They Might Be Giants
They Might Be Giants (commonly abbreviated to
TMBG) is an American
alternative rock duo consisting of
John Linnell and
John Flansburgh, collectively known as "the two Johns" or "John and John". Known for their experimental pop music, they have been popular on college campuses and earned a reputation for "intellectual rock" or "nerd rock." The band has maintained a loyal following over its 20+ years of existence, enough that fans rushed an online poll and landed John Linnell in the top ten results of
People Magazine's "Most Beautiful People" in 1998.
TMBG's most famous songs are probably one single from each of their first three albums, "
Don't Let's Start" (from
They Might Be Giants), "
Ana Ng" (from
Lincoln), and "
Birdhouse in Your Soul" (from
Flood). Their appearance on the show
Tiny Toon Adventures also gained recognition for their songs "
Particle Man" and "
Istanbul (Not Constantinople)". They are also known for their version of the
Bob Mould song "Dog on Fire" (the theme song to
The Daily Show), and "
Boss of Me", the theme to the hit television comedy
Malcolm in the Middle, for which they won
a Grammy Award. Two They Might Be Giants albums have been
certified gold:
Flood and
Here Come the ABCs.
Their influences include
Frank Zappa,
Elvis Costello, and
Pere UbuThe two Johns first met as teenagers in
Lincoln, Massachusetts. They began writing songs together in high school, but they never officially formed a band. The two went to separate colleges after high school (Flansburgh attended
Pratt Institute), and Linnell joined
The Mundanes, a
New Wave group from
Rhode Island. The two finally reunited after moving to
Brooklyn (to the same apartment building on the same day) to continue their career.
Then: The Earlier Years (1982â€"1989)
The band began performing their own music accompanied by a
drum machine, and soon became fixtures on the Manhattan underground. Their early work has been described as a type of
performance art, in which they used many innovative stage props, including giant cardboard cutout heads of
William Allen White.
Many of these props would later turn up in their first music videos.
Although they had a strong local following, they had a hard time getting a record deal. They did many live performances in New York, but when Linnell broke his wrist in a biking accident and Flansburgh's apartment was broken into and all his guitars were stolen, they set up the
Dial-A-Song system with an answering machine hooked up to a tape of them playing popular songs.
It soon caught the eye of
Bar/None Records and earned them a review in
People magazine.
The duo released their
self-titled debut album in 1986, and it became a college radio hit. The video for "
Don't Let's Start" became a hit on MTV, earning them a broader following.
In 1988, they released their second album,
Lincoln. The album's artwork, featuring the famous podiums on the cover, marked a high point of the band's regular collaboration with Brooklyn musical inventor
Brian Dewan. Beyond artwork, Dewan also performed and sang on many of their songs, both on their albums and live.
Move to Elektra (1990â€"1992)
In 1989, they signed with
Elektra Records, and released their third album
Flood the following year.
Flood earned them a gold album, largely thanks to "
Birdhouse in Your Soul" (which reached number three on the US Modern Rock chart) and "
Istanbul (Not Constantinople)".
Further interest in the band was generated when two cartoon music videos were created by Warner Brothers for
Tiny Toon Adventures: "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" and "Particle Man".
The videos reflected the high "kid appeal" that TMBG had, resulting from their often silly or absurd songs and poppy melodies.
In 1991, Bar/None Records released the B-sides compilation
Miscellaneous T. The title referred to the section of the record store where TMBG releases were often found as well as to the overall eclectic nature of the tracks. Though consisting of previously released material (save for the "Purple Toupee" b-sides, which were not available publicly), it gave a chance for new fans to hear the Johns' earlier non-album work without having to hunt down the individual EPs.
In 1992, They Might Be Giants released
Apollo 18. The heavy space theme coincided with TMBG being named Musical Ambassadors for
International Space Year. Singles from the album included "The Statue Got Me High", "The Guitar (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)", "I Palindrome I", and "My Evil Twin".
Apollo 18 was also notable for being one of the first albums to take advantage of the CD player's shuffle feature. The track "Fingertips" were actually 21 separate tracks of short song snippets designed to play in between the full-length songs. (Due to mastering errors, the UK and Australian versions of
Apollo 18 contained "Fingertips" as one track.)
Recruiting a band (1992-1998)
Following
Apollo 18, Flansburgh and Linnell decided to move away from the two-guys-with-samples nature of their live show, and recruited a supporting band that consisted of former
Pere Ubu bassist
Tony Maimone and drummer
Brian Doherty.
