Seven Mary Three

Seven Mary Three
Also known as 7 Mary 3, 7M3
Origin Williamsburg, Virginia, United States
Genres Post-grunge
Alternative rock
Years active 1992–present
Labels Mammoth, Atlantic, DRT Entertainment, Bellum, Settle Up
Associated acts NerVer, The Pollocks
Website 7M3.com
Members
Jason Ross
Casey Daniel
Thomas Juliano
Mike Levesque
Past members
Jason Pollock
Giti Khalsa

Seven Mary Three, occasionally abbreviated to 7 Mary 3 or 7M3, is an American hard rock band. They have released seven studio albums and one live album, and are best known for their hit singles "Cumbersome", "Water's Edge", "Lucky", and "Wait".

Contents

Career

Formation and members

Seven Mary Three formed in 1992 when Jason Ross and Jason Pollock met while attending The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia.[1] Originally an acoustic duo, Ross and Pollock split song-writing duties and performed with Ross singing and Pollock playing guitar. Later, drummer Giti Khalsa and bassist Casey Daniel joined the band, and the foursome played coffeehouses and clubs. Paul Smith of Megaphone contributed guitar tracks to Seven Mary Three's second and third studio albums (Rockcrown, and Orange Ave.), and toured as an additional guitarist with the band in support of both albums.

The present members of the band are Casey Daniel, Jason Ross, Thomas Juliano, and Mike Levesque. Giti Khalsa has stopped touring with the band, but still performs on studio recordings.

Origin of group name

Jason Pollock revealed in The Cavalier Daily that they came up with the name while watching the 1970s TV series CHiPs. '7 Mary 3' was the call sign for Officer Jon Baker, who was played by actor Larry Wilcox. (7M3: police radio call sign; 7 designates the patrol beat, M for Mary designates that he is a motorcycle unit and 3 is his unit number). Pollock noted, "There's no great significance or anything. We were just tired of trying to think of a cool name."[2]

Mainstream success

1994's album Churn, a self-produced independent release garnered the band airplay on an FM rock station in Orlando, Florida for the future hit single "Cumbersome".[3] Given this minor success, the band relocated to the Orlando area where they continued to expand their fan base. This regional success soon caught the attention of major-label scouts. In May 1995, Ross, Pollock, and Khalsa graduated from William & Mary and moved to Florida. The band signed with Mammoth and rerecorded the songs on Churn, plus two new ones, to create the commercially successful American Standard in 1995. Despite criticism of mimicking Pearl Jam and other alternative rock acts, only seven months after its release, American Standard achieved platinum status. This accomplishment can certainly be attributed to the success of "Cumbersome," which was a Top 40 hit, as well as another popular single, "Water's Edge" and "My My".

After touring throughout 1996, the band returned to the studio for a follow up to American Standard. During this time, Mammoth and Atlantic split, forcing Seven Mary Three to sign with Atlantic Records, releasing RockCrown in 1997. The album saw the band deemphasize hard rock, focusing more on acoustic folk rock and a "traditional singer/songwriter" style.[2] Rock Crown did not match fan expectations, reaching #75 on the Billboard 200 and failing to match the success of its predecessor.

A second effort under Atlantic, Orange Ave. debuted the following year and charted considerably lower; although, its single "Over Your Shoulder" performed exceptionally. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Giti Khalsa explained the differences between the albums as a result of the band's maturity and position in life:

"We made American Standard when we were fresh out of college, and it represented that time. With Rock Crown, it was very much a response to going from playing bars and fraternities to getting a record deal to selling a million records in a year. And Orange Ave. is a response to the last few years and us being a little further away than at the beginning and being able to look back and go, 'Okay, I get it now.'"[2]

In 1999 guitarist Jason Pollock left the group and was replaced by Thomas Juliano. In the summer of 2001, Seven Mary Three returned to Mammoth Records and producer Tom Morris. The resulting efforts became The Economy of Sound. This fifth studio album includes the single "Wait", a catchy track that reached #7 on Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks and became among the most well known songs of Seven Mary Three. The track demonstrated Seven Mary Three's evolving style and also served as the lead single from the Crazy/Beautiful film soundtrack.

After The Economy of Sound, the group shifted once again to DRT Entertainment and, in 2004, released Dis/Location. Their sixth studio album, it failed entirely to chart as did its only single. However, four years later, Seven Mary Three proved their resiliency by presenting a seventh album, day&nightdriving, under Bellum Records.

In December 2008, the group re-released their long out-of-print debut album Churn. On February 9, 2010, Seven Mary Three released the live acoustic album Backbooth.

Discography

Albums

Title Release date Record label U.S. Billboard 200 peak position
Churn 1995 5 Spot Records -
American Standard September 5, 1995 Mammoth 24
RockCrown June 3, 1997 Atlantic 75
Orange Ave. July 14, 1998 121
The Economy of Sound June 5, 2001 Mammoth 178
Dis/Location May 11, 2004 DRT -
day&nightdriving February 19, 2008 Bellum -
Backbooth February 9, 2010 Settle Up -

[3]

Singles

Year Song US US Main US Mod CAN Alt Album
1996 "Cumbersome" 39 1 7 8 American Standard
"Water's Edge" - 7 37 -
"My, My" - 19 - -
1997 "RockCrown" - 17 - - RockCrown
"Make Up Your Mind" - - - -
"Lucky" - 35 19 24
1998 "Over Your Shoulder" - 7 16 - Orange Ave.
"Each Little Mystery" - - - -
2001 "Wait" - 7 21 - The Economy of Sound
"Sleepwalking" - 39 - -
2004 "Without You Feels" - - - - Dis/Location
2008 "Last Kiss" - - - - day&nightdriving

EPs

Compilation and soundtrack contributions

References

  1. ^ Jeffrey Rotter (April 1996). Proud Mary - Seven Mary Three play guitar-driven rock without apology. Spin. http://books.google.com/books?id=JheoECFjDqMC&pg=PA32&dq=seven+mary+three+spin+magazine#v=onepage&q&f=false. Retrieved 2010-08-20. 
  2. ^ a b c Seven Mary Three Biography MusicianGuide.com. Retrieved on 11-07-08
  3. ^ a b Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. p. 861. ISBN 1-84195-017-3. 

External links