Carey Mercer

Carey Mercer (born c. 1975) is a Canadian musician best known for his work as lead singer of the indie rock band Frog Eyes and his work in Swan Lake and Blackout Beach.

Carey Mercer
OriginOkanagan, British Columbia, Canada
GenresIndie rock
Years active1994present
LabelsJagjaguwar, Absolutely Kosher, Global Symphonic, Dead Oceans, Soft Abuse
Associated actsFrog Eyes, Swan Lake, Blue Pine, Blackout Beach, Soft Plastics

Overview

Following the breakup of the Canadian indie rock band Blue Pine in 2001, members Mercer and Michael Rak reunited to form a new group. Recruiting Mercer's roommate Spencer Krug and wife Melanie Campbell, the four began writing music under the moniker Frog Eyes.

Mercer also began writing music on the side for his solo project Blackout Beach, and in 2004, released the album Light Flows the Putrid Dawn through Soft Abuse Records. His follow-up, Skin of Evil was released January 27, 2009. In November 2011, he released Fuck Death on Dead Oceans. Mercer, his longtime drummer and wife Melanie Campbell, and Dante Decaro re-recorded these takes into the record Blues Trip, released digitally by the band and on vinyl by Soft Abuse Records on February 18, 2013.

In 2006, Mercer teamed up with comrades Spencer Krug (of Sunset Rubdown and Wolf Parade) and Dan Bejar (of Destroyer and The New Pornographers) to form the supergroup Swan Lake. The band released Beast Moans through Jagjaguwar Records on November 21, 2006. Enemy Mine, the second album from Swan Lake was released on March 24, 2009.

On March 25, 2020, Mercer announced he was forming a new band called Soft Plastics. He also announced the band's first LP, titled 5 Dreams, and released a single: "Rope off the Tigers."[1]

Discography

Republic of Freedom Fighters

  • Republic of Freedom Fighters LP (1996) Mountain Collective/Linkwork

Blue Pine

  • Blue Pine LP (2001) Global Symphonic

Frog Eyes

Blackout Beach

  • Light Flows the Putrid Dawn (2004) Soft Abuse
  • Skin of Evil (2009) Soft Abuse
  • Fuck Death (2011) Dead Oceans
  • 11 Pink Helicopters in the Coral Sky (2012) Self-Released
  • Blues Trip (2013) Soft Abuse

Soft Plastics

Swan Lake

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.