Chris Carter (producer/disc jockey)

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This article is about Chris Carter, the American musician, producer and disc jockey. For other uses see the Chris Carter disambiguaftion page.
Chris Carter
Chris Carter

Chris Carter is a Los Angeles-based disc jockey and music/film producer who started his music career as a founding member and bass player with alternative rock/power pop band Dramarama. After Dramarama originally split in 1994, Carter formed QM Management to manage LA pop group The Wondermints, currently best known as Beach Boy Brian Wilson's touring backing band. Until September 2006, KLSX aired Chris's Breakfast with the Beatles, America's longest-running Beatle-based radio show, on which he played nothing but Beatles material and commented upon the history of the Beatles for as long as 4 hours every week. As of November 2006, the show moved to its new home, 95.5 KLOS, which bills itself as "L.A.'s Only Classic Rock Station Since 1969," and can be heard there every Sunday from 9 am to noon.

As a producer, Chris supervised and produced the music for the film Mayor of the Sunset Strip, a rock documentary about influential Los Angeles disc jockey Rodney Bingenheimer of seminal Los Angeles rock station KROQ-FM, which in 2003 was nominated for Best Documentary by the Independent Spirit Awards. He also recently supervised the music used in the film Factory Girl, based on the life of deceased Andy Warhol muse and model Edie Sedgwick, starring Sienna Miller in the title role, first released on December 29, 2006. Currently, Chris serves as a Consultant for the upcoming HBO series Off The Record, hosted by Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart.

Contents

[edit] Musician: Dramarama 1982-1994...and Beyond

Chris (second from left) with Dramarama, circa 1989
Chris (second from left) with Dramarama, circa 1989

After graduating from Wayne Hills High School in Wayne, New Jersey, in 1979, Chris bought a record store called Looney Tunez Records in Wayne, where he and several friends practiced playing live music in the basement after hours. In 1982, Chris and childhood friend John Easdale formally formed a power pop band called Dramarama, featuring Mark Englert and Peter Wood on guitar and Jesse Farbman on drums. After relocating to Los Angeles, Dramarama had an enduring career through the 1980s and early 1990s, recording nine albums. Their 1985 debut, Cinéma Vérité, yielded the hit single "Anything, Anything (I'll Give You)," which became Dramarama's most recognizable song and for years was a staple of alternative radio airplay. The song was a number-one hit on KROQ, and even today is consistently cited as one of the most requested songs in the station's history.

Chris's contributions to the band included playing bass guitar, producing, songwriting, arranging and personally designing all album artwork/promo materials. Dramarama's many television appearances included Late Night with David Letterman, The Dennis Miller Show, MTV’s Alternative Nation, 120 Minutes (as guest hosts), two live performances on The Joe Franklin Show, and their first-ever public performance on New Jersey's local access variety program The Uncle Floyd Show in 1982. In 1992, Dramarama received a Los Angeles Music Award for “Best Modern Rock Band” and then-current album Vinyl was voted “Album of The Year.” However, both music business challenges and widespread interest in Seattle’s emerging yet enormously popular grunge sound made things difficult for the group, which disbanded in 1994. They reunited again -- without Carter -- in 2004 and still perform nationally.

Between the years 1987 and 1999, Chris recorded for and/or with members of the Rolling Stones, New York Dolls, The Replacements, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, Blondie, Love, and The Pixies, both with and without Dramarama. In June 1997, he played bass guitar for Mike Myers (as Austin Powers) on the MTV Movie Awards, which aired in more than 10 countries around the world. Chris also briefly rejoined Dramarama for VH1's Bands Reunited reality show in February of 2004. Singer/songwriter Easdale has since re-formed Dramarama with Englert and Wood, and the band continues recording and touring today.

[edit] Artist Management: 1985-Present

Chris established QM Management in early 1995. The company has represented two of LA’s finest acts, the Wondermints, and The Negro Problem (as well as singer Stew's solo projects) in the past. Both groups have been critically acclaimed in the pages of the Los Angeles Times, Musician, Q, SPIN, and MOJO. Rolling Stone chose the Wondermints as one of its “10 Groups to Watch Out For in 1999,” and actor/producer Mike Myers hand-selected the Wondermints to write the title track for his 1997 film Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery. The Wondermints are currently Beach Boy Brian Wilson’s backing band.

