Jawbox
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Jawbox | ||
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Jawbox in 1995
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Background information | ||
Origin | Washington, D.C. | |
Years active | 1989 – 1997 | |
Label(s) | Dischord Records (1989-1993) Atlantic Records (1993-1997) TAG Recordings (1995-1997) Desoto Records (1989-1997) |
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Website | http://desotorecords.com | |
Former members | ||
Adam Wade J. Robbins Bill Barbot Kim Coletta Zach Barocas |
Jawbox was a post punk/indie rock band from Washington, D.C.. Its members were J. Robbins (vocals/guitar), Bill Barbot (guitar), Kim Coletta (bass guitar), and Adam Wade & Zach Barocas (drums).
Robbins had played in the final incarnation of Government Issue, which was the longest lived of the original D.C. punk bands. After Government Issue called it quits, Robbins formed Jawbox with Kim Coletta and Adam Wade. The trio recorded their first, self-released single and the Grippe album. (This was also the beginning of Desoto Records, which went on to become a successful independent record label.) Shortly afterwards, Bill Barbot joined the band as second guitarist and second singer. They shortly thereafter recorded Novelty with Iain Burgess, and toured the USA.
Wade then left the band to play drums with Shudder to Think, and their friend Zach Barocas was called upon to play the drums. Zach's adoption of various stage-names caused some confusion at the time; he used the name Jim Shortz, and even the name of the famous Japanese actor Takashi Shimura.
Jawbox gained some notoriety in the indie music community by becoming one of only two bands to defect from legendary record label Dischord Records for a major label, when they signed to Atlantic Records for 1994's For Your Own Special Sweetheart (the other band was Shudder to Think). Dischord fans boycotted their records, thinking that the band changed style or had sold out, but the band's sound on its two major label records largely remained faithful to their roots. The band had a minor MTV hit with Savory in 1994. They also had another hit with Cooling Card, but it wasn't as popular as "Savory".
The band recorded a second album for Atlantic, but during the sessions, Atlantic started a vanity label for alternative artists, TAG Recordings, which had the band Fountains of Wayne signed to it, and they transferred Jawbox to the new label. In 1996, they released the album, which was surprisingly successful and had a major MTV hit with Mirrorful and Cornflake Girl, but were eventually dropped by the label due to a perceived lack of singles on the album. Ironically, Absenter was subsequently released as a single for the album on Desoto.
In early 1997, at the completion of the tour supporting the self-titled record, Barocas decided to move back to New York, and Jawbox called it a day. After the split, Robbins and Barbot, along with former Government Issue drummer, Peter Moffett, formed the band Burning Airlines, which itself broke up after releasing two albums. Barbot and Coletta continue to run DeSoto Records. Barocas became a part of The Up on In which, like Burning Airlines, broke up quickly thereafter. Robbins is currently part of the band Channels, and has also gone on to become a successful producer.
[edit] Desoto Buys The Rights
In December of 2006, Desoto Records bought the rights of Jawbox's Atlantic Records albums and put them on iTunes and eMusic, along with the Dischord albums and EPs. They also released the albums in stores under the Desoto print and put the videos for all of the major label albums on their site, including their rendition of a Tori Amos song, Cornflake Girl, originally released as a hidden track on 1996's Jawbox.
[edit] Discography
- Jawbox Dischord (1989)
- Grippe Dischord/Fontana Distribution (1991)
- Novelty Dischord/Fontana Distribution (1992)
- For Your Own Special Sweetheart Atlantic Records/Desoto Records (1994)
- Jawbox TAG Recordings/Atlantic Records/Desoto Records (1996)
- My Scrapbook of Fatal Accidents Desoto Records/Dischord/Fontana Distribution (1998)