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{{short description|American indie rock band}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2022}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Archers of Loaf
| image = Archers of Loaf at the Middle East (6980829060).jpg
|
| caption = Archers of Loaf in 2012
| origin = [[Chapel Hill, North Carolina]], U.S.
| genre = [[Indie rock]], [[noise rock]]
| years_active = 1991–1998, 2011–present
| label = {{hlist|[[Alias Records|Alias]]|[[Merge Records|Merge]]}}
| current_members = [[Eric Bachmann]]<br />Matt Gentling<br />Eric Johnson<br />Mark Price
}}
'''Archers of Loaf''' is an American [[indie rock]] band originally formed in [[Chapel Hill, North Carolina]], in 1991. The group toured extensively and released four studio albums, one compilation, numerous singles and EPs, and a live album which was released after the band broke up in 1998.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/artist/403979-Archers-Of-Loaf|title=Archers Of Loaf|website=Discogs|access-date=
==History==
===Early history (1991–1995)===
Singer/guitarist [[Eric Bachmann]], guitarist Eric Johnson, bassist Matt Gentling, and drummer Mark Price, all originally from [[Asheville, North Carolina]],<ref name="ashevillenow.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.ashevillenow.com/arts-entertainment/music-clubs-nightlife/ |title=Introduction to the Asheville Music Scene |author=Hunter Pope |publisher=Asheville Now |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100911210443/http://www.ashevillenow.com/arts-entertainment/music-clubs-nightlife/ |archive-date=
Their initial release in 1992 was a 45" single, "Wrong" b/w "South Carolina" given away free with issue 1 of ''[[Stay Free!]]'' magazine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pettediscographies.com/archersofloafsingles.asp |title=Archers of Loaf Discography - Singles - Pette Discographies: A Record Collector's Guide |publisher=Pette Discographies |access-date=
The band signed with Alias records, and released their second single "[[Web in Front]]" in February 1993; it received moderate college radio airplay. The song was featured in a season five episode of ''[[Beavis and Butt-Head]]'', and was included on the soundtrack of the movie ''[[Mallrats]]'' in 1995.
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| url=http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/storage/paper851/news/2003/09/25/TheStatement/A.Decade.Later.Icky.Mettle.Still.An.IndieRock.Milestone-1418817.shtml
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928015209/http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/storage/paper851/news/2003/09/25/TheStatement/A.Decade.Later.Icky.Mettle.Still.An.IndieRock.Milestone-1418817.shtml
| archive-date=
| title=A decade later, Icky Mettle still an indie-rock milestone - The Statement
| publisher=[[The Michigan Daily]]
| date=
In 1994, the Archers released the EP ''[[Vs the Greatest of All Time]]''. However, the song "The Greatest of All Time" does not appear on this release but rather the second full-length album, ''[[Vee Vee]]'', released in 1995. ''Vee Vee'' followed a similar template as their previous recordings and featured the track "Harnessed in Slums", which became popular on college radio. The album also garnered significant attention outside the independent music scene, culminating in the band being courted by [[Maverick Records]], a division of [[Warner Music Group]], which the band rejected.<ref name=RS>{{cite web| url=https://www.rollingstone.com/artists/archersofloaf/articles/story/5925134/last_of_the_independents| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081120094255/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/archersofloaf/articles/story/5925134/last_of_the_independents| url-status=dead| archive-date=November 20, 2008| title= Last of the Independents: Archers of Loaf| author=Steve Gdula| publisher=Rolling Stone|date= September 18, 1998}}</ref> Bachmann later stated that he and the band did not really consider the offer. The band was still under contract with Alias, and changing labels would put them into considerable debt to Maverick. According to Bachmann, "We already signed a deal [with Alias] and it costs lots of money to get out of these things. If we would have had Maverick buy out our contract, we'd be however many thousands of dollars in debt to them. It's really complex that way and it really didn't make sense to do that."<ref name="furious.com">{{cite web| url=http://www.furious.com/perfect/archers.html| title=Archers of Loaf interview| author=Jason Gross |publisher=Perfect Sound Forever| date=December 1996}}</ref> The band had another reason for rejecting the Maverick offer: They did not want to be associated with the other high-profile bands on Maverick. "The other bands [on Maverick] were that bad," said Price at the time. "There are other bands on major labels that are associated with a lot of shit but it's big enough that there are a least a few bands that you like. For us on Maverick, it'd be us and [[Candlebox]] and [[Alanis Morissette|Alanis]]..."<ref name="furious.com"/>
In 1995 the band had its highest-profile tour opening for [[Weezer]]. The band's sometimes brash sound did not go over all that well with the Weezer crowd, and Gentling later said of the tour, "It wasn't as much that we didn't like the Weezer guys, but the opening bands get treated like crap by the people who work (at the venues). And as far as our music is concerned, I don't really know if we're all that compatible, at least live."<ref name="pub.umich.edu">{{cite web|url=http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1996/oct/10-23-96/arts/arts1.html |title=Archers set sights on A2 |author=Aaron Rennie |publisher=[[The Michigan Daily]] |date=October 23, 1996 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071104132537/http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1996/oct/10-23-96/arts/arts1.html |archive-date=November 4, 2007 }}</ref> In 1996 the band released ''[[The Speed of Cattle]],'' a collection of [[B-sides]], singles, and [[John Peel]] session tracks.
