About Me
Formed in Santa Barbara, California the day after frontman John Andrew Fredrick saw a London band called The Lucy Show play to seven people at a State Street club, the black watch have made 11 CDs of dreamy, beautiful, literate indie pop: "the hypnotizing sea," "very mary beth," "jiggery-pokery," "the king of good intentions, "lime green girl," and "amphetamines," among others, including the NEW LP, "tatterdemalion"--all of which are available from amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, or from your friendly neighborhood indie store or Virgin, and which are distributed by CARROT TOP DISTRIBUTION and PARASOL RECORDS. 2005's "the hypnotizing sea" is out in the UK now and available from SHELLSHOCK UK, and getting wonderful reviews, but it's also available in the United States from www.notlame.com, www.parasol.com, www.insound.com, and www.tonevendor.com.
"With a vocal style that rivals Robert Smith's, John Andrew Fredrick writes the dreamiest pop songs this side of My Bloody Valentine."--SplendidEzine
"Hazily low-key psychedelic dreampoppers the black watch deliver--in "Icing the Snow Queen"--their best record yet!"--LA Weekly
"A critic's delight yet still somehow under the radar, the black watch once again lend thoughtful, highbrow, intelligent chops to the nearly dozen songs on "Icing the Snow Queen," especially on the urgent "On Another Plane," the delicious "Apres Lisette" with its sweet harmonies and guitar accents as it glides beautifully along, the bubbly, Beatleish "The Love of the Buzz," and gentle but gorgeous My Bloody Valentine-like "Peppermint."--Popmatters
"John Andrew Fredrick, leader of this highly intellectual Beatlesque band, says outright that "Icing the Snow Queen" is about death; yet this is not a dark or depressing record. Instead, much of the material is lovely and expressive warm, fuzzy pop. Obvious influence: "Rubber Soul." Yet "On Another Plane," "Jenny Holly Wally Martin," and "Peppermint" drive along with great big distorted, oddly tuned guitars. The overall effect is picturesque, dreamy-floaty pop. With its illustrious history, the black watch is what fans of nebulous indie rock absolutely dream of."--JerseyBeat
"Swirling guitars, acidic lyrics, super catchy melodies--the black watch are like a dream combination of The Dukes of Stratosphere and My Bloody Valentine--whoa!"--Amoeba Music
"the black watch has never sounded like this. Wow! John Andrew Fredrick's LA foursome once had me calling them America's Go-Betweens, yet "Tatterdemalion" is the loud guitar, cranking bass and stamping drums LP they've never fully attempted. The opening title track will open minds and mouths, scaling six-string altitudes where Echo & the Bunnymen melds into The House of Love--with a swatch of Fredrick's My Bloody Valentine fondness on "Autoportrait" and "The Lost Colony of Roanoake." "Williamsburg employs Jesus and Marychain/Cure fuzz--the guitars are airborne with beautiful reverb and delay. THIS is what guitar effects were invented for: to cascade, reverberate, expand and tantalize. Marry this to Fredrick's compositional knack for smart poptunes, and you have this great, unexpected alt-rock guitar-rock LP."--THE BIG TAKEOVER
"the black watch remains, after nearly 20 years of making music, both intriguing and exhilarating. The group's sound continues to be both provocative and just out of reach.From the woozy title track that sounds more than slightly off-kilter to the cosmic clutter of "The Lost Colony of Roanoke" to the wistful "Covers the Bummers" and lilting "Never Know"--songs that reinforce the band's more melodic sensibilities--one can only hope that, after eight albums and half as many EPs, the black watch's time has finally come."--AMPLIFIER
"Why is this excellent LA band so loved in the UK? Have a listen to their new "Innercity Garden" EP. My vote for anthem of the summer? the black watch's "Innercity Garden." It's like a giant swing that lands you on your own secret party in a cloud."--LA WEEKLY
"Los Angeles has not produced a band like tbw in a long time; they have, in singer/songwriter/guitarist John Andrew Fredrick an artist capable of both My Bloody Valentine miasma and Nick Drake quietness--with literary allusions from Shakepeare and Dylan--to whimsical,nursery rhyme plafulness. It's a shame that they are relying on a tiny label out of Dorset to get their fine melodies heard."--ANDY GILL in THE INDEPENDENT UK
"the black watch is the best band you've never heard. "Innercity Garden" burns the house to the ground with its grinding, fire-alarm guitar riff."--MAGNET
"Remember the first time you heard XTC or The Cure? Discovering the black watch is precisely what is evoked by such memories. "Tatterdemalion" is a triumph of jangly-fuzzy beauty--the latest in a long string of stunningly catchy records."--TUCSON WEEKLY
"Hailing from Los Angeles they may be but indie rockers the black watch seem to be taking a few clues from Britain. Close in tone to what the Kaiser Chiefs are doing, the black watch write pop songs first and foremost, sometimes clouding them in walls of dissonance, sometimes in guitar freakouts. Frontman John Andrew Fredrick sings in a rich baritone, his lyrics acting as mini stories, his vocabulary stretching further than your average rocker--a kind of cross between Jarvis Cocker, that guy from Doves, Morrissey and Dylan. THE HYPNOTIZING SEA marks the band's UK debut album, and an intoxicating collection it is too. Kicking off with the single, "Innercity Garden," tbw sound like My Bloody Valentine meets Doves--delicious guitar abuse anchored by joyous choruses and deftly delivered melodicism. The equally enchanting "Buttercup Fairchild" is a sweetly sung pop tune that takes frequent sidesteps into swirling noise, while the self-explanatory "Dylan, Dylan, Dylan" skips along with an acoustic jangle and a harmonica to keep you company, with Fredrick spurting forth lyrics like "visions of johanna/ made me truly see/ that that little Zimmerman/ is of great help to me." It's a love letter to a musical hero. In a similar vein, "The Teacup Song" saunters along with gentle acoustics, while the very lo-fi "Willing to Wait" makes Guided by Voices sound like overproduced major label lackeys. The quirky "Another Summer Coming" somehow puts one in mind of Noel Coward, while "Story of Your Life" finds the band taking a more straightforward approach, with shimmering guitars and gentle drumming coming together in this dreamy love song. A satisfying and intoxicating collection of classy pop tunes, THE HYPNOTIZING SEA is a record that snuggles up to you and begs to be loved. Quirky in places, heartfelt in others, the black watch make music that's the aural equivalent to a Technicolour daydream."--UK MUSIC SEARCH
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Icing the Snow Queen
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Tatterdemalion
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Very Mary Beth
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jiggery-pokery
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