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“I
want to see Jellyfish make it because I’m bored with what alternative
rock has become – dreary, dull, dim-witted, and way too inbred. Jellyfish
flogs a different set of influences, and for that alone it’s refreshing.
In an era of pop underachievers, these dandies are ambitious and accomplished.
Beyond the fun of hearing my early teen record collection shoved through
a Cuisinart, I get off on the urgency of Jellyfish. These iconoclasts
sing and play with tuneful desperation, as if they’ll burst into flames
if they don’t get that forgotten Move riff just right.” Jellyfish: The legacy of power pop's
golden boys By
Peter Lee Let’s
face it: We yearn for good music. It’s
why the Beatles sold millions of CDs of their No. 1 hits 30 years
after they broke up. It’s why aging rockers such as R.E.M., U2 and
Bruce Springsteen continue to do well into their 40s and 50s. Nowadays,
though, it’s getting harder to find. It seems that TV commercials
(Nick Drake in a Volkswagen commercial) and programs (Sam Phillips
on “Gilmore Girls”) are better avenues than radio stations for finding
the good stuff. For
a moment in the 1990s, before hip-hop, boy bands and Creed clones
ruled the airwaves, it seemed as if good old-fashioned pop music was
making a comeback, and all was right with the world. Poised on the
edge of superstardom was Jellyfish; they had a small hit single, several
videos on MTV, and a brash, confident attitude to match their music. Four
years later, they had disbanded, leaving us with only two albums and
a jilted feeling. Jellyfish
seemed to come to us straight from the late 1960s and early 1970s,
the era of Badfinger, Big Star and Wings. They even dressed the part,
looking like Ken Kesey’s Merry Pranksters, with puffy shirts, capes,
floppy hats and bellbottoms. “They were a great band – one of the
best I’ve ever seen,” said their former manager, Chris Coyle. “They
were just ahead of the curve. The whole retro ’70s wear came into
fashion a few years later. But that’s what they grew up with, and
that’s what they were proud of.” For
Andy Sturmer and Roger Manning, growing up in Pleasanton, Calif.,
in the 1970s meant countless hours of listening to AM radio. I know
– insert disco joke here. Say what you want about ’70s music, but
amid the Village People and KC & the Sunshine Band, there was
Queen, ELO, 10cc, Supertramp and The Who. Singer/drummer Sturmer and
keyboardist Manning devoured this music and went even further, touching
genres such as jazz and art rock in search of that special formula
that made a song special. The
two friends kept in touch through the college years and in the late
1980s found themselves in the same band, a group called Beatnik Beatch.
The band was going nowhere, so Sturmer and Manning recorded some demos
and began shopping them around. And the record companies were astounded
– estimates run as high as 11 that wanted to sign the two to a deal.
Charisma Records, a subsidiary of Virgin, won the sweepstakes. Now
all they needed was a band and a name. They
snagged guitarist Jason Falkner from the band the Three O’ Clock.
Falkner had been hinting at pursuing a solo career, but after hearing
the demos, he signed on. The search for a bass player proved
to be more difficult. They auditioned many for the job but finally
settled on Roger’s brother, Chris, to join the band. The
name “Jellyfish” actually came from a rival record producer who had
recently been to an aquarium. The group first said no, but, according
to Ken Sharp’s “Power Pop: Conversations with the Power Pop Elite,”
Sturmer said, “It came closer to contract time and we really needed
a name and we thought, you know, that’s the least offensive of all
of the names. It’s just generic enough that it could work.” Sturmer
and Manning wanted the band’s first album to reflect their influences
from the 1970s, so they chose Albhy Galuten, best known for overseeing the Bee Gees’ work on the “Saturday Night
Fever” soundtrack, to produce it. The end result was “Bellybutton,”
a psychedelic romp through the late 1960s, from the foppish clothes
worn by the band members on the album cover to the sing-along choruses. “I think I’d like to play guitar and be
a Beatle, that’d be so swell,” sang Sturmer in the song “All I Want
is Everything.” And from the first listen to Jellyfish’s debut album,
one could tell that being a Beatle – or at least Beatle-like – was
what this group wanted. “Bellybutton” was a remarkable first album.
