biography
[+]
The Portland, OR, band Heatmiser was best known for launching the career of singer/songwriter Elliott Smith,
but other members of the group went on to have successful music careers
long after Heatmiser's demise. Singer/songwriter/guitarist Neil Gust went on to form the pop/rock band No. 2, while bassist Sam Coomes formed the popular indie pop duo Quasi with his then-wife, Sleater-Kinney drummer Janet Weiss. Drummer Tony Lash, who produced some of Heatmiser's material, went on to do production work with a variety of artists, including the Dandy Warhols, Death Cab for Cutie,
and the Minders. Heatmiser was well-known in the northwest rock scene
of the early '90s, but despite Smith's burgeoning solo career, the band
never achieved more than a cult following. Smith shared songwriting
duties with fellow guitarist/vocalist Neil Gust,
whom he met while both were attending Hampshire College, and their
contrasts in styles made Heatmiser's records compelling but incohesive.
Gust's songs were typically darker and harsher than Smith's melodic
folk-rock contributions. The fact that Heatmiser toiled in relative
obscurity during their active years and has remained unknown to the
masses despite Smith's popularity is puzzling to say the least.
Heatmiser formed in Portland, OR, in 1992, a time in
which labels large and small were scarfing up all the unsigned talent
they could in hopes of finding the next
Nirvana or Pearl Jam. Sub Pop records had signed several decidedly non-grungy Portland bands, such as the Spinanes, Pond, and Hazel, but Heatmiser somehow escaped Sub Pop's grasp. The band released its debut album, Dead Air, on Frontier Records in 1993. A second album, Cop and Speeder, appeared on Frontier in 1994 as did a five-song EP entitled Yellow No. 5.
By 1996, Smith had released two critically acclaimed solo albums and it
was becoming clear that Heatmiser was not his first priority.
The
Tony Lash-produced Mic City Sons was released in October of that year by the independent label Caroline. Hailed by critics as the best Heatmiser record yet, Mic City Sons
unfortunately was released as the band was in the process of breaking
up. Thus, despite all the makings of a breakthrough effort, Heatmiser
was grinding to a halt and would never record as a group again. Smith
reported in an interview in 1997 that Heatmiser had signed a contract
with Virgin, but an album never materialized. The bandmembers have
maintained working professional relationships, appearing on each others'
various projects in some capacity. Quasi toured with Elliott Smith in 1997, and both Smith and Coomes contributed to Gust's No. 2 album, which was released in 1999.
read more
1 comment:
http://depositfiles.com/files/5u9by2uhe
Post a Comment