Box Elders

Box Elders, a self-described "Cave Pop"[2] band, began initially in 2005 as a goof-off project of sixteen-year-old Clayton and his fourteen-year-older brother Jeremiah McIntyre.[3] The brothers' mother originally sang in the band, but soon quit.[4] Eventually they started to play shows around Omaha, Nebraska. After seeing a free show, Dave Goldberg was enlisted to join and simultaneously play organs and drums. They spent much of 2008 and 2009 on the road before releasing their debut album Alice and Friends on August 11, 2009. The album's name comes from a vegan barbecue restaurant in Chicago of the same name.[5] They embarked on a tour of the United States in October 2009 with labelmates Jay Reatard and Nobunny and in March 2010 with Black Lips.[6][7] Box Elders began an indefinite hiatus in 2010.[8]

Box Elders
Box Elders opening for Black Lips at Middle East Downstairs, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Background information
OriginOmaha, Nebraska, United States
GenresBubblegum Pop[1]
Garage Rock
Punk rock
Years active20052010
LabelsGoner Records, HoZac Records, Burger Records, Grotto
Associated actsBat Fish, Solid Goldberg, the terminals
WebsiteBox Elders Myspace
MembersJeremiah McIntyre
Clayton McIntyre
Dave Goldberg

Musical style

The band is influenced by 1960s rock and roll, punk rock, conspiracy theories, the DIY ethic, Coast to Coast AM and the John Peel Sessions.[9] The band is known for making short, but catchy songs about an interesting array of topics including walking ("One Foot in Front of the Other"), the end of the world ("2012"), goblins ("Alice & Friends"), a childhood hippie neighbor who hunted with Ted Nugent ("Ronald Dean") and necrophilia ("Necro").

Band members

Current line-up

  • Jeremiah McIntyre - vocals, guitar -
  • Clayton McIntyre - vocals, guitar
  • Dave Goldberg - drums, keyboards

Discography

Albums

7 Inch Records

  • Box Elders 7", 2008, Grotto Records
  • Box Elders - Hozac Hookup Klub 7", 2010, HoZac Records
gollark: ...
gollark: Less cool than relativistic cryoapioform beams.
gollark: I did write a simulator for that one time. It wasn't very good.
gollark: [REDACTED]
gollark: In practice in chemistry, you can't use the lower-level laws as much as is possible in physics.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.