Confident and disciplined, yet inventive and quirky, it was unlike
anything on the radio in 1990. Jellyfish was unrelenting, cramming
hooks, melodies and harmonies down the listener’s throat for 40 minutes
straight. And
we’re not talking one cute jingle per song. No, there were mini-movements
within songs – bridges that took 90-degree turns from the rest of
the music. “The King is Half-Undressed” is a melodramatic tune with
alternating major and minor chords, heavy on guitars and syncopated
drums (a la “Ticket to Ride”), but the bridge stops on a dime to reveal
gorgeous multi-part harmonies – in a different key from the song,
mind you – ooh-ing and aah-ing over a harpsichord. And you wonder
how they’re going to get back to the song, but they somehow modulate
to the original key, kick the guitars and drums back in as if nothing
happened, and fade out the chorus. Other
songs seemed to borrow tunes from another era. The bass line from
“She Still Loves Him” is straight from the Beatles’ “Free as a Bird”
– pure plagiarism, except that the Beatles’ version (which was created
from a long-lost John Lennon demo) wasn’t released until 1995, four
years after “Bellybutton.” Spooky, ain’t it? And the bridge to “That
is Why,” believe it or not, recalls a portion of disco diva Yvonne
Elliman’s “If I Can’t Have You” (perhaps Galuten’s influence?). “Now
She Knows She’s Wrong,” complete with harpsichord (again!) and chimes,
was a Phil Spector meets the Partridge Family sound – familiar, yet
original. Perhaps
the most amazing cut was buried near the end: “Baby’s Coming Back,”
a sub-3:00 ditty that, according to Sturmer, took them only 10 minutes
to write. Supposedly, Lennon and McCartney wrote “She Loves You” in
the back of a van on the way to a concert. Sometimes good songs write
themselves, and whether it took 10 minutes or 10 hours, it was pure
pop, complete with handclaps and, yes, a harpsichord. “Bellybutton”
was fresh and new, and critics welcomed it like the Second Coming.
“One could sniff and dismiss Jellyfish’s ‘Bellybutton’ as, ahem, derivative,
just another album in the Fab Four-through-Squeeze-through-Crowded
House milieu. But it’s not,” wrote Eric Snider of the St. Petersburg
Times. “All of those influences and more are plainly evident, but
these songs are so melodically delightful, the sweet-and-sour vocal
harmonies so tangy, the arrangements so artfully crafted, that ‘Bellybutton’
adds up to exalted pop, no matter if some of it strikes as a tad familiar.” Things
were looking up. “Baby’s Coming Back” reached only No. 62 on the Billboard
Hot 100 singles chart, but their videos were being featured on MTV,
and they opened for the Black Crowes on a nationwide tour. They spent
an afternoon writing songs with Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys. And
a song they wrote for Ringo Starr appeared on Starr’s critically acclaimed
“Time Takes Time” album, which they helped record. Wow. Crying over Spilt Milk Jellyfish
had finally arrived. The band was being mentioned in the same sentence
as the Beatles, and Sturmer and Manning were being compared to Lennon
and McCartney. And
it drove them crazy. “I
hate the word ‘Beatlesque’ with a passion,” Sturmer told Daily Variety.
“We get hit with that tag all the time, and I feel that it’s extremely
inaccurate.” Nevertheless, the comparisons were inevitable. In a sense,
“Bellybutton” was Jellyfish’s “Revolver” – an ambitious album that
gave hints of greatness and laid the stage for bigger and better things.
After a long tour, the group felt that it was time for them to make
their “Sgt. Pepper.” But
before they could start, the band quickly began to disintegrate. The
tour had taken its toll; Roger’s brother Chris decided that being
a rock star was not for him and left. Jason Falkner became dissatisfied
with his lack of input in the songwriting process (George Harrison,
anyone?) and quit the group to pursue a solo career. That left Roger
Manning and Sturmer, who were left to pick up the pieces. “We were
very tired,” Sturmer told Billboard magazine. “By the time we started
doing demos for the next record, everybody was totally stressed out.”
