bios
O'Connor was one of rock 'n' roll's once-in-a-blue-moon success
stories, a former member of the 1980s indie rock group I-Rails who became
an air traffic controller in Los Angeles and got so burned out that he dug
out an old demo from his closet and shipped copies. Much to O'Connor's surprise,
an executive at Columbia U.K. signed his one-man show known as Primitive Radio
Gods. O'Connor's "Rocket" album, five years in the making, was launched
in June 1996, just as the single, "Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth
With Money in My Hand," was climbing to the top of Billboard's modern
rock tracks chart. The song, cleverly incorporating a sample of B.B. King's
"How Blue Can You Get," also appeared on "The Cable Guy"
film soundtrack.
Though "Standing" was never released as a commercial single, there
was enough radio airplay to fuel "Rocket" to gold status. O'Connor
even added former I-Rails band mates, Tim Lauterio (drums) and Jeff Sparks
(bass), and guitarist Luke McAuliffe to the group and toured North America.
"It was bad from the very, very beginning, coming over to Columbia U.S., because we were originally signed to Columbia London," O'Connor said recently. "There was a lot of pressure to get songs into movies, and I kept saying no. Finally, we did do that one movie ('The Cable Guy'). I also wanted to be able to do my own stuff. That's what causes a lot of tension with any major label; you're wanting to do it yourself. But they have a plan for you; whatever's happening on the chart at the time, they try to push you in that direction and they want you to look a certain way and write a certain song to fit into a format.

"Then there was the whole thing about when we went to renegotiate, they
offered us almost nothing after they had already made millions of dollars
and got the record for free. It was bad blood from the beginning."
By early 1997, just as Primitive Radio Gods began work on a follow-up album,
Columbia dropped them. "That's why it was a shock," O'Connor said.
"It was like, 'It's fine if we fail, if we make a second record and there's
no hits and nobody likes it,' but don't we even get a chance to fail?"
Jonathan Daniel signed the band to Hi-Fi/Sire and everything, it seemed, was
back on course.
"Finally, it was going to come out, we had a release date and everything,"
O'Connor said, "but then at the last minute Sire - our new parent label
- got bought by London, and Sire was gutted. We got stuck in this limbo, where
London didn't release it, yet they didn't want to let us go, so we were back
in this kind of purgatory for a year. It seems to be part of our destiny to
have to go through a bunch of shit before we have to get something out."
As they waited for another opportunity, the four took on day jobs. O'Connor,
who had lived off the money he made from "Rocket" as long as he
could, delivered flowers for a year.
Daniel built his fledgling Kramden Enterprises around the group and enlisted
Boulder, Colo.-based What Are Records? to distribute and market the group's
long-overdue album, "White Hot Peach."
The album, an unexpected blast of brilliant, experimental power-pop,
was made available last month on the Web sites Napster, Scour Exchange, stationMP3,
Angrycoffee and Emusic and released in retail stores via W.A.R.? "It
took five years for the first record to come out, and now four years later
here we are again," a relieved O'Connor said. "Whether it's the
greatest record in the world, who knows, but it's as good as most stuff out
there. It's a good record, and it definitely deserves to get out. This second
one is a much better album, if for no other reason because we've had so long
to work on it. 'Rocket' was just kind of tossed out, something I would throw
out on the weekends when I got time off from work. Never before in our little
musical journey making records had we worked harder and longer on songs. We
had a lot of material to choose from; we had like 20 or 30 mixes of just one
song. So obviously that's going to make a better record, the more songs you
have and the more you get to work on them.
"The making of this other one was done for the first couple of years
where we were full-time musicians; we had the money and we were doing nothing
but writing and recording. I bought some recording equipment and started getting
into the recording aspect of it."
"Rocket" was hard-edged, drawing upon O'Connor's rock and rap influences.
"White Hot Peach" takes a page out of the Beach Boys-meets-XTC textbook,
from the lilting "Ghost of a Chance" to the spacious and crystalline
"Motor of Joy" and "Whatever Makes McCool."
"On 'Rocket,' there's a heavier, more of a rock and rap influence, since
I had been listening to Public Enemy," O'Connor said. "Then I got
burned out on that and really got into the Red House Painters and 'Loveless'
by My Bloody Valentine and Guided By Voices. I got onto a different track,
and of course, being in Southern California, there was a vibe there of the
sunsets and the coast, playing slower and laid-back.
"The first album was made in '91 and it didn't come out till '96. By
'White Hot Peach,' I was already listening to all kinds of different stuff
and having different influences. We were changing and getting older. This
new one is a little more current, because the last recordings were done in
'98. They're all pop records, more or less, because they do have an ear to
the ground." "White Hot Peach" also debunks the notion that
O'Connor is another Prince, doing it all himself. He co-wrote most of the
songs with Sparks, and Lauterio and McAuliffe also contributed lyrically.
"The perception was that it was just me, and it was at the time that
the first record came out," O'Connor said, "but we formed a partnership.
It's a band in the fullest extent; the money gets split. If you look at the
credits, Jeff sang as many or more songs than me. It's definitely a band effort."
By making "White Hot Peach" available for fans to freely download,
O'Connor hopes more people will be exposed to the music and want to buy the
album. It's a gamble they're willing to take, he says.
"We obviously don't have the big machine this time, but we're pumping
it into radio," he said. "It's a lot smaller, more of a grass-roots
type of thing, but we're getting some airplay and we're working on a video
for the second single. It's a lot of stuff done by Luke, 8mm footage made
back when he was a teenager. We're having a friend of ours piece that together.
Just the fact that we're on radio at all is pretty cool at this point, but
we've basically had to start over.
"After this much time, you can't really rely on people remembering your
name or what happened back in '96. Ultimately, this record could be just as
successful, if not more, than the other one just because it's better. It's
stronger in terms of songwriting, but it'll take more time to work it."
The four are already working on their third album. O'Connor crosses his fingers,
hoping it doesn't take another four years (and more anguish) to release it.
By
GERRY GALIPAULT , Pause & Play
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