Through subsequent touring, the new "band" began to function as a collective unit, encouraging the Johns to record new albums in the band format. This decision caused much controversy amongst die-hard fans. Some went as far as to stand outside of the concerts discouraging people from watching the performance, claiming it wasn't the "true" They Might Be Giants.
John Henry was released in 1994, TMBG's first album as a full band. Influenced by their more conventional format as a band, this album marked a radical departure from their previous releases with more of a guitar-heavy sound.
It was released to mixed reviews amongst fans and critics alike.
Their next album,
Factory Showroom, was released in 1996 to little fanfare. The band had moved away from the feel of
John Henry and includes the more diverse sounds of their earlier albums, despite the inclusion of two guitarists, the second being Eric Schermerhorn who provided several guitar solos.
They left Elektra after the duo refused to do a publicity show, amongst other exposure-related disputes.
Beyond Elektra (1999â€"2003)
In 1999, the ever-changing backing band lineup settled on "The Band of Dans", forming a full house line-up of Johns and Dans for almost five years. The Band of Dans was a trio of guys named Dan: guitarist
Dan Miller, bassist
Danny Weinkauf (both formerly of the band Lincoln) and drummer
Dan Hickey. In 2004, however, Dan Hickey left the band and was subsequently replaced by
Marty Beller, who had already played with TMBG for kids' shows and other projects.
For most of their career, TMBG have been on the forefront of activity on the Internet. As early as 1992, the band was sending news updates to their fans via Usenet newsgroups. In 1999, They Might Be Giants became the first band to release an entire album exclusively on the Internet with
Long Tall Weekend, available through
Emusic's "TMBG Unlimited" service. Five years later, the band started one of the first artist-owned online music stores, at which customers could buy MP3 copies of their music for US$10 an album. By creating their own store, the band could keep money that would otherwise go to record companies. (
TMBG MP3 Music Store)
In 1999, the band contributed the song "
Dr. Evil" to the motion picture
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. Over their career, the band has performed on numerous movie and television soundtracks, including
The Oblongs, the ABC News miniseries
Brave New World and
Ed and His Dead Mother. They also performed the theme music "Dog on Fire", composed by
Bob Mould, for the
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. More recently, they composed and performed the music for the
TLC series
Resident Life, the theme song for the Disney Channel program
Higglytown Heroes, and a song about the cartoon
Courage the Cowardly Dog.
During this time the band also worked on a project for
McSweeney's, a publishing company and literary journal. The band wrote a McSweeney's theme song and 35+ songs for an album that was meant to be listened to with the journal, with each track corresponding to a particular story or piece of artwork. Labeled
They Might Be Giants vs. McSweeney's, the disk appears in issue #6 of
Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern.
Contributing the TMBG single "
Boss of Me" as the theme song to the hit television series
Malcolm in the Middle, as well as to the show's compilation CD, brought a new audience to the band. Not only did the band contribute the theme, songs from all of the Giants' previous albums were used on the show: for example, the infamous punching-the-kid-in-the-wheelchair scene from the first MITM episode was done to the strains of "Pencil Rain" from
Lincoln. "Boss of Me" became the band's second top-40 hit in the UK, and in
2002, won the duo a
Grammy Award.
On
September 112001, they released the album
Mink Car on
Restless Records. It was their first full album release of new studio material since 1996, and their first since parting ways with Elektra. The making of that album, including a record signing event at a
Manhattan Tower Records, was included in a 2003 documentary directed by
AJ Schnack titled
Gigantic (A Tale of Two Johns). The film, released in 2003, won rave reviews and several awards, and was featured in dozens of film festivals. The film was released on DVD in 2003.
Recent Activities (2002-Present)
In 2002, the band released their first album "for the entire family,"
No!. The
No! CD is an enhanced CD that, when played on a computer, provides interactive animations for each of the songs. They followed it up in 2003 with their first book, an illustrated children's book with an included EP,
Bed, Bed, Bed.
In 2004, the band released their first new "adult" rock work in three years, the EP
Indestructible Object. They followed that up with a new album,
The Spine, and an associated EP,
The Spine Surfs Alone. For the album's first single, "
Experimental Film", TMBG teamed up with
Homestar Runner creators
Matt and Mike Chapman to create an animated music video. The band's collaboration with the Brothers Chaps also included several Puppet Jam segments with puppet Homestar, and the music for a Strong Bad email entitled "Different Town."
