SubArachnoid_Space

SubArachnoid Space

SubArachnoid Space

Add article description


SubArachnoid Space was a San Francisco, California-based psychedelic rock band founded in 1996 by Mason Jones, the owner of the independent music label Charnel Music.[1] Initially the band was a trio (Mason Jones: guitar, Jason Stein: bass, Michelle Schreiber: drums) and the debut 7" single release was by the trio. Before the band's first live show, performed at KFJC radio, second guitarist Melynda Jackson joined. That quartet toured for a few years before Michelle moved to Texas and Jason left to pursue other interests. Chris Van Huffle joined as drummer and Andey Koa Stephens took over role on bass. The role of bassist shifted several times when Stephens left in 2002 to work with David Starfire, but the rest of the lineup remained consistent until 2003, when Mason left the group so they could tour more. Shortly thereafter the band's core of Melynda and Chris relocated to Portland Oregon, where they continued to perform, tour and release albums. The band completed a fall tour of the US with the Italian group OVO in September/October 2009 before disbanding on August 13, 2010. This was accompanied by a farewell show at Mississippi studios. Melynda Jackson and Chris Van Huffle went on to form Eight Bells.[2]

Quick Facts Origin, Genres ...

Selected discography

Studio Albums

Singles

"Char-Broiled Wonderland" 7-inch single (1996), Charnel Music

Split LPs

Collaborative Albums

Live Albums

Former members

  • Melynda Jackson – guitar
  • Chris Van Huffel – drums
  • Daniel Barone – bass
  • Erik Moggridge – guitar
  • Mason Jones – guitar
  • Jason Stein - bass guitar
  • Andey Koa Stephens– bass guitar
  • Chris Cones – guitar
  • Diego Gonzalez – bass guitar
  • Stooert Odom – bass guitar
  • Michael Shiono - bass
  • Rus Archer - guitar
  • Daniel Osborne - guitar
  • Lauren K. Newman - drums
  • Bryan Sours - drums

References

  1. Christian, Chris (September 28, 1997). "Interview with SubArachnoid Space - Satyricon, Portland, OR - 9/28/97". Sonic Boom. Retrieved June 19, 2020.

Oregonian Sound Check:


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article SubArachnoid_Space, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.