Mirrors (Ohio band)

Last updated
Mirrors
Origin Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Genres Rock, proto-punk, punk rock, art punk
Years active1971 (1971)–1975 (1975), 1986 (1986)–1988 (1988), 2013 (2013)–2014 (2014)
Labels Heathen, Resonance,Overground Records, ROIR, Violent Times
Past members Jamie Klimek
Jim Crook
Mike Weldon
Craig Bell
Jim Jones
Paul Marotta

Mirrors (a.k.a. the Mirrors) was an American rock band from Cleveland, Ohio, United States, forming in 1971 and originally active playing live gigs between 1972 - 1975. [1] [2] Their sound has been described as "psychedelic garage" and "proto-punk". [1] [3] In his review of a 2009 LP of their 1970's material for Mother Jones former Maximumrocknroll editor Mark Murrmann described them as "not as bent as the Electric Eels...nor as throttling as Rocket from the Tombs." [3] The band's founder, Jaime Klimek, who sang and played guitar, said they "were ferociously loud." [4] The other members were Jim Crook, guitar; Mike Weldon (who started Psychotronic Video magazine in 1980), drums; and a succession of bassists—first Craig Bell (later of Rocket from the Tombs), followed briefly by Paul Marotta, who soon switched to keyboards (and also played with the Electric Eels), then Jim Jones (who later played guitar in Pere Ubu), then Bell again, and finally Jones again. [1] In some of their recordings Jones played drums. [5] They played original songs and covers originally by the Velvet Underground, the Kinks, the Troggs and Brian Eno among others. [1] [4] After they broke up Klimek, Jones, Marotta, other former members of the Electric Eels and Anton Fier formed the Styrenes. [1] In 2013 and 2014 Klimek, Crook, Bell and other musicians played some reunion shows in Cleveland. [6]

Their only release when the band existed was a 7" single on Heathen Records: "Shirley" b/w "She Smiled Wild." [1] Between 1986 and 1988, the original lineup, produced by Marotta, recorded the album Another Nail in the Coffin, which only saw limited release in 1989 before the Dutch record label went bankrupt. [1] [7] In 1997 Scat Records released Those Were Different Times: Cleveland 1972-1976, a CD with songs by Mirrors, the electric eels and the Styrenes. [5] In 2001 Mirrors put out Hands in My Pockets, a 19-song CD of material they had recorded in the 1970s. Mostly made up of studio tracks, it also included some home recordings and live material. [8] In 2004 ROIR released Another Nail in the {Remodeled} Coffin, a reissue of the 1989 album plus a second CD with demos, live tracks and alternate takes. [8] In 2009 Violent Times Records issued Something That Would Never Do, a limited edition LP of previously released songs recorded 1974–75. [8]

Discography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Electric Eels (band)</span> American protopunk band

The Electric Eels were an American rock band active between 1972 and 1975, formed by John D Morton in Cleveland, Ohio.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Pollard</span> American singer and songwriter

Robert Ellsworth Pollard Jr. is an American singer and songwriter who is the leader and creative force behind indie rock group Guided by Voices. In addition to his work with Guided by Voices, he continues to have a prolific solo career with 22 solo albums released so far.

<i>Earthbound</i> (King Crimson album) 1972 live album by King Crimson

Earthbound is a live album by the band King Crimson, released in June 1972 as a budget record shortly after the line-up that recorded it had broken up. It contains the band's first official live release of their signature song "21st Century Schizoid Man", and an extended live version of their 1970 non-LP B-side "Groon". It also contains two improvised tracks with scat vocals from Boz Burrell.

<i>Another Monty Python Record</i> 1971 studio album by Monty Python

Another Monty Python Record is the second album produced by the Monty Python comedy group, released in 1971. Dissatisfied with their monaural BBC debut album released the previous year, the group took full control of the follow-up, which would be the first release of a six-album deal with Charisma Records in the UK. Most of the material is from the second BBC series of Monty Python's Flying Circus, with a few newly written pieces. One track, "Stake Your Claim", is an English-language version of a sketch from the team's first German episode.

The Mice were a Cleveland-based power-pop trio active in the mid-80s. Brothers Bill Fox and Tommy Fox played with Bill's high school friends and performed music in various minor and untitled lineups. Together with a friend who would not end up in the band's final lineup, two recordings were made which appeared on a self-released 500-copy 7" single, Can You Walk on the Water Baby?. An ad was placed in the newspaper that read closely to "Mice seek bassist. No metalheads!" and after the responses came in, Fox chose bassist Ken Hall to complete the trio's lineup. An EP was made on the Herb Jackson Record label called For Almost Ever, recorded in 1985, containing the song "Not Proud of the USA", which would receive considerable airplay on freeform station WFMU during the Bush presidential administration. The EP was followed up a year later with the full-length LP entitled Scooter on the St. Valentine record label. Scooter was also released in the UK on the What Goes On label.

The Fleshtones are an American garage rock band from Queens, New York, United States, formed in 1976.

Growing is a drone music/ambient music/noise music band formed in Olympia, Washington, and currently based in Brooklyn, New York. The group was founded in 2001 by Kevin Doria, Joe Denardo, and Zack Carlson (drums). Carlson left following their first album, and the band continued as a duo until 2009, when they recruited Sadie Laska to form a new trio. The group's music has gradually progressed from slow, instrumental drone pieces through works in noise and ambient music toward more propulsive, rhythm driven music. Their live shows are consistently known for being very loud and for playing straight through their set without breaks or banter between songs.

