Jessamine (band)

Jessamine was an American post-rock band, that recorded three albums for Kranky records between 1994 and 1998,[1] and a number of singles for other record labels. These singles were later collected by the band on a self-released compilation album in 1997 entitled Another Fictionalized History.

Jessamine
OriginGalion, Ohio, United States
GenresPost-rock, space rock, psychedelic rock, drone, experimental rock
Years active1992–1999
LabelsKranky
Websitewww.kranky.net/artists/jessamine.html
MembersAndy Brown
Michael Faeth
Rex Ritter
Dawn Smithson

Their single "Cellophane" was a minor college radio hit in the band's native Seattle, getting frequent airplay on KCMU (now KEXP).

The band's sound was influenced by the works of Krautrock bands such as Can and Neu!, and their first album also bore some sonic resemblance to the sounds of early 1990s bands from the UK shoegaze scene.[2] This mesh of krautrock, shoegaze, drone, space-rock, and experimental electronica helped the band forge a unique sound, which helped them stand apart from other active bands in the Seattle scene that were more grunge, metal, or indie-rock based. Their success in solidifying a unique sound however did not translate to album sales, and the band remained a relatively obscure act, with a small cult following.

The band split in 1998, and Ritter and Brown recorded together as Fontanelle for a couple more years.[3]

Musicians

Discography

Albums

  • Jessamine [1995]
  • Long Arm of Coincidence [1996]
  • Another Fictionalized History [1997]
  • Don't Stay Too Long [1998]
gollark: Maybe have a *fake* goal, but it's not real and is fake.
gollark: Oh, maybe you can randomly win the lottery or something, but it's entirely random and extremely rare. And it doesn't actually fix all your problems.
gollark: You can't *win* life, why should petcruel be different?
gollark: I think this came from a discussion about helloboi's virtual pet game.
gollark: Better idea: a command which globally disables itself once run.

References

  1. Masters, Marc (January 12, 2009). "Kranky". Pitchfork. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
  2. Segal, Dave (December 8, 2014). "The Song of the Day Is Jessamine's "Don't You Know That Yet?"". The Stranger. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
  3. Weingarten, Christopher R. (September 20, 2012). "Hear the First Music From Fontanelle in a Decade". Spin. Retrieved July 26, 2019.


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