A band was hastily thrown together to record the album. Bassist Tim
Smith eventually became a regular; other musicians such as Eric Dover,
Jon Brion and Lyle Workman filled in on the recording sessions and
subsequent tour. Not
a good way to start an album. To make matters worse, the record took
an agonizing six months to record. Take after retake, tracks overdubbed
on top of tracks, the process was glacial. Paul McCartney, the ultimate
perfectionist, would have been envious of such obsessive-compulsive
recording. When
“Spilt Milk” was released in February 1993, critics didn’t know what
comparison to make anymore. Jellyfish, in a sense, had out-Beatled
the Beatles. It was Queen meets ELO meets “Pet Sounds”-era Beach Boys
meets 10cc – all of their icons rolled into one album. But then there
was that circus music. And the kids’ songs. And a power ballad, a
polka and a lullaby. I give up; who the hell did these guys sound
like? Let’s
set aside comparisons for now. “Spilt Milk” was an ambitious, innovative,
almost apocalyptic album that tested the limits of pop music and,
well, the human ear. It begins with a sweet a cappella lullaby, “Hush,”
with such gorgeous harmonies reminiscent of the Beach Bo … oops, never
mind. Then, as soon as you’re relaxed and asleep, BAM! A heavy metal
guitar riff introduces a … piano? ... as Andy Sturmer launches into “Joining a Fan Club,” a bombastic,
in-your-face ode to, well, a rock star’s fan club. This song has it
all – guitar solos racing pell-mell, feedback, several key changes
and what sounds like 20-part harmony. Ear candy. Let the wonderful
heartaches begin. “Sebrina,
Paste and Plato” is a rock operetta that starts with a piano reminiscent
of a children’s television show. The playful verse is followed by
a rousing refrain that sounds like a bar full of drunken sailors,
which is answered by a child’s voice saying, “Kool-Aid, sandwiches
and chips for all the shoulders!” The drunken sailors reply, “Lunch
is on the table, soon dessert is on the floor!” Huh? But
then the chorus, the lovely sing-song chorus (“So serene, Sebrina
makes me feel so serene ...”) finds its way into your heart, and it
starts all over again. By the end of the song, you’re dizzy from the
short, manic trip, and you don’t care what the lyrics mean. The
genius of “Spilt Milk” is in the first six songs – one masterpiece
after another. “New Mistake” provides an earful of guitars that sounds
so bittersweet, complemented by a 10cc-like chorus (Dang it,
did it again). “Glutton of Sympathy” is the classic that never was
– a beautiful mid-tempo ballad that was made for radio. It’s followed
by the ill-fated first single, “The Ghost at Number One” – Queen
resurrected. Sorry, but I can’t help it this time. It’s Queen, dammit.
All that is needed is Freddie Mercury. Then, taking a page from “The
King is Half-Undressed,” we hear a bridge in a different key that
turns the song upside down – multi-layered harmonies over a harpsichord.
Now the group is doing its best Beach Boys imitation. It’s dead-on,
really. The
rest of the album continues the voyage through the looking-glass.
“Bye Bye Bye” is a polka, complete with accordion and oom-pah-pahs.
