Posts Tagged ‘Juliana Hatfield Three’

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Earlier this year, Juliana Hatfield reunited the band Juliana Hatfield Three, the alt-rock trio who made the sorta-classic 1993 album Become What You Are, to make a new crowdfunded LP. That album, somehow only the second one from this band, is called Whatever, My Love, and it’s coming early next year. The first single is “If I Could,” a bittersweet jangle that’s so overwhelmingly early-’90s that I really want to call out sick for the rest of the day and dig out my My So Called Life DVDs. read some words about it that Hatfield wrote to people who contributed to the crowdfunding effort.

Hi! This is Juliana. Here, as promised, is the first song for you to hear off the new Juliana Hatfield Three album which we could not have made without your help (thank you!).The song is called “If I Could” . The album is called “Whatever, My Love”. Some of you may have heard an older demo version of this song… I have always loved this song and I always wanted it to be done up properly and although this is not shockingly or radically different than the demo, I really love it. This is an unmastered version of the song–with Todd (drums) counting off the song at the top. I would bet that most of you won’t be able to discern much difference between the mastered and unmastered versions but I wanted to give you something slightly different–even if infinitesimally so–than the album version. During the tracking of the song, I played a keyboard solo and a guitar solo and after much back and forth I decided on using just the guitar solo. But I like the keyboard solo, too, and I am going to let you hear that version, too, soon (not today but soon). I thought about putting both solos in at the same time but ultimately things were too complicated when they were both in the mix–the gtrs and keys were canceling each other out, or getting in each others’ ways, or something. You know me and I don’t have to tell you that the whole album doesn’t sound like this–there are some raunchier rockers in there along with some other pretty things. We hope you love it all……

It has been more than two decades since The Juliana Hatfield Three‘s last, and only, full-length, “Become What You Are”, helped make its front woman an alt-rock darling. She remained remarkably prolific (releasing five LPs, solo and with collaborative projects, in the past five years alone), but the 1993 set boasted what is likely Hatfield’s defining song, the sweetly caustic “My Sister.” As a result, Hatfield’s JH3 era, with drummer Todd Philips and bassist Dean Fisher, has come to be regarded as her watershed moment. ut her she is in fine form with a recent recorded set for the Radio station KEXP .

All of which means Whatever, My Love arrives with an extra bit of anticipation from Juliana Hatfield enthusiasts. And, much like its forebear, the album’s 12 tunes are tight, tidy pop-rockers, presented in her characteristic straightforward-yet-slightly-skewed manner. Speaking of that voice, Hatfield, now 47, still sounds very much the eternal adolescent, her phrasing and timbre pegged somewhere between coiled petulance and blunt indifference. It’s her most distinctive asset, and a perfect foil for her vivid if seemingly tossed-off character sketches.

The Juliana Hatfield Three performing live in the KEXP studio. Recorded March 11th, 2015.

Songs:
My Sister
Ordinary Guy
I’m Shy
Spin the Bottle

Album Review: The Juliana Hatfield Three Make Their Alt-Rock Return With 'Whatever, My Love'

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Juliana Hatfield will do anything to win the guy’s heart on “Invisible,” the opening track on her new album, “Whatever My Love”. She jumps up and down, throws a tantrum, feigns choking on candy—all just to get him to acknowledge her existence. It plays like a rom-com soundtrack, perhaps scoring a montage of wacky and increasingly self-deprecating behaviour egged on by a sassy best friend. Hatfield doesn’t hide her character’s desperation or humiliation, and her determination—simply to be noticed, much less loved.

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With each verse, however, Hatfield slyly changes the perspective and therefore the stakes of the song. “I let them dress me up in other people’s clothes, but you still don’t want to know,” she sings, leaving it to our imagination just who “them” is and whose clothes she is wearing. “Invisible” is, at heart, less a love song than a professional lament; Juliana Hatfield isn’t singing to a love interest, but to an uninterested audience that has not acknowledged her considerable accomplishments as an independent woman in the music industry. After coming up with the Blake Babies in the early 1990s, she launched a solo career and has sustained it over two decades. She founded and runs her own label, produces her own records, often plays all the instruments, and has developed a conversational lyrical style whose influence can be heard on albums by Best Coast, Lady Lamb the Beekeeper and Courtney Barnett. What else does she need to do so we’ll take notice?

