Archers of Loaf

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Archers of Loaf

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Alternative rock band

Chapel Hill, North Carolina’s Archers of Loaf have managed to distinguish themselves from other alternative rock bands riding in the wake of Nirvana’s epic 1991 crossover to the mainstream. They have done so by maintaining a balance between writing songs for themselves and catering to their fans. Steadfastly avoiding major record label overtures from 1993 to 1997, the band has forsaken the lure of the multi-platinum success of bands like Green Day and Bush. In so doing they have built a mass of critical and listener support and have retained the reigns of creative control.

Yet the Archers have not avoided the limelight just for the sake of doing so, or in opposition to the very idea of a wider audience. As Village Voice rock critic and avowed Archers fan Robert Christgau put it in 1995, "unlike many alternabands, right up to the notoriously uneven Pavement, they’re not so stricken with incompetence, fear, irony, or disdain that their live efficiency or enthusiasm is ever in question." This is not an unimpressive achievement in an alternative music culture riddled with such self-important negativity.

The dual Erics, Bachman and Johnson, are the guitar-wielding front men in the Archers of Loaf, and Bachman is the band’s singer. The two grew up in Asheville, North Carolina, a small city of 50,000 in the far western part of the state across the Great Smoky Mountains from Knoxville, Tennessee. Both were raised in upper-middle-class homes (Bachman as the son of an insurance salesman), and they met again at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, near the metropolis of Raleigh-Durham. Bachman had studied saxophone for two years at Appalachian State University before transferring to U.N.C. In January of 1992 Bachman and Johnson met bassist Matt Gentling and drummer Mark Price and formed the Archers of Loaf. Usually referred to as simply "the Archers," it isn’t clear what the band’s name refers to, but its quirkiness is in keeping with song titles like "Hate Paste," "Audiowhore," and "Vocal Shrapnel."

Band Formed at Peak of Chapel Hill Frenzy
The band came together at a time when Chapel Hill’s reputation for breeding college music hits had music industry insiders plugging it as the next big scene. Just as in Seattle after Nirvana’s mainstream crossover in 1991 and Athens, Georgia (another college town), in the mid-80s following R.E.M.’s meteoric rise, legions of record company talent scouts descended upon Chapel Hill’s music scene. Other local bands the Archers shared the spotlight with were Superchunk, Polvo, and Small (also known as Small 23, owing to copyright disputes with other bands apparently using the same self-deprecating moniker). In fact, Bachman was a founding member of Small, as well, contributing to that band’s 1993 EP, Cakes. But when Small gained record label attention and it came time to choose his allegiance, Bachman stuck with the Archers.

Under a local music fanzine and label called Stay Free, the Archers of Loaf recorded their first single, "Wrong" in late 1992. This release attracted the attention of a number of independent record labels, and the band signed with Burbank, California-based Alias Records. The first album, Icky Mettle, was released in 1993 and attracted significant praise in the college/alternative music industry. The first single from the album "Web in Front," gained measurable airplay both on college radio and on MTV. In addition, the album was on the influential College Music Journal (CMJ) charts for 22 weeks. Interview gave Icky Mettle the magazine’s highest praise, naming the album "Best Indie Rock Album of the Year." The album’s varied compositions drew comparisons to a number of sources: the latter-day punk of Washington, D.C.’s Fugazi, the alterna-pop of late-80s indie godfathers the Pixies, and the early 90s low-fidelity, art-school rock of Pavement.

In the fall of 1993, the Archers headlined the Alias Records segment of the CMJ music festival in New York, where bands, college music DJs, and label scouts converge annually to observe new talents. Writing in Rock: the Rough Guide, critic Jonathan Swift described a live Archers show from the early ‘90s: "The intensity of Eric Bachman, the dreaminess of Eric Johnson, and the muppet-like qualities of Matt Gentling and Mark Price combine to make one of the most solid live bands touring today."

