The Veldt - It's Over - 1990from the Mammoth Records cd "Frequency - A Sampler of North Carolina Sounds"
from CMJ.com
The Veldt fell just short of being an anathema in the Chapel Hill indie rock scene of the early '90s. Sounding and looking nothing like the striped shirt contingent of Superchunk, Polvo, or Archers of Loaf, the band was more at home with the likes of England's dream pop bands. They were predominantly Black, an unfortunate mark against them. What could be more natural than Black men playing rock & roll? Keep the atmosphere of the Cocteau Twins and AR Kane, add some aggression and more prominent guitars -- that was the Veldt. They were influenced by Echo and the Bunnymen just as much as Jimi Hendrix and Prince, adding discernible lyrics and upping the emotional power where most bands of their ilk shied from the microphone, burying their vocals in guitar wash.
Founded in 1986 by vocalist Daniel Chavis and his brother and guitarist Danny Chavis, they added drummer Martin Levi two years later. With Cocteaus and AR Kane associate Lincoln Fong producing, engineering, and providing bass, the Veldt recorded Marigolds, an EP released in 1992 on Stardog/Mammoth. Shortly after its recording, they recruited a full-time bassist in David Burris. Signed on the strength of the EP to Mercury, they released Afrodisiac, an excellent, muscular dream pop record. In keeping with the AR Kane ties, studio comrade Ray Shulman (Gentle Giant) produced, while the Cocteaus' Robin Guthrie provided some guitar. A number of the record's tracks had "alternative radio hit" written all over them, but unfortunately this didn't happen. Ejected from the major label world, they issued Universe Boat on the independent Yesha, an EP of demos. At some point prior to the recording of the quietly-released 1998 album Love at First Hate (on their own End of the World Technologies), tensions between the Chavis brothers led to Danny's dismissal; Burris also left. Daniel carried on with Sam Clowney and Des White, but the band didn't survive long after support dates for the record.
Somewhat fittingly, the band received their warmest response while touring in the U.K with the Cocteau Twins. The textured guitars went over well, and concert goers were more than happy to see a band who could sound layered and emote vocally at the same time. As the well-worn cliche goes, this didn't translate across the ocean.
Band Members:
Daniel Chavis - Vocals, Guitar
Danny Chavis - Guitars
Joe Boyle - Bass
Marvin Levi - Drums
3 comments:
This is one of my favorite songs of all time.
You've covered most NC bands I knew in CH in the late 80s and early 90s, but I haven't seen a post on one of my favorites, Johnny Quest with Joe Farmer, Jack Campbell, Steve Hill and one other whose name escapes me right now.
Yeah I know. I want to post a Johnny Quest song but all I have is Lady Cop. I want to find a copy of The Heismann. If anyone has an mp3, please send it to me and I will get to a Johnny Quest posting.
I have a CD that has the Heisman on it, entitled 10 Million Summers and released in 1992. I'm not real computer savvy, but i'll see what I can do about downloading and sending.
Bill Ladd was the one I couldn't remember!
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