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at a glance...
Hometown: Los Angeles, CA
First Recordings: '80s
Members:
Aimee Mann -bass, guitar, acoustic guitar
Jon Brion -bass, bass harmonica, acoustic and electric guitars, cello, drums, keyboards, percussion, harmonica, vocals
Bernard Butler -guitar, keyboards
Mike Deneen -keyboards
Chris Difford -vocals
Glenn Tilbrook -guitar
Brad Hallen -bass
Juliana Hatfield -vocals
Neil Innes -vocals
Stacy Jones - bass, drums, acoustic guitar
Peter Linton -guitar, vocals
Michael Penn -guitar
John Sands -drums
Clayton Scoble -guitar, vocals
Michael Lockwood -guitar
Bands in the family :
Til Tuesday, Young Snakes, Juliana Hatfield, Difford & Tillbrook, Neil Innes, Squeeze, Bernard Butler, Michael Penn, XTC
Notes:
Many thought Aimee Mann peaked in the early '80s as the leading
member of 'Til Tuesday, but die-hard fans and sage critics know that Aimee has
always been around since those early days -- working hard, writing and
performing her own special brand of clever, well-crafted,
take-no-prisoners, "adult-pop" classics. Still going strong and more independent than ever, it is only now that Mann is finally garnering the accolades and wider recognition she so
justly deserves. After Til Tuesday disbanded in '88, Mann went on to write and record two critically acclaimed solo albums. 1993's Jon Brion-produced Whatever (Imago), rife with brutally
honest, evocatively therapeutic, and non-Pollyana-esque songs, garnered the
solo Mann high praise. '96's I'm With Stupid again won the critics hearts
as another melodic gem of pop truisms, prompting Time Magazine to refer to
it as one of the "catchiest pop albums of the year, brimming with poised
three-minute mini-masterpiece." With praise of such high magnitude, you'd have thought Mann would have been more of a public fixture after the release of I'm With Stupid. But years of
major label hijinks, including Imago's demise, and Geffen's virtual
disappearance via the Polygram/Universal merger, led to the prolific Mann's
creative handcuffing (at least on the distributed/finished product-level).
This languish in no-man's label land, combined with Mann's honorable
unwillingness to betray her convictions, compromise her integrity or be
re-vamped by the spin machine of major label management led to the
much-too-long four years between albums. A public resurgence came via director Paul Thomas Anderson, a friend and long-time fan, whose latest film, "Magnolia," contains no less
than 8 Mann songs, 3 of which are also included on Bachelor No. 2.
Anderson, inspired by tapes he'd heard Mann working on while thinking of
his next movie, ended up writing Magnolia's screenplay/basing it's
characters on Mann's lyrics. Mann's "Save Me," received Golden Globe and Oscar nominations for best song from a motion picture. Enter Bachelor No. 2, Aimee Mann's third
solo and first self-produced album. Mann, finally fed up with major label
machinations, bought the album back from Interscope (where she landed after
the merger) in the Summer of 99 and created her own label, SuperEgo
records, through which she will distribute Bachelor No. 2.

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