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* [[Steve Wold]] (former member) - Guitar
* [[Steve Wold]] (former member) - Guitar
* [[John Wickhart]] (former member) - Bass
* [[John Wickhart]] (former member) - Bass
* [[Nicole Johnson]] (former occasional accompaniment) - Vocals on [[Building Nothing Out of Something]], [[This Is A Long Drive For Someone With Nothing To Think About]]
* [[Nicole Johnson]] (former occasional accompaniment) - Vocals on [[Building Nothing Out of Something]], [[This Is A Long Drive For Someone With Nothing To Think About]], [[Lonesome Crowded West]]


==Discography==
==Discography==

Revision as of 15:10, 17 May 2006

Modest Mouse
Modest Mouse live on Saturday Night Live on November 14, 2004.
Left to right: Dann Gallucci, Eric Judy, Sam Jayne from Love As Laughter, Isaac Brock, and (barely visible behind the drums) Jeremiah Green.
Background information
OriginIssaquah, Washington
Years active1993–present
MembersIsaac Brock
Eric Judy
Jeremiah Green
Hutch Harris
Tom Peloso

Modest Mouse is an American indie rock band. The band was formed in 1993 in Issaquah, Washington by guitarist Isaac Brock, drummer Jeremiah Green and bassist Eric Judy. Since being signed to Sony's Epic Records in 2000, the band has attained significant popular success.


Biography

Brock came up with the name "Modest Mouse" when he read the Virginia Woolf story The Mark On the Wall in which the author described the working middle class as "modest, mouse-coloured people."

In 1994, the band recorded their debut EP, Blue Cadet-3, Do You Connect?, at Calvin Johnson's Dub Narcotic Studios, which was then released on Calvin's record label K Records. Then followed a single with Sub-Pop that was recorded by Steve Wold at Moon Studios. During this time, Modest Mouse also recorded their "would-be" debut album Sad Sappy Sucker, but constant delays caused the album to be shelved and forgotten (It was officially released in 2001.) After moving to Up Records Modest Mouse put out several releases recorded at Moon Studios, including 1996's This Is A Long Drive For Someone With Nothing To Think About. This double LP was produced and recorded by Steve Wold, (at this time Steve Wold was a member of the band as well.)The next offering on UP was Interstate 8; also produced by Steve Wold. 1997's The Lonesome Crowded West, (also recorded at Moon Studios, by Scott Swayze) turned out to be the band's breakthrough album. The Lonesome Crowded West gained the band a cult following and is now widely considered by many critics to be one of the defining albums of mid-90s indie-rock. In 2000, Up released a singles and rarities collection entitled Building Nothing Out of Something, which included the entirety of Interstate 8 except for the songs "Edit the Sad Parts" and "Buttons to Push Buttons".

Also in 2000, Modest Mouse released The Moon And Antarctica, their first album on a major label (Epic Records). The band enjoyed some success on alternative radio with the singles "3rd Planet" and "Gravity Rides Everything." While initially positively received by critics [1], The Moon And Antarctica has subsequently gone on to receive further acclaim [2]. Lead singer Isaac Brock has since put out an album with his side project Ugly Casanova on Sub Pop Records. The band licensed "Gravity Rides Everything" for a commercial for Nissan's Quest minivan, a move that Brock has publicly acknowledged as blatantly commercial but necessary to achieve financial stability. (See A.V. club interview in external links)

In 2001, Modest Mouse released the EP Everywhere & His Nasty Parlour Tricks, a collection of unused songs from the Moon and Antarctica recording sessions, and Sad Sappy Sucker, a collection of songs Modest Mouse recorded in 1994, originally intended to be their debut album, but shelved in favor of This is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About. In 2002, they joined Cake, De La Soul, The Flaming Lips, The Hackensaw Boys, and Kinky on the Unlimited Sunshine Tour.

In 2003, drummer Jeremiah Green quit the band due to a mental breakdown; the official word was that he was quitting to work with his side project, Vells. He was replaced with two new members, drummer Benjamin Weikel (who also drummed for The Helio Sequence) and guitarist Dann Gallucci (who had been a member of Modest Mouse previously, and appears on Sad Sappy Sucker). On April 6, 2004, Modest Mouse released their most recent album, the platinum-selling Good News For People Who Love Bad News, which scored two hits with "Float On" and "Ocean Breathes Salty". Later that year, Jeremiah Green returned to the band, and Benjamin Weikel returned to drumming exclusively for The Helio Sequence. Dann Gallucci left the band in August, and they have been touring with Hutch Harris of The Thermals.

Modest Mouse was mentioned by name in the 2005 Supreme Court decision in the case of MGM v. Grokster. Justice Souter wrote that on the Grokster P2P network, "Users seeking Top 40 songs, for example, or the latest release by Modest Mouse, are certain to be far more numerous than those seeking a free Decameron, and Grokster and StreamCast translated that demand into dollars."

Current (as of 2006) talk within the North American indie scene is suggesting the possibility of an upcoming full-length release in 2006. A recent post Chicago show interview with drummer Jeremiah Green hints towards the release of new material; material, which he so vaguely teases, could be released "anytime in the near future." After having a conversation with Isaac Brock, Josh Modell of The Onion A.V. Club posted that the band is coming along with the new album but it isn't finished yet. Johnny Marr of The Smiths is also said to be working on the new Mouse album.

The band is doing a string of west coast shows in August of 2006.

Core Members

  • Isaac Brock - Vocals/Guitar/Banjo/Other Instruments - See also: Ugly Casanova
  • Eric Judy - Bass
  • Jeremiah Green (left before the completion of Good News...; has since rejoined) - Drums/Percussion - See also: Vells, Red Stars Theory, Psychic Emperor

Other Members

Discography

Albums

EPs and other collections

Singles

  • "Broke" (Sub Pop, 1996)
  • "A Life of Arctic Sounds" (Suicide Squeeze, 1997)
  • "Birds vs. Worms" (Hit or Miss, 1997)
  • "Other People's Lives" (Up, 1998)
  • "Neverending Math Equation" (Sub Pop, 1998)
  • "Whenever You See Fit" (with 764-Hero) (Up/Suicide Squeeze 1998/2000)
  • "Float On" (Epic, 2004)
  • "Ocean Breathes Salty" (Epic, 2004)
  • "The World At Large" (Epic, 2005)
  • "Live at RKCNDY" (Import)

See also