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Jeremy Matthew Messersmith[1] is an American indie pop musician based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States.
Biography
Jeremy Messersmith was born in Charleston, South Carolina, United States, and grew up in the Tri-Cities area of Washington.[2] He began playing music in church at a young age, and counts Sandi Patti, Carman, DC Talk and Michael W. Smith among his earliest musical influences. He initially played the trumpet, but was forced to stop after having dental braces installed; he then switched to guitar. In 1999, he moved to Minneapolis to study music at North Central University.[2][3][4]
Music career
After his first album, The Alcatraz Kid, was released in 2006, City Pages called Messersmith the "premier under-30 songwriter in the Twin Cities".[2]The Alcatraz Kid also received the attention of Performing Songwriter, KCRW, and The Current. The album's title was inspired by a man who used the name to prank-call Messersmith's workplace.[5]
Messersmith's second album, The Silver City, was produced by Dan Wilson and features an array of pop songs ranging from the electronically inspired "Miracles" to love songs like "Love You To Pieces".[citation needed]
Messersmith's Reluctant Graveyard was named one of the Top 10 Albums of 2010 by NPR, Top 25 Videos of 2010 by Paste magazine, and also won the Star Tribune's Critics' Poll for Best Local Artist. His video for the Star Wars-themed "Tatooine" went viral, with Messersmith receiving national press in several publications.
In the fall of 2012, Messersmith embarked on a "Supper Club Tour" in which he combined Pot Luck Dinners with Living Room Shows, selling out shows across the country.[citation needed] In 2013, he signed with Glassnote Records for his forthcoming release, Heart Murmurs, which was released in February 2014. He also toured extensively, playing with Tom O'Dell, Daughter, BOY, and Brett Dennen. The lead track from the album, "Tourniquet", was featured on The Current, WXPN, NPR's Here & Now, and Time magazine, where Messersmith was named one of 14 artists to look out for in 2014.[8]
In 2017, he released a digital-only songbook, 11 Obscenely Optimistic Songs For Ukulele: A Micro-Folk Record For The 21st Century And Beyond, which could be downloaded for free from his website. Of the release of his own versions of the songs, he wrote, "The audio will be released in mid April. I just wanted people to experience the songs with their own voices first."[10]
In early 2018, Messersmith released "Purple Hearts", the first single from his fifth full-length studio album, Late Stage Capitalism. In a press release, he elaborated on the song's narrative, calling it "two people on opposite sides of a cultural divide, who are experiencing the loneliness and disconnection of modern society in the form of the worst first date of all time. For a pop tune, that concept is a giant bummer. So I went full Bacharach to lift the lyrics above the dread, and coated the song with a generous layer of 1960s orchestral schmaltz, which I find irresistibly euphoric. So much so that I even dusted off my trumpet from middle school to take a solo during the instrumental break."[11]
In 2020, Messersmith released "Mixtape for the Milkyway", described as "a collection of sad, beautiful songs written and performed by Minneapolis-based recording artist Jeremy Messersmith. A celebration of sonic minimalism and introspective non-fiction songwriting, delicately produced by John Mark Nelson, the songs and accompanying ambient videos provide a compelling emotional landscape worth a visit."[12]
In 2022, Messersmith released his single "666" described as "psychedelic-rock/southern gothic" that instantly transports listeners into a "Quentin Tarantino universe-style Halloween party."[13] The single was released ahead of All Hallow's Eve, Messersmith's inaugural celebration of life, love, and death at the Fitzgerald Theater.[14]
Religion
While raised in an Assemblies of God church and later attending an Assemblies of God college, Messersmith identifies as an atheist.[15]
Discography
Albums and EPs
The Alcatraz Kid, 2006
The Silver City, 2008
The Reluctant Graveyard, 2010
Paper Moon (EP), 2012
Heart Murmurs, 2014
Late Stage Capitalism, 2018
Singles
"Tatooine", 2010
"Tourniquet", 2013
"Purple Hearts", 2018
"Sweep Me Off My Feet", 2018
"666", 2022
Songbook
11 Obscenely Optimistic Songs For Ukulele: A Micro-Folk Record For The 21st Century And Beyond, 2017
Projects
Mixtape for the Milkyway, 2020
References
^"BEAUTIFUL CHILDREN". ASCAP. American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Retrieved November 10, 2023.
^ abcDylan Hicks (August 30, 2006). "Speaking in Strums". City Pages. Archived from the original on May 23, 2010. Retrieved January 28, 2010.