Spottiswoode & His Enemies
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Spottiswoode & His Enemies | |
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Origin | New York City |
Genre(s) | Rock Jazz Alternative rock |
Years active | 1998 - Present |
Label(s) | New Warsaw Records |
Associated acts | Spottiswoode & McMahon The Zimmermans Seeker |
Website | Official Website |
Spottiswoode & His Enemies are a New York based rock band. Fronted by Jonathan Spottiswoode, who also writes most of the band's music, the group has an eclectic and hard to describe sound, with songs ranging from rock to folk to jazz and even gospel. Several of the band's members first played together in the now-defunct Washington, D.C. band The Zimmermans.
Although far from "mainstream", the band has become well known within the New York music scene during its ten years, regularly playing venues such as Joe's Pub and touring the East coast of the United States. The band also recently played in a Bob Dylan tribute at Avery Fisher Hall[1][2]
In an NPR interview, Jonathan Spottiswoode made this comment on the paradox of being a member of a well loved band but still having to struggle financially in the harsh environment of the modern music industry: "Maybe there was an illusion that was created in the '50s and '60s and '70s where there were all these huge bands making tons of money and there still are a few. But I think maybe the old-fashioned way, where you just — you're an itinerant musician and you depended on the kindness of strangers is — maybe that's the path again these days as things kind of implode."[3]
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[edit] Critical Reception
Paste Magazine's Steve LaBate wrote of the band's performance in Atlanta: "The longhaired, mutton-chopped British songwriter—who inhabits a possessed stage presence somewhere between Joe Cocker and Jim Morrison—knocked the crowd over with his gravelly voice, passionate delivery, dry wit and dark sense of humor[...]Toward the end of a set that inspired visions of Kevin Ayers and Randy Newman, the Enemies really showed their skills, with trumpet player Kevin Cordt and saxophonist Candace de Bartolo echoing the interplay of Miles Davis and Cannonball Adderly on landmark jazz album Kind of Blue. It was nothing short of transportive."[4]
The New Yorker has said "Jonathan Spottiswoode, the backbone of this tight group, has a deep, rough-hewn voice that’s evocative of Leonard Cohen’s. He writes astringent ballads and groovy pop songs with equal aplomb."[5]
[edit] Line-up
- Jonathan Spottiswoode - vocals, guitar
- John Young - bass
- Tim Vaill - drums
- Candace DeBartolo - saxophone, clarinet, flute, vocals
- Kevin Cordt - trumpet, violin, vocals
- Riley McMahon - guitars, mandolin, lap steel guitar, banjo, glockenspiel, percussion
- Tony Lauria - piano, organ, accordion
In addition to the seven regular performers, the band is often accompanied on stage by several backup singers, bringing the total line-up to ten or eleven musicians in total.
Several of the members participate in other projects. Spottiswoode & McMahon perform together in a duo, McMahon is a music producer and performs with other New York bands such as The Sad Little Stars, DeBartolo has a jazz band called Seeker, and Young plays with The Grandsons.
[edit] Discography
- Ugly Love (1998)
- Spottiswoode & His Enemies (2000)
- Building A Road (2002)
- That's What I Like (2007)
- Salvation (2008)