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Matthew Sweet

American musician (born 1964) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Matthew Sweet
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Sidney Matthew Sweet (born October 6, 1964) is an American alternative rock/power pop singer-songwriter and musician who was part of the burgeoning music scene in Athens, Georgia, during the 1980s before gaining commercial success in the 1990s as a solo artist. His companion albums, Tomorrow Forever and Tomorrow's Daughter, were followed by 2018's Wicked System of Things[1][2][3] and 2021's Catspaw,[4][5] his 15th studio effort.

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Early life and education

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Sweet (middle) with his first band the Specs, c. late 1970s

Sweet was born in Lincoln, Nebraska. He graduated from Southeast High School in Lincoln,[6] in 1983. Upon graduation he moved to Athens, Georgia, to attend college,[6] on the recommendation of Mitch Easter. Sweet and Easter had become pen pals after R.E.M.'s Bill Berry suggested Easter bring Sweet into his band Let's Active.[7]

Career

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1980s

As a high school student in 1980, Sweet wrote songs and recorded them on four-track cassettes. He joined the band The Specs and released his first recording on a battle of bands LP produced by a local radio station,[8] and fronted his own local band called The Dialtones.[9] After graduating, Sweet traveled to Athens, Georgia, to attend college amid the flourishing Athens music scene. That same year, Sweet, who had met the band R.E.M. when they played a show in his hometown the previous year, collaborated with frontman Michael Stipe in a duo group under the name Community Trolls, as well as played guitar in Stipe's sister Lynda Stipe's band, Oh-OK. In addition, he formed another duo, The Buzz of Delight, with Oh-OK drummer David Pierce, releasing an EP, Sound Castles, in 1984 on DB Records.[10] On the strength of this 12" vinyl, Sweet was signed to a solo recording contract with Columbia Records.[6]

In 1986, he released Inside, his debut album, to good reviews but little commercial success. In 1989, he released Earth after signing with A&M Records; likewise, it was well-received critically, yet not commercially.

1990s

In 1990, A&M released Sweet from his contract, and he signed with rival Zoo Entertainment, which evolved into Volcano Entertainment. Sweet formed a new band (which included Richard Lloyd, Robert Quine, Greg Leisz, Lloyd Cole, and Fred Maher), and they spent that year assembling his next work, originally titled Nothing Lasts.[11]

The following year, Sweet released Girlfriend, which was widely considered an artistic breakthrough. It quickly garnered impressive U.S. sales, spawning a Top 10 single with the title track. The music video for "Girlfriend" (heavily aired on MTV, MuchMusic and Night Tracks) featured clips from the anime film Space Adventure Cobra, while the video for "I've Been Waiting" used clips of the Urusei Yatsura character Lum.

In 1993, Sweet released Altered Beast, an album which drew mixed reactions with its intense and brooding tracks (such as "Someone to Pull the Trigger" and "Knowing People"). The music video for the single "The Ugly Truth" (directed by Sweet) featured the singer being chased in the desert by police while driving his own 1970 Dodge Challenger, while the video for "Time Capsule" was a literary homage to Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.

In 1995, Sweet released 100% Fun, an alt-rock album best known for its lead-off track, the self-deprecating "Sick of Myself". The album itself fared better commercially, and even made it onto Entertainment Weekly critic David Browne's year's-best list.

In 1997, Sweet released Blue Sky on Mars, a new-wave album which featured the synth-laden singles "Where You Get Love" and "Come to California". The music video for the former featured Sweet as an astronaut traveling through outer space.

In 1998, his version of Walter Egan's Magnet and Steel was recorded on the Sabrina The Teenage Witch album with Lindsey Buckingham on guitar.

In 1999, Sweet released In Reverse, a psychedelic album which featured Wall of Sound singles "What Matters" and "Trade Places". The album is noteworthy for its 10-minute closing track, "Thunderstorm", a combination of several demos.

2000s

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Sweet in 2006

In 2000, Sweet released Time Capsule: Best of 90/00, a retrospective compilation which featured two new tracks.

In 2001, Sweet and Darius Rucker performed The Beach Boys song "Sail On, Sailor" on the special A Tribute to Brian Wilson; the musicians later performed the same song with Brian Wilson himself on Late Show with David Letterman.

In 2002, Sweet released To Understand: The Early Recordings of Matthew Sweet, a retrospective compilation which featured unreleased material.[12] Also that year, he formed the group The Thorns with Shawn Mullins and Pete Droge.[13]

In 2003, Sweet released Kimi Ga Suki, a garage-rock album initially released in Japan, where Sweet has a following.

In 2004, he released Living Things, an acoustic album mainly consisted of material he wrote while recording w/ The Thorns.

In 2006, Sweet and Susanna Hoffs released Under the Covers, Vol. 1, which featured covers of popular 1960s songs.

In 2008, Sweet released Sunshine Lies, his 10th studio album, which also incorporated a 2-LP set featuring 4 bonus tracks.[14]

In 2009, Sweet and Hoffs released Under the Covers, Vol. 2, which featured covers of popular 1970s songs.

2010s

In 2010, the musical Girlfriend, using songs from Sweet's album of the same name, was staged by the Berkeley Repertory Theatre.[15][16]

In 2011, Sweet released Modern Art, an album which featured the single, "She Walks the Night".

