Jealous Haters Since 1998!
Home | News | Reviews | Day In Rock | Photos | RockNewsWire | antiTainment Wire | Feeds

Garbage Artist Feature


Garbage menu
Rate Garbage
Garbage Bio
Discuss Garbage on the Fan Speak Boards
Garbage MP3's, Audio, Videos Directory
Garbage Lyrics and Tabs Directory
Garbage Fan Reviews
Garbage Discography - CD Store with song  samples - T-shirts
Garbage Tour Dates
Search for Garbage news
Garbage Links
 
Groovy Baby
Pretty kewl
a-ok
enough already
god awful
Vanilla Ice

 
Biography
Garbage is pop music kissed by chaos where hooks, grooves and noise collide. "There are no rules," says Butch Vig, "but if the choice is to do less or to do more, usually the answer is more." Adds Duke Erikson, "We let it go as far as we can. Then, out of the racket, we pick what we like." Compatriot Steve Marker calls it "natural selection applied to chaos -- the strong overpowers the weak. But when it sounds too clean, we mess it up."

Garbage's voice is Shirley Manson of Edinburgh, Scotland, who Vig says "sometimes sounds scary, sometimes dreamy, sometimes sexy, sometimes psychotic. What more could you ask for?" Answers Shirley, "It makes me feel good when someone says I sing my heart out. That's what music's about -- freedom."

Garbage, and its self-titled debut album on Almo Sounds/Geffen records, grew out of collaborations begun more than a decade ago -- most recently involving remixes for the likes of U2, Depeche Mode, House of Pain and Nine Inch Nails. After hours of noise-making in Marker's basement and the uncovering of weird sounds that might be music, Garbage was the organic by-product. "We actually didn't set out to have a band," says Marker. "We were locked in a room with cheap beer and potato chips and this is what it turned into." "A record for pop geeks," suggests Vig, "who dance by themselves with the lights out."

Though Vig has earned prominence by producing albums by Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins and Sonic Youth, amongst others, Garbage is a decidedly group effort. Erikson, Marker and Vig have played in bands together for years, and the latter two are partners in Smart Studios, which was founded in 1984. Back then, living on peanut butter while recording punk/hardcore groups for $100 per single, when a band would cancel a session, they'd work on their own odd projects. For one band, recalls Vig, "The rules were that every song had to be under a minute long, have one radical tempo change, and be recorded in under an hour."

Garbage was a similar project begun in 1993, yet only when Manson was imported the following year did it develop beyond its seminal idea: songs of sonic extravagance that wouldn't seem possible for a four-piece to play, but if all you had was an acoustic guitar, they'd sound like pop songs with memorable melodies and dark lyrics that maybe you shouldn't sing too loudly.

They first saw Manson in the "Suffocate Me" video from her band Angelfish on MTV's "120 Minutes" and tracked her down. "I didn't know who they were," she says. "I told my record company, 'This guy Butch Vig called' and they just about dropped the phone." But I wasn't interested in sessions. I work with people I love, where there's a chemistry and a common outlook. Music is an extension of yourself and I can't just fit in with anybody." So when Angelfish was on tour in the U.S., Manson flew in for some introductory recording. "She was nervous and we were nervous," says Marker, "and it was a disaster." But, continues Vig, "she had the balls to come back. The last thing we wanted was somebody we could manipulate. To some of the lyrics she'd go, 'I can't sing this bloody crap!

"She challenged our thinking," continues Marker. "If it was up to us, we'd write about drinking beer and driving around in Camaros." Adds Duke, "When Shirley arrived, Garbage became a band rather than just an idea." "What did I add? A bad temper?" Manson says with a laugh. "There were just certain things I wouldn't sing about, and on other songs I wanted to change the perspective. Being the only woman in the band, it was necessary to do this to stay true to myself. Then again, I've been accused by male friends of thinking like a man." She smiles, "Maybe it comes from being small-chested."

When Manson would suggest an idea, she'd be roundly denounced -- until after she tried it and everyone realized the song should feature it as the main hook. "Shirley gave more edge to some songs than we thought they had," says Vig, "or she sang them so understated that she made them more subversive and intense."

Those early lyrics were penned during group agony sessions at a fishing cabin in the north woods of Wisconsin. Back at the studio, Manson would sing them over and over until the band invariably decided she'd done it best the first time. Further effort was spent getting the guitar and keyboard sounds perfect by utilizing the latest in expensive digital gear -- and then it was all scrapped in favor of outdated analog equipment, a 1965 Epiphone guitar and a monophonic synthesizer of unknown age, prone to emitting random squeals at inopportune moments. In fact, an unplanned sample of a digital tape deck in its death throes inspired the melody of one song and another opens with the sound of Vig accidentally wiring the mixing desk into the air conditioning system. "But," says Erikson, "whatever weird sounds there are have to serve the song. Whatever takes away from it is cut. The song is what's important." Vig concurs, "Nothing's sacred. The day after pouring your guts into recording, you have to be able to say 'erase it.' In the end, they're just magnetic impulses."

