New London began as a joke between David Hahn and Steve Mickelsen in
1987. They created a fictitious band named New London, made posters,
and distributed them along Central Avenue in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
The posters announced a show at the equally fictitious Mickey's Inn
which was a play on Steve's last name. Soon after Steve bought a 12-string
guitar and announced his intention to make New London a real band.
A Halloween party in that same year held at Steve's and his brother
Robert's house was the meeting place for Steve and myself, Matt Smith,
synthesizer player and composer. We agreed they would get together and
see if anything musical would happen soon after the party. Soon turned
out to be spring of 1988.
Steve brought his guitar and a notebook full of lyrics to my home studio
where the we crafted our first song, "A Day Without Me," not
to be confused by the U2 song of the same name. We garnered local radio
play immediately and decided that to play live, we would need some additional
musicians. Steve recruited guitarist Rick (last name gone from memory)
and after advertising in local papers, veteran drummer Carm Sciarrota
brought his energy and experience to the band. Bass player Jon Donovan
was added soon after to complete the first New London live outfit.
About that time, just weeks before the first real performance, the
band became unhappy with Rick's rudimentary guitar playing. As luck
would have it, while being recruited to play in another band, I played
a New London demo tape which impressed them. On my way home from the
meeting, that band's guitarist pulled me over on the road and asked
if New London needed a new member. Jeff Mettling was brought into the
band almost immediately, Rick fired, and recording began. With our sound
solidified by Jeff's polished ax play, New London performed for the
first time on June 13, 1988 at the Fat Chance Bar and Grill and we were
well received.
The band had culled together about 15 original songs already and decided
that the next step in our evolution would be a studio recording. Fans
were begining to demand a cassette and hopes were high that a tape could
be successfully shopped to record labels. The Garden Wall EP was completed
at Quincy Street Sound in Albuquerque over about three months at the
end of summer 1988, and released in December of that year. We sold in
the neighborhood of 1000 of the cassettes at $5 each. Several radio
stations aired New London songs regularly and the band made the College
Music Journal playlist. We participated in many interviews, and were
featured in the local music rags as well as the biggest Albuquerque
papers, all while continuing to hone our live act.
Our biggest fear at this point was losing our momentum. The new material
was sounding great and we quickly booked more recording time to begin
work on our next collection, an album tentatively titled The Misery
of Joy. Once again we found themselves disappointed in the play and
contributions of a member and fired Donovan, replacing him with bassist
Eric Owens.
After the line up change, New London signed to Eric Larson's StreetSound
records in early 1989 and hoped to quickly record and release some material
to create interest in the forthcoming album. Quincy Street Sound was
again the site of recording and the songs Communication and Underground
were the result. Although the band felt that these were not their strongest
songs at the time, it was decided that they should be committed to tape
first so that the newer songs could be developed more fully.
The two song cassette was released in late 1989 and was uniformly regarded
by the local music press as a solid and impressive release drawing comparison
to bands like the Psychadelic Furs, the Cure and others. As the tapes
began to move (they could be purchased at all live shows and at local
Hastings stores) New London played shows with such well-known college
acts as 27 Devils Joking, The Violet Hour, Splinter Fish, Cracks in
the Sidewalk, Subculture, A Patch of Blue and many others. The tape
was also heard on a growing number of radio stations and by several
record labels.
The band kept hard at work, playing a live show on KUNM, writing songs
that were showing both growth and promise, and building a burgeoning
fan base. But the cracks were beginning to show. Factions had developed
within the band. Jeff was becoming more of a songwriting force and demanding
more vocal time. Steve was starting to hear a different sound that New
London wasn't going to be able to play and I was growing disillusioned.
All the rehearsals, the sweat poured (literally, in our oven-like practice
room) into songwriting and a grueling live schedule, coupled with the
fact that we all continued to work full time jobs, I was fading, contributing
less each day. I think we all could tell the end was not far off. I
can remember long talks with Carm and Steve about our musical direction
(we comprised one faction) and noticing that we as a band were growing
apart. Our marriage was on its last legs.
New London played their last show in the spring of 1990 at an all-day,
outdoor music festival sponsored by the fraternities at the Universitiy
of New Mexico. As the sun fell on the large crowd so it fell on a band
that started out as a joke, become a promising outfit with a lot of
upside and then a group that found musical differences splintering their
creative energy. My recollection of the final show is that we played
really hard, and that it was one of our better performances. I remember
waiting all afternoon for our time to go on, sitting and talking with
the other members and the people that followed us where ever we went
and at once I knew that while I loved playing with these friends and
musicians, I had grown tired. I think the other members felt the same
way.
Not long after that show, after an agreed and much needed few weeks
off, New London gathered at Carm's house to begin recording on my four
track what was to be the demos of the tracks that would make up The
Misery of Joy. It went well for the first few days until our bottled
up frustrations came to the fore and petty bickering disintigrated into
an all-out war. We all packed up our equipment and bid our practice
studio, and each other farewell. Almost three years, quite a few members,
many shows, lots of cassette, t-shirt and poster sales, over a hundred
songs later, it was over. The last song we put to tape was Untitled,
in my eyes a beautiful look at what could have been if we could have
reached the next plateau together.
The former members of New London have all remained musically active
in one way or another. Steve Mickelsen went on to form the Bellyachers
and then Venus Diablo, both bands achieving success beyond New London's.
I worked with Jeff Mettling in several projects before releasing Dragonfly
Dance and various new collaborations found on this page: Matt's New
Music. Carm continues to work with a variety of local bands. Jeff had
modest success with several Jeff Mettro albums and is now the force
behind the electronic band Elu. Eric Owens worked with Jeff on the Mettro
projects.
Looking back, I can say that it was such an exciting time. In many
ways I miss the stage, the fans and being part of a creative machine
on a roll. I think that given different circumstances we could have
made the national scene and I wonder if we would have been ready, musically
and mentally. We seemed so close and yet so far. Now, all that is left
is the music, some of which you can download from this page, and some
pictures and memories. I hope you enjoy. |