Gaunt (band)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Gaunt
Origin
Warner Bros.
Past membersJerry Wick
Eric Barth
Jeff Regensburger
Jim Weber
Jovan Karcic
Bret Lewis
Brett Falcon
Nick Youngblood
Sam Brown

Gaunt was a Punk band formed in Columbus, Ohio, in 1991.[1] The band released five albums before splitting in 1998.

History

The original lineup formed from remnants of short-lived "punkadelic" band Black Juju, and consisted of guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Jerry Wick, bassist Eric Barth (who had also been in Two Hour Trip with the Spurgeon brothers, who would soon form Greenhorn), and drummer Jeff Regensburger (later of The Patsys). Jim Weber (also of the then newly formed New Bomb Turks) soon joined on second guitar only to leave just as quickly, and following his departure guitarist/songwriter Jovan Karcic (Waybald) joined. Barth and Regensburger would also later leave (in 1995) and be replaced by a series of successors including Bret Lewis and Brett Falcon (Space Cookie, Servotron) on bass, and Nick Youngblood (Beano, The Rackets) and Sam Brown (Feversmile, V-3, New Bomb Turks, The Sun, You're So Bossy) on drums.

In 1994, the quartet was signed to the independent Thrill Jockey and Crypt Records labels and their debut album, Sob Story, was produced by Steve Albini. A follow-up album was released in 1995, titled I Can See Your Mom From Here.[2] The band had gained a loyal local following in the Columbus area, alongside other indie punk rock bands, such as the New Bomb Turks, Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Monster Truck Five, and Pica Huss.

In 1995, Gaunt released a third album, Yeah, Me Too.[3][4] The album was released by Amphetamine Reptile Records (the label had originally approached them to record a track for their Dope, Guns, and Fucking in the Streets singles series, which they did earlier in the year), produced by Tim Mac (Halo of Flies) - who would remain with the band for the rest of their career as live sound and pre-production engineer - and was recorded over the course of a few days.

One last album was recorded for

Warner Bros. Records,[5] and they soon came together again. Despite recording an album's worth of material in a Chicago studio, the band scrapped that material before recording 1998's Bricks and Blackouts.[6][7][8] The album was considered to be a departure from their previous work, and although well received by critics, received little promotion and the band split shortly after its release.[6][9][10]

In January 2001, Jerry Wick was struck and killed by a car while bicycling home.

Warner Bros. Records as drummer and songwriter in The Sun
.

Discography

Albums

  • Sob Story (1994), Thrill Jockey/Crypt
  • I Can See Your Mom From Here (1995), Thrill Jockey/Crypt
  • Yeah Me Too (1995),
    Amphetamine Reptile
  • Kryptonite (1996), Thrill Jockey
  • Warner Bros.

EPs

  • Whitey the Man (1992), Thrill Jockey

Singles

  • "Fielder's Choice" (1992), Datapanik
  • "Jim Motherfucker" (1992), Anyway
  • "Solution" (1993), Snap! Crackle Punk!
  • "Good Bad Happy Sad" (1993), Bag of Hammers
  • "Pop Song" (1993), Thrill Jockey
  • National Postal Museum (1994), Potential Ashtray - tracks: "Turn to Ash", "Flying"
  • 2c USA (1996), Super 8 - tracks: "Cheater's Heaven", "The Powder Keg Variety"
  • "97th Tear" (1998), Warner Bros.

Split releases

  • A Datapanik Split Single (1991), Datapanik - split with New Bomb Turks
  • "Ohio" (1993), Demolition Derby - split with the Beavers

References

  1. ^ a b Howell, Stephen "Gaunt Biography", AllMusic. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  2. ^ Howell, Stephen "I Can See Your Mom From Here Review", AllMusic. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  3. ^ Anderson, Jason "Yeah Me Too Review", AllMusic. retrieved June 17, 2014
  4. CMJ New Music Monthly
    , February 1996, p. 36. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  5. ^ "Scans: Indie Punks Gaunt Signed To Major Label". MTV. Retrieved 2022-09-08.
  6. ^ a b Anderson, Jason "Bricks and Blackouts Review", AllMusic. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  7. CMJ New Music Monthly
    , June 1998, p. 9. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  8. ^ a b D'Angelo, Joe (2001) "Gaunt Singer/Guitarist Dead At 33", MTV, January 12, 2001. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  9. CMJ New Music Monthly
    , April 1998, p. 12. Retrieved June 17, 2014
  10. ^ Poeter, Christopher (1998) "Gaunt's Late, Late Late Show", The Washington Post, August 19, 1998.
  11. ^ Narciso, Dean (2002) "Driver Sentenced In Crash That Killed Bicyclist", WFMU, January 9, 2002. Retrieved June 17, 2014