Alger Hiss began in 1994, with aspirations of injecting harsh, no wave-influenced noise into droning, punk-tinged hard rock. The NYC power trio originally consisted of guitarist/vocalist/bassist Jordan N. Mamone, drummer Hajji Majer, and bassist/vocalist/guitarist Chris O'Rourke. By late 1995, they had self-released a cassette and played numerous Northeastern gigs with a host of rough, avant-rock luminaries. These shows were characterized by bloody hands, drunken sloppiness, and the drop kicking of guitars. Oblivious of its surroundings, the young band exhibited reckless enthusiasm regardless of whether an audience was receptive, apathetic, or hostile.
At the end of 1995, the burgeoning Ba Da Bing! label released Alger Hiss' official debut, a vinyl mini-LP/CD entitled Settings For Nudes. O'Rourke quit the following summer and was replaced by guitarist-turned-bassist Jon Fine (Bitch Magnet, Don Caballero). Free of his ex-cohort's more melodic inclinations, Mamone began writing heavier music that elucidated his love of complex song structures, gigantic riffs, alternate tunings, and brief explosions of improvisation.
In January 1997, Feldspar Records issued the varied Graft Vs. Host, which compiled a remixed version of the early cassette with the original lineup's final studio efforts. The album--also pressed on vinyl via Mamone's Tangential imprint--was hailed by critics in the fanzine and alterna-glossy media. A year later, Fine and Majer departed. Mamone spent time traveling and pursuing his career as a rock writer.
Alger Hiss sprang to life again in 2000, when Mamone recruited bassist J Yung--whose simplified low-end added more weight to the sound--and drummer Frederick Schneider. A series of live dates ensued. The following year brought another change of percussionists with the arrival of Lithuanian expat Dalius Naujokaitis, a jazz-schooled associate of Fluxus filmmaker Jonas Mekas. Alger Hiss' sound was mutating and maturing during this era; the new, sometimes painfully slow material lumbered with art-metal ferocity.
In 2003, Mamone and Yung asked longtime friend Dave Reid (Glenn Branca, Wider, Dustdevils, Don Caballero) to fill in on drums for a thundering, ominous take of the live favorite "Mason Jar," which will appear on a compilation issued by San Francisco's tUMULt Records .
In late 2004, with Alger Hiss again on hiatus, Mamone traveled to Pori, Finland. Overseas, he participated in Lee Miller , a bludgeoning, hypnotic union with Jyrki Laiho and Janne Peltomäki, both of whom were key members of nordic underground heroes Circle and Stalwart. (Circle and Alger Hiss had been labelmates on Feldspar.) Musically Incorrect Records released Lee Miller's European-only debut album, The Futility of Language, in 2005.
Back in New York, Mamone and Yung reconvened with Naujokaitis for one more resurgence of Alger Hiss. During a 17-month period, the group wrote some of its sludgiest songs and played several fine shows, with the occasional aid of video artist Tamara Yadao. The project went dormant once again, the result of Naujokaitis' chronic unreliability, in May 2007. Since then, Mamone has collaborated live and/or in the studio with Yadao, Pete Simonelli (Enablers), Jussi Lehtisalo (Circle), and David Keay and Laura Feathers (the Day Care Centre). Alger Hiss continues to hibernate until the day when suitable coconspirators might again materialize. You've been warned.