Don Fleming (musician)

Don Fleming

Don Fleming in 2009
Background information
Birth name Donald Gene Fleming
Born (1957-09-25) September 25, 1957
Valdosta, Georgia, United States
Occupation(s) Musician
Labels Thick Syrup
Associated acts Velvet Monkeys, B.A.L.L., Gumball, Dim Stars, Half Japanese, The Backbeat Band

Donald Gene "Don" Fleming (born September 25, 1957 in Valdosta, Georgia) is an American musician and producer. Besides fronting a number of his own bands, (Velvet Monkeys, B.A.L.L., and Gumball) Fleming has produced Sonic Youth, Teenage Fanclub and Hole.[1]

Career

Bands

The Stroke Band

Fleming started his musical career with the art/garage/punk group The Stroke Band of Adel, Georgia in the late 70's.[2] They released one album, Green and Yellow, in 1978 on Abacus Records.[3]

Citizen 23

After The Stroke Band, Don relocated to Norfolk, Va. in 1979 and formed the punkish/new wave group Citizen 23 with Elaine Barnes, Mark Myers, and, Stephen Soles.[4] Their only recorded output was on the compilation album No Room to Dance in 1980.[5]

The Velvet Monkeys

Citizen 23 broke up in early 1981; all members but Mark Mayers relocated to Washington, D.C. shortly thereafter and formed the three-piece psychedelic/post-punk band The Velvet Monkeys in the fall of 1981. The Velvet Monkeys line-up featured Fleming on guitar & vocals, Barnes on keyboards and vocals, Stephen Soles on bass, and a drum machine called Dr. Rhythm providing the beat. The Velvet Monkeys would go through many incarnations over the next 10 years, with Fleming the constant factor in all versions. In July 1982 the band released their debut -- Everything is Right—on cassette tape.[6] This album was re-released in on CD in 2011.[7][8]

After trading in their drum machine for a live drummer (Jay "The Rummager" Spiegel) in 1981 and switching to a new bass player (Charles Steck) in early 1982, the band began to grow their following through increased gigging in the Washington, DC area and the Eastern Seaboard. This lineup released the album Future on Fountain of Youth Records in 1983.[9]

In 1985, ousting all but Spiegel and himself, Fleming brought on guitarist Malcolm Riviera of D.C.'s Grand Mal and bassist Rob Kennedy, formerly of D.C.'s The Chumps and NYC's The Workdogs. The band now turned away from its synth-pop roots completely and became a kind of glam/trash rock theatre that included light shows, smoke machines, live wrestling with the audience, and even instrument-free lip-syncing.

By 1988, Fleming and Spiegel had re-located to New York City where they teamed up with former Shockabilly bass player and Shimmy Disc impresario Mark Kramer and drummer David Licht to form B.A.L.L..[10] After that group's acrimonious demise, the trio of Fleming, Riviera and Spiegel reunited to form the next iteration of the Velvet Monkeys.[8] Fleming expanded the band with such indie celebrities as John Hammill (of Pussy Galore, Thurston Moore, J Mascis, and Julia Cafritz. This supergroup recorded the band's final album, a soundtrack parody called Rake that paid tribute to the 1970s Blaxploitation film Shaft.[11]

The band has never officially broken up, and Fleming continues to revive the group when the time is right. A series of recordings found their way to the record and CD bins through the 1990s as well.[12]

Dinosaur Jr.

After Fleming and Spiegel's group B.A.L.L. broke up in 1990, the duo briefly joined Dinosaur Jr. and released "The Wagon" 45 on the Sub Pop label.[13] The two left Dinosaur Jr. shortly after the release of the single.

Gumball

In 1990 Jay Spiegel approached his friend Eric Vermillion, a member of Camp Hill, PA's The Stump Wizards, about playing with himself and Fleming. Vermilion agreed and subsequently quit The Stump Wizards. After less than a week's rehearsal, the new trio played its first show and Gumball was born. Their first release came our shortly thereafter: an eponymous 12 inch EP on Paperhouse Records/Sire Records in England. In 1991 the band released the album Special Kiss, also on Paperhouse, and embarked on a tour with Mudhoney, Sonic Youth, and other similar American indie bands of the early 1990s.

In 1991, Gumball signed a two-album deal with Columbia Records and re-entered the studio to record their major-label debut, Super Tasty. The sessions were done in Wisconsin with producer Butch Vig (who later engineered Nirvana's major label debut Nevermind). Although Gumball recorded Super Tasty as a trio, fourth member (and longtime musical associate) Malcolm Riviera joined the band shortly after the album's release, and In 1993 the foursome toured the U.S., Europe, and Japan in support of the album. Gumball released their second album for Columbia, Revolution on Ice, in 1994 and toured in support of it throughout that year. The band left Columbia in 1994 and released the live album Tokyo Encore on their own label. By early 1995 the band called it quits rather than shopping for another label.

