Howler (band)

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Howler

Howler performing at Rough Trade East, London in 2012
Background information
Origin Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Genres Indie rock,[1][2] surf rock,[1] garage rock
Years active 2010-present
Labels Rough Trade
Associated acts Total Babe, Nice Purse, France Camp, The Vaccines
Website www.howlerband.com www.americagiveup.com
Members Jordan Gatesmith
Ian Nygaard
Max Petrek
Rory MacMurdo
Past members

Daniel Hupp

France Camp (Jay Simonson)

Brent Mayes

Howler is an indie rock[1][2] band from Minneapolis, Minnesota. The group consists of Jordan Gatesmith on lead guitar and vocals, Ian Nygaard on guitar, Max Petrek on bass, and Rory MacMurdo on drums.

Howler has received international acclaim,[3][4][5] most notably from NME, which named Howler their No. 3 Best New Band of 2011[6][7] and included Jordan Gatesmith in their 2011 Cool List.[8][9]

History

Formation and EP

Jordan Gatesmith

Nineteen year-old Jordan Gatesmith began Howler out of boredom in 2010 with former member Daniel Hupp. Before Howler, he had created other bands without much success. "I was starting bands what seemed like every other week," explained Gatesmith. "We had a metal band for a while. We had one called Gay Animals, another called A-Cups, but none of them really lasted that long".[10] Gatesmith met keyboardist Max Petrek while on sky-diving course during a visit to Saint Paul. Each noticed the other tapping their feet to a Yardbirds song playing in the reception. Having similar tastes in music, Gatesmith and Petrek started playing together. Ian Nygaard was already the guitarist of Nice Purse when Gatesmith included him in the band. Both Howler and Nice Purse were on the same record label, SO-TM. Drummer Brent Mayes knew Gatesmith from high school, although Mayes is four years older than Gatesmith, and is thus the oldest member of the band.[10]

Howler's first public performance was at the farmers market where they found financial success. In an interview with Minnesota Public Radio, Gatesmith explained, "People thought the lyrics were really funny and they thought that we were being cute and kind of snide all at the same time. They're like, 'Well that's interesting.' "[11]

Howler released its first EP This One's Different in the United States on February 14, 2011. In April 2011 freelance writer Jon Garret watched Howler perform at their release show. While he believed the band was not musically mature yet, Garret thought Howler had potential. He especially saw something special in Gatesmith: "And I guess what really drew me to them was Jordan just really had this phenomenal stage presence that I don't see very often, especially in younger bands."[11]

Garret sent Howler's EP to London-based record label Rough Trade Records without the band's knowledge. The label was impressed with the band and signed Howler to a record deal in summer 2011. The band then supported The Vaccines on their U.K tour. This One's Different was released in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2011 and received favorable reviews—NME in particular. Emily Mackay writes that while Howler is not different from other bands, it does "make commonplace components fly with a brilliant nonchalance".[12] NME named Howler their No. 3 Best New Band of 2011. In addition, Gatesmith No. 44 on NME's list of the 50 Coolest People of 2011.

Howler's debut album America Give Up was released in January 2012.[13] The band recently released the first track from their album "Back of Your Neck" for digital download off their website. Howler later released a music video for the song. Howler is currently on tour. The following countries are on their schedule United States, the UK, Europe, Brazil and Japan.[14]

In a recent interview with Paste Magazine, Gatesmith announced Howler's plans for a second album, which will be inspired by 1960s pop: “I’d say it’s more like the Yardbirds, even a bit psychedelic," said Gatesmith. "I’m really into The Rolling Stones’ more psychedelic records like Between the Buttons, Aftermath, Their Satanic Majesties Request. And also a lot of early ‘60s crooners kind of like Dion [DiMucci] and Del Shannon just for pop sensibilities." Gatesmith stated that he "hoped to release the second album by March 2013".[15]

Former member Daniel Hupp left Howler in May 2011 in order to attend songwriting school, and in June 2012 France Camp (Jay Simonson) left Howler to pursue his other band entitled France Camp.

Featured in "The Fly Magazine" in June 2013, information on album number 2, current working title "Wasteland Blues" was given. The album is an homage to Bob Dylan, and current tracks written for the album are "Fake Flowers" and "Indictments", very much a continuation of Jordan's obsession with "60s garage rock and psychedelic, but also for hardcore punk and a lot of other new wave stuff.".[16] Songs played on the NME Generation Next Tour throughout October 2013, "Ridin' Hood", "Louise" and "Ipecac" are speculated as potential tracks for the album.

The release date for album 2 is currently unknown, however has been pinpointed for Autumn/Fall 2013.

As of July 2013, drummer Brent Mayes has been replaced by Rory MacMurdo.

On January 21st, 2014, Howler announced via their Facebook page that their second album, titled "World of Joy", would be released on March 25th, 2014 via Rough Trade Records. They subsequently released the music video for the first single off of the new album, "Don't Wanna", via their Vevo channel.

Discography

Albums

EPs

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Jon Caramanica (January 19, 2012). "Some Smoother Edges, Soon to Come". New York Times. Retrieved January 22, 201. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Harriet Jennings (January 15, 2012). "Howler: ‘There’s Nothing Really Serious About This Band’". This Is Fake DIY. Retrieved January 22, 201. 
  3. Diver, Mike "Howler This One's Different", July 25, 2011. Retrieved November 27, 2011
  4. Garret, Jonathan "Howler might be Minneapolis' next big band", June 22, 2011. Retrieved November 27, 2011
  5. Lester, Paul "New band of the day: Howler", July 13, 2011. Retrieved November 27, 2011
  6. NME "Best New Bands of 2011", June 3, 2011. Retrieved November 26, 2011.
  7. Swensson, Andrea. "Howler named one of NME's 50 best new bands of 2011", "City Pages," June 8, 2011. Retrieved on November 26, 2011.
  8. NME Cool List 2011, November 21, 2011. Retrieved on November 26, 2011.
  9. Thomson, George "Keep Your Eyes Peeled" Retrieved on December 15, 2011.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Garret, Jonathan. "Howler might be Minneapolis's next big band". City Pages. Retrieved January 2, 2012. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Roberts, Chris. "Overseas frenzy for Howler; back home, not so much". Retrieved 11 March 2012. 
  12. Mackay, Emily. "Album Review: Howler - 'This One's Different'". NME. Retrieved January 2, 2012. 
  13. Jon Caramanica (January 19, 2012). "Some Smoother Edges, Soon to Come". New York Times. Retrieved January 22, 2012. 
  14. "Howler". Howler. Retrieved January 2, 2012. 
  15. Saunders, Hilary. "Howler Writing '60s Pop-Inspired Second Album Album Expected Early 2013". Paste Magazine. Retrieved 11 March 2012. 
  16. The Fly, June 2013 http://mamacolive.com/thefly/feature/in-the-studio/1019509/howler-in-the-studio/

External links

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