<i>Datapanik in the Year Zero</i> 1996 box set by Pere Ubu

Datapanik in the Year Zero is a 1996 box set by Pere Ubu, which catalogues their initial phase of existence up to their 1982 break-up. The title was first used by the band for a 1978 EP which compiled their first singles; the name was "recycled" for this release. The name references the Cold War film Panic in Year Zero! (1962).

Scat Records is a St. Louis, Missouri-based independent record label. It was founded in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1989, and many of the bands released on the label are from Ohio. The label is notable for featuring Guided by Voices, The Mice and Cobra Verde on its roster. Scat Records' owner Robert Griffin himself played in the band Spike in Vain. Griffin discovered Guided by Voices from Matt Sweeney, and their 1994 release Bee Thousand helped launch the band before they signed with Matador Records. Scat also released a compilation of Cleveland pre-punk.

My Dad Is Dead was a recording project of musician Mark Edwards. The project began in Cleveland, Ohio in 1984. My Dad Is Dead has released twelve full-length albums before it officially ended in 2011. A new group called Secular Joy was formed later that year in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

<i>Psychotronic Video</i> US film magazine active 1989–2006

Psychotronic Video was an American film magazine founded by publisher/editor Michael J. Weldon in 1980 in New York City, covering what he dubbed "psychotronic movies", which he defined as "the ones traditionally ignored or ridiculed by mainstream critics at the time of their release: horror, exploitation, action, science fiction, and movies that used to play in drive-ins or inner city grindhouses." It was published through 2006. Most of the magazine's hundreds of reviews were written by Weldon himself. Other contributors provided career histories/interviews with cult filmmakers and actors such as Radley Metzger, Larry Cohen, Jack Hill, William Rotsler, David Carradine, Sid Haig, Karen Black, and Timothy Carey. Regular features included "Record Reviews" by Art Black, "Spare Parts" by Dale Ashmun, and "Never To Be Forgotten", an obituary column.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harvey Mandel</span> American guitarist (born 1945)

Harvey Mandel is an American guitarist best known as a member of Canned Heat. He also played with Charlie Musselwhite and John Mayall as well as maintaining a solo career.

James E. Jones was an experimental music artist, producer, and guitarist in the rock band Pere Ubu. Jones was a member of many experimental rock bands of the 1970s and 1980s including: Easter Monkeys, Foreign Bodies, Mirrors, The Styrenes, Electric Eels, Home And Garden, and Terminal Lovers. He later recorded and performed with local bands Speaker\Cranker, Noble Rot, and KNG NXN. Jones died of a heart attack on February 18, 2008 at the age of 57.

The Styrenes are an American proto-punk rock band, formed in Cleveland, Ohio in 1975, by former members of other local underground scene bands, electric eels and Mirrors.

Richard Thomas Marotta is an American drummer and percussionist. He has appeared on recordings by leading artists such as Aretha Franklin, Carly Simon, Steely Dan, James Taylor, Paul Simon, John Lennon, Hall & Oates, Stevie Nicks, Wynonna, Roy Orbison, Todd Rundgren, Roberta Flack, Peter Frampton, Quincy Jones, Jackson Browne, Al Kooper, Waylon Jennings, Randy Newman, Kenny G, The Jacksons, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Boz Scaggs, Warren Zevon, and Linda Ronstadt. He is also a composer who created music for the popular television shows Everybody Loves Raymond and Yes, Dear.

The Numbers Band are an American blues rock and experimental rock band formed in Kent, Ohio, United States in 1969. They are part of the "Akron Sound" that sprang forth from their home state.

Neil Cooper (1930–2001) was the founder and head of independent US cassette and record label ROIR.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John D Morton</span> American musician (born 1953)

John D Morton is an American musician born in the Cleveland suburb of Lakewood, Ohio, best known as the leader and founder of protopunk band electric eels in 1972.

X_______X was a no wave band formed in 1978 by Cleveland musician and artist John D Morton. Morton is perhaps best known as the leader and founder of protopunk band Electric Eels. Original members of X_______X were Morton on lead guitar & vocals, Anton Fier on drums, Jim Ellis on bass, and Andrew Klimeyk on rhythm guitar and vocals.

<i>Punk 45: Extermination Nights in the Sixth City</i> 2015 compilation album by Various artists

Punk 45: Extermination Nights in the Sixth City is a 2015 compilation album released by Soul Jazz Records. The album received positive reviews from The Quietus, AllMusic, and Pitchfork.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Mirrors: Artist Biography". AllMusic . Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  2. Murrmann, Mark (June 19, 2009). "Music: Mirrors, Something That Would Never Do". Mother Jones . Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  3. 1 2 Kaufman, Gil (May 26, 1997). "Early Cleveland Punk Surfaces". MTV . Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  4. 1 2 Klimek, Jaime. "Mirros Liner Notes". Scat Records. Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  5. 1 2 "Those Were Different Times: Cleveland 1972-1976". Discogs . Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  6. Petkovic, John (January 23, 2014). "Cleveland rock pioneers Mirrors are bigger than ever and back in action Saturday at Beachland Ballroom". The Plain Dealer . Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  7. "Another Nail In The Coffin". Discogs . Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 Anderson, Rick. "Another Nail in the Remodeled Coffin". AllMusic . Retrieved October 13, 2016.