Thunderegg is an American rock and roll band and recording project currently based in San Francisco, California, led by songwriter Will Georgantas (guitar, vocals). Its earliest incarnation was the Yale University band Larry,[1] formed in 1992 and featuring founding Thunderegg players Jake Fournier (bass) and Keith Woodfin (drums).

Thunderegg
Thunderegg at the Uptown, Oakland, CA, 9/29/2016. L-R: Reese Douglas, André Custodio, Alex Jimenez, Will Georgantas.
Thunderegg at the Uptown, Oakland, CA, 9/29/2016. L-R: Reese Douglas, André Custodio, Alex Jimenez, Will Georgantas.
Background information
OriginNew Haven, Connecticut
Genreslo-fi
indie rock
Years active1992–present
LabelsCommand-Q (1994–2005)
Orange Entropy (2000-2002)
HUEV (Hartford Unified Egg Vendors) (2005–2017)
Bleeding Gold Records (2017-present)
MembersWill Georgantas
Alex Jimenez
Reese Douglas
André Custodio
Past membersJake Fournier
Keith Woodfin
Bob Porri
Tim Kane
Jonathan Chatfield
Nathan Gohla
Ken Moon
Greg "Action" Zinman
Aileen Brophy
Russell Lord
Ken Matsuda
James Sundquist

Between 1995 and 2004, Georgantas recorded the first eight Thunderegg albums by himself to four-track cassette in various apartments in Brooklyn, New York, and his parents' house in Princeton, New Jersey. These albums, from 1995's Universal Nut through 2004's Sweetest One, display increasingly elaborate lo-fi (or "bedroom music"[2]) arrangements, and reviewers have remarked on their high lyrical quality.[3] In January 2006, all of these recordings were collected for the anthology Open Book: The Collected Thunderegg, 1995–2004. The independently produced Open Book featured 231 mp3s on a single data CD along with a 108-page illustrated lyric book. It enjoyed a positive reception[4] both for its large scale[5] and its music,[6] which was likened to rock in the vein of Guided by Voices,[7] The Velvet Teen,[8] and The Mountain Goats.[9]

Thunderegg began playing and recording as a full band in 2000 after Fournier moved back east to Hartford, Connecticut, from Portland, Oregon. (The band was named after the thunderegg, the state rock of Oregon.) In 2002 a new full-band version of Georgantas's song "If I Went on a Diet" was selected for inclusion on a compilation CD produced by Jane magazine;[10] in 2005 that song and nine others would comprise Thunderegg's first full-band album, A Very Fine Sample of What's Available at the Mine. Thunderegg's second full-band album, Line Line, would be produced and mixed by Alan Weatherhead (Sparklehorse, Cracker) at Sound of Music Studios in Richmond, Virginia, and released independently in September 2011.[11] A follow-up with Weatherhead, C'mon Thunder, featuring Darren Jessee of the Ben Folds Five and Hotel Lights, was released on May 13, 2014,[12] to positive critical reception.[13][14][15][16]

Throughout, Georgantas continued to record at home on a 424 Portastudio:[17] In 2005 he posted a new song every week[18] to Thunderegg's website, the best of which were collected for the CD This Week, which was self-released in early 2007. Several other albums followed, including Not What I Meant, Thunderegg's first San Francisco album,[19] which was recommended for fans of "The Eels, Ween, The Flaming Lips, and Pulp."[20] That album's closing track, "The Guest Star of the Rest Stop," was initially commissioned by author T Cooper for a CD accompanying his 2012 book Real Man Adventures.[21] Cooper would also include the Line Line opener "The Scheduled Show" in the soundtrack to his 2018 documentary Man Made.

Thunderegg toured Germany in the summer of 2013 with a lineup that included Georgantas, Fournier, Moon, and Ken Matsuda (violin),[22] and Georgantas toured the United States (with KC Turner) in the summers of 2014 and 2016.[23] In April 2015 the band, now including Alex Jimenez (bass), Reese Douglas (guitar), and James Sundquist (drums), released the seven-inch single "Ten Sleeves"/"Big Cigarette," again recorded with Weatherhead, this time at Tiny Telephone in San Francisco.[24]

With new drummer André Custodio, the band gelled in the Bay Area as a regularly gigging and touring four-piece band, complementing Georgantas's narrative lyrics with a sound described as "space bar rock" ("space rock, bar rock, space bar rock").[25] In January 2017, they returned to the studio with Weatherhead, this time at Acoustic Noise in Oakland, to record their new LP, Cosmos. It was completed at Space Bomb Studios in Richmond, Virginia, and released on both black and deluxe color vinyl by Bleeding Gold Records on May 11, 2018, accompanied by a second tour up and down California.[26] Issue 82 of the Big Takeover, in naming it a Top 40 selection, called the album "otherworldly" and "smart and full of melodic charm," comparing it to "Teenage Fanclub, Eyelids, Bats, and Chills."[27]

