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Guadalcanal Diary

 
Artist: Guadalcanal Diary
Guadalcanal Diary

Group Members:

Jeff Walls, John Poe, Rhett Crowe, Murray Attaway

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Performed Songs By:

Jeff Walls, John Poe

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1981
  • Disbanded: 1989
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Walking in the Shadow of the Big Man/Jamboree," "2X4," "Jamboree"
  • Representative Songs: "Litany (Life Goes On)," "Cattle Prod," "Watusi Rodeo"

Biography

While frequently lumped in with such Southern alternative pop bands as R.E.M. and Let's Active, Guadalcanal Diary was distinctly different from its peers, with a sound that was at once melodic and rhythmically aggressive, and a decidedly literary and spiritual bent to the group's lyrics. And at a time when Athens, GA, was being hailed as the new center of the smart-pop universe, Guadalcanal Diary hailed from Marietta, GA, an Atlanta suburb where the band formulated its sound with little input or influence from the local rock scene.

Guadalcanal Diary was formed in 1981 by guitarist and singer Murray Attaway and lead guitarist Jeff Walls, who'd first met in 1977 when they both joined a punk band called Strictly American. Rhett Crowe, who was sharing a house with Attaway at the time and was learning to play bass guitar, joined the new band's lineup, and shortly before the new group's first show, John Poe, a former bassist who has worked with Walls, was recruited to play drums when their original timekeeper quit at the last minute. Attaway chose the name Guadalcanal Diary from a book by Richard Tregaski about the U.S. campaign against Japan during World War II, enamored of the name's surface ambiguities and undertones of patriotism and warfare.

After developing a reputation on the Georgia music scene thanks to frequent gigging in Atlanta and Athens, Guadalcanal Diary cut its first record, a four-song EP called Watusi Rodeo, in 1983 for the Athens-based DB Records label. A year later, DB and the band followed it up with a full-length album, Walking in the Shadow of the Big Man, produced by Don Dixon. Filled with rich but moody songs about faith, doubt, and the legacy of life in the Deep South, and driven by thundering drums and the clarion call of electric guitars, Walking in the Shadow of the Big Man quickly won an enthusiastic reception from critics and college radio programmers, and in 1985 Elektra Records signed Guadalcanal Diary and reissued the album. More touring followed, as did a cameo appearance in a best-forgotten youth comedy called Rockin' Road Trip.

In 1986, the band released its first album financed by Elektra, Jamboree, which was produced by Rodney Mills, best known for his work with the likes of .38 Special and the Atlanta Rhythm Section. While Mills brought a greater polish to Guadalcanal Diary's approach and the band displayed a greater stylistic diversity, it lacked the force and impact of Walking in the Shadow of the Big Man and was not as well received. Guadalcanal Diary returned to the studio with Dixon for 1987's 2x4, which coupled the energy of the first album with Jamboree's sense of musical adventure and spawned a minor alternative rock hit, "Litany (Life Goes On)." However, Guadalcanal Diary's busy touring schedule was beginning to take its toll when the group cut 1989's uneven Flip-Flop, and by the end of the year, after a long stretch on the road, the bandmembers amicably parted ways.

Following Guadalcanal Diary's breakup, Murray Attaway signed to Geffen as a solo artist, and released the well-reviewed In Thrall in 1993. Walls played guitar with Hillbilly Frankenstein and Dash Rip Rock, and produced recordings for Southern Culture on the Skids, the Woggles, and Man or Astro-Man? Poe pursued a low-key solo career, and Crowe retired from music after a short spell with Ottoman Empire to raise her children. In 1995, Attaway began recording a second album and decided to invite Walls, Poe, and Crowe to join him on a few songs, and while the album was never released due to a change of management at Geffen, the four were happy enough with the tunes they recorded to play a few reunion gigs in Atlanta. In late 1998, the band self-released a live album, At Your Birthday Party, recorded at one of its reunion shows; in 2000, the bandmembers announced they'd gone back on hiatus, but had not ruled out working together again in the future. Continued interest in Guadalcanal Diary has been confirmed by a "two-fer" compact disc reissue of Walking In The Shadow Of The Big Man and Jamboree, released by Collectables in 2003, and limited-edition remastered and expanded editions of the group's first three albums, issued by the Rhino Handmade imprint in 2003 and 2004. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Guadalcanal Diary (band)
Top
Guadalcanal Diary
Genres alternative jangle pop
Years active 1981-1989, 1997-2000
Labels DB Records, Elektra Records
Members
Murray Attaway, Jeff Walls, Rhett Crowe, John Poe

Guadalcanal Diary is an alternative jangle pop group from Marietta, Georgia. The band formed in 1981 (originally as "Emergency Broadcast System")[1] and disbanded in 1989. They reformed in 1997 and toured without a new album. The band originated in Marietta, a suburb of Atlanta, but they were often billed as being "from Athens, Georgia" in the early 1980s.