Other Bands

Fleming was also a member of the bands Dim Stars, Death Camp 2000, Half Japanese, Tabby Chinos, Idlewild, and Gravy. He has also made many guest appearance both live and in the studio with Brain Surgeons, Shotgun Rationale, Jad Fair, Los Straitjackets, Maureen Tucker, Steriod Maximus (Foetus), Tinklers, and Walking Seeds.

Solo Work

Don has released recordings on his personal label Instant Mayhem and on several other labels: Don Fleming 4 (a four-song EP with Fleming and artists Kim Gordon, Julia Cafritz and R. Stevie Moore); Super Bad @ 65 (compilation album released by Zero Hour records); the solo EP jojo ASS RUNne; Because Tomorrow Comes, a solo CD-3; the track "Adam's Fall" on compilation album 78 LTD (Thick Syrup Records); Telstar, featuring Thurston Moore & Fleming; the song "Sound as Steel" on the Guitarrorists CD (No. 6 Records); and the solo single "Real Cool Time" (Iridescence Records).

Music Projects

Don has played in and on many music projects throughout his career: Foot with Thurston Moore and Jimbo (aka Jim Dunbar);[14] The Walter Sears with Tom Smith, Thurston Moore, Steve Shelley, Sean Lennon, Jim Dunbar and Rat Bastard;[15] The Backbeat Band (a supergroup that recorded all the music for the film Backbeat, which focuses on The Beatles' early career); The Dripping Tap, a collaboration with R. Stevie Moore; Wylde Ratttz (band built around guitarist Ron Asheton to supply Stoogesque tracks for the film Velvet Goldmine); Rockin'ham (a NASCAR theme band); Dee/Don (Fleming plus Dee Pop, drummer from the Bush Tetras[16]); and Badge (with A.J. Lambert on vocals/keys/guitar, Fran Azzarto on drums, Bil Emmons doing programming, and Matt Azzarto on guitar).[17]

Producer

Fleming is also widely known as a record producer. He has recorded and produced such artists as Sonic Youth, Hole, Teenage Fanclub, The Posies, Alice Cooper, Andrew W.K., The Dictators, Joan Jett, Nancy Sinatra, Screaming Trees, The Smithereens, Pete Yorn, Bruce Joyner & the Reconstruction, Hifiklub, Joe Hurley, Jenni Muldaur, To Live and Shave in L.A., Richard Hell, Jad Fair, Triple Fast Action, Swish, Steel Miners, Ann Magnuson, Free Kitten, Rudolph Grey, STP (featuring Julia Cafritz of Pussy Galore), Action Swingers and many others.[18]

Other Projects

With the Global Jukebox project, Fleming serves as executive director of the Association for Cultural Equity where he has worked since 1995 on the conservation and publication of the musical collection of Alan Lomax.[19]

Discography

(Note: Velvet Monkeys, B.A.L.L., and Gumball albums are not included in the following list).

Solo

With bands

Foot
Walter Sears
Gravy
Thurston Moore & Don Fleming
The Backbeat Band
Idlewild
Tom Smith/Don Fleming
Dinosaur Jr
Citizen 23
Stroke Band

References

  1. Ankeny, Jason. "Don Fleming | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  2. "The Stroke Band". Discogs. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  3. "Green and Yellow". RateYourMusic. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  4. "Citizen 23". Dicsogs. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  5. "No Room to Dance". Discogs. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  6. "The Velvet Monkeys - Everything Is Right (1982 tape)". Discogs. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  7. "Velvet Monkeys* - Everything Is Right (CD 2011)". Discogs. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  8. 1 2 Cohan, Brad (2011-08-10). "Q & A: Don Fleming On The Grunge Years, Courtney Love's Work Ethic, The Velvet Monkeys And Being Sonic Youth's "Manager"". Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  9. "Future". Fountain of Youth. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  10. "Rake". Discogs. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  11. "Rake". Discogs. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  12. "Velvet Monkeys". Discogs. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  13. "The Wagon". Discogs. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  14. "Foot". Instant Mayhem. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  15. "The Walter Sears". Instant Mayhem. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  16. "Dee Pop". Instant Mayhem. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  17. "Badge". Instant Mayhem. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  18. "Additional Artists". Instant Mayhem. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  19. Rohta, Larry (January 30, 2013). "Folklorist's Global Jukebox Goes Digital". New York Times. Retrieved August 22, 2013.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.