- Matt Hollywood
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Matt Hollywood (born June 11, 1973) is an American indie rock guitarist and singer. He was a founding member and leader of the Portland-based indie rock band The Out Crowd, as well as a founding member of the neo-psychedelic rock band The Brian Jonestown Massacre.[1] He currently fronts the drone rock band The Rebel Drones.
He was born in Syracuse, New York in 1973. He grew up in and around Ventura, California, and now resides in North Portland, Oregon.
Contents
The Imajinary Friends
Hollywood had been involved with the neo-psychedelic/surrealist rock band, The Imajinary Friends, that spawned from the original line-up of The Brian Jonestown Massacre in 1993. The band consisted of Travis Threlkel, Ricky Maymi (both from The BJM), Matt Hollywood, Graham Bonnar (of Swervedriver) and Tim Digulla (later of Tipsy). The band recorded its debut album Lunchtime In Infinity on Bomp! Records in 1994. Hollywood left the band due to his full time commitment to The BJM and was replaced by Jeremy Davies (brother of founding BJM-member Jeff Davies).[2]
The Brian Jonestown Massacre
Matt Hollywood was a founding member of neo-psychedelic rock band, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, with the initial line-up of Anton Newcombe (guitar/vocals), Travis Threlkel (guitar), Ricky Maymi (drums), Jeff Davies (guitar) and Hollywood (bass).[3]
Hollywood was a member of The BJM for roughly seven years as mainly a bass guitar player, but was also known to play acoustically at times. Over this period, Hollywood contributed many musical ideas to the band. He composed and sang several of The BJM's songs, most notably "Oh Lord", "Maybe Tomorrow", "No Come Down" and "Not if You Were the Last Dandy on Earth"; the latter of which parodied The Dandy Warhols' single "Not if You Were the Last Junkie on Earth", and led many people to believe the 'Warhols and The BJM were fighting. Hollywood has said of the song: "It always amazed me how this song got taken as evidence that Anton (Newcombe) was 'stalking' the Dandys - since he didn't even write it." The song was featured in the Jim Jarmusch film Broken Flowers.
He appears on the 2004 documentary DiG! with The BJM, which also includes footage of the onstage altercation that led to his departure from the band.
In 2010, it was reported that he has returned to the studio with The Brian Jonestown Massacre and is once again a full-time member.
Post-BJM
Magic Fingers
Before forming The Out Crowd, Hollywood was in Magic Fingers with Eric Hedford (of The Dandy Warhols and We Are Telephone) and Spike Keating (of Swoon 23 and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club).
The Out Crowd
Hollywood formed the indie rock band, The Out Crowd, in late 2001 with drummer Stuart Valentine, guitarist Elliott Barnes and tambourine player Sarah Jane.
The group released their debut album Go on, Give a Damn which was produced by Gregg Williams (The Dandy Warhols) in early 2003. Their follow up Then I Saw The Holy City was produced by Brian Coates and released in the fall of 2004. Hollywood confirmed that the band broke up in 2006.[4]
The Rebel Drones
Of his current work, Hollywood says,
We plan on doing some recording in the near future. Beyond that nothing's been discussed. I'm currently writing and rehearsing an album I hope to get recorded within the next few months with a new band. So far it's some dark, heavy, spacey stuff in a suicide/spacemen 3 vein with a few moments of quiet sadness and hope for better days, with the odd krautrock sex jam thrown in here and there. Pretty much reflecting the state of my mixed-up life right now.