TMBG also became slightly involved with the electoral process by contributing a track to the
Future Soundtrack For America compilation, a project compiled by John Flansburgh with the help of
Spike Jonze and
Barsuk Records. The band contributed "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too", a political campaign song from the
presidential election of 1840. The compilation was released by
Barsuk and featured indie, alternative, and high-profile acts such as
Death Cab For Cutie,
The Flaming Lips, and
Bright Eyes. All proceeds went to progressive organizations such as
Music For America and
MoveOn.org.
Flansburgh and Linnell also provided voices and an original song or two in
Camp, the
January 11,
2004 episode of the animated
sitcom Home Movies. They voice both a pair of camp counselors and members of a strange hooded male bonding cult.
Following the
Spine on the Hiway Tour of 2004, the band announced that they would take an extended hiatus from performing to focus on other projects, such as a musical produced by Flansburgh and written by his wife,
Robin "Goldie" Goldwasser, titled
People Are Wrong!.
2005 saw the release of
Here Come the ABCs, TMBG's follow-up to the successful children's album
No!. The Disney Sound label released the CD and DVD separately on
February 152005. To promote the album, Flansburgh and Linnell along with drummer Marty Beller embarked on a short tour, performing for free at many
Borders Bookstore locations. Despite their success in the children's music genre, anyone under the age of 16 is currently barred from TMBG concerts (except, of course, shows intended for a younger audience). The reasons stated on their site mention a number of elements uncharacteristic of their typical concerts (such as
pot smoking and violent, drunken audience members).
In November 2005,
Venue Songs was released as a two-disc CD/DVD set narrated by
John Hodgman. It is a concept album based on all of the "venue songs" from their 2004 tour. They are currently working on a new album with longtime producer
Pat Dillett (
David Byrne) and
The Dust Brothers (
Beck,
Beastie Boys)
, which has yet to be named, as well as a follow-up to the Here Come the ABCs album entitled
Here Come the 1-2-3s. More can be found on their webpage, http://www.tmbg.com.
Since December 2005, TMBG has been making podcasts on a monthly, sometimes bi-monthly, basis. These podcasts are available on
iTunes and tmbg.com. TMBG has also contributed five original songs for
Dunkin' Donuts TV commercials, including "Things I Like To Do" and "Pleather".
Recently, the band has produced and performed two original songs for the new
Playhouse Disney series
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse. They will also be providing original songs for the soundtrack to the
Henry Selick-directed movie of
Neil Gaiman's childrens' book
Coraline.
The band takes its name from the 1971 movie
They Might Be Giants starring
George C. Scott and
Joanne Woodward (based on the play of the same name written by
James Goldman). The play (and movie) title is an
allusion to
Don Quixote, who mistook windmills for giants. George C. Scott's character discusses man's ability to invent and analyze past the obvious, saying:
Of course, [Quixote] carried it a bit too far. He thought that every windmill was a giant. That's insane. But, thinking that they might be... Well, all the best minds used to think the world was flat. But, what if it isn't? It might be round. And bread mold might be medicine. If we never looked at things and thought of what they might be, why, we'd all still be out there in the tall grass with the apes.
In an interview Flansburgh said (paraphrasing) that the words "they might be giants" are just a very outward-looking forward thing, which they liked. In an earlier radio interview, Linnell described the phrase as "something very paranoid sounding".
The band's name is parodied in
Terry Pratchett's novel
Soul Music by the dwarf "rock band", "We're Certainly Dwarfs". Pratchett has repeatedly stated they are his favourite band.
