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Commander Venus

 
Artist: Commander Venus
Commander Venus

Formal Connection With:

  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Barely into his first year of high school, Conor Oberst had other things on his mind than the pressures of finding a homecoming date, evading aggressive jocks, and attending weekly football games. Along with the slightly older Ben Armstrong (drums), Robb Nansel (guitar), and Todd Baechle (bass), the 14-year-old Oberst formed Commander Venus in 1994 with himself on guitar and vocals. Cutting class and pep rallies in order to play shows in Omaha, NE, Oberst and company got together some money, formed the influential label Saddle Creek, and issued their first album with 1995's Do You Feel at Home? Comparisons to Sunny Day Real Estate, Pavement, Pixies, and Superchunk followed, and Commander Venus' second album Uneventful Vacation was issued two years later courtesy of Grass Recordings. Commander Venus disbanded before the decade ended, however, and Oberst went on to achieve both underground and mainstream acclaim with Bright Eyes. ~ Mike DaRonco, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Commander Venus
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Commander Venus
Origin Omaha, Nebraska, USA
Genres Emo
Years active 1995–1997
Labels Saddle Creek
Grass Records
Associated acts Bright Eyes
The Faint
Cursive
The Good Life
Former members
Ben Armstrong
Todd Baechle
Matt Bowen
Tim Kasher
Robb Nansel
Conor Oberst

Commander Venus was an American emo band from Omaha, Nebraska. Fronted by Conor Oberst and Tim Kasher, the band also included Todd Fink and Matt Bowen of The Faint, Ben Armstrong of Head of Femur and Robb Nansel, executive producer of the indie label Saddle Creek. Kasher subsequently went on to front the band Cursive, and Oberst later became famous as the core member of the indie folk collective Bright Eyes, and later the emo-punk band Desaparecidos.

They recorded two albums, Do You Feel at Home? on Saddle Creek and The Uneventful Vacation, on Grass Records, which became Wind-up Records, that ultimately licensed the CD to Thick Records.

Contents

History

Shortly after his two solo recordings, Conor Oberst (guitar, vocals) began playing with Tim Kasher (bass) and Matt Bowen (drums) to form Commander Venus the summer before Oberst's freshman year at Creighton Prep. "I didn't know how to play with a band at all," he says. "I couldn't keep in time with the drums." Robb Nansel, who runs Saddle Creek Records, also joined the band on guitar.

In 1995, they released Do You Feel at Home? on their own label, Saddle Creek. They were later signed to Grass Records for whom they recorded The Uneventful Vacation in July 1997. The story of how the second album was recorded, and the band's dealings with Wind-up Records management, is one of carefree excess.[1] The Uneventful Vacation cost $15,000 to record, a staggering sum for an indie album.

"They bought us a van and sent us on these tours. They had all this money and didn't know how to run a record label. The new management all came from a major label and knew nothing about underground music. It was a zoo, they didn't know what was going on and didn't have the know-how to make something happen."

Despite the money thrown at the project, Oberst considers The Uneventful Vacation — a loud, sometimes brash alt-rock album that still manages to encompass Oberst's awkward but powerful personal music style — to be "somewhat of a failure musically. We wanted to do stuff we weren't prepared to do because I'm not a very good guitar player. That's always been my biggest problem."

The project also was rushed, having to be recorded during summer vacation. Despite all that, the record received college airplay, as well as positive critical nods, including a Scratch (magazine) review that said, "If Commander Venus is any indication of what's to come from the second generation of indie rock, then the future looks bright indeed." The hot rumor was that Commander Venus could be "the next big thing" out of Omaha. The rumor was wrong.

"First, Matt quit. He was frustrated; he didn't want to play drums. Then Tim had to make a decision, because Cursive was really picking up at the time and he was their main guy. We knew it would come to this point where we'd both be touring at the same time, so he bowed out."

The band continued for another nine months with Todd Baechle on bass and Ben Armstrong on drums. They toured the East Coast, but Oberst began to feel penned in by the band. "It lost its luster and I got fed up with the big 'emo music' craze. We got tagged as an emo band right off the bat. A lot of cool bands were playing that style of music, then a huge number of bands started tagging along, and suddenly everyone was getting thrown in the emo category. These days, I think of emo as a negative term."

The song "I'm Sorry for Being Such a Crappy Friend" is often mislabeled on the internet as being by Commander Venus, Rilo Kiley or Bright Eyes. The song is actually by B'ehl from their 2000 album Bright Eyes.

Discography

Albums

Singles

Compilations

See also

References

  1. ^ Kim Samek (2001-05-24). "Bright Eyes: Up Saddle Creek and around the corner". The Stanford Daily. http://daily.stanford.edu/article/2001/5/24/brightEyesUpSaddleCreekAndAroundTheCorner. Retrieved 2008-02-02. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
Head of Femur (Rock Band, 2000s)
Uneventful Vacation (1997 Album by Commander Venus)
Lullaby for the Working Class (Rock Band, '90s)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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