Spurned Suitors Included Madonna
Continuing their regular recording schedule but offering up a shorter release this time, 1994 saw the band issue The Archers of Loaf vs. the Greatest of All Time EP. More punk in style than their previous work, the release again garnered extensive college airplay and also topped Village Voice critic Christgau’s list of the year’s best EPs. This feat prompted many major record labels to call on the band and even prompted singer Madonna to show up at an Archers performance and try to sign them to her Maverick label. The band spurned all the offers, preferring to stick with the independent Alias. Perhaps this decision was motivated by a desire to avoid the pitfalls of the countless bands who have signed to major labels, only to find themselves dropped after falling short of the required number of album sales. Gentling confessed to the Village Voice’s Christgau that the band had a fear of catering to the desires of the marketplace rather than its own original inspiration. "I like the way certain people maintain their privacy," Bachman added. "Like Tom Waits—he’s always done what he wants, right?"

Following The Archers of Loaf vs. the Greatest of All Time’s release the band embarked on its longest sustained period of touring to date—over 12 months spent traveling across the United States and Europe, including a stop at England’s influential Reading Festival. In 1995 the Archers entered the studio with legendary alternative music engineer, Steve Albini, whose long list of credits include In Utero, Nirvana’s follow up to their multi-platinum Nevermind. The result, Vee Vee, was another success, spending 14 weeks on the CMJs Top 50 list and six weeks in the Top 10.

Rolling Stone’s review of the album deemed the band "top of the heap" of the Chapel Hill crowd and described the release as follows: "Weirdo song titles (‘Under-achievers March and Fight Song,’ ‘Let the Loser Melt’) and lyrics stuffed with quips (‘the underground is over crowded’) testify to a welcome humor; dissonant guitars lend a wicked edge. And when the Archers settle into full-out rocking—the hammering ‘Harnessed in Slums’—they do so with satisfying savagery." That same year Alias also released the first product of Bachman’s solo project, Barry Black, a mostly instrumental, experimental amalgam of rock, jazz and folk influences incorporating instruments like the sax, trombone, cello and Brazilian rainstick.

This critical success led the band back to the road, albeit playing in bigger venues and on tour with similarly quirky but slightly better financed bands like the Flaming Lips and Weezer—a group propelled in part by its big-time producer, former Cars front man Ric Ocasek. The Archers also continued their string of annual Alias releases, producing their third album, The Speed of Cattle, in early 1996. In contrast to the studio albums, however, this release was an 18-track collection of assorted B-sides, alternate versions of previously released tracks, live recordings, and sessions from the London studios of John Peel. Known as "Peel Sessions," many punk/alternative bands of the last 20 years, from the Buzzcocks to Nirvana, have paid a visit to this studio to record a few songs for limited release.

Even with the lack of new material, The Speed of Cattle merited an "A minus" in the Village Voice’s "Consumer Guide," and Christgau added, "I say the bits and pieces of the most musical band in Alternia beat the fully realized works of art of mortal road heroes. In fact, I say they are fully realized works of art."

Ever the touring band, the Archers continued to play dates in the United States and Europe up to and following the recording of their next album, All the Nations Airports, during March and April of 1996. Released in September of that year, the album was again on the Alias label but this time with the added U.S. distribution muscle of Elektra Records behind it. It was recorded at Ironwood Studios in Seattle and featured slicker production than that on the band’s earlier "low-fi" releases. In contrast to the week spent recording earlier albums, which were essentially taped live, this time the band spent a month just preparing the sound settings. The final product was a similar departure in song writing, including shorter songs, four instrumentals, and a three-song mini-rock opera. "Worst Defense," "Attack of the Killer Bees," and "Rental Sting" were listed as three songs but played as one. The Archers referred to the songs affectionately as "the trilogy."

In January of 1997, the band released another EP on Alias, Vitus Tinnitus. Also rereleased that year was the first Archers recording, "Wrong," on an Atlantic Records compilation of songs appearing on the popular but short-lived TV show, My So-Called Life. This followed at least five other compilations in the previous two years that featured Archers tracks, including the soundtrack to the movie Mallrats, Step Right Up: the Songs of Tom Waits, and a CD to benefit the beloved Chicago indie music venue, Lounge Ax. Furthermore, the single "Harnessed in Slums" from Vee Vee was named "one of the best protest songs in indie rock" by Trouser Press founder Ira Robbins. This acknowledgment, along with a string of solid indie album releases enabled the Archers to continue following their own inspiration. The band’s lasting significance to the music world was deemed by the Village Voice to be, "in croaked, wild, intelligent music that’s also virtuosic, especially up against the myriad alt bands who fancy themselves players these days."

