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The Lemonheads

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This article describes a musical group. For the candy, see Lemonheads (candy).

The Lemonheads are an indie, alternative and punk band from the United States. Since forming, recording, and touring lineups of the band have included John Strohm (Blake Babies), Corey Loog Brennan, Juliana Hatfield, Nic Dalton (Godstar, Sneeze, The Plunderers), Dave Ryan, Patrick "Murph" Murphy (Dinosaur Jr), Bill Gibson (Eastern Dark), Mark Newman, Kenny Lyon, and various others.

History

Early years 1984-1991

The Lemonheads were formed by Evan Dando and Ben Deily, in high school, at the Commonwealth School in Boston, MA circa 1986. At this stage they played very snotty punk rock, and were briefly known as the Whelps, until a name change in 1987 led to the birth of the Lemonheads, a candy which Dando noted was sweet on the outside, and sour on the inside, possibly a metaphor for the band's sound. Their very first recording as a group was titled Laughing All the Way to the Cleaners. Dando enrolled at Skidmore College, but couldn't maintain his grades and dropped out to pursue a career as a musician. Having signed to local label Taang! Records, the Lemonheads released the albums Hate Your Friends,Creator, and Lick with Deily and Dando sharing lead vocals and songwriting duties until about 1989, when Deily left the band. Dando then recruited David Ryan on drums, signed to major label Atlantic/Warner, and produced the album Lovey in 1990. Straddling punk, rock, country, and metal, this album was a year too early for grunge and never took off. The album sold roughly 30,000 copies.

Breakthrough and height of fame 1992-1997

Dando cut his losses and flew to Australia to write some songs with friends Nic Dalton and Tom Morgan. These songs formed the basis for It's a Shame About Ray, the Lemonheads' breakthrough album. However, a cover of "Mrs. Robinson" (recorded to promote the video release of The Graduate) was released to the annoyance of the band and got them the most exposure they'd had so far. When the Ray album was reissued, the track was tagged on to the end. The band enjoyed quite a bit of success on college radio, and modest mainstream exposure. During 1992-1993, Dando's face was on virtually every magazine cover, posters of him peering out between golden blonde locks hung from teenage girls' walls. Courtney Love said she had "impure thoughts" about him while he stayed with the Cobains.

The band officially renamed themselves from "Lemonheads" to "The Lemonheads" prior to the release of the Come on Feel the Lemonheads LP. Still, a huge breakthrough single still eluded the band as they released Come on Feel the Lemonheads in late 1993. This was a successful album but paved the way for future madness with tracks like "Style" and "The Jello Fund." Once again, the band enjoyed modest mainstream success, this time with the single "Into Your Arms."

The Lemonheads then toured throughout 1994; Dando famously befriended Oasis and appeared at the band's live shows. The cracks were beginning to show, and after one ridiculous interview where Dando (not being able to speak, having lost his voice) admitted to having a crack problem, he was no longer viewed as the "slacker sex kitten" of the previous year. 

In 1996, Dando got a new band together, still called the Lemonheads, featuring old friends John Strohm and Murph (ex-Dinosaur Jr). This band produced another Lemonheads album, Car Button Cloth. While featuring jangly guitar songs such as "If I Could Talk I'd Tell You," this set also showed off the darker side of Dando's writing: "Break Me" and "Losing Your Mind" proved that all was not well with Dando's head.

The band helped in a 1996 tribute album for Schoolhouse Rock creator Thomas G. Yohe, which contains remakes of many popular "Schoolhouse Rock" songs like "Conjunction Junction," "I'm Just a Bill," and "Interplanet Janet." The Lemonheads' contribution was "My Hero Zero."

The band toured successfully in 1997 and played a final gig in Reading, after which Dando promptly disappeared from view.

Hiatus and future directions 1998-

Atlantic's release of The Best Of The Lemonheads in 1998 only served to increase the mystery. After a nine-year recording absence, during which Dando performed off and on as a solo act and released a live solo album, it was announced in the summer of 2005 that the band had quietly reformed - with a recording lineup bolstered by Bill Stevenson and Karl Alverez, ex-members of The Descendents - and are working on new material in a studio in Colorado.

Recently, the live lineup has fluctuated, with Bill Stevenson, Chris Brokaw (Come (US band)), and George Berz (Dinosaur Jr) all sitting in on drums during 2005, while Juliana Hatfield and Josh Lattanzi - chiefly known for his work with Ben Kweller - have performed a few shows on bass.

In September 2005, Dando, Stevenson, and Lattanzi performed two shows at Shepherds Bush Empire in London, where they played the It's a Shame About Ray LP in its entirety.

In April 2006, The Lemonheads were signed to Vagrant Records. Their self-titled Vagrant debut will be released on September 26th 2006 (US - September 25th UK); the album features special guests Garth Hudson and J Mascis on select tracks.

Discography

Albums

Singles and EPs

Bootlegs

Tribute

External links

 


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