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Walt Mink

Walt Mink were an American alternative rock power trio formed in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1989 by guitarist/singer/songwriter John Kimbrough, drummer Joey Waronker and bassist Candice Belanoff. The band released four studio albums over the course of their eight-year career.[1]

Walt Mink
OriginSt. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.
GenresAlternative rock, math rock, psychedelic rock
Years active1989–1997
LabelsCaroline Records, Atlantic Records, Deep Elm Records
Past membersJohn Kimbrough
Candice Belanoff
Zach Danziger
Orestes Morfin
Joey Waronker

History

Early days, 1990-91

John Kimbrough (son of actor Charles Kimbrough) and Joey Waronker (son of music executive Lenny Waronker) had briefly attended high school together in Massachusetts and reconvened at Macalester College, a small, liberal arts school in St. Paul, Minnesota. Looking for a bass player to fill out a trio, they were introduced to Candice Belanoff, who had only been playing for a few months, and Walt Mink was formed in February 1989, named after a beloved psychology professor.

The band started out by playing at college house parties on the weekends, and in December 1989, a fellow student offered to record them for a 7" single he was releasing on his own independent label, Skene! Records. With that, the band made their first trip into the studio, recording versions of the songs "Fragile" and "Croton-Harmon (local)," both of which would later appear in newer versions on the albums Miss Happiness and Bareback Ride.

In March 1990, the trio began recording what was to become Listen Little Man!, an album-length cassette demo, recorded on a four-track machine in the basement of the house John and Joey were living in at the time. Distributed to friends and sold on consignment in local record stores, the tape gained modest notoriety and furthered the name of the band in the Twin Cities.

By the end of the spring the members of Walt Mink pledged to pursue the goal of getting more club gigs in Minneapolis after going their separate ways over the summer. When they returned to the Twin Cities in September, they found a large house in the uptown section of Minneapolis that had been owned at one time by a music production company and had been renovated in order to accommodate loud rock bands, complete with a large, soundproofed rehearsal room. It was here that they began recording their second full-length demo cassette, The Poll Riders Win Again!!!, in February 1991.

After opening for Babes in Toyland in December 1990, Babes drummer Lori Barbero had become a fan, and tipped off a friend who worked at the New Music Seminar in New York City. This led to a spot at the seminar for the band, and in June 1991 they traveled to New York for their first out-of-state show. It was here they were introduced to Matt Quigley, a former member of the band Skunk (and later of Vaganza, with whom both Waronker and Kimbrough played at different times), who became a fan and, armed with copies of the band's demos, quickly alerted friends to their existence. One of those friends was Janet Billig, the label manager of the New York independent record label Caroline Records, who liked the tapes and contacted the band about playing another New York show.

Walt Mink continued to play in Minneapolis throughout the summer of 1991, garnering much local press and building a respectable fan base. In October, they returned to New York to play at the CMJ music conference, and it was here that Billig finally saw them live. After the show, she offered to sign them to Caroline Records.

Caroline Records, 1992-93

The band began recording their first album at Smart Studios in Madison, Wisconsin in March 1992. Released in June 1992, Miss Happiness provided the impetus for a hefty amount of touring, both in the United States and the United Kingdom, in support of The Lemonheads, Firehose, Pavement, Mudhoney and others. It was also in the spring of this year that the band made their first video. Directed by Kevin Kerslake, the video for "Chowdertown" aired on MTV's 120 Minutes on July 9, 1992.

After touring their way out to L.A., recording of the second record began there in February 1993. Bareback Ride was released in June of that year and paved the way for continued touring, both as headliners and as support for bands such as Hole, Urge Overkill, Paul Westerberg and Cracker, among others. It was also in the spring of '93 that the band made their second video, for the song "Fragile." Directed by Miguel Arteta, the video was rejected by MTV but received airplay on a variety of other video programs.

While touring to support the new record, the band began to address the question of where to go after their two-record contract with Caroline Records was fulfilled. Billig had since left the label to manage bands at Gold Mountain Records, a company whose clients included Nirvana and Beastie Boys, and as Walt Mink's new manager, she began the process of shopping them to major labels. By mid-summer of 1993, the band had decided that Columbia Records seemed to be the most enthusiastic, and so while on tour in Memphis, Tennessee, the three members signed a six-record contract with under a statue of the great blues songwriter W.C. Handy.

Touring continued throughout that summer and into the fall, pausing only briefly to shoot the band's third video, for the song "Shine". Directed by Sofia Coppola, and shot by Spike Jonze, the video was filmed at the Coppola vineyard in Rutherford, California, in and around the family swimming pool.

