Art Alexakis
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Art Alexakis | ||
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Background information | ||
Birth name | Arthur Paul Alexakis | |
Born | April 12, 1962 (Age 44) | |
Origin | Los Angeles, California, USA | |
Genre(s) | Rock Acoustic |
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Instrument(s) | Vocals, Guitar | |
Label(s) | Eleven Seven Music Capitol Records Tim/Kerr Records Shindig Records |
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Associated acts |
Everclear Colorfinger The Easy Hoes |
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Website | www.everclearonline.com |
Art Alexakis (born Arthur Paul Alexakis on April 12, 1962) is the singer/guitarist and songwriter of the rock band Everclear. He was born in Los Angeles, California.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
At a young age, Alexakis' father walked out on the family, leaving Alexakis, his mother, his brother, and his three sisters to fend for themselves. Not long after, financial difficulties forced Alexakis' mother to relocate the family to the Mar Vista Gardens housing projects in California, located in Los Angeles near Culver City.
There, Alexakis came in direct contact with the area's criminal and drug culture. Alexakis' brother George died of a heroin overdose when Alexakis was twelve. A lyric in the song "Heroin Girl" refers to his mother overhearing a police officer describing his brother's death as "just another overdose." A few months after his brother's death, Alexakis' 15-year-old girlfriend committed suicide.[1] Not long after her death, Alexakis attempted suicide by getting stoned, filling his pockets with sand and lead weights, and jumping off the Santa Monica Pier. He claims that the vision and voice of his brother George compelled him to survive. [2]
Regardless, Alexakis' drug addiction continued. Over the next eight years, he was shuffled around between various family members all over the country. He spent a brief period in Houston, Texas, living with his father, and a period in Roseburg, Oregon, living with his sister, a born-again Christian, and her husband. Eventually, he returned to LA to live with his mother. He attended journalism school for a time, and worked as a music reviewer for The Evening Outlook, a small newspaper in Santa Monica. Eventually, a near-fatal cocaine overdose pushed him to quit drugs cold turkey.
After cleaning himself up, Alexakis briefly attended UCLA film school. While living in Los Angeles, he organized a band called Shakin' Brave. Shakin' Brave featured a rather rough rock sound, but never really rose above the sea of music in Southern California. Generally frustrated with the music scene in LA, Alexakis and his first wife Anita relocated to San Francisco.
While living in San Francisco, Alexakis stumbled upon a genre of music known as "cowpunk". The sound meshed together the two prevalent forms of music with which he grew up - country and straight-ahead rock and roll. Inspired, Alexakis established Shindig Records. Much of this period was explicitly detailed in the album, Deep in the Heart of the Beast in the Sun, which was originally intended as a solo album, but gradually developed into a group project under the name Colorfinger.
In 1992, within a single month, Shindig went bankrupt, Colorfinger disbanded, and Alexakis' girlfriend Jenny became pregnant. Seeking a change of scenery, Alexakis moved to Portland, Oregon. There, he married his girlfriend and had a daughter. Though less directly biographical, Everclear's second album, Sparkle and Fade, deals deeply with the themes of escape and redemption that pervaded his life upon leaving San Francisco.
The instability and personal turmoil Alexakis went through left him with a wide breadth of subject matter for his songs. "Father of Mine" and "Why I Don't Believe in God" described his difficult youth. "Heroin Girl", "Strawberry", and "Color Pit" touched upon his drug addictions. [2]
Following the move to Portland, Alexakis placed an ad in The Rocket seeking a bass player and a drummer to form a new band. Alexakis had two respondents, Craig Montoya and Scott Cuthbert. The trio became the first incarnation of Everclear. After Cuthbert was replaced by Greg Eklund, the band spent the better part of a decade as a dominant act on alternative rock radio. The band scored three platinum albums in Sparkle & Fade, So Much for the Afterglow, and Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 1: Learning How to Smile.
While finding success as a musical act and songwriter, Alexakis began taking on other projects within the music industry. For several years, he served as an A&R representative for Capitol Records. In 1996, he produced Frogpond's 1996 album Count to Ten. In the early 2000s, Alexakis established his own label, Popularity Recordings, as a subsidiary of Artemis Records. Alexakis produced the label's first release, the 2002 album Volume by Flipp. However, Alexakis chose to shutter the label in 2003. Alexakis has also dabbled in songwriting with other artists, including co-writing the song "At the End of the Day" on Marion Raven's 2005 album Here I Am.
While pursuing a music career, Alexakis has also dabbled in acting. In 2000, he made brief appearances in the Heather Graham comedy Committed. Two years later, he made cameo appearances in two episodes of The Chris Isaak Show. In 2006, Alexakis appeared on an episode of Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide on Nickelodeon, portraying a music teacher. He also had a lead role in the 2006 short film Room to Breathe.
Alexakis has also been politically active. In 2000, Alexakis testified before Congress in support of HR 1488, the Compassion for Children and Child Support Enforcement Act. Alexakis was a delegate for the 2004 Democratic National Convention representing Portland's 3rd congressional district after campaigning for John Edwards during the 2004 Democratic Presidential primaries. He and the new Everclear recorded the Woody Guthrie standard This Land Is Your Land, which Alexakis performed at several political events.
As a result of his history of drug addiction, he has also been involved in drug awareness, including the taping of PSA's for the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
On January 4, 2005, Alexakis filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in United States Bankruptcy Court, Central District of California. According to the filing, Alexakis owed a federal tax bill for the years 1999, 2001 and 2002 of $2.75 million, as well as nearly $230,000 to the Oregon Department of Revenue and more than $120,000 in credit card debt spread over several accounts.
In August 2006, Alexakis appeared on The O'Reilly Factor discussing the video for "Hater", the first single from Everclear's Welcome to the Drama Club.
[edit] Partial discography
With The Easy Hoes:
With Colorfinger:
With Everclear:
- 1993 – World of Noise
- 1995 – Sparkle and Fade
- 1997 – So Much for the Afterglow
- 2000 – Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 1: Learning How to Smile
- 2000 – Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 2: Good Time for a Bad Attitude
- 2003 – Slow Motion Daydream
- 2004 – Ten Years Gone: The Best of Everclear 1994-2004
- 2006 – Welcome to the Drama Club
[edit] References
- ^ Alexakis, Art. "When I Was Fifteen (Written in My 44th Year)". [1]
- ^ Edwards, Gavin. "Clear Unpleasant Danger". Details. May 1996.