From his tenures with the
Sneakers and
the dB's to his subsequent solo projects, singer/songwriter
Chris Stamey was a towering figure in the Southern jangle pop renaissance, though that was hardly the limit of his talents. Whether he was fusing the sensibilities of
Big Star to new wave pop with
the dB's on 1982's Repercussion, blending angular melodies with playful melodicism on his 1987 solo effort
It's Alright, detouring into introspective semi-acoustic pop with his former
dB's bandmate
Peter Holsapple on 1991's
Mavericks, or embracing the sounds of mid-century popular songwriting on 2019's
New Songs for the 20th Century,
Stamey understood the importance of melody while also demonstrating the many ways in which it can be shaped, depending on its context.
Stamey was also a valuable producer and sideman, sometimes as effective working for others as he was for himself.
Born December 6, 1954 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Stamey was raised in the Winston-Salem area, and alongside longtime friend and collaborator
Peter Holsapple, he first surfaced in 1972 in the short-lived Rittenhouse Square, which issued their sole LP the following year. While attending the University of North Carolina in 1975,
Stamey teamed up with drummer
Will Rigby to form the cult favorite power pop combo
Sneakers; the group were later joined by guitarist
Mitch Easter, the future
Let's Active frontman who would emerge as one of the era's premier producers. The band traveled to New York City in 1976 to appear at the famed Max's Kansas City but dissolved soon after, at which time
Stamey returned to the Big Apple to set up his own label, Car Records.
In addition to issuing the posthumous
Sneakers collection In the Red in 1978, Car also issued the magnificent "I Am the Cosmos," the lone solo single of ex-
Big Star mastermind
Chris Bell; concurrently,
Stamey played live with
Bell's one-time
Big Star partner
Alex Chilton, and in 1977 issued a solo single, "The Summer Sun." When
Rigby and bassist
Gene Holder relocated to New York,
Stamey joined them as
the dB's, releasing the 1978 single "If and When" before expanding into a four-piece with the addition of
Holsapple. Although
the dB's quirky yet melodic approach anticipated the emergence of the Southern jangle pop explosion, the band never earned the same attention afforded to acts like
R.E.M. -- initially, they couldn't even land an American record deal, and their first two albums (the much-acclaimed 1981 efforts Stands for Decibels and Repercussion) appeared only in Britain.
Stamey left
the dB's in 1983, issuing the solo LP It's a Wonderful Life later that same year; after releasing 1984's Instant Excitement EP, he recorded and toured with
the Golden Palominos, squeezing in the Christmas Time mini-album in 1986. A year later,
Stamey signed with A&M to make his long-awaited major-label debut with the superb
It's Alright; despite uniformly solid reviews, the album made almost no commercial impact, and he spent the next several years as a producer and guest musician, completing an album that A&M reportedly rejected. The LP finally appeared on Rhino in 1991 under the title
Fireworks; that same year, he reunited with
Holsapple for
Mavericks.
For 1995's The Robust Beauty of Improper Models in Decision Making,
Stamey made a radical shift away from his pop past, teaming with cornetist/guitarist
Kirk Ross for an exercise in free improvisation.
Stamey spent the remainder of the decade focusing on producing records for other artists at his Modern studio in Chapel Hill, but he returned to his own recording career with 2004's
Travels in the South. Less than a year later,
Stamey had another new album ready for release, a collaboration with
Yo La Tengo and Tyson Rogers credited to
the Chris Stamey Experience and titled
A Question of Temperature (2005).
A few years afterward,
Stamey reunited with
Peter Holsapple, releasing
Here and Now in 2009 and supporting it with a tour. He then turned his attention to an ambitious live staging of
Big Star's third album, Sister Lovers, acting as the musical director for the star-studded concerts. The first of these debuted at Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, North Carolina in December of 2010 and over the next few years,
Stamey brought
Big Star's Third to London and to 2012's South by Southwest. That year also saw the reunion of
the dB's, who played live and released the new album
Falling Off the Sky that summer.
Stamey continued with his busy workload in early 2013 with the release of the dreamy solo album
Lovesick Blues. Two years later, he issued Euphoria, a record that touched upon many of his pop obsessions. 2019 saw the release of an especially ambitious effort,
New Songs for the 20th Century, with
Stamey writing and arranging 26 tunes modeled on mid-century pre-rock sounds with a bevy of guest vocalists and musicians. 2020's
A Brand New Shade of Blue was a similarly minded follow-up, with a greater emphasis on cool '50s vocal jazz and vocals from
Brett Harris.
Stamey and
Holsapple reunited once again for the 2021 release
Our Back Pages, in which they recorded new interpretations of tunes from their back catalogs. ~ Jason Ankeny & Mark Deming