John Linnell
American musician (born 1959) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American musician (born 1959) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Sidney Linnell (/lɪˈnɛl/ lih-NEL; born June 12, 1959) is an American musician and one half of the Brooklyn-based alternative rock band They Might Be Giants, with John Flansburgh, which was formed in 1982.[2] In addition to singing and songwriting, he plays accordion, baritone and bass saxophone, clarinet, and keyboards for the group.
John Linnell | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | John Sidney Linnell |
Born | [1] New York City, New York, U.S. | June 12, 1959
Origin | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Genres | Alternative rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician, singer-songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, accordion, keyboards, saxophone, clarinet, bass, guitar, autoharp, banjo, stylophone, marxophone |
Years active | 1976–present |
Labels | Bar/None Records, Elektra Records, Restless Records, Idlewild Records |
Spouse |
Karen Brown
(m. 1997) |
Linnell's lyrics include strange subject matter and word play. Persistent themes include aging, delusional behavior, bad relationships, death, and the personification of inanimate objects. Conversely to some of these dark themes, the accompanying melodies are usually cascading and upbeat.[3][4]
John Linnell was born in New York City, to father Zenos Linnell, (1925–2011), a psychiatrist,[5] and mother Kathleen (née Glenn; 1926–2008).[6][3] When Linnell was a child, Walt Kelly's Songs of the Pogo album made a strong impression on his musical sensibilities. The album contained lyrics that relied heavily on puns and word play, which Linnell appreciated. In particular, he recalls "Lines Upon a Tranquil Brow", which later became part of They Might Be Giants's live repertoire.[7][8] At an early age, Linnell and his family relocated to Lincoln, Massachusetts, where he attended Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School. Here, he worked on the school newspaper, the Promethean, and met John Flansburgh. The two occasionally collaborated on home-recording projects.[3]
Linnell studied English for a semester at the University of Massachusetts Amherst before dropping out to pursue a career in music.[9]
In high school, Linnell played with a band called The Baggs.[7] Prior to finding success in the alternative rock scene, Linnell was also involved with The Mundanes, a Rhode Island–based new wave band. Linnell played keyboards and saxophone for the group.[10] Because of his unsatisfactory minor role in the band, and under the pressure of The Mundanes' unsuccessful search for a record deal, Linnell began leisurely recording music with John Flansburgh.[9][11] His family did not support the transition from what they considered to be a more professional band to an experimental one.[3]
Linnell co-founded They Might Be Giants in 1982 with high school friend John Flansburgh. While the two split singing and songwriting duties roughly in half, Linnell's songs enjoyed the most commercial success in their early years: singles like "Don't Let's Start" and "Ana Ng" introduced the band to college radio, and they made waves on the Billboard charts in 1990 with "Birdhouse in Your Soul".[3][12] Linnell writes songs, sings, plays accordion, keyboards, and various woodwind instruments for the band.
Linnell described his role in the group during an interview for Splatter Effect in 1994:
I have a personal, a real obsession, with melody and harmony. I can really never get enough of that kind of thing. I don't think too much about the cultural context of what we're doing. I think John [Flansburgh] is more on that end of it. He thinks more in terms of the larger picture, the larger meaning of what we're doing. I'm more into the technical end: the chords and the rhythms and the melodies.
In December 2005, the band began to produce a twice-monthly podcast. Early on, Linnell frequently contributed humorous spoken-word pieces to the program.
Since 1994, Linnell has done some solo work: in that year he released the State Songs EP, which he expanded to a full-length album in 1999. The concept of the State Songs project is intentionally misleading: U.S. states feature prominently in the title and chorus of each song, but have very little to do with their actual narratives. "Montana", for instance, is about the insane ramblings of somebody who is about to die; "Idaho" explores a famous rock story in which John Lennon, having consumed hallucinogenic drugs, believed he could drive his house; "South Carolina" is about getting rich as a result of a bicycle accident.[13]
Other side-projects include the limited-release House of Mayors EP in 1996 through the Hello CD of the Month Club and in 1997 a flexi disc of the song "Olive the Other Reindeer" accompanying promotional copies of the children's books, Olive, the Other Reindeer. Linnell has also appeared as a guest musician—often as an accordionist—on a number of musical efforts by other artists, including Suzanne Vega's Days of Open Hand and David Byrne's Grown Backwards.[14][15]
Linnell provided the singing voice for the Other Father character in the 2009 film Coraline, for which They Might Be Giants wrote the "Other Father Song", included on the film's soundtrack.[16]
In 2021, Linnell released a four-song EP containing original songs sung entirely in Latin, titled Roman Songs.[17]
Linnell married Karen Brown in 1997 and has one son, Henry (b. 1998),[3] who appeared as a performer on They Might Be Giants' children's albums Here Come the ABCs and Here Come the 123s,[18][19] as well as his father's solo album Roman Songs.[20]
In a People magazine online poll—"The Most Beautiful People of 1998"—Linnell finished ninth (with 4,189 votes, eight ahead of Sarah Michelle Gellar, and 1,038 behind Madonna). He responded to the poll results with an op-ed piece in The New York Times:[21]
I had already gotten wind of the existence of the poll a few days earlier when I read that Leonardo DiCaprio had been knocked out of the No. 1 spot by a dark horse named Hank the Angry, Drunken Dwarf. The on-line voters, it seemed, had a new, more evolved definition of beauty that gave low marks to standard celebrity good looks. What they really valued was a person's inner beauty. Anyway, that's what I told myself as I went on line to see the results firsthand.
He went on to say, of online voting:
It has been suggested that the Internet might be a good way to vote for our elected officials. If my experience is any guide, though, it appears there are still a few bugs to be worked out before you'll be able to elect the next President while sitting at home in your underwear, unless you want Shecky Greene running the country.
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