Eric Erlandson

Eric Erlandson

Erlandson performing in 2012, Brooklyn, New York.
Background information
Birth name Eric Theodore Erlandson
Born (1963-01-09) January 9, 1963
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres Alternative rock, experimental rock, noise rock
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter, producer, author
Instruments Guitar, banjo, synthesizer
Years active 1989–present
Labels Sympathy for the Record Industry, Caroline, City Slang, DGC/Geffen
Associated acts Hole, Rodney & the Tube Tops, Vincent Gallo, Melissa Auf der Maur, RRIICCEE, White Flag
Notable instruments
Fender Jaguar
Fender Telecaster
Veleno Turner

Eric Theodore Erlandson (born January 9, 1963) is an American musician, guitarist, and writer, primarily known as founding member, songwriter and lead guitarist of alternative rock band Hole from 1989 to 2002.[1] He has also had several musical side projects, including Rodney & the Tube Tops, which he formed with Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth, and RRIICCEE with Vincent Gallo.

While studying creative writing, Erlandson published a book titled Letters to Kurt in 2012, consisting of free-form and stream-of-consciousness poetry.

Biography

Early life

Erlandson was born on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood and raised in San Pedro, California. He is of Swedish, German, and Irish descent and related to Martin Luther. During his college years, he worked for the now-defunct Licorice Pizza record store chain. Erlandson studied economics with a minor in marketing at Loyola Marymount University, where his father, Theodore Erlandson, served as Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and earned a Bachelor of Science degree.

In the early days of Hole, Erlandson worked for Capitol Records, where he managed Paul McCartney's, Tina Turner's, and various other artists' royalties. In 1988, Erlandson travelled Europe for a number of months "trying to decide what he wanted to do with his life."[2]

1989–2002: Hole

In mid-1989, Erlandson responded to an advertisement placed by Courtney Love in Recycler, a local classified ad paper. Erlandson describes the band's first rehearsal session, which featured original bassist Lisa Roberts, as:

These two girls show up dressed completely crazy, we set up and they said, "okay, just start playing something." I started playing and they started screaming at the top of their lungs for two or three hours. Crazy lyrics and screaming. I said to myself, "most people would just run away from this really fast." But I heard something in Courtney's voice and lyrics.[3]

Love, Erlandson and Roberts were later joined by drummer Caroline Rue and third guitarist Mike Geisbrecht, and this line-up performed Hole's first live performances. A new line-up, with new bassist Jill Emery and without Geisbrecht, recorded their debut album, Pretty on the Inside, in 1991. After achieving underground success in the United Kingdom, Emery left the band in February and Rue in April, 1992. With new members Patty Schemel and Kristen Pfaff, Hole signed a contract with their new label DGC in 1992 and, a year later, began touring and recording for their sophomore and major label debut, Live Through This. The album, ranked by Time magazine as one of the top 100 albums of all time,[4] received unanimous critical acclaim and is Hole's most successful record to date.

During Hole's hiatus in 1996, Erlandson formed a short-lived side project, Rodney & the Tube Tops, with Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth and various other musicians. The project dissolved shortly after releasing the single "I Hate the '90's". He also co-produced the Sympathy for the Record Industry release "Milk Carton" by The Grown Ups, a raw riot of an album by a group of 14-year-old girls from Santa Monica, California.

Hole released their third studio album, Celebrity Skin, in 1998, with Erlandson co-producing the record. More pop-oriented than their previous albums, the album was a commercial success and was the last material by Hole to feature Erlandson. Auf der Maur left the group in 1999 to pursue other musical projects and on May 22, 2002, Erlandson and Love disbanded Hole through their official website noting that they would "no longer record or tour together."

In 2009, Love announced that her upcoming solo album, Nobody's Daughter, was being released under the name Hole and described the band's reunion, which included Love's guitarist Micko Larkin replacing Erlandson. Auf der Maur was first to respond to the news, describing it as "jeopardis[ing] a real Hole reunion"[5] and Erlandson stated that he and Love "have a contract",[6] which was later revealed to be a contract preventing either from reforming Hole without mutual involvement. In a later interview, just days before the expected release of Hole's Nobody's Daughter, Erlandson explained how "[Courtney's] management convinced me that it was all hot air and that she would never be able to finish her album. Now I'm left in an uncomfortable position."[7] Neither Love nor Erlandson have commented on the reunion further.

