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Jonathan Fire*Eater

 
Artist: Jonathan Fire*Eater
Jonathan Fire*Eater

Group Members:

Tom Frank, Matt Barrick, Walter Martin, Paul Maroon, Stewart Lupton

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  • Disbanded: August 18, 1998
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Jonathan Fire Eater was the rare band whose members had the good fortune of growing up together -- and the band's music reflected its members closeness. Their star burned incredibly bright for just a few years, finally burning out -- not fading away -- in 1998. The five-piece grew up in Washington, DC, where they started playing music together at an early age. After high school, all five moved to New York City to attend college, where living together kicked the musical process into high gear. The band practiced in a boiler room at Columbia University.

The band's self-titled debut album was released by a tiny indie label in 1995. Suffering from terrible production and a lack of cohesion, it didn't win the band many fans and quickly disappeared. Almost immediately, though, the band released the intense and brilliant Public Hanging of a Movie Star EP which, along with their legendary early live shows, made Jonathan Fire Eater the talk of the city. The sound was propelled by Walter Martin's Farfisa Fast Five organ, an instrument whose sound was a throwback but, in this band's hands, the perfect instrument. Guitarist Paul Maroon provided the spooky guitar noises; Tom Frank and Matt Barrick were an amazing rhythm section.

Enigmatic singer and lyricist Stewart Lupton was really Jonathan Fire Eater's star attraction, though. With a voice like a young Mick Jagger mixed with Nick Cave and a bizarre, fantastic stage presence, Lupton was what had people talking, A&R people in particular. 1996 saw the band relentlessly pursued by major labels; they ended up as one of the first signings to the then-new Dreamworks SKG. They also released the excellent five-song Tremble Under Boomlights EP that year, largely regarded as their finest moment.

Press hype and hyperbole surrounded Jonathan Fire Eater's major-label debut, Wolf Songs for Lambs, but amidst all the excitement, someone forgot that the band's music, although amazing and memorable, was never really commercially viable. The album is a brooding, mysterious affair with bursts of brilliance, but even less pop-oriented than the two EP's that preceded it. Artistically a huge success but ultimately a commercial failure, Jonathan Fire Eater broke up in 1998. Singer Stewart Lupton has performed the occasional shambling live concert under the name Stewart Stephenson, while the rest of the band continue to play together under the name Today Okay. ~ Josh Modell, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Jonathan Fire*Eater
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Jonathan Fire*Eater
Origin Washington DC
Genres Indie rock
Years active 1994–1998
Associated acts The Ignobles, The Walkmen, The Childballads
Members
Stewart Lupton
Tom Frank
Paul Maroon
Matt Barrick
Walter Martin

Jonathan Fire*Eater was a New York City-based indie rock band originally from Washington DC. The line-up was Stewart Lupton (vocals), Tom Frank (bass), Paul Maroon (guitar and pedal steel), Matt Barrick (drums) and Walter Martin (organs, keyboards). After the band's break-up, Maroon, Barrick, and Martin went on to form The Walkmen.

Jonathan Fire*Eater was formed from a childhood band called The Ignobles. All the members of Jonathan Fire*Eater attended high school at the D.C. private school the St. Albans School, which counts former Vice President Al Gore among its alumni. Lupton, Martin, and Barrick formed the Ignobles in junior high school. Maroon joined as the guitarist and Ryan Cheney signed on as the vocalist. Lupton played bass. The precocious Ignobles showed promise beyond their years and in high school made regular warmly received appearances at local clubs. In 1993, the members went to college, mostly in New York City, and Jonathan Fire*Eater was formed with Cheney departing and later joining The Ruby Dare and Lupton taking over vocal duties. St. Albans alum Tom Frank joined as a new bassist.

In 1994 the boys dropped out of college and moved into a cramped two-bedroom apartment on Suffolk St. in the Lower East Side.[citation needed] They slept in bunk beds, showered in the kitchen, and lived off pizza slices and brown-bagged beer as they hammered out a D.C. post-hardcore spin on early Rolling Stones-meets-Velvet Underground 60s rock.[citation needed] Martin's piercing Farfisa organ, Maroon's crashing reverb-soaked guitar and a convincing rhythm section channeled three decades of underground rock. Up front, Lupton was charismatic and worldly, evoking Nick Cave with his dark lyrics and rakish glamour.[attribution needed] The group were embraced by critics as a breath of fresh air in a commercialized alternative rock scene.[citation needed]

In 1995, they released their eponymous debut, Jonathan Fire*Eater, on Tucson, Arizona's Third World Underground Records, which featured "The Silver Surfer", "Romans & Barbarians", "Christmas Time, Halloween", and other tracks. Later that year, a self-titled EP on PCP established their reputation with the frenetic tracks "The Public Hanging of a Movie Star" and "When Prince Was a Kid".

In 1996, the five-song mini-album Tremble Under Boom Lights was released by the Medicine label, featuring well produced offers like "The Search for Cherry Red" and "Give Me Daughters". By this time, the band was receiving considerable media and industry attention. They were courted by Calvin Klein to model and opened for Brit Pop stars Pulp and Blur. As Lupton said in a 1996 New York Times Magazine profile, "Right now the record companies are sort of circling like vultures."

In early 1997, Jonathan Fire*Eater signed with David Geffen's nascent DreamWorks music label. It was a million dollar contract with unusual clauses including full creative control for the band and a generous dental plan for their nearly toothless manager Walter Durkacz.[citation needed] Behind the scenes, drug use was causing a rift between Lupton and the other members.[citation needed] Their major label debut, Wolf Songs for Lambs, was released by Dreamworks in 1997 to tepid critical response. Not long after the album's release, tensions between Lupton and the other members and a general wariness of mainstream success led to the band's breakup. They played their last show at the Central Park bandshell on July 28, 1998.

Jonathan Fire*Eater was called "the most hyped band you never heard,"[citation needed] but many of the few people that did hear them started a band,[citation needed] including later New York acts like The Strokes, who have identified them as a major influence.

Maroon, Barrick, and Martin later went on to form The Walkmen and Lupton has pursued his music career through his band The Childballads, who put out their debut album in January 2007.

Contents

Discography

Albums

  • Jonathan Fire*Eater (album, 1995, Third World Underground)
  • Wolf Songs for Lambs (1997, Dreamworks SKG)

Singles, EPs

  • Jonathan Fire*Eater (EP, 1995, PCP)
  • "Give Me Daughters" (1996, Deceptive)
  • Tremble Under Boom Lights (1996, Medicine)
  • "These Little Monkeys" (1998, Deceptive)
  • "When the Curtain Calls You" (1997, Deceptive)

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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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