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Gentling said of the experience, "We knew we wanted to take a long time on this album. We specifically wanted not to do tracks over and over and over again, but more to work on tone and get all of our instruments down right. We took over a day (just) to get the drums sounding right."<ref name="pub.umich.edu"/>
The band toured extensively in support of the record, to limited mass commercial success. Of the tour, Bachmann said, "We got back and we were not real happy with the way that [the tour] went. Usually when you finish a tour you have a general idea of a song or two you can start working on, but we got back and were like 'geez, what are we going to do?'"<ref name="beloit.edu">{{cite web|url=http://www.beloit.edu/~derrick/archers.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19991010173322/http://www.beloit.edu/~derrick/archers.html |archive-date=October 10, 1999
Their final LP, ''[[White Trash Heroes]]'', was released in 1998. The album's style deviated drastically from their first three albums, and received mixed reviews from critics.<ref>{{cite web| author=Robert Christgau| date=September 29, 1998| url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv998-98.php| title= Consumer Guide September 1998| publisher= [[Village Voice]] (archived at RobertChristgau.com) }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.popmatters.com/music/features/cutoutbin/3-archersofloaf.shtml |title=The Cut-Out Bin No. 3: Archers of Loaf, ''White Trash Heroes'' (1998) | author=Zeth Luney| publisher= [[Pop Matters]]| date=October 7, 2005}}</ref> The album's creative break from the band's previous work may have stemmed from the different writing process used for ''White Trash Heroes''. According to Bachmann, "Things were laid down one at a time, though we did play a lot of it live, too, but pieced together more perfectly so we could hear when one sound was beginning to get in the way of something else."<ref name="beloit.edu"/> The band went to great lengths in the studio in an attempt to keep the writing from turning stale. For example, on the song "Banging on a Dead Drum," the band members all switched instruments to try to liven up the feel of the song. Johnson plays drums, Gentling plays slide guitar, Price plays bass, and Bachmann still plays guitar, as he was the one who knew the song.<ref name="beloit.edu"/>
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===Post-breakup projects===
Bachmann moved on to multiple solo projects and the band [[Crooked Fingers]]. Gentling went on to provide extra instrumentation on tour with another North Carolina-bred band, [[Superchunk]] as well as a brief stint as live bassist for [[Band of Horses]], the Poles, and [[Analog Moon]]. He has also continued to work with Bachmann as a contributor in [[Crooked Fingers]]. Johnson self-released one EP and one full-length under the moniker "Spookie" (originally Spookie J) and attended law school in North Carolina.<ref name=myspace>{{cite web|url=http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=2159923 |title=Spookie - Asheville, NC - Grunge |author=Eric Johnson |publisher=MySpace.com/spookie |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011001257/http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile |archive-date=
===Reunion (2011–present)===
On January 15, 2011, Archers of Loaf reunited to play an unannounced set at The Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, North Carolina. They opened for local act The Love Language.<ref>{{cite web|last=Modell |first=Josh |url=
Bachmann has stated in interviews that his thought processes around the band have changed over time and that his relationships with the older material are also different: "Essentially, before, when I was a 20-year-old kid playing that stuff, I got some sense of satisfaction or power. I felt confident playing in front of people. Now I don't feel that satisfaction or that power," he said. "The reward I get now is I'm going out and people are enjoying hearing it. My relationship had to change with the songs, and in that light I like all of them."<ref name="Partridge">{{cite web|last=Partridge|first=Kenneth|url=http://www.spinner.com/2011/07/05/archers-of-loaf-tour/ |title=Archers of Loaf Show Their 'Mettle' With Reunion Tour, Reissue of Debut LP |publisher=Spinner |date=July 5, 2011
