
Written by Nic Brown, founding member and ex-drummer
When Mark and I formed the band in 1990, I was 13 and ready to rock. Instead, we played about five Eagles covers at my eighth grade dance. I doubt I need to clarify the fact that "Hotel California" was the crowning jewel of the show. Then Alex joined. Obviously this made the proverbial difference since we finally got asked to play the pep rally. Mark and the cheerleaders sang the national anthem before we started, but unfortunately he did not know the words to the school song, "Lo Hearts Behold". Soon thereafter, Mom named us Athenaeum (ATH-A-NEE-UM).
In 1995 we put out our first recording, cleverly untitled although more familiarly known as "The Green Album." This we recorded in Raleigh, NC (not far from our hometown of Greensboro, NC), with producer John Plymale (Meat Puppets, Superchunk, Squirrel Nut Zippers) and engineer Jerry Kee (The Connells, Superchunk, Dish). We recorded most of it in Jerry's living room. At night, after recording, we got together for group activities like watching The Dark Crystal. Incidentally, The Dark Crystal is a terrifying movie.
In 1996 we signed with Atlantic Records. Obviously, this was the coolest thing ever. We went to LA in 1997 and recorded our first major label release, Radiance, with producer Gavin Mackillop (Toad the Wet Sprocket, Goo Goo Dolls) and mixer Jack Joseph Puig (Black Crowes, Goo Goo Dolls, Verve Pipe). Our first single "What I Didn't Know" enjoyed some success, hitting the top ten on the modern rock charts. We were in our van on I-85 outside of Greensboro when we first heard it on the radio. Once we realized that it was our song coming out of the speakers (hey, that's us!) we promptly skidded across the median, trailer in tow, directly into oncoming traffic.
After regaining control, we went on to tour forever with bands like Semisonic, Big Wreck, Better Than Ezra, Black Lab and the Goo Goo Dolls. Following the erosion of several Ford vans, we traveled in a huge green tour bus with mirrors on the ceiling. I wish I could say that we were the ones who put them there, but it must have been the people who had the thing before us. I suppose they reasoned that a mirrored ceiling would complement the illuminated airbrush depiction of the beach that was so tastefully placed in the back lounge. But I digress...
People loved Radiance. It got lots of good reviews. It was on TV and in The Movies.
Then we went home. At this point we either:
A) made up with our girlfriends.
B) found girlfriends.
C) continued to play drums.
These are mutually exclusive.
We also wrote a lot of songs.
In February 2000 we began work on our second Atlantic release, Athenaeum. It's a deceptively simple album. Ignoring the majority of pop trends, mostly due to our lack of knowledge about them, it seems that what we've created is at once an anachronism as well a contemporary statement. It's a pop rock record whose cerebral sophistication coexists perfectly with its accessibility, kind of like the paragraph I just wrote. Sorry, back to the story.
We commenced recording in Nashville with veteran producer Peter Collins (known for penning the classic "Monster Mash" as well as producing Queensryche, Bon Jovi, Rush) and an engineer named Elvis who dressed like...well, you get it. In May, after finishing a few songs in Nashville, we traveled to San Francisco to work with well-known remixer (No Doubt, New Order, Korn) and producer (Los Amigos Invisibles) Philip Steir. We recorded in Philip's legendary San Francisco studio, Toast, and stayed across the street in two tiny rooms at the Roadway Inn. The deskman at The Roadway refused to give us any of our phone messages because they were written in his wife's handwriting, which, of course, he couldn't read. Also, I wish someone had told us before we packed that San Francisco isn't actually warm in the summer... ah, the sweet, sweet life of rock and roll.
One of the best things about working with well known producers is that they have the phone numbers for lots of people who play their instruments better than anybody really should. They also have the clout to make them answer the phone. This would explain our luck in enlisting the help of Rusty Anderson on guitar (Paul McCartney, Sinead O'Conner, Ricky Martin), Carl Herrgesell on keyboards (Elton John, David Mead), and Matt Brubeck (Dave Brubeck's son) on Cello, among others.
After completing a batch of songs in San Francisco, we brought Philip east with us and finished the album late in the Summer of 2000 with sessions at Mitch Easter's Fidelitorium in Kernersville, NC and finally at John Plymale's Overdub Lane in Durham, NC. Once again, we turned to Radiance alum Jack Joseph Puig to handle the final mixes.