Studio albums
*
They Might Be Giants (aka
The Pink Album) (1986)
*
Lincoln (1988)
*
Flood (1990)
*
Apollo 18 (1992)
*
John Henry (1994)
*
Factory Showroom (1996)
*
Long Tall Weekend (1999) (Internet release only)
*
Mink Car (2001)
*
No! (2002)
*
The Spine (2004)
*
Here Come the ABCs (2005)
Live releases
*
LiveNew York City 10/14/94 (1994) * Severe Tire Damage (1998) :* Contains three studio tracks * Live (1999):* Compiled from Severe Tire Damage tracksEPs and singles* Don't Let's Start (1987) * (She Was A) Hotel Detective (1988) * They'll Need a Crane (1989) * Ana Ng (1989) * Purple Toupee (1989) * Birdhouse in Your Soul (1989) * Istanbul (Not Constantinople) (1990) * The Statue Got Me High (1992) * The Guitar (The Lion Sleeps Tonight) (1992) * I Palindrome I (1992) * Why Does The Sun Shine? (The Sun Is a Mass of Incandescent Gas) (1993) * O Tannenbaum (1993) * Back To Skull (1994) * S-E-X-X-Y (1996) * Doctor Worm (1998) * What We Did This Summer (1999) * "I'm Sick (Of This American Life)" (1999) (appears on the first This American Life compilation CD set) * Working Undercover for the Man (2000) * Boss of Me (EP) (2000) * Man, It's So Loud in Here (2001) * They Might Be Giants in Holidayland (2001) * Bed, Bed, Bed (2003) * Indestructible Object (2004) * The Spine Surfs Alone'' (2004) * "T-Shirt" (2005) (Single, exclusive to iTunes Music Store)Compilations, online releases, other releases* Don't Let's Start (1989) (UK/Germany compilation) * Miscellaneous T (1991) * Then: The Earlier Years (1997) * CD soundtrack to McSweeney's magazine issue 6 (2001) (Contributions, and arrangement of music by others) * They Got Lost (2002) * Dial-A-Song: 20 Years Of They Might Be Giants (2002) * Bed, Bed, Bed (2003) * The Spine Hits The Road (2004) (Internet release only, live album) * Almanac (2004) (Internet release only, live album) * Venue Songs (2004) (Internet release only) * A User's Guide to They Might Be Giants (2005) * They Got Lost (2005) (Re-release) * Venue Songs DVD/CD (2005) (A re-release of Venue Songs in a CD/DVD combo pack with bonus material)Contributions* "SenSurround" for Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Soundtrack (1995) * "Spiralling Shape" for Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy Soundtrack (1996) * "Boss of Me" and "Older" for Music from Malcolm in the Middle (2001) * "Darlin' Allison" for Gordon Gano's Hitting the Ground album (2002) * "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too" for Future Soundtrack for America (2004) * "Through Being Cool" for Sky High Soundtrack (2005)The band has made music videos for many of their songs, including: * "Put Your Hand Inside the Puppet Head" (1986) * "Don't Let's Start" (1986) * "(She Was a) Hotel Detective" (1986) * "Ana Ng" (1988) * "Purple Toupee" (1988) * "They'll Need a Crane" (1988) * "Birdhouse in Your Soul" (1990) * "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" (animated) (1990) * "The Statue Got Me High" (1992) * "The Guitar" (1992) * "Snail Shell" (1994) * "Doctor Worm" (1998) * "Boss of Me" (2001) (abridged version premiered on FOX, some airplay on MTV2 and other stations) * "Experimental Film" (2004) (animated, with Homestar Runner characters)
Other videos include: * "Rabid Child" (1986) (home video, not released publicly, clip can be seen in Gigantic) * "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" (1990) (produced by and featured on Tiny Toons) * "Particle Man" (1990) (produced by and featured on Tiny Toons) * "Why Does the Sun Shine? (The Sun Is A Mass Of Incandescent Gas)" (1997) (animated/live action, premered on KaBlam!) * "Doctor Worm" (1999?) (animated, premered on KaBlam!) * "Courage the Cowardly Dog" (2002) (computer animated, aired on Cartoon Network) * "Dee Dee and Dexter" (2003) (animated by Klasky-Csupo, aired on Cartoon Network) * "I'm All You Can Think About" (2004) (animated in Macromedia Flash by John Linnell) * "Damn Good Times" (2005) (animated, appears on tmbg.com) * "Bastard Wants to Hit Me" (2005) (animated, appears on tmbg.com) * "Dallas", "Los Angeles", "Anaheim", "Vancouver" "Asheville" "Glasgow", "Albany", "Pittsburgh", "Asbury Park", "Brookln" and "Charlottesville" (2005, on the Venue Songs DVD)
Official sites* Official They Might Be Giants web page * Official band-operated download site * They Might Be Giants' Dial-a-Song * The official Gigantic film web page * The official TMBG Kids web page * "Experimental Film" video on Homestarrunner.comUnofficial fansites* :This Might Be A Wiki â€" a wiki about TMBG. As of May 26, 2006, it contained 10570 pages, 2359 articles, and had 1050 registered users. ** TMBW:Fan Communities â€" List of many TMBG internet discussion forums * TMBG:UK - the only UK based fansite with media content * Theynow.com - A fanmade TMBG podcast * The unofficial They Might Be Giants siteArticles* "They Might Be Giants release First MP3 Only Album" by Rich Menta, MP3 Newswire, 1999 * IMDb ** * **
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