Loss and label troubles, 1993-96

In October 1993, Waronker moved back to his hometown of Los Angeles. Soon John and Candice relocated to their hometown as well, arriving in New York City in February 1994. While John worked on writing songs, Joey began playing in L.A. with the as-yet-unknown singer Beck. By the late spring of that year, with the success of the album Mellow Gold keeping him busy as Beck's drummer, Joey decided to leave Walt Mink.

The summer of 1994 was devoted to finding a new drummer for the band. John and Candice finally found one in the person of Orestes Morfin, formerly of the band Bitch Magnet. They quickly began rehearsing in preparation for a small fall tour, to be followed by the recording of their Columbia debut.

On the last night of that tour the band arrived home to find that the plug had been pulled on their record, and they promptly asked to be released from their contract. The label obliged, and the band began working to find another record deal. Billig, who had left their management company that fall to become an executive at Atlantic Records, expressed interest, and in February of '95 the band signed a one-record deal with Atlantic.

Recording of what was now to be their Atlantic debut began in April of that year at Dreamland Studios in Woodstock, New York, with John Agnello producing. The process continued through that spring and into the summer, and after mixing once in Chicago it was determined that the record needed to be mixed again, which it later was.

El Producto was released in January 1996, and from the beginning there were ominous signs. On the first day of their first tour supporting the record, the band discovered that their A&R person had just been fired. In spite of an uplifting piece about the band in Billboard that day, in which it cheerfully asserted that after so many disappointments it seemed that Walt Mink was finally going to get a chance to be heard, the mood of the moment was one of deep uncertainty.

The spring of '96 was to be the last significant period of touring for Walt Mink. February through May were spent both headlining and opening for bands like Tripping Daisy and Tracy Bonham. In June, Atlantic dropped the band, part of a great "purge" which saw the label drop nearly half its artist roster.

The band's next album was mixed at Smart Studios in November 1996. About this time, Orestes decided to leave the band to pursue a degree in hydrology at the University of Arizona.

Deep Elm and the beginning of the end, 1997-present

By early 1997, several independent labels had expressed interest in the record, but it was finally Deep Elm who John and Candice decided was the right fit. The record, Colossus, was released in June of that year, but the two remaining members had given up on the idea of finding a replacement drummer for touring, planning instead to occasionally perform as an acoustic duo. The band's fourth and last video, for the song "Brave Beyond the Call" was filmed during this period. Directed by Adam Rothlein, the video was shown briefly on MTV.

At this point, the group met Will Tanous, a friend who had wanted Colossus on his label, and who also worked for the HBO live music show "Reverb." Drummer Zach Danziger first appeared with Walt Mink on the June 20, 1997, broadcast of "Reverb". Armed with a new drummer, the reinvigorated members of Walt Mink began to contemplate a tour supporting Colossus.

 
Walt Mink's star on the outside mural of the Minneapolis nightclub First Avenue

Meanwhile, the band's business infrastructure was eroding badly; within a matter of weeks in mid-1997, the group, who had been dropped by their management the previous year, was dropped by their booking agent and accountant, and with no money coming in there was virtually no way to pay for a tour. John Szuch, the label head of Deep Elm, got them a new booking agent and gave them a small amount of tour support, but his label's modest financial resources were no match for the demands of a band on an extensive tour.

The band undertook a final two-week tour through the upper Midwest and parts of New England, but after playing to virtually empty venues, it was decided that it was time to end the band. The band played a final concert at the Mercury Lounge in New York on November 1, 1997, which was recorded and later released as Goodnite.

Since 1997 the band have occasionally reunited to play one-off shows. John Kimbrough went on to play with New York power-pop band Valley Lodge, while pursuing a career as a composer for film and television. He moved into music production with Tenacious D's third album, Rize of the Fenix.

The band has been honored with a star on the outside mural of the Minneapolis nightclub First Avenue,[2] recognizing performers that have played sold-out shows or have otherwise demonstrated a major contribution to the culture at the iconic venue.[3] Receiving a star "might be the most prestigious public honor an artist can receive in Minneapolis," according to journalist Steve Marsh.[4]

Discography

Other appearances

References

  1. ^ https://www.allmusic.com/artist/p22920/biography Allmusic
  2. ^ "The Stars". First Avenue & 7th Street Entry. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  3. ^ Bream, Jon (2019-05-03). "10 things you'll learn about First Avenue in new Minnesota History Center show". Star Tribune. Minneapolis. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  4. ^ Marsh, Steve (2019-05-13). "First Avenue's Star Wall". Mpls.St.Paul Magazine. Retrieved 2020-05-10.