“All is Forgiven” is a thundering, wonderful, noisy anthem; the operatic,
falsetto Queen/ELO harmonies make another appearance. The song ends
abruptly into the quiet “Russian Hill,” an homage to Henry Mancini
laced with strings and a flute. How
do you end such an album? With a circus tune, of course. “Brighter
Day” is a slow, plodding song that sounds like it came straight from
a calliope. You can almost hear children laughing and barkers peddling
cotton candy. The song ends just as the album began: with a music
box and the same note that started “Hush.” You’ve come full circle,
but you feel as if you’ve been on the merry-go-round for 45 minutes,
and it’s about to start again. The
album was magnificent. Forty-eight mixed tracks of voices, strings, brass, flutes, banjos, chimes, theremins,
harpsichords, accordions, balalaikas and
other noise squeezed into 12 songs. And
it tanked on the charts. Jammed
smack in the middle of the grunge era, “Spilt Milk” presented a problem
for Charisma Records, who didn’t know how to market the group. Try
pitching an album as varied and intense as “Spilt Milk” alongside
Nirvana and Pearl Jam and see how far it gets you. It got the album
as high as No. 164 on the Hot 200 chart. And it was the beginning
of the end for Jellyfish. And in the end … For
fans, the end came suddenly. The San Francisco Chronicle reported
in February 1994 that the band was writing songs for its next album.
Then, three months later, word came of the band’s demise, citing “creative
differences.” As with any breakup, there are 10 different stories
as to what happened; getting a synthesis is difficult, but one could
surmise that personality conflicts between Sturmer and Manning arose,
and the songwriting process seemed broken. They both went into the
studio to record “Think About Your Troubles” for a Harry Nilsson tribute
album, and that was it. Apparently, the two friends haven’t said a
word to each other since. The second coming of Lennon and McCartney
had, like their mentors, split in a huff. The
band members did move on to other things. After leaving Jellyfish,
Chris Manning was in a band called Honey, which broke up in 1996.
He is now a producer and engineer in San Francisco and has worked
with such artists as Santana, Metallica and Third Eye Blind. Jason
Falkner, free from being the odd man out, chose yet another band for
his next project. The Grays, a collection of musicians from other
bands who didn’t like being in bands, released “Ro Sham Bo” in 1994.
Then they broke up. Since then, Falkner has released several solo
albums and counts many in the Jellyfish faithful among his fans. Roger
Manning and Eric Dover formed the power pop band Imperial Drag and
released one album. Manning was also the creative force behind the
Moog Cookbook, which played popular hard rock tunes (“Black Hole Sun,”
“Cat Scratch Fever”) on Moog synthesizers. Their techno version of
“More Than a Feeling” will move you to tears – of laughter. Recently,
Manning and Falkner joined forces in a group called TV Eyes; they
are currently shopping for a label. Tim
Smith formed Umajets with former Hollyfaith member Rob Aldridge and
released a few albums that sound like lost Jellyfish albums. He is
probably best known as Sheryl Crow’s bass guitarist. Finally,
Andy Sturmer has all but disappeared. He got married, wrote some songs
and produced a Jelly-like album by Sweden’s the Merrymakers. On the
other side of the world, he produced and played on several releases
by the Japanese group Puffy AmiYumi. Numerous Sturmer demos have surfaced,
as have rumors of a solo album. But he has spent his post-Jellyfish
years lurking in the shadows. There have never been any rumors of
a Jellyfish reunion. So
you would think that yet another band had come and gone, all but forgotten.
Wrong. The
band had developed a small but fanatic following worldwide. The “Jellyfish
Army,” as they called themselves, continue to flourish a decade after
the band split in discussion groups and among the group’s side projects.
They clamored for more Jellyfish material, and a box set called “Fan
Club” was released in 2002, consisting of demos, live recordings and
unreleased songs. (A box set!
That’s only reserved for rock legends such as Bob Dylan and Led Zeppelin.) Andy
Zax’s liner notes for “Fan Club” include a fitting epitaph: “For now
– and let’s face it, forever – we’ve got two albums and this
box of demos, one-off covers, forgotten songs and interview bits …
And that’ll have to do, really. Listening to the four discs at hand
reminds me of a lot of things, but mostly of how hard Jellyfish worked,
how they always tried to get the details right, how completely unwilling
they were to settle for anything less than the best they knew they
were capable of.” Maybe
that hard work will not be forgotten. Maybe a future pop group will
be asked about their influences, and they will point to Jellyfish,
and the group will have their place in music history alongside their
idols. Who
knows? Maybe we’ll hear “Joining a Fan Club” in a Volkswagen commercial
one day.
Related link: The Jellyfish Homepage |