Asked about the band's future plans, Bachmann did not rule out a new album, but noted that it was not something that was on the immediate horizon following the reunion tour. "The worst thing [Archers of Loaf] could do is force something out and have it be a bad version of something we already did. It's going to have to be a forward step. I don't want to recreate the 25-year-old kid writing the songs that I would do now with those three other guys, so we'd have to think that through. They're very good to work with, in that way. It's not out of the question, because everyone thinks the same way. No one wants to do 'Icky Mettle 2.'"<ref name="Partridge"/>
A live concert documentary ''[[What Did You Expect? (film)|What Did You Expect?]]'', capturing the band's August
In a 2018 interview with Eric Bachmann, he said all of the members of Archers of Loaf are on board with the idea of reforming and making a new record, saying "Oh yeah, everybody wants to do it — I just have to write the songs."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Khanna |first1=Vish |title=Archers of Loaf Return! New Music "Is Happening" Says Eric Bachmann |url=https://exclaim.ca/music/article/archers_of_loaf_return_new_music_is_happening_says_eric_bachmann |publisher=Exclaim! Media |access-date=
On February 20, 2020, the Archers of Loaf digitally released "Raleigh Days", their first new music since 1998.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.brooklynvegan.com/archers-of-loaf-share-raleigh-days-first-new-song-in-over-20-years/ |title=Archers of Loaf share "Raleigh Days," first new song in over 20 years|last=Pearis |first=Bill |date=February 20, 2020 |website=[[Brooklyn Vegan]] |access-date=February 20, 2020}}</ref>
On July 13, 2022, the Archers of Loaf announced their first LP in 24 years,
==Discography==
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*''[[All the Nations Airports]]'' (Alias, 1996; Merge, 2012)
*''[[White Trash Heroes]]'' (Alias, 1998; Merge, 2012)
*''[[Reason in Decline]]'' (Merge, 2022)
===EPs and other collections===
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*''Might'' (Alias, 1993)
*''The Results After the Loaf's Revenge'' (contains "What Did You Expect?"/"Ethel Merman") (Merge, 1994)
*"Telepathic Traffic"/"Angel Scraper" split with
*"Funnelhead"/"Quinnbeast" split with [[Treepeople]], (Sonic Bubblegum, 1994)
*"Harnessed in Slums"/"Telepathic Traffic" (Alias, 1995)
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*"Screaming Undercover" (Merge, 2022)
==
* In the ''[[Archer (2009 TV series)|Archer]]'' three-part episode "Heart of Archness", main character Sterling Archer names his [[lacrosse]] team the "Archers of Loafcrosse". (The show’s creator [[Adam Reed]] is a UNC graduate)
* The
* The
* The music video for "Web in Front" was featured on an episode of ''[[Beavis and Butt-head]]''.
* Mentioned in the song "[[Jerks of Attention]]" by Australian indie rock group [[Jebediah]].
* The
* Lyrics from the Archers of Loaf song "Chumming the Ocean" are featured in the song "I Will Play My Game Beneath the Spin Light" by Long Island alternative rock band [[Brand New (band)|Brand New]].
* A poster of Archers of Loaf is seen in Josh's room in the 2000 film ''[[Road Trip (2000 film)|Road Trip]]''.
* A poster of Archers of Loaf is seen on the door of the Cyberdelia club in the 1995 film ''[[Hackers (film)|Hackers]]''.
* The song "White Trash Heroes" was featured in Zero's "Dying To Live (2002)" video.
* Former [[Hot Rod Circuit]] frontman Andy Jackson started a band in 2008 called Death In The Park which was named after the Archers of Loaf song by the same name.
==References==
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{{Archers of Loaf}}
{{Authority control}}
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