Sparklehorse
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2008) |
Sparklehorse | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Richmond, Virginia, U.S. |
Genres | Indie rock, dream pop, lo-fi |
Years active | 1995–2010 |
Labels | EMI (Capitol, Parlophone, Odeon, Astralwerks), Slow River, Devil in the Woods |
Past members | Mark Linkous Scott Minor |
Website | Official website |
Sparklehorse was an American indie rock band led by the singer and multi-instrumentalist Mark Linkous.
History
Sparklehorse's first album, Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot (1995), was a modest college radio success. In 1996, while touring Europe with Radiohead shortly after the album's release, Linkous consumed a combination of anti-depressants, valium, alcohol, and heroin in a London hotel room.[1] Unconscious and with his legs pinned beneath him for almost fourteen hours, the resulting potassium build up caused his heart to stop for several minutes after his body was lifted up. The ensuing surgery almost caused him to lose the use of both legs and left him wheelchair-bound for six months and requiring dialysis for acute kidney failure.
Good Morning Spider (1998) was recorded following this incident. Critics[2] have conjectured that Linkous's brush with death inspired the sombre tone of the album, though Linkous stated that much of the material on GMS had already been written. One song that did result from it is "St. Mary", which is dedicated to the nurses at the eponymous hospital in Paddington where Linkous recuperated.
2001 saw the release of It's a Wonderful Life, featuring appearances by Tom Waits, PJ Harvey, Bob Rupe, Nina Persson and Dave Fridmann. Whereas much of Vivadixie... and Spider were recorded solely by Linkous on his Virginia farm, the new album was a more collaborative work. Linkous expressed his satisfaction with the overall sound of It's a Wonderful Life, while also claiming that he would have preferred to include more experimental and instrumental material.[3]
On September 25, 2006, Sparklehorse released their fourth album, Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain, collaborating with Danger Mouse, Christian Fennesz, and Steven Drozd. This album featured the radio release "Don't Take My Sunshine Away" and a remastered version of "Shade And Honey", which Linkous originally wrote for Alessandro Nivola to sing in the 2003 movie Laurel Canyon, as well as a virtually unchanged re-release of "Morning Hollow," the bonus track from It's a Wonderful Life.
In 2008, Sparklehorse recorded a cover of the song "Jack's Obsession," from Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas for the official compilation album Nightmare Revisited. In 2009, Sparklehorse teamed up with Danger Mouse and David Lynch in the project Dark Night of the Soul.
In 2009, Linkous teamed up with electronic ambient-music artist Christian Fennesz to create In the Fishtank 15, a wafting album EP of experimentation and dreamy atmospherics. The last four live shows, Linkous did together with Fennesz during a European tour that was held during October 2009.
Linkous committed suicide in Knoxville, Tennessee, on March 6, 2010.[4]
Discography
Albums
- Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot (August 1995, UK No. 58)
- Good Morning Spider (October 1998, UK No. 30)
- It's a Wonderful Life (June 2001, UK No. 49)
- Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain (September 25, 2006, US Heatseekers No. 11, UK No. 60)[5]
- In the Fishtank 15 EP (with Fennesz) (September 2009)
- Dark Night of the Soul (with Danger Mouse) (2009, UK No. 32)
EPs
- Chords I've Known EP - "Heart Of Darkness (Wiggly)" / "Almost Lost My Mind" / "Midget In A Junkyard" / "Dead Opera Star" / "The Hatchet Song" (CD, April 1995)
- Distorted Ghost EP - "Happy Man (Memphis Version)", "Waiting For Nothing", "Happy Place", "My Yoke Is Heavy" (Daniel Johnston cover), "Gasoline Horseys (Live)", "Happy Pig (Live)" (CD, July 2000)
Complilations
- Chest Full of Dying Hawks ('95-'01) (U.S. promo) (2001)
- "Stained Glass Tears ('95-'06)" (CD, Promo, Comp) (Capitol Records, 2006)
Singles
