We are currently migrating our data. We expect the process to take 24 to 48 hours before everything is back to normal.

Last updated: 10 hours ago

Gastr del Sol was one of the most experimental groups to come out of Chicago's adventurous post-rock camp of the '90s. Shortly after forming around the more outlandish improvisational visions of <a href="spotify:artist:03XSVbjjgDX2hrw1VXlj87">David Grubbs</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:46urSPEzIrRVqKqciwOq2f">Jim O'Rourke</a> climbed aboard to make Gastr del Sol a duo, adding his own musical depth to the project's mix of abstract acoustic instrumental technique, musique concrète-inspired electronics, and playfully deconstructed songwriting. Between 1993 and 1998, Gastr del Sol steadily expanded their sound, reaching a skewed but nearly accessible type of pop on 1998's Camoufleur. They went their separate ways shortly thereafter and both went on to prolific solo careers. In 2024, Gastr del Sol released We Have Dozens of Titles, an archival release made up of unreleased live recordings, non-album rarities, and other long-vaulted material from their run in the '90s.

Throughout the '80s and into the very beginning of the '90s, Kentucky musician <a href="spotify:artist:03XSVbjjgDX2hrw1VXlj87">David Grubbs</a> was part of proto-math punk band <a href="spotify:artist:3swFyT2DNOalAWhotbvcVf">Squirrel Bait</a>, and then experimental post-hardcore outfit <a href="spotify:artist:1XyFywRMGdnpFIcxlUD6Pt">Bastro</a>. In 1991, <a href="spotify:artist:03XSVbjjgDX2hrw1VXlj87">Grubbs</a> left Louisville, Kentucky to attend grad school in Chicago, and he and <a href="spotify:artist:1XyFywRMGdnpFIcxlUD6Pt">Bastro</a> members Bundy K. Brown and <a href="spotify:artist:39xjP2biuKg7i0U6DwoRHg">John McEntire</a> formed the first iteration of Gastr del Sol. This trio version of the band reworked unfinished <a href="spotify:artist:1XyFywRMGdnpFIcxlUD6Pt">Bastro</a> songs into hushed, lingering arrangements using primarily acoustic instruments, presenting this new sound on their 1993 debut album The Serpentine Similar. Brown and <a href="spotify:artist:39xjP2biuKg7i0U6DwoRHg">McEntire</a> broke away to join <a href="spotify:artist:3WggbHDpj4rPKbL97zG5MQ">Tortoise</a> in 1994, and <a href="spotify:artist:03XSVbjjgDX2hrw1VXlj87">Grubbs</a> teamed up with Chicago polymath <a href="spotify:artist:46urSPEzIrRVqKqciwOq2f">Jim O'Rourke</a> for all future Gastr del Sol creations from that point forward. The duo was joined by various friends and auxiliary players on the 1994 releases Crookt, Crackt, or Fly (a full-length album) and Mirror Repair (an EP), integrating bass clarinet, occasional rambunctious punky outbursts, and subtle electronics into their largely acoustic songs. 1996 album Upgrade & Afterlife was influenced by film soundtracks and American Primitive fingerstyle guitar, among other sonic reference points, and included violin contributions from minimalist composer <a href="spotify:artist:4JZ6ZOxHDimksHWN4DFmoM">Tony Conrad</a> on the lengthy closing track, a cover of <a href="spotify:artist:4js8BDiQwnHLlDmT1shPH7">John Fahey</a>'s "Dry Bones in the Valley (I Saw the Light Come Shining 'Round and 'Round)." 1998's Camoufleur was the band's most ambitious album, but also their least challenging. <a href="spotify:artist:03XSVbjjgDX2hrw1VXlj87">Grubbs</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:46urSPEzIrRVqKqciwOq2f">O'Rourke</a> enlisted the help of <a href="spotify:artist:1Yti3CsDazWVjNMXBHx1Af">Oval</a>'s Markus Popp for the album's sheen of bright, glitchy electronics, and they brought in a host of players and vocalists that included <a href="spotify:artist:3cmq7YmDFFy99rpgJipF2E">Edith Frost</a>, Julie Pomerleau, <a href="spotify:artist:55Wpgt1Y1RISpita5RLxGm">Ken Vandermark</a>, and many others for chamber pop arrangements that utilized full brass ensembles, steel drums, <a href="spotify:artist:3oDbviiivRWhXwIE8hxkVV">Beach Boys</a>-inspired vocal harmonies, and more. The band dissolved after this album, with both <a href="spotify:artist:46urSPEzIrRVqKqciwOq2f">O'Rourke</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:03XSVbjjgDX2hrw1VXlj87">Grubbs</a> remaining active in multiple projects for decades to follow.

In May of 2024, <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Drag+City%22">Drag City</a>, the Chicago indie label that had been a home to much of Gastr del Sol's output, released We Have Dozens of Titles, a multi-disc collection of unreleased material and rarities from the band's run in the '90s. In addition to previously unshared studio material, We Have Dozens of Titles included recordings from the band's final live performance in 1997, one that found them working out versions of Camoufleur songs on-stage in forms different than what would appear on the album. ~ Fred Thomas, Rovi

Monthly Listeners

7,771

Followers

18,531

Top Cities

228 listeners
129 listeners
116 listeners
110 listeners
107 listeners

Related Artists