Earth (American band)

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Earth
Earth - STUK Leuven 27-03-2009.jpg
Earth performing live in Hamburg in 2009; from left to right: Steve Moore, Don McGreevy, Adrienne Davies and Dylan Carlson
Background information
Origin Olympia, Washington, United States[1]
Genres Drone metal, experimental rock, post-rock, psychedelic rock, doom metal, stoner rock, minimalist
Years active 1989–1997, 2003–present
Labels Sub Pop, No Quarter, Or, Southern Lord, Blast First/Mute
Associated acts Melvins, Nirvana, Sunn O))), Thrones, Bill Frisell
Website www.thronesanddominions.com
Members Dylan Carlson
Adrienne Davies
Don McGreevy
Bill Herzog
Past members Slim Moon
Greg Babior
Kelly Canary
Joe Preston
Ian Dickson
Dave Harwell
Sean McElligot
John Schuller
Michael McDaniel
Jonas Haskins
Steve Moore
Angelina Baldoz
Karl Blau
Lori Goldston

Earth is an American musical group based in Olympia, Washington, formed in 1989 and led by the guitarist Dylan Carlson.[1][2] Earth's music is nearly all instrumental, and can be divided into two distinct stages. Their early work is characterized by distortion, droning, minimalism, and lengthy, repetitive song structures. The band's later output reduces the distortion while incorporating elements of country, jazz rock, and folk.[3] Earth is recognized as a pioneer of drone metal, with the band's Earth 2 being regarded as a milestone of the genre.[3]

Biography

Dylan Carlson founded the band in 1989 along with Slim Moon and Greg Babior, taking the title "Earth" from Black Sabbath's original name. Carlson has remained the core of the band's line-up throughout its changes. Outside of the underground music world, Carlson is perhaps best known for having been a close friend of grunge icon Kurt Cobain, as well as the person who purchased the gun that Cobain reportedly later used to commit suicide.[4] Cobain sang lead vocals in the song "Divine and Bright", from a demo included on the re-release of the live album Sunn Amps and Smashed Guitars.

Earth 2 was described as a "milestone" by Terrorizer's Dayal Patterson, which she described as "a three-track, 75 minute deluge of feedback and distorted guitars that marked the blueprint for what Dylan at the time coined 'ambient metal'".[3] The band went on hiatus after the release of Pentastar: In the Style of Demons due to Carlson's personal problems, including heroin addiction, rehabiliation, his connection to Kurt Cobain's suicide, and incarceration.[3] Carlson attributed the break primarily to his heroin addiction:

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At one point, music was everything to me. Then suddenly it wasn't and something else was there, and that was something destructive and damaging. Heroin is part of your life - you don't function without it. It's not like, "I need to get it to write," it's at a much more fundamental level to your existence, like, "I need it to get out of bed."[3]

Earth reappeared around 2000[3] with a markedly different sound. Its music was still drone based, slow-paced, and lengthy, but it now included a drummer and featured strong elements of country music. Remarking on the stylistic change, Carlson was quick to point to the continuity with Earth's previous sound:

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In 2001 I started writing again. Originally I had thought it would be something radically different and if it had been I probably wouldn't have stuck with the name. I thought about doing something different at first, but no matter what I do there's always going to be certain elements that are the same, like the slow tempos and repetition. So for whatever reason, I can't help myself - it was still Earth.[3]

The press release for Hex; Or Printing in the Infernal Method (2005) stated the band's music shows "the influence of country guitarists/songwriters such as: Duane Eddy, Merle Haggard, Roy Buchanan and fuses it with the vibe of epic visionary composer: Ennio Morricone."[5] The press release for The Bees Made Honey in the Lion's Skull (2008) declares "Earth shows it's affinity with a nod to the best elements of the more adventurous San Francisco bands of the late 60's and 70's, and the more spiritually aware and exciting forms of Jazz-Rock from the same era"[6] The press release for Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light I describes "inspiration from both British Folk-Rock bands the Pentangle and Fairport Convention".[7]

Members

Current members


Former

Timeline

Discography

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Studio albums

References

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External links

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