Once completed, we found that Athenaeum resembled the soundtrack to a strange and beautiful film no one could remember ever having seen. It all seems more familiar than it should. "Sweeter Love" sounds like what the band would play at Flash Gordon's wedding. "Damage" and "Comfort" make radio sound like it was invented as a medium for their specific transfer. The torch song "If Baby's Gone" makes one think of some sort of time warp to the coolest 1950's prom ever. "Plurabelle," named after the heroine in James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake, proves two things: Athenaeum can rock while playing a song about a book that almost no one has ever read, and that we should probably still be doing things like watching The Dark Crystal. It was also a song co-written by both Mark and Mike Garrigan, who recently joined the Athenaeum ranks after a stint with his own successful band, Collapsis.
Granted, that legendary pep rally rocked pretty hard back in the day, but even by the time we recorded Radiance, we were still spending most of our time in the studio simply not believing that we were actually there. By no means old pros this time around, we had garnered enough time in the studio to have a much better perspective on what we wanted, as well as how to take advantage of what the studio can offer. With Athenaeum, we explored new instrumentation at every angle. More than once I caught Mark daring the instruments to remind him that he didn't actually know how to play most of them. And in spite of themselves, the timpani, string sections, sitar, gongs, and strange keyboards all seem to fit in.
This album is good, I promise. So damn good, in fact, that I quit the band and went to college. They replaced me with some new guy (Jeremy Vogt of Tonic, The Connells). God help him.
Check this band out, they may just inspire you to get smarter too.
Nic Brown, New York City, June 5, 2001
The band met some six years ago while in high school in their hometown of Greensboro, North Carolina.The name Athenaeum is derived from the Greek word meaning the temple of Athena, where poets read their works. Modernly, an athenaeum is a society or institution for the promotion of literary or scientific learning. The band's use of the name was inspired by the fact that Nic's father was a member of an athenaeum in high school, a sort of "Dead Poets Society" which contained such literary noteables as Hunter S. Thompson and Robert Penn Warren.
After touring the local club scene, Athenaeum independently released their first CD, titled Athenaeum, in May of 1995. Recording of the CD took place at the legendary Duck-Kee studios in Raleigh, NC with producer John Plymale (Dillon Fence, Sex Police) and engineer Jerry Kee (The Connells, Superchunk, Dish).
In late 1996, Athenaeum signed with Atlantic Records. Leaving in January of 1997, the band then traveled to Los Angeles , California where they recorded their first major label CD "Radiance" with producer Gavin MacKillop (Toad the Wet Sprocket, Goo Goo Dolls) and mixer Jack Joseph Puig (Black Crowes, Tonic).
You've heard of garage rock, you're familiar with the Basement Tapes. Now open up your ears to Athenaeum's attic pop. Why attic pop, you ask? Well, this Greensboro, North Carolina-based band's first practice space was high atop drummer Nic Brown's mom's house, and that's where their songs and sound began.
"That's where Nic kept his drums," singer/songwriter/guitarist Mark Kano says. "It was really big. We bought a PA and started rehearsing up there. Basically, there was just a bunch of old Fisher Price toys and a drum set, so we just set up in the attic."
From the attic to Atlantic, Athenaeum's seven-year journey has brought them from mom's house to their splendid debut album, "RADIANCE." A sparkling collection of smooth harmonies, rich guitar melodies, ringing hooks and Kano's warm, knowing lyricism, the album places Athenaeum among today's best new pop rock combos.
Back in 1991, seventeen-year-old high school junior Mark and fourteen-year-old Eighth Grader Nic formed a band to play Brown's middle school dance. They learned their chops as they worked their way through a number of covers by AOR touchstones like the Eagles, Rush, Steve Miller, Living Colour, and Led Zeppelin. After the departure of Athenaeum's first bass player, they brought in Alex McKinney to take over low-end duties.
"As the band developed we started to gel as a unit," McKinney says. "We all have similar musical tastes and our originals developed out of that."