The group's music was characterized by clear, bright guitar sounds, upbeat rhythms, and Murray Attaway's clear, high tenor. Lyrically, the band mixed absurd, punk humor ("I Wish I Killed John Wayne," "I See Moe," "Watusi Rodeo," "Cattle Prod") with melancholy and spiritual themes ("Lewa Wechi," "Always Saturday," "3:00 AM," "Litany"). In liner notes for a Rhino Handmade re-release of Walking in the Shadow of the Big Man, Attaway described the group's sound:[1]

It was great fun to be able to take a line from a revered blues song, a drum pattern from Africa, and a guitar or bass riff from The Stooges, and squeeze it all into some loud, tongue-in-cheek mush.

This underappreciated Georgia quartet distinguished itself from any number of smart, tuneful American guitar combos by combining accessible songcraft with provocatively twisted lyrics. Singer/guitarist Murray Attaway's songs reflect a bizarre variety of far-flung interests, from a preoccupation with the supernatural to a fascination with American cultural imperialism; the band delivers them all with rootsy irony.

Conveying a sense of wonder as well as a sense of humor, Watusi Rodeo — which doesn't include the song of the same name — is an appealing debut, with four fine, offbeat numbers (most notably "Michael Rockefeller" and "Dead Eyes," both later re-recorded on Jamboree) and sturdy playing.

"Watusi Rodeo," a rollicking tale of American cowboys pillaging African wildlife, does appear on Guadalcanal's first longplayer, Walking in the Shadow of the Big Man. Produced on the cheap by Don Dixon, the album presents rocking explorations of several of Attaway's pet themes: religious fanaticism ("Why Do the Heathen Rage?"), Civil War mythology ("Trail of Tears") and spontaneous human combustion ("Fire from Heaven"). There's also a pair of enjoyable instrumentals, plus an unlikely (though somehow appropriate) rendition of "Kumbayah."

Jamboree, produced by mainstream Southern-rock specialist Rodney Mills (with two additional tracks helmed by Englishman Steve Nye), features upgraded sound quality and contains some fine tunes, but overall the album is more competent than inspired. Standout tracks include "Pray for Rain," "Fear of God" and the title tune, all of which take dark views of religious faith; "Country Club Gun" and "Cattle Prod" (smartass redneck character studies); and "I See Moe," which uses the head Stooge as a metaphor for unchecked personal aggression.

Dixon — and inspiration — returned for the smashing 2 X 4, on which the group's members dip into their shadowy art-rock pasts (Attaway once fronted a Yes cover band) to finally create music as distinctive as the lyrics. "Litany (Life Goes On)," "Newborn" and "Winds of Change" sport big, ambitious arrangements that suit their subject matter just fine; "Lips of Steel" is an effective stab at space-rock, while "Say Please" and "Let the Big Wheel Roll" make rude cowpunk noise. Perhaps most impressive, however, is "3 AM," Attaway's quietly harrowing account of alcoholism. The CD adds a good cover of the Beatles' "And Your Bird Can Sing."

Flip-Flop, which proved to be Guadalcanal's final album, finds drummer John Poe emerging as a worthy songwriter, supplanting guitarist Jeff Walls as Guadalcanal's auxiliary composer. Poe's moralistic rockers "Pretty Is as Pretty Does" and "The Likes of You" are among Flip-Flop's highlights, alongside Attaway's sardonically wistful "Always Saturday," the psychedelic "Fade Out" and the wacky singalong "...Vista."

Guitarist Jeff Walls later performed with the bands Hillbilly Frankenstein, Dash Rip Rock, Southern Culture on the Skids and Man or Astro-Man?; as of 2007 he is a member of the Atlanta-based band The Woggles.[2]

Members

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Trail Of Tears" 1985
  • "Watusi Rodeo" 1985
  • "Spirit Train/Cattle Prod" 1986
  • "Litany" 1987
  • "Get Over It" 1987
  • "Lips Of Steel" 1987
  • "Always Saturday/Kiss Of Fire" 1989
  • "Pretty Is As Pretty Does" 1989

References

  1. ^ a b Guadalcanal Diary - Walking In The Shadow Of The Big Man - from Rhino Handmade
  2. ^ OnlineAthens.com | Marquee | The Woggles return 02/08/07

External links


 
 

 

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