External links

  • @ The Internet Archive
  • Trouser Press entry
  • Official website supporting a documentary film on Walt Mink
  • John Kimbrough official site

walt, mink, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, largely, entirely, single, source, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, h. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Walt Mink news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Walt Mink were an American alternative rock power trio formed in St Paul Minnesota in 1989 by guitarist singer songwriter John Kimbrough drummer Joey Waronker and bassist Candice Belanoff The band released four studio albums over the course of their eight year career 1 Walt MinkOriginSt Paul Minnesota U S GenresAlternative rock math rock psychedelic rockYears active1989 1997LabelsCaroline Records Atlantic Records Deep Elm RecordsPast membersJohn KimbroughCandice BelanoffZach DanzigerOrestes MorfinJoey Waronker Contents 1 History 1 1 Early days 1990 91 1 2 Caroline Records 1992 93 1 3 Loss and label troubles 1993 96 1 4 Deep Elm and the beginning of the end 1997 present 2 Discography 3 Other appearances 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditEarly days 1990 91 Edit John Kimbrough son of actor Charles Kimbrough and Joey Waronker son of music executive Lenny Waronker had briefly attended high school together in Massachusetts and reconvened at Macalester College a small liberal arts school in St Paul Minnesota Looking for a bass player to fill out a trio they were introduced to Candice Belanoff who had only been playing for a few months and Walt Mink was formed in February 1989 named after a beloved psychology professor The band started out by playing at college house parties on the weekends and in December 1989 a fellow student offered to record them for a 7 single he was releasing on his own independent label Skene Records With that the band made their first trip into the studio recording versions of the songs Fragile and Croton Harmon local both of which would later appear in newer versions on the albums Miss Happiness and Bareback Ride In March 1990 the trio began recording what was to become Listen Little Man an album length cassette demo recorded on a four track machine in the basement of the house John and Joey were living in at the time Distributed to friends and sold on consignment in local record stores the tape gained modest notoriety and furthered the name of the band in the Twin Cities By the end of the spring the members of Walt Mink pledged to pursue the goal of getting more club gigs in Minneapolis after going their separate ways over the summer When they returned to the Twin Cities in September they found a large house in the uptown section of Minneapolis that had been owned at one time by a music production company and had been renovated in order to accommodate loud rock bands complete with a large soundproofed rehearsal room It was here that they began recording their second full length demo cassette The Poll Riders Win Again in February 1991 After opening for Babes in Toyland in December 1990 Babes drummer Lori Barbero had become a fan and tipped off a friend who worked at the New Music Seminar in New York City This led to a spot at the seminar for the band and in June 1991 they traveled to New York for their first out of state show It was here they were introduced to Matt Quigley a former member of the band Skunk and later of Vaganza with whom both Waronker and Kimbrough played at different times who became a fan and armed with copies of the band s demos quickly alerted friends to their existence One of those friends was Janet Billig the label manager of the New York independent record label Caroline Records who liked the tapes and contacted the band about playing another New York show Walt Mink continued to play in Minneapolis throughout the summer of 1991 garnering much local press and building a respectable fan base In October they returned to New York to play at the CMJ music conference and it was here that Billig finally saw them live After the show she offered to sign them to Caroline Records Caroline Records 1992 93 Edit The band began recording their first album at Smart Studios in Madison Wisconsin in March 1992 Released in June 1992 Miss Happiness provided the impetus for a hefty amount of touring both in the United States and the United Kingdom in support of The Lemonheads Firehose Pavement Mudhoney and others It was also in the spring of this year that the band made their first video Directed by Kevin Kerslake the video for Chowdertown aired on MTV s 120 Minutes on July 9 1992 After touring their way out to L A recording of the second record began there in February 1993 Bareback Ride was released in June of that year and paved the way for continued touring both as headliners and as support for bands such as Hole Urge Overkill Paul Westerberg and Cracker among others It was also in the spring of 93 that the band made their second video for the song Fragile Directed by Miguel Arteta the video was rejected by MTV but received airplay on a variety of other video programs While touring to support the new record the band began to address the question of where to go after their two record contract with Caroline Records was fulfilled Billig had since left the label to manage bands at Gold Mountain Records a company whose clients included Nirvana and Beastie Boys and as Walt Mink s new manager she began the process of shopping them to major labels By mid summer of 1993 the band had decided that Columbia Records seemed to be the most enthusiastic and so while on tour in Memphis Tennessee the three members signed a six record contract with under a statue of the great blues songwriter W C Handy Touring continued throughout that summer and into the fall pausing only briefly to shoot the band s third video for the song Shine Directed by Sofia Coppola and shot by Spike Jonze the video was filmed at the Coppola vineyard in Rutherford California in and around the family swimming pool Loss