The band's very original moniker-pronounced Ath-a-nee-um-was Ma Brown's idea, lifted from the century-old literary society found in Louisville, Kentucky's high schools. Athenaeum alumni includes not only Nic's dad, but such lions of belle lettres as one-time poet laureate Robert Penn Warren and the master of gonzo journalism, Dr. Hunter S. Thompson. With their somewhat unwieldy handle, an assortment of mispronunciations and misspellings has haunted the band.
"Anthony-um is a big one," Nic laughs. "We were in one town where they were calling us Anthem Mayhem. So, it has been a bit of a curse, but once people hear it, they really can't forget it, either. I'm more surprised now when I hear people say it right."
Despite the tongue-twisting nature of their name, Athenaeum gigged regularly at Greensboro's Somewhere Else Tavern, occasionally playing local parties and school functions. They recorded their first demo tape in 1994, which they dubbed "The Unofficial Demo."
"It had six songs on it," says Mark. "including 'No One,' which is also on 'RADIANCE.' Anyway, we made about three hundred of those and we sold them out in a few months."
In early 1995, the band parted ways with their original guitarist. Once Grey Brewster hitched up with Mark, Nic, and Alex, Athenaeum as we know it today was born. The band soon recorded their self-titled indie CD, which included early versions of a number of "RADIANCE" tracks, including "No One," "Away," "Different Situation," and "On My Mind." "ATHENAEUM" sold upwards of 10,000 CDs, establishing the quartet as one of the Southeast's shining new lights. They soon inked with Atlantic, giving them the chance to work with one of their favorite producers, Gavin McKillop, whose work with Toad The Wet Sprocket was a strong selling point to the band.
"The Toad records had a real strong pop sense to them," Kano says, "and really centered around vocals and lyrics. Gavin came out to see us play and we went to his house the next day and had a pretty good talk with him. He called us back a couple of weeks later and said that whenever we were ready to go, he would be very interested in doing it."
The band hit MacKillop's Master Control studio in Burbank, California in January of 1997, where, as Nic recalls with a chuckle, "We were like four really, really small fish going into a big, smoggy pond."
"It was a big learning experience to work with Gavin," Nic says, "because it was like having a new member in the band. It taught us to open our minds up and see that, yeah, this is good, but it can be a lot better."
The band spent more than three months at Master Control, fine-tuning their arrangements and harmonies while filling in their sonic palette with the assistance of esteemed session players like pedal steel whiz Greg Liesz (who plays on "Spotlight") and accordianist James Fearnley, late of the Pogues, who contributes squeezebox to the swinging "Different Situation." After Athenaeum wound up the sessions, master mixer Jack Joseph Puig (Tonic, The Verve Pipe) was brought in to work his magic upon the already-stellar tracks.
"I think we've really matured and developed our own sound," Alex notes. "It's pretty distinguishable from other bands out there and I think when people hear our songs, they can identify them as Athenaeum."
Writing quality songs is top priority for the quartet. Though Kano is the band's primary tunesmith, it takes the other three members to turn them into trademark Athenaeum. "RADIANCE" kicks off with the unabashedly irresistable "What I Didn't Know," a chiming chronicle of loss, regret and love gone bad.
"Well, it's about a relationship that I was in that was over when I wrote the song," Mark explains. "It was me coming full circle with everything. I felt like it was a summation of everything that had happened. It was just me saying, 'Hey, you know, everything's okay. It was amazing, but it's over and so be it and here it is in a song.'"
Between Kano's husky vocals and the lilting guitar textures, "RADIANCE" is filled with teriffic tunes, from the winsome and melodic "Flat Tire" to the energetic, explosive title track which closes the collection.
"Man, I'm so excited," beams Mark with impossible-to-hide pride. "I'm so pleased with the record. I guess that's kind of a blessing in disguise. I don't know how many artists are completely happy with their first record, but we are, so we're very fortunate."
With "RADIANCE" ready to rock radio across the land, the members of Athenaeum are poised to take to road and bring their harmony-rich attic pop to America. While the four guys have divided up across the Carolina area, Athenaeum haven't forgotten their roots.
"We all seem to move every six months into a new place," Nic - who currently resides in Chapel Hill - says, "so our numbers consistently change, as do the area codes. But we still practice in Greensboro, in my mom's attic."
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