Dolorean

Dolorean

Dolorean playing Cafe Nine in New Haven, CT,
April 19, 2007
Background information
Origin Portland, Oregon, USA
Genres Alternative rock
Indie rock
Years active 2003present
Labels Yep Roc, Partisan Records
Website
Members Al James
Jay Clarke[1]
Ben Nugent
James Adair
Jon Neufeld[2]

Dolorean was a American band based in Portland, Oregon. Their current line-up is: Al James, guitar/vocals; Jay Clarke, organ/piano; Ben Nugent, drums/percussion/vocals; James Adair, bass; and Jon Neufeld, guitar.

Hiatus

After the release of their 2007 album, You Can't Win, Dolorean went on a hiatus until 2010. Al James told TheWaster.com in an interview:

We had released about three records in about five years. There was a lot of touring, a lot of time in the studio and I think we all just needed a little bit of break ... We just needed a little break to re-calibrate and get some good energy going again.”[3]

The group has worked with Portland area musicians such as Jay Clarke who records with Knitting Factory Records under the moniker Ash Black Bufflo,[4] and Emil Amos who records on Partisan Records under the moniker Holy Sons.[5]

Discography

Albums

Tour only

EPs

External links

References

  1. AMY MCCULLOUGH (March 27, 2007). "Foureveryoung, "Birthdays Are What They Used To Be," Young Family Sitcom (self-released)". Willamette Week. Retrieved 2011-05-13. ... Dolorean keyboardist and Foureveryoung engineer Jay Clarke ...
  2. Chris Martins (March 10, 2011). "Sober People Scare the Shit Out of Me". LA Weekly. Retrieved 2011-04-28.
  3. Johnson, Alexandra (January 17, 2011). "Channeling the Musical-Chi: From Portland roots to the edge of the white noise with Dolorean". TheWaster.com.
  4. KELLY CLARKE (March 10, 2010). "Off The Wall: A pair of local choreographers asks the Ford Building to dance". Willamette Week. Retrieved 2011-05-13. ... recently renovated building ... gains another identity: dance partner. ... The constant motion and a thrumming minimalist soundscape by Jay Clarke create an atmosphere ... of change and excitement.
  5. Mark Oliver Everett (2010). "Holy Sons: Survivalist Tales (Partisan Records)". Spike Magazine. Retrieved 2011-04-28. Actually the songwriting count for this project is at the 4-digit mark...