and label troubles 1993 96 Edit In October 1993 Waronker moved back to his hometown of Los Angeles Soon John and Candice relocated to their hometown as well arriving in New York City in February 1994 While John worked on writing songs Joey began playing in L A with the as yet unknown singer Beck By the late spring of that year with the success of the album Mellow Gold keeping him busy as Beck s drummer Joey decided to leave Walt Mink The summer of 1994 was devoted to finding a new drummer for the band John and Candice finally found one in the person of Orestes Morfin formerly of the band Bitch Magnet They quickly began rehearsing in preparation for a small fall tour to be followed by the recording of their Columbia debut On the last night of that tour the band arrived home to find that the plug had been pulled on their record and they promptly asked to be released from their contract The label obliged and the band began working to find another record deal Billig who had left their management company that fall to become an executive at Atlantic Records expressed interest and in February of 95 the band signed a one record deal with Atlantic Recording of what was now to be their Atlantic debut began in April of that year at Dreamland Studios in Woodstock New York with John Agnello producing The process continued through that spring and into the summer and after mixing once in Chicago it was determined that the record needed to be mixed again which it later was El Producto was released in January 1996 and from the beginning there were ominous signs On the first day of their first tour supporting the record the band discovered that their A amp R person had just been fired In spite of an uplifting piece about the band in Billboard that day in which it cheerfully asserted that after so many disappointments it seemed that Walt Mink was finally going to get a chance to be heard the mood of the moment was one of deep uncertainty The spring of 96 was to be the last significant period of touring for Walt Mink February through May were spent both headlining and opening for bands like Tripping Daisy and Tracy Bonham In June Atlantic dropped the band part of a great purge which saw the label drop nearly half its artist roster The band s next album was mixed at Smart Studios in November 1996 About this time Orestes decided to leave the band to pursue a degree in hydrology at the University of Arizona Deep Elm and the beginning of the end 1997 present Edit By early 1997 several independent labels had expressed interest in the record but it was finally Deep Elm who John and Candice decided was the right fit The record Colossus was released in June of that year but the two remaining members had given up on the idea of finding a replacement drummer for touring planning instead to occasionally perform as an acoustic duo The band s fourth and last video for the song Brave Beyond the Call was filmed during this period Directed by Adam Rothlein the video was shown briefly on MTV At this point the group met Will Tanous a friend who had wanted Colossus on his label and who also worked for the HBO live music show Reverb Drummer Zach Danziger first appeared with Walt Mink on the June 20 1997 broadcast of Reverb Armed with a new drummer the reinvigorated members of Walt Mink began to contemplate a tour supporting Colossus Walt Mink s star on the outside mural of the Minneapolis nightclub First AvenueMeanwhile the band s business infrastructure was eroding badly within a matter of weeks in mid 1997 the group who had been dropped by their management the previous year was dropped by their booking agent and accountant and with no money coming in there was virtually no way to pay for a tour John Szuch the label head of Deep Elm got them a new booking agent and gave them a small amount of tour support but his label s modest financial resources were no match for the demands of a band on an extensive tour The band undertook a final two week tour through the upper Midwest and parts of New England but after playing to virtually empty venues it was decided that it was time to end the band The band played a final concert at the Mercury Lounge in New York on November 1 1997 which was recorded and later released as Goodnite Since 1997 the band have occasionally reunited to play one off shows John Kimbrough went on to play with New York power pop band Valley Lodge while pursuing a career as a composer for film and television He moved into music production with Tenacious D s third album Rize of the Fenix The band has been honored with a star on the outside mural of the Minneapolis nightclub First Avenue 2 recognizing performers that have played sold out shows or have otherwise demonstrated a major contribution to the culture at the iconic venue 3 Receiving a star might be the most prestigious public honor an artist can receive in Minneapolis according to journalist Steve Marsh 4 Discography EditListen Little Man self released demo 1990 The Poll Riders Win Again self released demo 1991 Miss Happiness Caroline Records 1992 Bareback Ride Caroline Records 1993 El Producto Atlantic Records 1996 Colossus Deep Elm Records 1997 Goodnite Deep Elm Records 1998 Other appearances EditDu Huskers The Twin Cities Replay Zen Arcade Synapse Recordings 1993 Unreleased No 2 Deep Elm Records 2003 References Edit https www allmusic com artist p22920 biography Allmusic The Stars First Avenue amp 7th Street Entry Retrieved 2020 05 10 Bream Jon 2019 05 03 10 things you ll learn about First Avenue in new Minnesota History Center show Star Tribune Minneapolis Retrieved 2020 05 10 Marsh Steve 2019 05 13 First Avenue s Star Wall Mpls St Paul Magazine Retrieved 2020 05 10 External links EditWalt Mink official site The Internet Archive Trouser Press entry Official website supporting a documentary film on Walt Mink John Kimbrough official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walt Mink amp oldid 1113688283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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