Manson, sharp-tongued but sedate Erikson, quiet and studious Marker, and unassuming Vig seem unlikely authors of Garbage's tales of extreme emotions such as obsession, vengeance, hate and infatuation. Says Manson, "I find the most normal people full of excess and rebellion. Weirdness lurks in the most unlikely corners. Our common ground was a certain melancholy and an interest in the perverse. It's easy to be morose and hard to be happy. But by the end of recording, I felt we might do something totally la-dee-da. We never did. Maybe the next album will be more jolly." Her melancholy, she suggests comes from growing up "desperately unhappy, despite a perfect upbringing. I was convinced I was the ugliest creature that ever lived, that everybody hated me and the only way to deal with it was to be as unpleasant as possible." Her father was a professor of animal genetics and poultry breeding, her mother a former big band singer. She joined her first rock band at 16 and the next year connected with Goodbye Mr. MacKenzie as backing vocalist and keyboard player. A handful of albums and tours of the continent later, she led Angelfish, whose self-titled debut album appeared in 1994.

The others have quite a different background. Vig was raised in the small dairy farm community of Viroqua, Wisconsin, his mother a music teacher, his dad the town doctor. Though he studied piano until the sixth grade and then the drums, when he enrolled at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, he was presumably headed to medical school. But two years later he dropped out and joined the band Spooner as its drummer.

Erikson was that band's guitarist and singer. He too had grown up in a tiny rural locale, but in Nebraska. There he learned piano and bought records at the local appliance store, and studied art in college. He moved to Madison because of its cool art scene, and ended up driving trucks and working as a carpenter while playing in bands at night.

Meanwhile, Marker was a film student at UW. Raised in a dozen different places but spending most of high school in Mamaroneck, north of New York City, he'd played his uncle's drum kit since he was six and picked up the guitar at 12. He met Spooner while hanging out at clubs and, boasting a four-track reel-to-reel he'd bought after working summers mowing lawns, started recording their songs.

By this time, Vig had returned to college, but like Marker, as a film student shooting 16mm films he calls "abstract, arty, very unwatchable." It was his interest in their soundtracks that led to dabbling with synthesizers in the electronic music studio and catching the production bug. With Marker, he took out a loan to buy an eight-track and rent warehouse space, sticking egg cartons on the walls for better acoustics. For local punk bands, he says "we engineered, produced, tuned drums, made the coffee, and propped up the guitarist if he passed out. Forced to work with severe limitations and not knowing the correct way, we had to figure it out as we went along."

After Spooner's three albums of garage rock, the band mutated into Firetown. Recording its first of two albums on Smart's meager eight-track, the studio's reputation accelerated, breaking through on the indie scene with Killdozer and other bands for labels such as Sub Pop, Touch and Go, Slash and Twin Tone. But it's Nirvana's Nevermind, whose demos were done at Smart, for which Vig's most remembered. He never expected it to become a milestone and prefers not to dwell on its enormous success. "It affected so many people and changed the music business but I don't want to get caught up in that. To try to put a perspective on it is scary."

Today, Vig and Garbage remain geographically distant from the music industry mainstream. "We love Madison," he says. "It's good to have a place to go where there's no bullshit. People here will call you on it if you act pretentious."

One such musician, upon heaving the innumerable loops and samples during playback, inadvertently inspired the band's name when he said, "This sounds like garbage!" Replied Vig, "Exactly, and we're going to turn this garbage into a song."

From out of chaos, there is music.

Garbage: see also

Main Features
Bio
Fan Board
Discography with CD Store, and sound samples
Garbage Links
Garbage Lyrics and Tabs
Multimedia Directory -Audio, Videos and MP3's
Write a review of Garbage
Tour Dates
Search for Garbage news
Other Sites

Rocksearch

UBL Artist Card

Launch.com artists pages

Garbage at Rolling Stone




.
.
News Reports
.
Day in Rock:
Marilyn Manson Snuff Film Masquerading As A Video- MTV Walls Off Free U2 Berlin Show- Slayer, Megadeth, Testament and High On Fire Tour? and more

Yesterday's Report: 11/05: Aerosmith To Replace Steven Tyler?- Fans Ask AC/DC To Change Their Tunes- Jack White Turned Down Slash- John Mayer Michael Franti Tour and more

 Subscribe To Day in Rock

Quicks: Bon Jovi Fans Revolt- Pixies Do Dolittle- Switchfoot Instore- Who Should Replace Steven Tyler?- Radiohead Suggest Throttling Downloaders- Folk Go Punk and more

Day in Pop 11/06: Chris Brown Pushed Up- Rihanna, Eminem, Lady Gaga and Carrie Underwood AMAs- Gossip Girl 3SOME Protest- Adam Lambert TV- Janet Jackson and more


Your Ad Here for Just $10
.
 
