Eric Matthews biography
Date of birth : 1969-01-12
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Compton, California, U.S.
Nationality : American
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2011-12-13
Credited as : composer, record producer, Songwriter
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Although the tendncy is to call this music 'pop' ... most of the musical references are much more obscure." Chris Nickson of the Rocket declared It's Heavy in Here "the Northwest album of the year, a glowing, intimate record." Placing Matthews into any particular musical niche proves difficult; O'Connor wrote, "It's Heavy in Here doesn't sound like anyone else's record." Still, Matthews has been compared to Nick Drake, the Beatles, Burt Bacharach, the Bee Gees, and the Beach Boys. Matthews layers his pop music with stately orchestration and well-crafted melodies, which renders his style memorably atmospheric. His lyrics are sung in a smoky tone, and are generally dark and low-key.
Matthews was raised in Gresham, Oregon, where he was exposed to an array of music. He told CMJ's Dawn Sutter, "My parents ... were Miles Davis fans and they had a lot of orchestral music and a lot of Russian composers, so I was listening to a lot of trumpet sections ... and then Star Wars came out. John Williams was writing so specifically and predominantly for trumpet. I fell in love with it." He took up the trumpet at the age of ten and decided he wanted to make a career of it. However, he refused to play in his high school's marching band because he felt it was more an athletic exercise than a musical one.
He applied to a musical conservatory rather than a conventional college, and trained as a classical trumpet player at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, but the choice was short-lived. Matthews found work at clubs in San Francisco while studying and was able to support himself as a trumpet player, but his academic pursuits were largely unsuccessful. After two years at the conservatory, he moved to the Boston area and attempted to pick up where he left off by studying with Thomas Morrison, a principal in the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Once again, Matthews didn't feel the choice was right for him. Just as he was wrestling with his career options, his father and brother sent him a tape of original material they had recorded at home with new recording equipment. Matthews told Sutter that his reaction was, "This is so much more interesting than me trying to play Mozart like every other trumpet player has tried to do for the last 300 years. I basically got off the train on my way to my first lesson."
Matthews met Australian singer/songwriter Richard Davies of the Moles through friend and Sebadoh member Bob Fay. Davies and Matthews decided almost immediately to collaborate on material. They released the album Cardinal in 1994, and Matthews found himself pitched into the unfamiliar indie rock world. Cardinal had been primarily a showcase for Davies and his songs, and Matthews acted as producer, arranger, and co-singer. Neil Strauss, in an article for the New York Times, described it as, "an excellent album of soft, pristine pop."
Matthews struck out on his own in 1995 with his debut release It's Heavy in Here, which met with rave reviews. Interview magazine's Jennie Ryan wrote, "Matthews songs have a pristine, musicianly quality--as if sprung whole from a time capsule, circa early experimental Beatles." Musician magazine's Ken Micallef wrote, "Matthews' music recalls Andy Partridge and Prokofiev ('Angels for Crime'), Brian Wilson and Bach ('Fried Out Broken Girl')." Kurt B. Reighley, in a review for Paper magazine, wrote, "From th opening brass of 'Fanfare,' through 12 cuts of wide-eyed, Donovan-esque vocals, string arrangements and psychedelic titles ... Eric Matthews pulls off the impressive feat of refashioning almost every style of 60's pop into something fresh on his Sub-Pop debut."
Matthews followed It's Heavy in Here with his second release, The Lateness of the Hour. Like his previous release, this album featured lush orchestral arrangements and a "swirling" guitar sound. Along with Matthews' 451 Philharmonic orchestra, Jason Faulkner and Tony Lash were featured players on the album. Rolling Stone's David Greenburger wrote of The Lateness of the Hour, "Standard guitar-bass-drums trappings are but foot soldiers amid platoons of horns and harpsichords, all of which must answer to that higher power: the carefully crafted song.... this is pop music for the rain and fire rather than the beach."
Matthews is an unlikely musician for the Sub-Pop label, as he has little reverence for rock, grunge, punk, or metal music--yet he is signed to a label particularly equated with alternative rock: Mudhoney, Nirvana, and Soundgarden are part of the Sub-Pop roster. Matthews told James Hunter of Details, "We did have this big movement of orchestral pop music, but now we've gotten away from that, and I'm stuck in this indie-rock category, talking to people who enjoy really bad rock records." Some of Matthews' favorite artists include the Moody Blues, Herb Albert & the Tijuana Brass, Scott Walker, Talk Talk, ABC, Burt Bacharach, and Art of Noise, and he doesn't hesitate to admit he knows little about rock music. He told Sutter, "It {rock music} all simply sounds loud ... I couldn't be any less in love with the aesthetic of guitars and guitar records." Ironically, Matthews is alternative on an alternative label, offering something refreshingly original and paving the way for more anti-alternative, orchestrated pop music. Chris Nickson of Alternative Press wrote of Matthews' material, "You won't be tapping your toes, but you will be nodding your head, and sometimes you'll even want to cry."
In 2005, Matthews released his third solo record, entitled Six Kinds of Passion Looking For An Exit, and in 2006 another album entitled Foundation Sounds. In the summer of 2006, Matthews announced that he and a guitarist from Cleveland named Christopher Seink had formed a new instrumental band called Seinking Ships. In 2008, Eric Matthews and Empyrean Records released The Imagination Stage to a flurry of glowing reviews heralding Eric's return to the fully orchestrated sound of his Sub Pop releases. In March 2009, Eric ended his professional relationship with Empyrean Records.
Albums:
-It's Heavy in Here (1995) Sub Pop
-The Lateness of the Hour (1997) Sub Pop
-Six Kinds of Passion Looking For An Exit (2005) Empyrean
-Foundation Sounds (2006) Empyrean
-The Imagination Stage (2008) Empyrean
-Too Much World ...release pending