice. Archived from the original on 31 March 2008. http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0813,blame-it-on-the-teutons,389135,22.html. Retrieved 2008-03-30. 
  2. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 235. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  3. ^ "Adam Green "Animal Dreams"". LoyalGallery. http://www.loyalgallery.com/gl002_adam_green.html/. 
  4. ^ "Adam Green’s NYC Art Debut: Teen Tech at the Morrison Hotel Gallery Bowery". Sentimentalist. April 23, 2010. http://www.sentimentalistmag.com/2010/04/23/adam-greens-nyc-art-debut-teen-tech-at-the-morrison-hotel-gallery-bowery/. 
  5. ^ "Adam Green comes to the Bowery". Morrison Hotel Gallery. https://www.morrisonhotelgallery.com/set/default.aspx?setID=1306/. 
  6. ^ "A Preview of Adam Green's New Aladdin-Themed Art Exhibit "Cartoon and Complaint"". Paper. May 16, 2012. http://www.papermag.com/2012/05/a_preview_of_adam_greens_new_a.php. 
  7. ^ "Adam Green Explains His Macaulay Culkin–Starring, Ketamine-Influenced iPhone Movie The Wrong Ferrari". New York. April 4, 2011. http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2011/04/adam_green_explains_his_macaul.html. 
  8. ^ "Pete Doherty and Macaulay Culkin star in 'ketamine'-fuelled Adam Green film". NME. April 7, 2011. http://www.nme.com/news/adam-green--2/55971. 
  9. ^ Paerse, Sam (2006-04-21). "Green And Moldy". Totally Jewish. http://www.totallyjewish.com/entertainment/features_and_reviews/?content_id=3308. Retrieved 2012-04-23. 
  10. ^ Pegg, David (2010-02-04). "Adam Green - The Junction". Varsity. http://www.varsity.co.uk/reviews/1940. Retrieved 2012-04-23. 
  11. ^ Adam Green Interview / CD-Kritik Thema
  12. ^ Music: From Woodwinds to Indie Folk Rock
  13. ^ "Adam Green". The Sydney Morning Herald. December 5, 2008. http://www.smh.com.au/news/entertainment/music/gig-reviews/adam-green/2008/12/05/1228257306473.html. 
  14. ^ "Durch die Nacht mit..." Carl Barât und Adam Green (2005)

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Mentioned in

Man Man (Rock Band, 2000s)
Audio Hallucinations (2003 Album by Mr. California and the State Police)
Jessica (2003 Album by Adam Green)
Adam Green (Rock Artist, 2000s)
Antifolk, Vol. 1 (2002 Album by Various Artists)