Thunderegg's most recent album, Helicopters, was released on February 4, 2022. Recorded remotely with Weatherhead, it includes guest appearances from Bay Area musicians Bradley Skaught, Brad Brooks, John Elliott, Julian Müller, and Megan Slankard. Again the music was favorably received, described by one reviewer as "highly intelligent, narrative vocals over lushly arranged chamber pop rock soundscapes."[28]

Discography edit

 
The Uptown, Oakland CA. L-R: Alex Jimenez, André Custodio, Will Georgantas, Reese Douglas
  • Larry (May 1994)
  • Universal Nut (Nov. 1995)
  • New England Music (May 1996)
  • Personnel Envelo-file (Feb. 1997)
  • Thunderegg (Nov. 1997)
  • Powder to the People (Aug. 1998)
  • Spent Butane: Cassette Outtakes, 1995-1998 (Sept. 1999)
  • In Yanistin (Sept. 2000)
  • The Envelope Pushes Back (Oct. 2000)
  • Sweetest One (Oct. 2004)
  • A Very Fine Sample of What's Available at the Mine (June 2005)
  • Open Book: The Collected Thunderegg, 1995–2004 (Jan. 2006)
  • This Week (Feb. 2007)
  • Where Are the Cars (Feb. 2008)
  • Platinum (Sept. 2009)
  • Gazillion (March 2011)
  • Line Line (Sept. 2011)
  • Thunderegg History Unit Volume One (March 2012)
  • Not What I Meant (Dec. 2012)
  • He's Actually Pretty Cool Once You Get to Know Him: A Thunderegg Sampler, 1995-2012 (cassette; Dec. 2013)
  • C'mon Thunder (May 2014)
  • All Right Could Be Better EP (Nov. 2014)
  • "Ten Sleeves"/"Big Cigarette" (7"; Apr. 2015)
  • Cosmos (May 2018)
  • Helicopters (Feb. 2022)

Timeline edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Don’t Break My Egg, My Achey Breaky Thunderegg," Yale Herald, March 31, 2006
  2. ^ Ira Robbins, "Thunderegg," The Trouser Press
  3. ^ "Thunderegg: Open Book," Music News (UK), March 21, 2006
  4. ^ Eric Danton, "Thunder + Eggs = A Lot of Music," Hartford Courant, Jan. 24, 2006
  5. ^ "The Pleasures of Indulgence," The Stylus, Sept. 11, 2006
  6. ^ Brian LaRue, "Crack That Egg: An Embarrassment of Pop Riches on Thunderegg's New Studio and Retrospective Albums," The New Haven Advocate, Feb. 2, 2006
  7. ^ "Sunday Cleaning, Volume 26," Chrome Waves, March 5, 2006
  8. ^ "The Other Side of Mt. Thunderegg: CMG vs. Open Book," Coke Machine Glow, April 15, 2006
  9. ^ "Thunder and the Mountain," Southcoasting, Oct. 14, 2006
  10. ^ "Maybelline and Jane Magazine Kick That 'American Idol' Off the Stage; Announcing Debut of Reader-Produced Compilation CD," Entertainment Wire, Sept. 16, 2002
  11. ^ "Thunderegg!," Kentucky Seven (Sweden), Sept. 19, 2011
  12. ^ Mike Ragogna, "The Force Empire: Chatting With NHRA Superstar John Force, Plus Thunderegg's 'Summer Kids' Exclusive," The Huffington Post, April 22, 2014
  13. ^ Zaza Lipsoidiac, "Album Review: Thunderegg, C'mon Thunder," Speak Into My Good Eye, May 2, 2014
  14. ^ Travis Boyer, "Thunderegg: C'mon Thunder," In Your Speakers, May 7, 2014
  15. ^ Justin Amidon, "Thunderegg - C'mon Thunder," Buffalo Blog, May 13, 2014
  16. ^ Greg Shaw, "Review: Thunderegg - C'mon Thunder," Nanobot Rock Reviews, July 26, 2014
  17. ^ "Not What I Meant" video, June 3, 2012
  18. ^ "At the End of the Day, We’re All Buddies," You Ain't No Picasso, June 21, 2005
  19. ^ "Review: Thunderegg, Not What I Meant," Nanobot Rock Reviews, April 24, 2013
  20. ^ "Thunderegg—Not What I Meant," The Orange Press, March 19, 2013
  21. ^ "Real Man Adventures #3: 'The Guest Star of the Rest Stop,'" The Rumpus, December 28, 2012
  22. ^ "Thunderegg, 'I Turn Automatic'—Püttlingen, Germany 7/5/13," official tour video, Oct. 15, 2013
  23. ^ John B. Moore, "That Summer Feeling: Thunderegg," Blurt Online, July 21, 2014
  24. ^ Augustus Welby, "Thunderegg: Ten Sleeves/Big Cigarette," The Brag Online, April 6, 2015
  25. ^ "About Thunderegg," official Thunderegg Facebook Page, accessed April 29, 2017
  26. ^ "BG122: Cosmos," Bleeding Gold Records blog, May 10, 2018
  27. ^ "CD/Vinyl Reviews: Thunderegg," The Big Takeover, issue 82, May 28, 2018
  28. ^ KZSU Stanford 90.1 Zookeeper Online, March 6, 2022

External links edit