Hollywood's new band, The Rebel Drones, consist of Dand Lee Strickland, Collin Hegna (of The Brian Jonestown Massacre), Jason "Plucky" Anchondo (of The Warlocks and Spindrift), William Slater (of Grails) and Peter Holmstrom (of The Dandy Warhols).[5]
Discography
Albums with The BJM
- Spacegirl & Other Favorites (1993) Candy Floss
- Methodrone (1995) Bomp! Records
- Their Satanic Majesties' Second Request (1996) Bomp! Records/Tangible
- Take It From The Man! (1996) Bomp! Records/Tangible/Tee Pee Records
- Thank God For Mental Illness (1996) Bomp! Records/Tangible
- Give It Back! (1997) Bomp! Records/Tangible
- Strung Out in Heaven (1998) TVT Records [6]
- Bringing It All Back Home – Again (1999) Which Records
Albums with The Out Crowd
- Go On, Give a Damn (2003) Elephant Stone Records
- Then I Saw the Holy City (2004) The Kora Records
References
- ^ "Joel Gion didn't want his band to find fame in failure, but that's just what happened, thanks to 'Dig!' - Page 2 - SFGate". Articles.sfgate.com. 2005-04-16. http://articles.sfgate.com/2005-04-16/entertainment/17368348_1_dandy-warhols-anton-newcombe-heroin-addled/2. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
- ^ US. "The Imajinary Friends - San Francisco, US". MySpace.com. http://www.myspace.com/theimajinaryfriends. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
- ^ "Brian Jonestown Massacre". Left Off The Dial. http://www.leftoffthedial.com/BrianJonestownMassacre.htm. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ US. "Rebel Drones - - Psychédélique / Blues / Gospel". MySpace.com. http://www.myspace.com/theerebeldrones. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
- ^ "Keep Music Evil". Bjmarchives.com. http://www.bjmarchives.com/members/hollywood.html. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
External links
Anton Newcombe · Matt Hollywood · Frankie "Teardrop" Emerson · Ricky Maymi · Dan Allaire · Rob Campanella · Collin Hegna · Joel Gion ·
Peter Hayes · Jeffrey Davies · Dave Koenig · Miranda Lee Richards · Graham Bonnar · Bobby Hecksher · Dean Taylor · Brian Glaze · Charles Mehling · Patrick Straczek · Raugust · Travis Threlkel · Mike Whitemann · Mike Sharperson · Dawn Thomas · Robert Desmond · Irina Yaikowski · Ryan Summer · Hunter Crowley · Jeremy Davies · Norm Block · Adam Hamilton · Johnny Haro · Billy Pleasant · Marty Smith · Milo Warner Martin · Mara Keagle · Lenny Pops · Jeff Levits · Sune Rose Wagner · Tommy Dietrick · Brad Artley · Jussi Tegelman · Christian Omar Madrigal Izzo · Tony O'Neill · Kieran McCartney · Kirpatrick Thomas · Elise Dye · Chris Dupré · Paola Simmonds · Josie Fluri · Christof W. Certik · Ian Sefchik · Zy Lynn · Greg Helton ·Studio albums Spacegirl & Other Favorites (1993) · Methodrone (1995) · Take It from the Man! (1996) · Their Satanic Majesties' Second Request (1996) · Thank God for Mental Illness (1996) · Give It Back! (1997) · Strung Out in Heaven (1998) · Bringing it All Back Home - Again (1999) · Bravery, Repetition and Noise (2001) · ...And This Is Our Music (2003) · My Bloody Underground (2008) · Who Killed Sgt. Pepper? (2010)Singles "She Made Me" / "Evergreen" · "Convertible" / "Their Majesties 2nd Request (Enrique's Dream)" · "Hide & Seek" · "Cold To The Touch" / "Anemone" · "Never Ever" / "Feelers" · "Not If You Were The Last Dandy On Earth" · "This Is Why You Love Me" · "Love" · "If Love Is The Drug Then I Want To OD" · "Prozac vs Heroin" / "Nailing Honey To The Bee" · "The One" · "Iluminomi" / "There’s A War Going On"EPs If I Love You (2001) · We Are the Radio (2005) · Just Like Kicking Jesus (2008) · Smoking Acid (2009) · One EP (2009)Compilations Tepid Peppermint Wonderland: A Retrospective (2004)Associated acts Collaborators Matthew J. Tow · Will Carruthers · Mark Gardener · Sarabeth Tucek · Constantine Karlis · Freiderike Bienert · Thibault Pesenti · Jón Sæmundur Auðarson · Felix Bondareff · Unnur Andrea EinarsdottirRelated articles Discography · Dig! (Ondi Timoner) · Bomp! RecordsCategories:- American male singers
- American rock singers
- American rock guitarists
- American indie rock musicians
- Living people
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