In 2012, Sweet celebrated the 20th anniversary of Girlfriend with a tour performing the entire album from start to finish.[17] Also that year, Sweet contributed an essay for the Mark Dillon book Fifty Sides of the Beach Boys on the 1967 song "Wonderful".[18]

In 2013, Sweet and Susanna Hoffs released Under the Covers, Vol. 3, which features covers of popular 1980s songs.[19][20][21]

In 2014, Sweet was featured on The Simpsons, the longest-running American sitcom. He wrote "Hopin' for a Dream", a song by fictitious 1980s band SunGazer, in the episode.[22][23] Sweet and his wife Lisa were also research consultants for the Tim Burton film Big Eyes, a biography on painter Margaret Keane.[24][25][26]

In 2015, Sweet and Susanna Hoffs released Completely Under the Covers, a limited 4-disc box set of all three Under the Covers albums, with 15 bonus tracks.[27]

In 2017, Sweet released Tomorrow Forever,[28][1] a rootsy album funded entirely by fans on Kickstarter; over the course of one month in 2014, the project exceeded its $32,000 goal by 75% from fewer than 800 backers.[29]

In 2018, Sweet released Tomorrow's Daughter on May 18,[30] a companion album to Tomorrow Forever. Also that year, Sweet was paid tribute in the compilation album, "Altered Sweet", which included artists such as Lisa Mychols, Andy Reed, Greg Pope, Nick Bertling, Fireking, Chris Richards & The Subtractions, simple friend, Michael Simmons, Gretchen's Wheel, The Well Wishers, Elvyn, Pop Co-Op, Stabby Robot, Lannie Flowers, Stereo Tiger, Michael Carpenter, Phil Ajjarapu, CokeRoque, Donny Brown, Nick Piunti, Paranoid Lovesick, Trolley, Keith Klingensmith, Arvidson & Butterflies, Robyn Gibson and Popdudes.[31][32] Also that year, independent vinyl reissue label Intervention Records announced it would release Artist-Approved 2 LP Expanded Editions of 100% Fun, Altered Beast, and Girlfriend on vinyl and CD/SACD, along with a vinyl reissue of Son of Altered Beast. On Record Store Day's Black Friday, he released Wicked System of Things,[33] a tribute to midwestern power pop, and a 3-inch colored vinyl of a live 1997 recording from Disney Orlando's Pleasure Island for Record Store Day in 2019.[34][35]

2020s

In 2021, Sweet released Catspaw, his 15th studio album, and the first to feature Sweet playing all lead guitar parts.[4][5] At the time of his stroke in 2024, Sweet was writing and recording new material for an upcoming album, Midsommar. Due to the effects of his illness it is unlikely to be finished in the immediate future, according to Sweet.[36]

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Personal life

Sweet and his wife Lisa have resided in Omaha, Nebraska, since 2013.[25] He was married at least once before; a 1989 divorce inspired the songs on Sweet's commercial breakthrough album Girlfriend.[37]

Sweet is a member of the Canadian charity Artists Against Racism.[38]

In October 2024, Sweet suffered a debilitating stroke while on tour with Hanson.[39] The stroke was severe and left him unable to walk due to ataxia (extreme dizziness), inability to use his left arm properly, which keeps him from being able to play guitar, and his speech was also affected. He is currently undergoing therapy to mitigate the effects of the stroke.[36]

Discography

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Film and television

1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
  • Theme song, Camp Burlesque[46]
2006
2007
2009
2010
2012
2014
2016
2018
2019
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Tributes and benefits

1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
  • "Do Ya" (Move cover), Live from 6A: Great Musical Performances from Late Night with Conan O'Brien
1998
  • "Girlfriend", Onxrt: Live From the Archives, Vol. 4[54]
  • "We're the Same", Golden Jam: General Mills' Golden Grahams[55]
1999
  • "Divine Intervention", 2 Meter Sessies, Vol. 5[56]
2001
  • "Every Night", Listen to What the Man Said: Popular Artists Pay Tribute to Paul McCartney.
2002
  • "Karen", Shoe Fetish: A Tribute to Shoes.
  • "Big Sky", This Is Where I Belong – The Songs of Ray Davies & The Kinks
  • "Halfway to Paradise" (Gerry Goffin & Carole King song recorded by Nick Lowe), The Stiff Generation – If It Ain't Stiff It Ain't Worth A Tribute
2004
  • "Good Night" (Beatles cover), For the Kids Too
2005
  • "American Girl" (Tom Petty cover), High School Reunion: A Tribute To Those Great 80s Films[57]
2006
2007
  • "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere" (w/ Susanna Hoffs), Like a Hurricane: A Tribute to Neil Young
2012
  • "Hombre Secreto (Secret Agent Man)" (Plugz cover), A Tribute to Repo Man[58]
2013
  • "Marianne" (vocals w/ Tim Robbins), Son of Rogue's Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs and Chanteys[59][60]
  • "Second Choice" (vocals w/ Velvet Crush), Skrang: Sounds Like Bobby Sutliff[61]
2017
  • "Lonely Summer" (original), Taking It To Heart: Volume Two[62]
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Other appearances

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References

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