In April 2012, Courtney Love joined Erlandson, bassist Melissa Auf der Maur, and drummer Patty Schemel onstage for the first time in 15 years at the after party for the premiere of Schemel's documentary entitled Hit So Hard. The band played two songs that evening, "Miss World" from the band's hit album Live Through This and a cover of The Wipers song "Over the Edge".[8]

In April 2014, Courtney Love confirmed that she had been rehearsing new material with Erlandson, Schemel, and Auf der Maur, and that a reunion of the 1994 lineup of the band was being prepared.[9]

2002–present: Collaborations, writing

Following Hole's disbandment, he wrote songs with actress Bijou Phillips and contributed to Melissa Auf der Maur's debut solo album Auf der Maur, playing guitar on the track, "Would If I Could." He toured with his friend Bill Bartell's band, White Flag, and wrote, produced and performed two shows with a group including singer/songwriter John Wolfington and drummer Blackie Onassis from Urge Overkill. In 2007, Erlandson formed an improvisational music project, RRIICCEE, with his neighbor Vincent Gallo.[10] The band toured the United States and Canada, and performed at the Fuji Rock Festival in Japan. Erlandson has since left the group. In 2010, he noted that he has "new musical projects in the works."

Erlandson has studied Creative Writing for the last several years. He released Letters to Kurt, his first book of prose poetry in the form of letters to his friend Kurt Cobain, in 2012. The book expresses his opinions on his own life and the society he lives in, as well as his experiences with Hole, his relationship with Kurt, Courtney Love, the grunge scene, grief, sex, suicide and spirituality. He also talks about the death of other loved ones, since the death of Kurt Cobain, his girlfriend and bandmate Kristen Pfaff and that of his father all occurred within less than a year, between April 1994 and March 1995.

As part of a special advanced preorder promotion through Akashic Books, Erlandson also released "Cock Soup", a limited edition chapbook/photo compendium consisting of 52 photographs of ephemera that he photographed as a visual accompaniment to "Letters to Kurt". The preorder package also contained signed Polaroid-style snapshots taken by Eric Erlandson – a unique photo and inscription for each preorder package purchased, and an exclusive CD outtake of demos for the upcoming soundtrack to the book.

He is currently at work recording the soundtrack, as well as working on various art projects, including a performance art piece involving guitars, and an assortment of sculptures that he describes as "psycho-sexual trigger art".

Personal life

Erlandson has practiced Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism since 1992[11] and visits Japan often.

Erlandson was in a relationship with actress Drew Barrymore in the mid 1990s. He's also previously dated bandmates Kristen Pfaff, and had a relationship with Courtney Love in the first year of Hole's formation.

Having lost many friends to suicide, Erlandson is a supporter of Suicide Prevention, and has participated in many Out of the Darkness walks organized by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

References

  1. "Hole | AllMusic". Allmusic. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  2. Mason, Darryl (1995). "Hole: A New Lease of Life". The West Australian (January 1995).
  3. Erlandson, Eric (1999). "Skin Tight". Guitar World (January 1999).
  4. TIME (November 2, 2006). "The All-TIME 100 Albums: Live Through This by Hole". Time. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  5. The Guardian (January 18, 2010). "Melissa Auf der Maur finds Hole in Courtney Love's reunion plans". London.
  6. "Q&A: Hole's Eric Erlandson". SPIN. Retrieved August 2009. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  7. Brett Buchanan. "GrungeReport.net » Blog Archive » GRUNGEREPORT.NET EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH ERIC ERLANDSON". Retrieved September 23, 2011.
  8. "Watch Hole Reunite in Williamsburg". Retrieved 2012-04-12.
  9. Monde, Chidera (2014-04-03). "Courtney Love confirms Hole reunion, teases possible Kurt Cobain musical". New York Daily News. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
  10. "Independent Film Quarterly, Issue 13 – Interview with Vincent Gallo". Retrieved 2007. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  11. "Former Hole Guitarist, Eric Erlandson, On His New Book About Kurt Cobain, Tragedy Of Suicide And 90′s Legacy". KROQ/CBS. 2012-03-28. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
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