Blake Schwarzenbach

Blake Schwarzenbach

Schwarzenbach performing with Jets to Brazil in 2001
Background information
Birth name Alexander Blake Schwarzenbach
Born (1967-05-21) May 21, 1967
Origin Berkeley, California, United States
Genres Punk rock, alternative rock, indie rock, emo
Instruments vocals, guitar, piano
Years active 1988–present
Labels Shredder, Tupelo/Communion, Geffen, Blackball Records, Jade Tree
Associated acts Jawbreaker, Jets to Brazil, The Thorns of Life, Forgetters

Alexander Blake Schwarzenbach (born May 21, 1967) is an American musician. He was the singer and guitarist of Jawbreaker (1988–1996), Jets to Brazil (1997–2003), The Thorns of Life (2008–2009), and Forgetters (2009– 2013). Although experiencing little mainstream success himself, Schwarzenbach and groups he has been a member of have influenced a variety of musical groups.

Early life and education

Schwarzenbach spent his early childhood in Berkeley, California and Boulder, Colorado. Upon moving to Venice, Los Angeles, California to live with his father, he attended the Crossroads School, a private K-12 school in Santa Monica, California. He then attended New York University between 1985 and 1991, including a two-quarter stint at UC Santa Cruz in 1985. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from NYU in English literature and creative writing in 1991.

Musical career

Jawbreaker

Main article: Jawbreaker (band)

Jawbreaker formed in 1988 after Blake Schwarzenbach and drummer Adam Pfahler responded to a flyer that bassist Chris Bauermeister posted in a New York University dorm cafeteria. The band played their first show as Jawbreaker on March 16, 1989 at Club 88 in Los Angeles, CA. Jawbreaker disbanded in the summer of 1996. They had played together for eight years and released four albums. Their last show was on May 19, 1996 at the Capitol Theater in Olympia, WA.[1]

Jets to Brazil

Main article: Jets to Brazil

Schwarzenbach then formed the indie band Jets to Brazil in 1997 with Jeremy Chatelain of Handsome and Chris Daly of Texas is the Reason. Jets to Brazil released three albums before disbanding after their summer tour in 2003.

The Thorns of Life

Main article: The Thorns of Life

In October 2008, Blake revealed that he recently started writing music for a then "as-yet-unnamed group"[2] with drummer Aaron Cometbus (formerly of Crimpshrine) and bassist Daniela Sea, formerly of the Gr'ups and Cypher In The Snow, but best known for her recurring role on television's The L Word. The band has since been named The Thorns of Life. As of November 2008, the group has played a couple of shows in Brooklyn, with videos and reviews available online.[3][4]

Blake informed via Facebook:

I can say only that it's loud and tender and we're called the Thorns of Life. whether it's more Jetsesque or Breaker-like I honestly don't know; It sounds like a storehouse of fond hatred from the last few years and in the now.[5][6]

In early 2009, Cometbus left the band quietly. Although there has been no official announcement, many assume that The Thorns of Life are no more. Their break-up was announced on punknews.org as an official break-up.

Forgetters

Main article: Forgetters

On August 23, 2009, Blake announced via Facebook information on his new band, Forgetters. After a European tour in spring of 2011, bass player Caroline Paquita announced her departure from the band on her blog, declining to comment further.[7]

Musical influence

Schwarzenbach largely remains an influential figure in the punk/emo/indie music scene.[8] He is known as "one of the godfathers of emo".[9] He has a devoted following from musicians in the genre, particularly for his songs while playing in Jawbreaker, as shown by the variety of groups who paid tribute to the band on the 2003 Jawbreaker tribute album Bad Scene, Everyone's Fault. Blake was a character in the online game Emogame 2. The main character, "Blake", in Nothing Nice To Say, a webcomic, is named after him and bears a resemblance to the singer. The folk punk band Defiance, Ohio's song "I'm Just Going To Leave..." refers to listening to Jawbreaker, as does the song "I Must Be Hateful" by Lagwagon. The Get Up Kids song "I'll Catch You" refers to the Jawbreaker song "Jinx Removing". The Smoking Popes song "You Spoke To Me" is a tribute to Schwarzenbach's influence on the life of lead singer Josh Caterer. The Pootie song "What Will They Think?" has a few Jawbreaker references as well.

Non-musical activities

Video game reviews

During the summer of 1997, Schwarzenbach worked as a freelance writer and contributed several reviews of video games for GameSpot. Games reviewed included Independence Day,[10] HeliCOPS,[11] and Pandemonium[12]

Politics

Blake was involved in some efforts of Punk Voter leading up to the 2004 U.S. presidential election. In October 2004, he wrote a "guest column" called "Empires" on Punk Voter's website.[13] Additionally, Blake was peripherally involved with the New York University antiwar protests of late 2002-early 2003. On March 27, 2003, Blake gave an antiwar speech, entitled "See How We Are", to a crowd assembled in Washington Square Park following a student walkout.[14]

Writing and art

In 2004, Samantha Gillison commented on Blake literary and artistic endeavors in City Pages:

...his writing has expanded beyond lyrics and liner notes. Employing Michel Foucault's theory of spontaneous and local anarchy, his artistic self-expression now includes deeply felt political essays, children's stories, and graphic representation in the form of agitprop stickers that have wound up on New York City cop cars, subway ads, Starbucks windows, and Fox News vans. And with what he calls "deep human hunger," he has delved into the world of filmmaking, starting with a Cindy Sherman-esque short entitled "Biko/Chico" that stars his cat and muse Chico Schwarzenbach.[9]

Teaching

Currently, Schwarzenbach teaches undergraduates as a member of the Adjunct Faculty in the Department of English at Hunter College, which is part of the CUNY public university system in New York City.[15] [16]

References

  1. History of Jawbreaker Archived August 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. from loosecharm.org
  2. Navel Gazing: October 26th, 2008 from punknews.org
  3. AP Exclusive: A Review of The Thorns of Life (Blake Schwarzenbach, Aaron Cometbus Show) from altpress.com
  4. More details, video from the Thorns of Life (Blake Schwarzenbach, Aaron Cometbus) from punknews.org
  5. Schwarzenbach, Cometbus, and the Thorns of Life from bohemian.com
  6. Video of Blake Schwartzenbach’s Thorns of Life in Brooklyn from blog.synthesis.net
  7. http://carolinepaquita.blogspot.com/2011/08/workshop-this-weekend-and-other-news.html
  8. An interview with Blake Archived December 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. from Mesh magazine Issue 1 (Sept 2003)
  9. 1 2 Artists of the Year Archived August 26, 2006, at the Wayback Machine., a Dec. 29, 2004 article in City Pages
  10. Independence Day review by Blake posted April 3, 1997 on GameSpot
  11. HeliCOPS review by Blake posted May 2, 1997 on GameSpot
  12. Pandemonium review by Blake Archived September 7, 2005, at the Wayback Machine. posted August 6, 1997 on GameSpot.
  13. Empires Archived November 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. guest column posted October 7, 2004 on Punk Voter
  14. Transcript of Blake's "See How We Are" speech – retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine as a record of Blake's original 3-31-2003 posting on the Jets to Brazil website.
  15. http://registrar.hunter.cuny.edu/pdf_folders/spring08sched.pdf
  16. http://wpmin.hunter.cuny.edu/departments/6500 Retrieved as of January 4, 2014

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Blake Schwarzenbach
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.