The New Pornographers
The New Pornographers |
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The New Pornographers are a Canadian indie rock supergroup formed in 1997 in Vancouver, British Columbia. Their sound is highly influenced by such power pop bands as The Cars and Cheap Trick, although their songs are generally of a greater melodic and harmonic complexity. Carl Newman, who writes most of the band's material, has said, "When I seriously started to try to write songs, my main influences were, like, Burt Bacharach, Jimmy Webb, and Brian Wilson. Those were the guys I kinda looked at their music and went, 'What the hell are they doing here?' I was just fascinated by the structures and the harmonics."[1] The melody of the first and eponymous track on their second album Electric Version, for instance, begins with an arpeggiated diminished triad—a rare and strange opening flourish for a pop song.
The band's first three albums each ranked in the top 40 on The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop year-end poll of hundreds of music reviewers. From 2000 to 2006, either a New Pornographers' album or a solo album from one of the band's members ranked in the top 40 on the list each year.[2] In 2007, Blender magazine ranked The New Pornographers' first album, Mass Romantic, the 24th best indie album of all time. It is the second-highest Canadian album on the list, behind Arcade Fire's Funeral (which came in sixth).[3]
The name of the band was chosen by Newman. It is reminiscent of a quotation attributed to Jimmy Swaggart, who once called rock and roll "the new pornography," although Newman did not know of the quote at the time.[4] Newman has stated that he came up with the name after watching a Japanese film called The Pornographers.[5]
The band has released four albums to date: Mass Romantic (2000), Electric Version (2003), Twin Cinema (2005), and Challengers (2007). A live album recorded on their 2006 tour is available only at concerts and on the band's website.
In 2008 the band contributed a t-shirt design to the Yellow Bird Project to raise money for the ALS Society of BC.
Members
- Dan Bejar of Destroyer and Swan Lake
- Kathryn Calder of Immaculate Machine
- Neko Case, solo artist, also of Maow and Cub
- John Collins of The Evaporators
- Kurt Dahle of Limblifter and Age of Electric
- Todd Fancey, solo artist (as Fancey) and Limblifter
- Carl Newman, solo artist (as A.C. Newman), also of Superconductor and Zumpano
- Blaine Thurier, independent filmmaker.
Discography
- Mass Romantic (CA: Mint Records; US and EU: Matador Records, 2000)
- Electric Version (CA: Mint Records; US and EU: Matador Records, 2003) #196 US
- Twin Cinema (CA: Mint Records; US and EU: Matador Records, 2005) #44 US
- Challengers (CA: Last Gang Records; US and EU: Matador Records, 2007) #34 US, #13 UK Indie
Live albums
- Live Session (iTunes Exclusive) (2005)
- LIVE! (2006)
- LIVE from SoHo (iTunes Exclusive) (2008)
Singles
- "Letter from an Occupant" (2002, Europe)
- "Use It" (2005)
- "Sing Me Spanish Techno" (2005)
B-sides: Graceland
- "My Rights Versus Yours" (2007)
- "Myriad Harbour" (2007)
B-sides: Fugue State; Silent Systems
- "The Spirit of Giving" (2007)
B-sides: Joseph, Who Understood; Arms of Mary/Looking at a Baby (Chilliwack cover medley)
Contributions
- Queer as Folk (2000) - "Mass Romantic"
- FUBAR: The Album (2002) – "Your Daddy Don't Know"
- Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (2001) – "Letter from an Occupant"
- CBC Radio 3 Sessions, Vol. 1 (2004) – "The Fake Headlines"
- Matador at Fifteen (2004) – "Graceland"
- The Office Episode 13: "The Client" (2005) – "Use It"
- Weeds (2005) – "The Laws Have Changed"
- Waiting... (2005) - "Electric Version"
- The Hour Main Title Theme Season 3 (2006) – "Use It"
- Chuck Season 1, Episode 2 (2007) – "Challengers"
- Heroes Season 2, Episode 6 (2007) – "All for Swinging You Around"
- Rock Band (2007) – "Electric Version"
- Numb3rs (2008) - "Challengers"
- The University of Phoenix television advertisement (2007) - "The Bleeding Heart Show"
See also
References
- ^ Interview with A.C. Newman from Cokemachineglow.com
- ^ Pazz & Jop awards from robertchristgau.com
- ^ 100 Greatest Indie-Rock Albums of all time, #30 - #21, from Blender.com
- ^ New Pornographers bio from TrouserPress.com
- ^ Handler, Shane (2005-11-01). "The New Pornographers: Canadian Blockbuster". Glide Magazine. Retrieved 2007-09-27.
External links
- The New Pornographers official website
- Matador Records label website
- "Use It" artist commentary