Thebrotheregg, Friday, March 21
Touching base with one of Portland’s most elusive, bizarre pop outfits.
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![]() BACK TO THE FUTURE: Thebrotheregg preps for the used bins of tomorrow, intentionally. IMAGE: myspace.com |
[March 19th, 2008]
[PSYCH-POP] Since recording its first 7-inch in 1992, Thebrotheregg has maintained a release schedule as mercurial as its bristling, psychedelia-tinged popcraft. Now, the self-described “avant-rainpop” quartet has a new guitarist, Jairus Smith (replacing family-bound member Chris Kalani Gabriel), and a self-titled EP—full of unabashedly frail and overtly intellectual tweaked indie anthems—forthcoming. WW sat down with 34-year-old singer-guitarist-songwriter-godhead Adam Goldman to discuss the band’s trajectory.
WW: It’s been three years since any new material. Why?
Goldman: The last album [Aortica Mor, its fourth full-length] was almost 80 minutes long! We just started to take advantage of new technologies, being able to...record part of a song in one place and part in another. I thought I was done putting out records. Somebody suggested that we do vinyl, and we were going to put out a 10-inch. [Laughs] I think we do things deliberately to be difficult.
Why weren’t you going to put out albums anymore?
[It] just seemed like there was a big paradigm shift [within the music industry]. I figured we’d collect songs, and, all of a sudden, we were having a little more fun writing pop songs that we weren’t married to, that didn’t have to be under the umbrella of an album format or concept. I always had this morbid fantasy that I’ll be dead, and some archaeologist will put the songs out.
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How’d you choose the songs on the new EP?
Some of them were written in one week, some of them sat around for 10 years. There was a Darwinism about the process; the ones that weren’t as good just got filtered out earlier. I wound up mixing the whole thing and wearing a number of different hats, and that sometimes causes problems of perspective...I remember having someone say, “Your songs don’t mean anything, and that’s what I love about them,” and it made me upset. I don’t believe that things mean nothing. I wouldn’t want to live in that world.
What are the band’s plans for the future?
We’re doing everything ourselves. It just means a lot of things don’t get done. We’ve kinda embraced this cult-music mentality. The kids who are going through bins and bins of records looking for obscure bands, I see ourselves as being one of those bands 30 years from now. [Like,] “Oh, my God! Look what I found!”








