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Teenage Fanclub
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After first gaining acclaim for a densely melodic sound which anticipated the coming emergence of grunge, Scotland's
Teenage Fanclub
spent the remainder of their career as torch-bearers for the power pop revival, unparalleled among their generation for both their unwavering adherence to and brilliant reinvention of the classic guitar pop approach of vintage acts like
Big Star
and
Badfinger
. Blessed with the talents of three formidable singers and songwriters (
Norman Blake
,
Gerard Love
, and
Raymond McGinley
, respectively) all sharing an
unerring knack for crafting immediately infectious melodies,
Teenage Fanclub
's radiant brand of pop classicism enjoyed only a brief moment devotion to its unapologetically old-fashioned sensibility yielded of commercial and critical vogue, and over time, the band's dogged increasingly dwindling fan base and virtually non-existent record sales. Nevertheless, almost none of their contemporaries can claim either
Teenage Fanclub
's consistency or longevity -- though never groundbreaking or hip, their music possesses a timelessness and accessibility matched by precious few.
Singers/guitarists
Blake
and
McGinley
first teamed with singer/bassist
Love
in 1987 in Glasgow's short-lived
Boy Hairdressers
, issuing the single
"Golden Shower"
on the famed Scottish indie label 53rd and 3rd, before disbanding. After a brief stint with the
BMX Bandits
,
Blake
reunited with
Love
and
McGinley
to form
Teenage Fanclub
in 1989; drummer
Francis McDonald
, a fellow
BMX Bandit
, completed the original lineup, although
McDonald
was replaced by fan
Brendan O'Hare
during sessions for the group's debut album, 1990's
A Catholic Education
. Released on the Creation label overseas and on the fledgling Matador imprint in the U.S., the album's thick, murky squall staked out sonic territory subsequently occupied by the nascent grunge movement and made
Teenage Fanclub
an instant critical favorite; the
God Knows Its True
EP soon followed, but although American major labels came courting, the band still owed Matador one more record. They submitted
The King
, a ramshackle collection of instrumentals capped off by a tongue-in-cheek rendition of
Madonna
's
"Like a Virgin"
; instead, the record was summarily rejected by Matador honcho Gerard Cosloy, and after paying Cosloy what they felt the remainder of their contract was worth,
Teenage Fanclub
signed to Geffen.
Never shy about celebrating their inspirations -- covers of
the Beatles
'
"The Ballad of John and Yoko,"
the Flying Burrito Brothers'
"Older Guys,"
and
Phil Ochs'
"Chords of Fame"
are scattered across various singles and EPs --
Teenage Fanclub
's 1991 Geffen debut,
Bandwagonesque
, gloriously evoked the raggedly radiant pop manna of
Big Star
, the famed 1970s cult band led by ex-
Box Tops
frontman
Alex Chilton
and his singing/songwriting partner
Chris Bell
. With its newfound melodic ingenuity, brash guitar sound and gorgeous harmonies, the record was a massive critical success, and although mainstream pop radio failed to bite, the group found a warm welcome on collegiate airwaves. Although somewhat hard to believe in retrospect,
Bandwagonesque
topped Spin magazine's best-of-1991 year-end list in the face of staggering competition including
Nirvana
's
Nevermind
,
My Bloody Valentine
's
Loveless
, and
R.E.M.
's
Out of Time
; a few months later, they were tapped as Rolling Stone's Hot Band for 1992, and at the peak of their success,
the Fannies
even performed on Saturday Night Live, that same year also opening for
Nirvana
.
Although the title of the 1993 follow-up
Thirteen
served immediate notice that
Teenage Fanclub
's
Big Star
fetish continued unabated, the album's bitter lyrical outlook and heavier guitar sound owed much to
Neil Young
, while the epic closer,
"Gene Clark,"
honored the pioneering
Byrds
co-founder. Critical reception was decidedly icy, however, and in 1994,
O'Hare
was dismissed from the lineup, briefly resurfacing in
Mogwai
before mounting his own project, the
Telstar Ponies
. Ex-
Soup Dragon
Paul Quinn
assumed drumming duties for the 1995 follow-up, the shimmering
Grand Prix
; by now, however, whatever critical cachet
the Fannies
had amassed was long gone, and after the disc sold poorly on both sides of the Atlantic, Geffen dropped the group from its roster. Sony picked up their contract just long enough for a U.S. release of 1997's
Songs From Northern Britain
, which again made few waves outside of the power pop faithful.
Quinn
left
Teenage Fanclub
in the midst of completing 2000's
Howdy!
More setbacks were to follow as Sony refused to release
Howdy
in the United States. The album eventually recieved distribution via Thirsty Ear in 2001, a year after its original release.
A year later, the band brought a relationship they had developed with spoken word artist
Jad Fair
to fruition by backing him on the album
Words of Wisdom and Hope
. In 2003, the band took stock of its career by releasing the retrospective anthology
Four Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-Six Seconds: A Short Cut to Teenage Fanclub
.
It took three more years for
Teenage Fanclub
to return to the studio, eventually working with Chicago post-rock icon
John McEntire
at his Soma recording studio. Forming its own label Pema, the
Fanclub
released
Man-Made
in 2005. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Most Popular Music Videos (5)
Hang On
(Duration: 3:26)
Jul 22nd, 2:47am
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Albums (11)
Man-Made
(4 songs)
Four Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-Six Seconds: A Short Cut to Teenage Fanclub
(19 songs)
Howdy!
(7 songs)
Songs from Northern Britain
(3 songs)
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