Selected discography
Icky Mettle (includes "Web in Front"), Alias, 1993.
The Archers of Loaf vs the Greatest of All Time (EP), Alias, 1994.
(Contributor) Step Right Up: The Songs of Tom Waits, Manifesto, 1995.
Vee Vee (includes "Underachievers March and Fight Song" and "Let the Loser Melt"), Alias, 1995.
(Contributor) My So-Called Life, Atlantic, 1995.
(Contributor) Mallrats (soundtrack), MCA, 1995.
The Speed of Cattle (includes "Wrong" and "South Carolina"), Alias, 1996.
All the Nations Airports (includes "Worst Defense," "Attack of the Killer Bees," and "Rental Sting"), Alias, 1996.
(Contributor) The Lounge Ax Defense and Relocation CD, Touch & Go, 1996.
Vitus Tinnitus (EP), Alias, 1997.

Sources
Books
Rock: the Rough Guide, Rough Guides Ltd., 1996.
The Trouser Press Guide to ’90s Rock, Fireside, 1997.

Periodicals
Guitar Player, November 1996.
Interview, December, 1993.
Melody Maker, October 1, 1994; April 27, 1996, p. 74.
Rolling Stone, March 23, 1995, p. 125.
Village Voice, April 18, 1995, p. 76; October 8, 1996, p. 60.

Online
http://www.iuma.com/Warner
http://wkuweb1.wku.edu/~bob/archers
Additional information was provided by Alias Records publicity materials, 1997.
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  • Genres: Rock

Biography

The Archers of Loaf were darlings of the indie world in the early to mid-'90s, thanks to an off-kilter sound that was edgy and challenging, yet melodically accessible at the same time. Cornerstones of the Chapel Hill, NC, indie scene that also spawned Superchunk and Polvo, the Archers' chief inspirations were the Replacements and Sonic Youth, but that only began to tell the story. Their music was frequently likened to a more intense, raucous version of Pavement's postmodern pop, and indeed they shared key elements: fractured song constructions, abstractly witty lyrics, clangorous guitars, and lo-fi production. More rooted in punk and noise rock, however, the Archers took the dissonance, white noise, and angularity to greater extremes, and played with more overt commitment and enthusiasm in concert. The Archers became a hip name to drop with their acclaimed 1993 debut, Icky Mettle; several more accomplished albums followed before the group called it quits in 1998.

The Archers of Loaf were formed in Chapel Hill in 1991, when all four members were attending the University of North Carolina. Coincidentally, they'd all grown up in Asheville, in the western part of the state, but hadn't all gone to the same schools. Singer/guitarist Eric Bachmann, guitarist Eric Johnson, bassist Matt Gentling, and drummer Mark Price cut an independently released single, "Wrong," that helped them land a contract with the California-based indie label Alias (also home to releases by American Music Club and Yo La Tengo). Another single, "Web in Front," became a substantial hit on college radio in 1993, creating a strong buzz for the group's full-length debut. Icky Mettle arrived later in the year to highly positive reviews and more alternative-radio airplay, and the Archers supported it with an extensive national tour.

A five-song concept EP, Archers of Loaf vs the Greatest of All Time, arrived on the heels of Icky Mettle in 1994. Amid growing media attention, Madonna's Maverick label made a play for the band, but they elected to continue developing on an independent, with lower commercial stakes. Their second album, the rawer and noisier Vee Vee, appeared in 1995 and was an even bigger college-radio hit, thanks in part to the single "Harnessed in Slums." The album landed in the CMJ Top Five, and even got some press from the hipper mainstream media outlets. In its wake, Eric Bachmann convened the Chapel Hill side project Barry Black, an eclectic, mostly instrumental outfit given to bizarre arrangements; their eponymous first album was also released in 1995.

