Cap'n Jazz

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Cap'n Jazz
Background information
Origin Chicago, Illinois, USA
Genre(s) Indie Rock, Emo
Years active 19891995
Label(s) Jade Tree Records
Associated
acts
Joan of Arc
The Promise Ring
Make Believe
Owls
Former members
Tim Kinsella
Mike Kinsella
Sam Zurick
Victor Villareal
Davey von Bohlen

Short-lived but highly influential, Cap'n Jazz helped transform emo from a deeply underground punk subgenre into a more widely accepted subset of indie rock. Not terribly popular or well-known outside of the Midwest, Cap'n Jazz's main contribution was stylistic -- along with Pinkerton -era Weezer , they helped shift emo's always-elusive musical focus from post-hardcore prog-punk to an arty but more accessible punk-pop.

Their discography was as scant as it was rare, but that very obscurity helped build their underground legend through word of mouth, until a double-CD retrospective was finally issued several years after their breakup. By that time, most of the members had moved on to other, better-known emo bands, most notably Joan of Arc and the highly successful Promise Ring , which helped spread Cap'n Jazz's influence far beyond their original audience.

The first incarnation of Cap'n Jazz was formed in Chicago circa 1989, when brothers Tim (guitar, vocals) and Mike Kinsella (drums) teamed up with bassist Sam Zurick and guitarist Victor Villareal ; all were still in school at the time. The band went through several name changes and added guitarist Davey von Bohlen , but took a few years to get serious about pursuing music. Eventually, they earned a cult following around Chicago and the Midwest, honing a sound that was at once complicated and sloppily enthusiastic. Frontman Tim Kinsella 's cryptic wordplay and naïve, amateurish vocals became the group's focal points; although some found those traits polarizing, they gave Cap'n Jazz a distinct personality.

During the early '90s, the band recorded several singles for tiny independent labels, and also contributed tracks to several indie and emo compilations. In 1995, they issued their first and only album, Shmap'n Shmazz , on the tiny, poorly distributed Man With Gun label; the album also had an incredibly lengthy alternate title, which most fans ignored. It quickly became a collector's item. Cap'n Jazz broke up not long after its release in July 1995 in Little Rock, Arkansas; they were scheduled to play that night at DIY punk venue Das Yutes a Go-Go. In 1998, three years after the band's breakup, the Jade Tree label assembled a generous double-disc Cap'n Jazz retrospective titled Analphabetapolothology . It contained the band's complete recorded works -- the entirety of Shmap'n Shmazz , material from their early singles and split releases, compilation tracks, unreleased demos and outtakes, and several songs from their farewell concert in Chicago.

The line up of the band included Tim Kinsella (vocals); Samuel Zurick (bass guitar); Mike Kinsella (drums, vocals); Victor Villareal (guitar, vocals); and Davey von Bohlen (guitar, vocals from 1994-95).

Although their talent and influence stands on its own, they are also notable for the significant careers that former members of the band have charted since the demise of Cap'n Jazz in 1995, most notably Make Believe, The Promise Ring, American Football, Owls, Ghosts and Vodka, Joan of Arc and Owen.

[edit] Discography

Compilations

  • Achtung Chicago! Zwei! – compilation LP (Underdog Records, 1993).
  • Nothing Dies with Blue Skies – 7” split w/ Friction (Shakefork Records, 1993).
  • How the Midwest Was Won – compilation 2x7” (Subfusc Records, 1993) (Playing Field Recordings, 1993).
  • Picking More Daisies - compilation 2x7” (Further Beyond Records, 1993).
  • It’s a Punk Thing – compilation LP (Shakefork Records, 1993).
  • Ghost Dance - compilation 2x7” (Slave Cut Records, 1993).
  • A Very Punk Christmas – compilation 2x7” (The Rocco Empire & Further Beyond Records, 1993).
  • Punk TV – compilation LP (Red Dawg Records, 1995).
  • We’ve Lost Beauty – compilation LP (File 13, 1995).
  • Ooh Do I Love You – compilation 2xCD (Core For Care, 1995).


7”

  • Sometimes if you stand further away from something, it does not seem as big. Sometimes you can stand so close to something you can not tell what you are looking at. – 7” (Underdog Records, 1993).
  • Boys 16 to 18 Years... Age of Action - (Further Beyond Records, 1993).


Albums


Anthology

[edit] References

The bands Scary Kids Scaring Kids and We Are Scientists both got their name directly from Cap'n Jazz songs.

[edit] External links

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