Well, she could release a reunion record. “Whatever My Love” is not a solo record, but the sophomore release by the Juliana Hatfield Three. The band—which includes Hatfield on guitar and vocals, Todd Philips on drums and Dean Fisher on bass—recorded her landmark album “Become What You Are” back in 1993, right around the time that alternative rock was taking over the mainstream. It produced two hit singles, “My Sister” and “Spin the Bottle,” the latter of which was featured prominently in Ben Stiller’s Gen-Xploitation flick Reality Bites.

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They were a tight trio, with Philips and Fisher lending Hatfield’s pop songs a hard-rock drive, but the group quickly spun out of control. “Todd had some drug problems that I ultimately didn’t want to deal with,” Hatfield says, more than 20 years later. “That’s why I fired him.” Her next record, 1995’s “Only Everything”, was billed to Juliana Hatfield without the Three, even though Fisher played bass on those songs, including the hit “Universal Heartbeat.”

Since then, Juliana Hatfield has released a steady stream of new records, most of them on her own Ye Olde Records label. Subsequent hits have been elusive, but she has retained a loyal fan base by developing a style that expresses messy emotions via sharp melodies and plainspoken lyrics. She didn’t intend to reunite the Juliana Hatfield Three, but the trio simply gravitated back to each other,

“Like many things in my life, there’s no planning, no strategy,” she explains. “It just happened. I was getting ready to make a new album. I had some songs ready, and I asked Todd if he would like to play drums on the new record.” It was Philips’ suggestion that they bring in Dean to play bass. The reunion was pure happenstance, although Hatfield admits she had already considered revisiting “Become What You Are”. “I knew people who were playing their whole album on tour, like the Lemonheads went out and played It’s a Shame About Ray in its entirety. I thought people might be interested,

Instead, Hatfield, Philips and Fisher booked time at a studio in New Jersey and recorded a handful of new songs. None of them knew how it would turn out. Would they be able to re-create that old energy? Or would it sound like another nostalgia trip? “We went in hoping it would work out, and it worked out,” she says. “The chemistry was intact. It was like riding a bike.” After two decades apart, the Three had sharpened their chops, which brought a new dynamic to the sessions. “We’re all a little more mature, although just slightly.

If “Whatever My Love” sounds like a direct sequel to “Become What You Are”, it might be because several of these songs were written in the mid to late 1990s, when Hatfield was at the peak of her popularity. She recorded “If I Could,” “Now That I’ve Found You” and “Invisible” as demos, with Philips on drums, but they never fit on any of her subsequent albums. “I loved those songs and I didn’t want to forget about them. Todd was actually the one who suggested I bring them back for this record. He made me remember how much I liked them.

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After 21 years, The Juliana Hatfield Three has recorded their first new album, Whatever, My Love, out February 17th. Though Hatfield herself has released several outstanding solo albums over the years – including 1998′s “Bed”, 2005′s “Made In China” and 2013′s “Wild Animals”  this album is the first she’s made with the band that made Become What You” Are in 1993, and its propulsive tempos and distortion-pedal riffs play as perfectly today as Become did 22 years ago.

Juliana Hatfield Three | Photo by Johnny Anguish

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We’re getting the band back together! 21 years ago–in 1993–we released “Become What You Are” (featuring “My Sister”). It was our one and only album as the Juliana Hatfield Three and now we are reforming to make a new full-length album. Dean FIsher, Todd Philips, and I, Juliana will be documenting our progress in the studio and we will be checking in with you to show you what’s happening. Reuniting! Chemistry!

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Todd, Dean, and I have just begun recording with the lovely and talented Tom Beaujour (who worked with me and Matthew [Caws] on the Minor Alps album) at the Nuthouse in Hoboken, New Jersey, and so far it is going great. Some of you may have previously heard some version of some of the songs we are working on. For example, one of the songs we are exploring is “If I Could”. We have always loved this song but there have only ever been demos of it; it has never been properly finished or produced. There are multiple attempted versions of it but the nut has never been quite cracked, and this has always sort of haunted me. Now I feel like I finally have the chance to get it right with Todd and Dean.
We are also exploring electricized band versions of a couple of the punchier acoustic home-recorded songs from my last album, “Wild Animals”. And there will be some other surprises.

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Early-’90s alt-poppers the Juliana Hatfield Three have reunited, and they’re getting set to release the new album Whatever, My Love”, their second album and their first in 12 years. First singleIf I Could was a strong and catchy piece of work, which is only a surprise if you haven’t revisited Become What You Are anytime lately. They’ve now followed it up with the driving, shimmering, plainspoken “Ordinary Guy.” It’s a song about wanting to fall in love with someone who isn’t a freak, and if your past romantic history may or may not include Evan Dando, I can see how this would be a priority.