- "Spirit Ditch" / "Waiting for Nothing" (7", 1995, US)
- "Hammering the Cramps" / "Too Late" (7", 1995, US)
- "Someday I Will Treat You Good" / "Rainmaker" (7", February 1996, US Modern Rock No. 35[6])
- "Someday I Will Treat You Good" / "London" / "In The Dry" (7" & CD, February 1996, UK)
- "Hammering the Cramps" / "Spirit Ditch" / "Dead Opera Star" / "Midget In A Junkyard" (7" & CD, April 1996)
- "Rainmaker" / "I Almost Lost My Mind" / "Intermission" / "Homecoming Queen (Live On KCRW)" / "Gasoline Horseys (Live On KCRW)" (7" & 2x CDs, August 1996, UK No. 61)
- "Come On In" / "Blind Rabbit Choir" (7", February 1998, US)
- "Maria's Little Elbows" / "Painbirds" / "Wish You Were Here" (with Thom Yorke) (Pink Floyd cover) / "Haint" (CD, July 1998)
- "Sick of Goodbyes" / "Good Morning Spider (BBC Radio 1 Evening Session)" (7", October 1998, UK No. 57)
- "Sick of Goodbyes" / "Happy Place" / "Happy Pig (BBC Radio 1 Evening Session)" / "Shot A Dog" / "Gasoline Horseys (Live)" (2x CDs, October 1998, UK No. 57)
- "Gold Day" / "Heloise" / "Devil's New" / Maxine" (CD, July 2001)
- "Don't Take My Sunshine Away" / "Ghost In The Sky" / "Knives of Summertime" (CD, 4 September 2006)
- "Don't Take My Sunshine Away" / "Galveston" (Jimmy Webb/Glen Campbell cover) (7", 4 September 2006)
- "Ghost in the Sky" / "Marigold" (7", 11 September 2006)
- "Knives of Summertime" / "Caroline" (7", 18 September 2006, US)
Various Artists Compilations
- "Heart of Darkness" on "Dear Charlottesville" (1995)
- "Heart of Darkness" on "Cowpunks" (1996)
- "Sad & Beautiful World" on "Boys Soundtrack" (1996)
- "West of Rome" (Vic Chesnutt cover) on "Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation" (1996)
- "Hammering The Cramps" on "Chicago Cab Soundtrack" (1996)
- "Sad & Beautiful World" on "Dreamworld: Essential Late Night Listening" (2000)[7]
- "Galveston" (Jimmy Webb/Glen Campbell cover) on "New Sounds Of The Old West Volume Three" (2001)
- "Shade And Honey" on "Devil In The Woods Magazine 3.3" (2001)
- "It's A Wonderful Life" on "Laurel Canyon Soundtrack" (2003)
- "Go" (with The Flaming Lips) (Daniel Johnston cover) on "The Late Great Daniel Johnston: Discovered Covered" (2004)
- "Wish You Were Here" (with Thom Yorke) (Pink Floyd cover) on "Lords of Dogtown: Music from the Motion Picture" (2005)
- "Dark as a Dungeon" (Merle Travis/Johnny Cash cover) on "Cash Covered" (MOJO Magazine Tribute CD to Johnny Cash) (2006)
- "Jack's Obsession" (Danny Elfman cover) on "Nightmare Revisited" (2008)
Guest Appearances on Cracker tracks
- "Eyes of Mary" on "Garage D'Or" (2000)
- "Rainy Days and Mondays" (The Carpenters cover) on "Garage D'Or" (2000)
References
- ^ HARP Magazine
- ^ Jonze, Tim (Monday 8 March 2010). "Sparklehorse took the ugly and made it beautiful". The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Laurence, Alexander. "The portable-infinite: Sparklehorse 2002 interview (Mark Linkous RIP)". Portable-infinite.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2010-05-01.
- ^ Sisario, Ben (March 7, 2010). The Singer-Songwriter Known as Sparklehorse is Dead at 47. New York Times
- ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 518. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^ "Sparklehorse > Charts & Awards > Billboard Singles". allmusic. 2010-03-06. Retrieved 2010-05-01.
- ^ "Various – Dreamworld: Essential Late Night Listening". Discogs. Retrieved 2013-09-27.
External links
This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (March 2010) |
- Sparklehorse.com (official site)
- Sparklehorse MySpace (official)
- "He sparkles: The sad and beautiful world of Mark Linkous" (dead link) 2002 interview in the Hook weekly
- August 2006 interview, Harp Magazine
- October 2006 interview, Subculture Magazine
- Interview with LeftLion Magazine
- Tribute Piece in Crawdaddy! Magazine
- Wikipedia external links cleanup from March 2010
- Musical groups from North Carolina
- Music of Richmond, Virginia
- Musical groups from Virginia
- American indie rock groups
- Musical groups established in 1995
- Musical groups disestablished in 2010
- Capitol Records artists
- Astralwerks artists
- Dream pop musical groups