The
Rentals were the new wave-influenced project of singer/songwriter
Matt Sharp, former bassist for power pop favorites
Weezer. Born in Arlington, Virginia, on September 22, 1969,
Sharp co-founded
Weezer in 1992, and in the months to follow, the band emerged as one of the most popular up-and-coming acts on the Los Angeles club scene; their self-titled debut LP appeared on Geffen two years later, becoming a major hit thanks their smash single and video "Buddy Holly." During the spring of 1994,
Sharp mounted the first
Rentals studio session. Assembling a roster including
Weezer drummer
Pat Wilson,
that dog. violinist
Petra Haden, vocalist/keyboardist
Cherielynn Westrich, and guitarist
Rod Cervera, subsequent dates yielded the group's 1995 debut,
Return of the Rentals, which notched a hit with the infectious "Friends of P."
Sharp returned to
Weezer to record the band's acclaimed 1996 follow-up,
Pinkerton, but announced his exit from the lineup in February 1998; the second
Rentals album,
Seven More Minutes, followed a year later.
After a six-year hiatus,
Sharp brought back
the Rentals in 2005. After touring with
Ozma in the summer of 2006,
Sharp's group released the EP The Last Little Life in 2007. In December of the same year,
the Rentals announced that they would begin recording a new album in 2008. The resulting Songs About Time, a 2009 multimedia project consisting of photographs, short films, and three mini-albums, was made available in a limited-edition deluxe box set in 2010. In April of 2011, the band released Present Resilience: A Benefit Album for the Japanese Relief. For the band's next album,
Sharp chose ten songs from Songs About Time and re-recorded them with violinist
Lauren Chipman,
Ozma guitarist
Ryen Slegr,
Black Keys drummer
Patrick Carney, and
Jess Wolfe and
Holly Laessig of the group
Lucius.
Sharp recorded the basic tracks in L.A., then worked with
Carney in Nashville and the
Lucius vocalists in N.Y.C. After
Sharp arranged the tracks, using some parts of the Songs About Time sessions as well, he turned the songs over to
D. Sardy to mix. The resulting album,
Lost in Alphaville, was released in late summer of 2014 by Polyvinyl. ~ Jason Ankeny