Meanwhile, the Archers compiled a raft of non-LP indie singles, B-sides, alternate takes, and live cuts for 1996's The Speed of Cattle. Their proper third album, All the Nation's Airports, came out later that year and showed the band moving into quieter, more layered territory. Bachmann's second album with Barry Black, Tragic Animal Stories, arrived in 1997, as did the live Archers of Loaf EP Vitus Tinnitus. The band's fourth proper album, 1998's White Trash Heroes, continued its exploration of calmer, more spacious sounds, and began to incorporate keyboards and samples. However, their marathon touring commitments were contributing to a sense of stagnation within the group. After the supporting tour for Heroes, the Archers decided to call it quits. A live album recorded at that tour's Chapel Hill show, Seconds Before the Accident, was released posthumously in 2000. Bachmann moved on to the folkier Crooked Fingers, and also went back to solo recording, stepping away from the Barry Black moniker and using his own name on a pair of releases and a soundtrack for the film Ball of Wax. Johnson also moved on to solo work with his own project, Spookie. In 2011, Archers of Loaf reunited, playing an unannounced reunion show in North Carolina before heading out on the road for a summer tour. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi
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Archers of Loaf
Origin Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Genres Indie rock, noise rock, college rock, punk rock
Years active 1991–1998, 2011–present
Labels Alias
Members
Eric Bachmann
Matt Gentling
Eric Johnson
Mark Price

Archers of Loaf is an American indie-rock band originally from Chapel Hill, formed in 1991. The group toured extensively and released a total of four studio albums, a collection album, numerous singles and EPs, and a live album which was released after the band broke up in 1998.[1]

Contents

Early history

Singer/guitarist Eric Bachmann, guitarist Eric Johnson, bassist Matt Gentling, and drummer Mark Price, all originally from Asheville, NC,[2] formed Archers of Loaf in the early 1990s. Eric Bachmann was a saxophone major at Appalachian State before dropping out because he "didn't want to be a high school band director."[3]

Their initial release in 1992 was a 45" single, with the A-side "Wrong" (B-side "South Carolina") given away free with issue 1 of Stay Free! magazine.[4] Following the success of their independently released single "Wrong", the band signed with Alias records and released their second single "Web in Front" which garnered moderate college radio airplay. For a number of months in 1994, the video for "Web in Front" was the lone video played in between movies on the network USA's "Up All Night" feature on weekends. It also featured in a season five episode of Beavis and Butt-head, where its quality was roundly mocked. They released their debut full-length album, Icky Mettle, in 1994. It was critically well received,[5] and is considered one of the landmark albums of 1990s alternative rock.[6] In the 2008 book The Pitchfork 500, the prominent music website Pitchfork Media named "Web in Front" one of the top 500 songs of recent decades.[7]

In 1994, the Archers released the EP Vs the Greatest of All Time. However, the song "The Greatest of All Time" does not appear on this release but rather the second full-length, Vee Vee. They released their second full-length album Vee Vee in 1995. Vee Vee followed a similar template as their previous recordings and featured the track "Harnessed in Slums", which became popular on college radio. The album also garnered significant attention outside the independent music scene, culminating in the band being courted by Maverick Records, a division of Warner Music Group, which the band rejected.[8] Bachmann later stated that he and the band did not really consider the offer. The band was still under contract with Alias, and changing labels would put them into considerable debt to Maverick. According to Bachmann, "We already signed a deal [with Alias] and it costs lots of money to get out of these things. If we would have had Maverick buy out our contract, we'd be however many thousands of dollars in debt to them. It's really complex that way and it really didn't make sense to do that."[9] The band had another reason for rejecting the Maverick offer: They did not want to be associated with the other high-profile bands on Maverick. "The other bands [on Maverick] were that bad," said Price at the time. "There are other bands on major labels that are associated with a lot of shit but it's big enough that there are a least a few bands that you like. For us on Maverick, it'd be us and Candlebox and Alanis Morissette..."[9]

In 1995 the band had its highest-profile tour opening for Weezer. The band's sometimes brash sound did not go over all that well with the Weezer crowd, and Gentling later said of the tour, "It wasn't as much that we didn't like the Weezer guys, but the opening bands get treated like crap by the people who work (at the venues). And as far as our music is concerned, I don't really know if we're all that compatible, at least live."[10] In 1996 the band released The Speed of Cattle, a collection of B-sides, singles, and John Peel session tracks.

