Marcy Playground

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For the album, see Marcy Playground (album)

Marcy Playground is an American alternative rock or post-grunge band.

Contents

[edit] History

Named for the formative location in lead singer John Wozniak's childhood, the Marcy Open grade school in Minneapolis, Marcy Playground emerged in the late 1990s with clean and subdued alternative rock (often sounding like a tranquil Nirvana).

Wozniak's first effort, Zog BogBean - From the Marcy Playground, was a self-produced labor of love, recorded in his bedroom studio with some help from his then-girlfriend Sherry Fraser in the early nineties. A small run of CD's were self-released by Wozniak, and to this day it remains extremely difficult to find.

After attending the Evergreen State College for two years, Wozniak moved east to New York, where Marcy Playground began to coalesce around the songs that would become the self-titled album. Bassist Dylan Keefe and drummer Dan Rieser filled out the band's sound, and complemented Wozniak's songwriting. The self-titled album was released in 1997, and Marcy Playground emerged into the mainstream with the success of the single "Sex and Candy." Marcy Playground is quiet and minimalist in tone, but filled with emotion and childhood imagery. Wozniak's songs run in many different styles: some are modern folk music; many have undertones reminiscent of children's songs; the blurred sound of psychedelia makes appearances; and then there are the songs where Wozniak clearly defines himself as a rock man. A lot of its commercial draw was due to the success of Seattle's grunge-influenced sound (see post-grunge). The only band member who contributed to all of the album was Wozniak himself; several others filled in for Rieser and Keefe on some of the songs, notably Jared Kotler (bass and drums).

Marcy Playground's next outing was 1999's Shapeshifter, in many ways a more complex album than Marcy Playground, despite not being as much of a success commercially as the self-titled album. The songs are longer and harder-edged than those on the self-titled album, and have a more layered sound. Whereas most of Marcy Playground has the feel of a quiet, unplugged live show, Shapeshifter is clearly amp-driven rock, and maybe even less grunge inspired.

A minor controversy came to light when Paul Leary of the Butthole Surfers revealed on Marcy Playground's BBS that the cover art for Shapeshifter had originally been conceptualized and commissioned by Leary for his band's aborted After the Astronaut album. He admitted to being a fan of Marcy Playground, but accused the band of an apparent lack of imagination and originality. Leary's outrage was eased once he learned that Capitol Records, former home of the Butthole Surfers and then-current home of Marcy Playground, had pitched the artwork to Wozniak as original work from their own art department and that Marcy Playground had no knowledge of the work's origins. Upon learning the truth, Wozniak proclaimed that he was "honored" to have an album cover designed by Paul Leary. There were apparently no bad feelings between the bands once the controversy had been cleared up.

After Shapeshifter, drummer Dan Rieser left the band to pursue other interests. The position was eventually filled on his recommendation by Gonzalo "Gonz" Martinez De La Cotera, a friend whose previous band Lincoln had opened for Marcy Playground.

After a considerable hiatus and at least one failed attempt to record a follow-up to Shapeshifter, Marcy Playground's third album, MP3, was finally released in 2004 with even less commercial success than the two preceding albums. MP3 fit the pattern of evolution from Shapeshifter, with a more electric sound and a slicker production. Some of the songs on MP3 also featured more overt messages of Wozniak's feelings on the music industry ("Hotter than the Sun," which tells a tale similar to the story of the band) and politics (the anti-censorship "Flag and Finger" and "Jessie Went to War," the story of a brother lost at war). This made MP3 arguably more topical than previous Marcy Playground albums, the songs of which seemed to have a more generally timeless quality.

Marcy Playground did little if any touring in support of MP3. Despite releasing many singles, the band never matched the success of their single "Sex and Candy", and are generally considered a one-hit wonder.

The band is currently working on a new album which is scheduled for release sometime in mid-late 2007.

Wozniak's second solo effort "Leaving wonderland in a fit of rage" is due out in early 2007.

[edit] Personnel

Current:

  • John "Woz" Wozniak, lead vocals, guitar, songwriter, producer
  • Dylan Keefe, bass, backing vocals
  • Gonzalo "Gonz" Martinez De La Cotera, drums, backing vocals

Past:

  • Dan Rieser, drums, backing vocals

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles and EPs

  • 1997 - Sex and Candy
  • 1998 - Our Generation (Promo only)
  • 1998 - St. Joe on the Schoolbus
  • 1998 - Sherry Fraser (Promo only)
  • 1998 - Coming Up From Behind
  • 1999 - It's Saturday College Sampler EP

[edit] Soundtracks Featuring Marcy Playground

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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