BILL JANOVITZ Lonesome Billy 1997
by request
Artist Biography
by Mark Deming
Bill Janovitz is best-known as the guitarist and lead singer with Buffalo Tom,
one of the few bands that sprung from the American underground scene of
the '80s who weathered the alternative rock boom of the '90s with their
talent and integrity intact. Born in Queens, NY, Janovitz spent most of his childhood living in Long Island. At the age of 16, Janovitz
moved with his family to Massachusetts and, after graduating from high
school, he enrolled at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. Janovitz began playing music while in elementary school when he took up the trumpet; at the age of 12, Janovitz
moved on to guitar, and at 14 had formed his first band, the Plastic
Peach, who played covers ranging from Neil Young to Talking Heads.
Several years later Janovitz
joined what he's described as "a tragically named high school band,"
the Rambunctious Llamas, who specialized in new wave and jangle pop
covers. Janovitz
was still playing with the Llamas during his early college days when he
met fellow UMass students Chris Colbourn and Tom Maginnis, who were
also playing in local bands. The three became friendly after running
into each other at local rock shows, and after discovering a shared
admiration for bands such as Hüsker Dü, Mission of Burma, and the
Replacements, they decided to join forces, with Colbourn on bass and
Maginnis behind the drums.
Calling themselves Buffalo Tom, Janovitz,
Colbourn, and Maginnis began playing out in 1986, and soon gained an
important ally when J. Mascis of Dinosaur Jr. befriended the band and
loaned them equipment. In 1989, Mascis produced the group's self-titled
debut album, which clearly displayed the producer's influence. However,
the band's own musical personality -- tighter, cleaner, and more
heartfelt -- began to manifest itself on their second album, 1990's
Birdbrain. The band began to develop a following in Europe, and gained
considerable college radio airplay with 1992's Let Me Come Over, a
striking set of songs that included several heart-wrenching ballads and
showed just how strong and dynamic the band could be. Buffalo Tom's
fourth album, Big Red Letter Day, finally earned the band some
well-deserved commercial radio exposure with the propulsive single "Soda
Jerk," which also popped up on the acclaimed television series My
So-Called Life. After Big Red Letter Day, Buffalo Tom opted to take some time off, and Janovitz decided to make use of a backlog of unrecorded songs by making a solo album. Lonesome Billy, recorded at a tiny studio in Arizona, found Janovitz playing alongside Joey Burns and John Convertino of Giant Sand and Calexico, and Chris Toppin from Fuzzy, on a set of material that displayed a surprisingly rootsy style. Janovitz returned to Buffalo Tom for 1998's Smitten, but in 2001, with the group on hiatus, he released a second solo set, Up Here, which found Janovitz exploring his interest in folk-rock and singer/songwriter-oriented material. The musicians Janovitz
assembled for the Up Here sessions -- which included Toppin, bassist
Josh Lattanzi, and drummer Tom Polce -- eventually evolved into a
separate band, Crown Victoria, who began playing live shows and in 2004
shared billing with Janovitz for the album Fireworks on TV!. Janovitz
also has a second side project, the Bathing Beauties; formed originally
to play covers for fun at the occasional bar gig the group (besides Janovitz and Toppin) includes noted producer Paul Kolderie on bass).
Tracklist
1 |
Girl's Club |
|
2 |
Think Of All |
|
3 |
Shoulder |
|
4 |
Gaslight |
|
5 |
Ghost In My Piano |
|
6 |
Strangers |
|
7 |
My Funny Valentine |
|
8 |
Peninsula |
|
9 |
Talking To The Queen |
|
10 |
Red Balloon |
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