Reviews
.

Creedence Clearwater Revival - The Singles Collection

Kelly Clarkson Live October 2009

Pithy Reviews: Karen O and the Kids (Where the Wild Things Are Soundtrack), Lita Ford, Everclear, Beatallica, Livan, State Radio, and the Riverwinds

Death Row Rarities: Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg

Mick Priestly (Green River Project) Interview Part II

Bon Jovi - The Circle

N.E.D. - No Evidence of Disease

Nirvana - Live at Reading DVD/CD

Rock Reads: Bon Jovi - When We Were Beautiful

Will Hoge: Highway Wings and Harrowing Hearts

MorleyView: The Agonist

Lucero Live

Ozric Tentacles - The Yum Yum Tree

First Look: Candella

Jack Bruce & Robin Trower - Seven Moons Live

U2 Live in Arizona Rocktober 2009

MorleyView: Lita Ford & Jim Gillette

Michael McDermott - Hey La Hey

Blood Ties

Kill Hannah - Wake Up The Sleepers

Road Trip: Ann Arbor's Main Street Still Rockin'


.
.
.

Search for Tickets

Or Browse For Tickets

.
.
Today's News
.

Marilyn Manson Snuff Film Fantasy Masquerading As A Video

MTV Walls Off Free U2 Berlin Show

Slayer, Megadeth, Testament and High On Fire Tour?

Bon Jovi Fans Revolt- Pixies Do Dolittle- Switchfoot Instore- Who Should Replace Steven Tyler?- Radiohead Suggest Throttling Downloaders- Folk Go Punk and more

Original Metallica Member Selling Historic Instrument

Nonpoint Unplugged

Santana, Marilyn Manson, Billy Idol, and Earth, Wind, & Fire Go Hi-Def

Roger Daltrey Loses It In Cleveland

An Evening with David Johansen

Bachman and Turner Fighting For Bachman-Turner Overdrive Name

Third Eye Blind, Peter Bjorn & John, The Walkmen and More Rock Against Malaria

The Grascals & 3 Doors Down Frontman added To Charlie Daniels Christmas 4 Kids Concert

Benevolent Tomorrow Stream Entire New Album Online

Second Lightspeed Champion Release Set

We All Have Hooks For Hands Hitting The Road

The Mercury Program Returns

Seth Glier Debuts

Road Fink

Kenny Gamble Releasing I Am An American: The Making of An Anthem

Singled Out: Paul McCartney

Chris Brown Pushed Up- Rihanna, Eminem, Lady Gaga and Carrie Underwood AMAs- Gossip Girl 3SOME Protest- Adam Lambert TV- Janet Jackson Prime Time and more

Beyonce Big Winner at MTV Europe Awards, US Broadcasts Announced

Jay-Z Announces 2010 Tour

George Carlin's Last Words

XTC: The Complete And Utter Dukes

Ocote Soul Sounds Remixed and Expanded

Kenny Rogers Christmas & Hits Tour

DJ Hell teams up with Bryan Ferry

Marrow Go Soph

Eban Schletter To Deliver A Spaced Out Christmas Album

More News

Subscribe to Day in Rock Report by Email

.
 
Day in Rockers
. Sites that feature the Day in Rock

94WYSP PhillyKFLY Real Rock97.9 WCPR Biloxi107thebone.fmX92.5 FM Maui100.1 The EdgeRock 105.994.7 The End96.3 The Blaze104.9 The WolfKROQWTOS Pure Rock!trakkrz.com

.
 
anti Worthy Links
.
The Screen DoorLloyd Zeffler blogGary GonzoLonn FriendTalking MetalNightwatcher's House of RockCJ Chilvers: passionate music journalist and photographerDeja Voodoothecopycat.bizKeavin.comantiMusic Myspace

.
 
Merch
.

Posters and Rock T-Shirts!

Hot New Releases of the Week



 

Tell a Friend about this page - Contact Us - Privacy - antiMusic Email - Job Postings - Advertising

Copyright© 1998 - 2009 Iconoclast Entertainment Group All rights reserved. antiMusic works on a free link policy for reprinting of our original articles, click here for details. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use.