Later years and breakup

Their third studio album, 1996's All the Nation's Airports, was considered far more accessible than their previous releases, and was the first to be distributed by a major label, Elektra Records (the band was still signed to Alias Records, though). The album was recorded in Seattle and took three weeks to complete, which was the most time the band had been in the studio to complete an album up to that point.[9]

Gentling said of the experience, "We knew we wanted to take a long time on this album. We specifically wanted not to do tracks over and over and over again, but more to work on tone and get all of our instruments down right. We took over a day (just) to get the drums sounding right."[10]

The band toured extensively in support of the record, to limited mass commercial success. Of the tour, Bachmann said, "We got back and we were not real happy with the way that [the tour] went. Usually when you finish a tour you have a general idea of a song or two you can start working on, but we got back and were like 'geez, what are we going to do?'"[11] The band almost broke up at this point, due to a general lack of enthusiasm for the continuation of the project. However, after some soul searching, they decided to continue on for the time being. "We thought we'd had too good a time with it, so let's make another record, do another tour, and if there's not another spark, we'll split up after that," said Bachmann of the episode.[3]

Their final LP, White Trash Heroes, was released in 1998. The album's style deviated drastically from their first three albums, and received mixed reviews from critics.[12][13] The album's creative break from the band's previous work may have stemmed from the different writing process used for White Trash Heroes. According to Bachmann, "Things were laid down one at a time, though we did play a lot of it live, too, but pieced together more perfectly so we could hear when one sound was beginning to get in the way of something else."[11] The band went to great lengths in the studio in an attempt to keep the writing from turning stale. For example, on the song "Banging on a Dead Drum," the band members all switched instruments to try to liven up the feel of the song. Johnson plays drums, Gentling plays slide guitar, Price plays bass, and Bachmann still plays guitar, as he was the one who knew the song.[11]

This approach made playing songs from the album on the last tour more difficult. "Certain songs we don't even play yet," Bachmann stated in an interview during the White Trash Heroes tour. "We haven't even learned them that well due to the way the record was pieced together. They're not impossible to play, we just haven't pulled them out yet...as time goes on we learn more of the new ones, and they've been coming across fine."[11] During the tour supporting the album, Eric Johnson missed several dates due to his day job's work schedule. Brian Causey, guitarist for Man or Astro-man? and friend of the band, filled in for the missing Johnson. In late 1998, after Price was diagnosed with, and subsequently had surgery for, carpal tunnel syndrome, the band decided to call it quits for good.[3]

Post-breakup projects

Bachmann moved on to multiple solo projects and the band Crooked Fingers. Gentling went on to provide extra instrumentation on tour with another North Carolina-bred band, Superchunk as well as a brief stint as live bassist for Band of Horses. He has also continued to work with Bachmann as a contributor in Crooked Fingers. Johnson self-released one EP and one full-length under the moniker "Spookie" (originally Spookie J) and attended law school in North Carolina.[14] He continues to play and record. In 2000, Alias released Seconds Before the Accident. This project was the band's first official live album and was recorded during their final show at the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro. It was the last album released by the band.

Reunion

On January 15, 2011, Archers of Loaf reunited to play an unannounced set at The Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, North Carolina. They opened for local act The Love Language.[15] On May 29, 2011 they performed at the Sasquatch! Music Festival outside of Seattle, Washington which was recorded for broadcast and archive by NPR Music and KEXP-FM.[16] The band were chosen by Les Savy Fav to perform at the ATP Nightmare Before Christmas festival that they co-curated in December 2011 in Minehead, England.[17] On June 25, 2011 the band performed their song "Wrong" on NBC's Late Night With Jimmy Fallon. The band continued to tour throughout 2011 and 2012 while their back catalog was reissued by Merge Records.

