The Tomorrowpeople

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The Tomorrowpeople were a psychedelic rock band based in Dallas, TX featuring former members of Brutal Juice and Toadies -- although their gently quirky sound was miles removed from the harder rock played by either of those groups.

They took their name from a cult British science fiction show (The Tomorrow People) that aired on ITV in the early '70s.

During their career, The Tomorrowpeople played and toured with such groups as Tripping Daisy, Spoon, Centro-matic, Sixteen Deluxe and Third Eye Blind.

They formed in 1996 and broke up in 2000. The group's Gordon Gibson, Ben Burt and Jody Powerchurch reformed in 2008 with two new members, Gary Parks and Hayes Smith, ostensibly to promote the release of their catalog on iTunes.

Their reunion show was on May 17th, 2008 at the Double-Wide in Dallas, TX. Someone please put up their setlist.

Contents

[edit] Band members

  • Gordon Gibson - lead vocals, guitar, programming
  • Jody Powerchurch (ne Erich Scholz) - guitar, bass
  • Ben Burt - drums
  • Darrel Herbert - bass, guitar
  • John Norris - keyboards, vocals
  • Bill Shupp - drums, vocals
  • Don Cento - guitar, keyboards
  • Michael Allen - lights, visuals

[edit] Background

Gordon Gibson formed The Tomorrowpeople in 1996 with his roommate Erich Scholz in Denton, TX while on a break from touring with hardcore heroes Brutal Juice. Following a move to Dallas, the two hooked up with former New Bohemian guitarist Wes Martin who brought them into Steve Curry's SRC Studios in Garland, TX. Along with Brutal Juice drummer Ben Burt, the group -- with Martin on bass -- recorded a clutch of songs that would come to be known as Scuzzy Ports. Although never released, the eight-track demo soon attracted the attention of major labels on the West Coast. Enlisting the aid of recently departed Toadies guitarist Darrel Herbert and Chomsky keyboardist John Norris, Gibson and Scholz -- who took the nom de rock "Jody Powerchurch" -- quickly wrote enough songs for a set and played their first show at Club Dada in Dallas on November 18, 1996.

Their wildly erratic stage shows featured liberal use of old 16 mm films and projections courtesy of Gordon and Jody's neighbor Michael Allen as well as live deployment of electronics and samples.

The group signed with Geffen Records, home of Nirvana, Sonic Youth and Beck, in 1998 and recorded an album's worth of material with former Brave Combo and Tripping Daisy drummer Mitch Marine. However a shift in power at the label resulted in the group departing Geffen before the album was mastered.

Following the departure of Ben Burt, Bill Shupp officially took over drumming chores. Multi-instrumentalist Don Cento was recruited when Herbert and Norris left in 1999.

The group released two CDs, 1997's Golden Energy on Last Beat/Slab records and 1999's Marijuana Beach -- a mini album of demos and unreleased tracks from their aborted 1998 Geffen set. Several other songs have appeared on compilations and promos.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Golden Energy

Last Beat/Slab Recordings, 1997

Golden Energy album cover
Golden Energy album cover
  1. "Theme Allison"
  2. "Youth in Orbit"
  3. "Beneath the Valley of the 3rd World Sugardaddies"
  4. "Something 4 Joey"
  5. "Queen of Earthly Delights"
  6. "Psyched by the 4-D Witch"
  7. "Mercitron"
  8. "Favorite Song"
  9. "Gidget Goes to Court"

Hidden tracks

  • "Windows Wide"
  • "Psychic Friends"

[edit] Marijuana Beach

Olivia Records, 1999

Marijuana Beach album cover
Marijuana Beach album cover
  1. "By My Side"
  2. "Marijuana Beach"
  3. "America's Deathrow Sweetheart"
  4. "Get Norris"
  5. "Love That Yer Making"
  6. "Shiny Mutation"
  7. "Squeaky Fromme"