Discogs
Superdrag Biography
by Darren Paltrowitz
Though many have dubbed Superdrag a
punk-pop or power pop band, their music has shown itself to be atop of
the aforementioned genres. Taking as much influence from the British
Invasion-style pop of the Beatles and the Zombies as My Bloody Valentine and Hüsker Dü, Superdrag's songs combined melodicism and noise in fully distinct fashion. While many have compared frontman John Davis -- no relation to the Jonathan Davis of Korn or John Davis of Folk Implosion -- to Big Star's Alex Chilton
in terms of his throaty vocals, sometimes cynical lyrics, and
major-minor chord progressions, the history of the two Tennessee-based
groups have shared many parallels in terms of being a band's band that
has often gone misunderstood.
Superdrag's chief members -- Davis, guitarist Brandon Fisher, bassist Tom Pappas, and drummer Don Coffey, Jr. -- had played together in various outfits, including Punch Wagon and 30 Amp Fuse, before molding into the Used in the early '90s. The band's lineup featured Davis on drums, Pappas on vocals/guitar, Fisher on lead guitar, and Chris Hargrove on bass, although Coffey was eventually recruited to get behind the drum kit as Davis left to pursue "Superdrag" -- a vehicle for his own songs. Though Davis
was fully competent toward playing all of the instruments on his
original material (as shown on circulated home demos), he enlisted the
talents of Fisher, Pappas, and Coffey
so the group could play live. While playing frequent shows in their
native Knoxville and beyond, Superdrag became a buzz band through the
release of their 1995 debut, The Fabulous 8-Track Sounds of Superdrag,
which was issued by Darla Records. The EP received rave reviews in
publications like CMJ, fueling a major-label bidding war that eventually
saw the band heading to Elektra Records.
After Regretfully Yours
was released during the summer of 1996, the leadoff first single
"Sucked Out" became a major radio hit on both alternative and crossover
stations, in addition to becoming an MTV "Buzz Clip." Sales of Regretfully Yours
eventually pushed to a moderately successful 300,000, despite the
failure of follow-up single/video "Destination Ursa Major." Playing
hundreds of shows in support of the record, the group established itself
as a highly renowned touring entity, though many of Davis'
new songs proved to be darker and increasingly piano-based: the
antithesis of the jangly rock that had launched Superdrag into the
mainstream.
Tracklist
1 |
| Sugar | 2:33 |
2 |
| Bloody Hell | 4:26 |
3 |
| Really Thru | 3:55 |
4 |
| Liquor | 4:34 |
5 |
| 6/8 | 4:16 |
6 |
| Blown Away | 2:58 |
7 |
| Load | 4:50 |