Discography

  • Singles
    • "Wrong"/"South Carolina" (Stay Free, 1992)
    • The Loaf's Revenge (contains "Web in Front"/"Bathroom"/"Tatyana") (Alias, 1993)
    • The Results After the Loaf's Revenge (contains "What Did You Expect?"/"Ethel Merman") (Merge, 1994)
    • "Telepathic Traffic"/"Angel Scraper" split with Monsterland, (Radiopaque, 1994)
    • "Funnelhead"/"Quinnbeast" split with Treepeople, (Sonic Bubblegum, 1994)
    • "Harnessed in Slums"/"Telepathic Traffic" (Alias, 1995)
    • "Mutes in the Steeple"/Smoking Pot in the Hot City" (Esther, 1995)
    • "Vocal Shrapnel"/"Density" (Alias, 1996)
    • "Jive Kata" (Alias, 1997)

Pop culture

References

  1. ^ http://www.crawdaddy.com/index.php/2008/10/08/eric-bachmann-new-records-for-the-old-artist-soul/
  2. ^ Hunter Pope. "Introduction to the Asheville Music Scene". Asheville Now. http://www.ashevillenow.com/arts-entertainment/music-clubs-nightlife/. 
  3. ^ a b c Melanie Haupt (November 27, 2003). "Houston - Music - Quit Loafing!". Houston Press. http://www.houstonpress.com/2003-11-27/music/quit-loafing/. 
  4. ^ http://www.pettediscographies.com/archersofloafsingles.asp
  5. ^ Robert Christgau. "Archers of Loaf: Icky Mettle brief review". Consumer Guide. RobertChristgau.com. http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_album.php?id=143. 
  6. ^ Andrew M. Gaerig (2003-09-25). "A decade later, Icky Mettle still an indie-rock milestone - The Statement". The Michigan Daily. Archived from the original on 2007-09-25. http://web.archive.org/web/20070928015209/http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/storage/paper851/news/2003/09/25/TheStatement/A.Decade.Later.Icky.Mettle.Still.An.IndieRock.Milestone-1418817.shtml. 
  7. ^ Ryan Schreiber, Scott Plagenhoef,et al (2008). The Pitchfork 500. Fireside. ISBN 1-4165-6202-8. 
  8. ^ Steve Gdula (September 18, 1998.). "Last of the Independents: Archers of Loaf". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/archersofloaf/articles/story/5925134/last_of_the_independents. 
  9. ^ a b c Jason Gross (December 1996). "Archers of Loaf interview". Perfect Sound Forever. http://www.furious.com/perfect/archers.html. 
  10. ^ a b Aaron Rennie (October 23, 1996.). "Archers set sights on A2". The Michigan Daily. http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1996/oct/10-23-96/arts/arts1.html. 
  11. ^ a b c d Matthew Fluharty. "It's Just a Band: a conversation with Eric Bachman of the Archers of Loaf". Derrick online magazine. Matthew Fluharty. Archived from the original on 1999-10-10. http://web.archive.org/web/19991010173322/http://www.beloit.edu/~derrick/archers.html. 
  12. ^ Robert Christgau (September 29, 1998). "Consumer Guide September 1998". Village Voice (archived at RobertChristgau.com). http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv998-98.php. 
  13. ^ Zeth Luney (October 7, 2005). "The Cut-Out Bin #3: Archers of Loaf, White Trash Heroes (1998)". Pop Matters. http://www.popmatters.com/music/features/cutoutbin/3-archersofloaf.shtml. 
  14. ^ Eric Johnson. "Spookie - Asheville, NC - Grunge". MySpace.com/spookie. http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=2159923. 
  15. ^ http://www.avclub.com/articles/archers-of-loaf-played-an-unannounced-reunion-show,50134/?loc=interstitialskip
  16. ^ http://www.npr.org/2011/05/23/136581429/sasquatch-2011-archers-of-loaf-live-in-concert
  17. ^ ATP Nightmare Before Christmas

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Mentioned in

Seconds Before the Accident (2000 Album by Archers of Loaf)
Vee Vee (1995 Album by Archers of Loaf)
Vee Vee [Japan] (1998 Album by Archers of Loaf)
In Hospitalable (1997 Album by Beatnik Filmstars)
Coffinberry (Rock Band, 2000s)