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Artist:

The Walkmen

The Walkmen

Formed:
2000 in New York City

Representative Albums:

Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone, A Hundred Miles Off, Bows + Arrows

Similar Artists:

Influences:

  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Members: Hamilton Leithauser, Paul Maroon, Peter Bauer, Matt Barrick, Walter Martin

Biography

The Walkmen feature three members from Jonathan Fire Eater and two from the Recoys. When Jonathan Fire Eater disbanded in 1998, the group took the remainder of their Dreamworks funding and established an uptown rehearsal space in New York City that doubles as a 24-track recording studio where they use a wide variety of vintage equipment. The 900-square-foot Harlem industrial space, dubbed Marcata Studios, was completed in the fall of 1999. (Interesting trivia: Bands that have recorded at their studio include labelmates the French Kicks and experimental rockers Arto Lindsay and Nação Zumbi.) The Walkmen, some of whom had gigged in the city under the moniker Today Okay, formed in 2000 and consist of Fire Eaters Walter Martin (vocals, organ, etc.), Paul Maroon (guitars), and Matt Barrick (drums) and ex-Recoys Hamilton Leithauser and Peter Bauer. Like Jonathan Fire Eater, the members of the Walkmen grew up together in the Washington, D.C., area and have played in the same bands since the fifth grade. Perhaps the only way the group could be any closer is if they were all related. (Martin and Leithauser are cousins, so the semi-merging of bands is also somewhat of a family reunion!)

The Walkmen make a conscious attempt to evolve away from the raw, fiery garage sounds of their previous bands. They incorporate piano into the new songs as well as take the compositions in new directions by experimenting with instrumentation and recording techniques. The Walkmen are influenced by such diverse bands as the Pogues, Joy Division, Bruce Springsteen, Björk, U2, New Order, the Smiths, and the Cure. Their new music has favorably been compared to Pixies, Brian Eno, and the Velvet Underground with strong hints of U2 and Television. An online advertisement for the Marcata Studios explains that the owners appreciate the sonic recordings on Joy Division's Peel Sessions, Talking Heads' Fear of Music, the Specials' The Specials, and Royal Trux's Singles, among others.

The Walkmen released a self-titled, four-song EP in 1999 through the small Brooklyn label Startime International (Brendan Benson) and completed a vinyl-only release to be made available at concerts. The first Walkmen concert was at Joe's Pub in the East Village in September of 2000, shortly after their EP was released. In 2002, the Walkmen made their proper full-length debut with Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone. It was a favorite among most indie crowds and the album led the Walkmen to tour the world in support of it. Bows + Arrows, the band's first for Warner Bros' Record Collection label, appeared two years later. Along with touring and appearing in a cameo on the Fox TV series The O.C., the Walkmen began writing a novel, John's Journey, together. The band returned to the studio in 2005, working with Don Zientera at Arlington, VA's Inner Ear Studio on their third album, A Hundred Miles Off, and at their own Marcata Studio on a song-by-song cover of Harry Nilsson's Pussy Cats. A Hundred Miles Off was released in spring 2006, and Pussy Cats arrived that fall. ~ JT Griffith, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: The Walkmen
The Walkmen
Origin New York City/Washington, D.C., United States
Genre(s) Indie rock, post-punk revival
Years active 2000–present
Label(s) Record Collection, Startime
Associated
acts
Jonathan Fire*Eater, The Recoys
Website www.marcata.net/walkmen
Members
Hamilton Leithauser
Paul Maroon
Walter Martin
Peter Bauer
Matt Barrick

The Walkmen are an indie rock band from New York City. The band formed with three members from Jonathan Fire*Eater (which had recently disbanded) and two members from The Recoys in 2000. The group comprises Hamilton Leithauser (vocals, guitar), Paul Maroon (guitar, piano), Walter Martin (organ/bass), Peter Bauer (bass/organ) and Matt Barrick (drums). Four of the five band members attended St. Albans in Washington, D.C. They prefer the unique sound of vintage musical instruments, most famously the clangy upright piano, and often recorded at their self-designed recording studio Marcata Recording, which used analog recording equipment before closing in 2006 after Columbia University bought the building that contained Marcata.

The 2002 debut album Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone was well received by critics for its experimental approach and progressive sound. The track "We've Been Had" from Everyone Who Pretended... was used on a television commercial for the Saturn ION. The follow up album [[Bows + Arrows]], was released in 2004 and was listed by many critics as one of the year's best albums while embracing a less whimsical, experimental sound than the previous album. [[Bows + Arrows]] was released on the Record Collection label, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Records. The independent label Startime released Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone.

Their next album, A Hundred Miles Off, was released in the US on May 23rd 2006. The band premiered most of the new songs on a tour of the Northeast in early 2006. The first single to be released was "Louisiana." Peter Bauer and Walter Martin have traded instruments on the new album with Bauer handling the organ duties and Martin playing bass.

2006 also saw the release of another full-length offering by the Walkmen: a track-by-track cover of Harry Nilsson and John Lennon's drug-fueled Pussy Cats album from 1974.

In 2007, the band continued touring and writing songs for their next album, and "The Rat" was included in the soundtrack of the video game Major League Baseball 2K7.

Trivia

  • The Walkmen are working on a book entitled John's Journey.
  • Had their prized gourd stolen from them early in 2006 [1]
  • Their Song "We've Been Had" was featured in a Saturn ION Commercial in 2002.
  • Peter Bauer was featured in an episode of the Discovery Health Channel series Runway Moms.

Discography

LPs

Other releases

  • The Walkmen (June 26, 2001)
  • Untitled (with eight songs) (2001)
  • Radio (aka Wake Up), track for This Is Next Year: A Brooklyn-Based Compilation (2001)
  • Untitled (with eight songs) (2002)
  • Let's Live Together (2002)
  • Split (with Calla) (2002)
  • The Rat (single) (2004)
  • Little House of Savages (single) (2004)
  • Christmas Party (2004)
  • "There Goes My Baby" on the Stubbs the Zombie soundtrack (2005)
  • Louisiana (single) (2006)
  • "Red River" on the Spider-Man 3 Soundtrack (2007)

The O.C.

  • Several songs were performed by The Walkmen in season 2 of the hit FOX television program The O.C.. Including "What's in it for Me?," "The Rat," and "Little House of Savages." This guest performance meekly improved The Walkmen's record sales.

External links


 
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Artist. Copyright © 2008 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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