Chris on the air at 97.1 Free FM, Los Angeles
Chris on the air at 97.1 Free FM, Los Angeles

[edit] On the Air: 1989-Present

Chris has been an on-air radio personality since the late 1980s, when he first appeared on KROQ filling in for Rodney Bingenheimer and co-hosting KROQ artist specials with him. From 1996 to 1997, he hosted “Sony’s Siren Spotlight” interview show, broadcast worldwide and featuring in depth interviews with hundreds of Sony artists, ranging from Ozzy Osbourne to Pearl Jam. From August 1997 through December 1999, he hosted his original show “The Chris Carter Mess,” a four-hour specialty show on Los Angeles radio station Modern Rock Y107. “The Mess” also aired in the midwest on WOXY-FM. After a Y107 format change in January 1999, “The Chris Carter Mess” moved to LA’s Channel 103.1, where it aired as a weekly radio show through February 2001. Meanwhile, in 1999, Chris was honored by (now-defunct) BAM Magazine as one of the BAM 100, which recogized “The 100 Most Influential Californians in the Music Industry.”

Until September 2006, Chris hosted “Breakfast with the Beatles” on 97.1 Free FM (formerly KLSX-FM) in Los Angeles, where it was heard every Sunday morning from 10:00 a.m. until 12:00 noon. The longest-running Beatles show in America (premiering in 1976), “Breakfast with the Beatles” was also the highest-rated weekend music show in all of Los Angeles. As host of this show, Chris personally interviewed ex-Beatles Paul McCartney, George Harrison (recorded for a Capitol Records promo CD, this turned out to be his last interview before his death in 2001), Ringo Starr and Pete Best. The McCartney interview can be seen in Paul’s “Back in the US” film and DVD.

In September 2006, the show was placed on hiatus by KLSX (which has an all-talk format). This marked the (temporary, as it turned out) end of a 23-year run in Los Angeles, as the show was founded by Deirdre O'Donoghue and hosted by her until her death in 2001. The last KLSX show aired on September 3, 2006 -- the day after Chris Carter's 47th birthday. After that, fans of the show heard the show commercial free on "Free 2 HD," KLSX's HD2 channel. (Information on how to buy a radio for this and other secondary radio stations can be found here.) In November 2006, KLOS announced that it was picking up the Breakfast with the Beatles show, and now broadcasts it every Sunday from 9 am - noon.

[edit] Music Writer: 1989-Present

In addition to serving as Associate Editor for Music Confidential from 1992-1994, Chris has written freelance features and reviews for the following publications:

[edit] Discography (as performer and producer)

  • Comedy (1984, EP, Questionmark)
  • Cinéma Vérité (1985, Fr. New Rose Records)
  • Box Office Bomb (1987, Questionmark/Chameleon)
  • Stuck in Wonderamaland (1989, Chameleon)
  • Looking Through... (1990, Bent Backed Tulips, Fr. New Rose Records)
  • Live in Wonderamaland (1990, promo-only EP, Chameleon)
  • Live at The China Club (1990, EP, Chameleon)
  • Vinyl (1991, Chameleon/Elektra)
  • Vinyl (1992, EP, Chameleon/Elektra)
  • The Days of Wayne and Roses (The Trash Tapes) (1992, fan club release, 1000 copies)
  • The Mess (1992, The Mess-Carter/Mullaney side project, Fr. New Rose Records)
  • 10 From 5 (1993, Chameleon)
  • hi-fi sci-fi (1993, Chameleon/Elektra)
  • hi-fi sci-fi/10 From 5 (1993, 2-CD set, Chameleon/Elektra)
  • Cinéma Vérité...Plus (1995, Rhino)
  • Box Office Bomb...Plus (1995, Rhino)
  • Looking Through... (1988, Bent Backed Tulips, eggBERT)
  • 18 Big Ones (Greatest Hits) (1996, Elektra/Rhino)

[edit] Discography (as producer)


[edit] External links


[edit] CD Reviews

[edit] Interviews