Joe Casey
Casey performing live with Protomartyr in 2016
Casey performing live with Protomartyr in 2016
Background information
Born (1977-01-31) January 31, 1977
Detroit, Michigan
OriginUniversity of Michigan
Genres
Years active2010-present
WebsiteThese Hungry Times

Joseph Kevin Barry Casey[1] (born January 31, 1977) is an American musician based out of Detroit, best known as the lead vocalist and lyricist of post-punk band Protomartyr. He is known for his distinctive vocal style, "anti-charisma[tic]" stage presence, and sardonic, literary lyrics which often incorporate philosophical themes. He is also responsible for creating the band's visual aesthetic.

Early life

Casey was born to an Irish-American Catholic[2] family and is the youngest of 3 children.[3] He grew up on 6 Mile on the north-west side of Detroit, which he remembers as an "idyllic corner" of the city when he was a child; his house described as being "the last [...] on a dead-end street, surrounded by a school, a church, and a monastery." However, by the time he was a teenager, his street had become prone to frequent shootings and stabbings, including one on his next door neighbor's lawn when he was just 12.[4] His father - a construction inspector for the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department[5] - was a fan of history, which in turn encouraged his interest in the field later on. Solitary in nature and fond of playing video games, he remembers being an avid reader as a child, treating it as "a competition [...] to see who [among his siblings] could read the most".[3]

He attended the University of Detroit Jesuit High School and Academy and remembers being a good student, though he describes his academic performance in college - University of Michigan[2] - as being "pretty bad".[3] He recalls trying to learn the flute in grade school, calling the attempt a "failure on [his] part."[6] His school friends included many future musicians, including the members of garage punk band Tyvek (whom he would accompany on a few of their tours and cite as an influence on Protomartyr's music).[7] However, while many of them left for places like New York City, Los Angeles or Chicago, Casey himself chose to stay in Detroit and worked a number of odd-end jobs after film school, a period during which "he drank, [and] got depressed."[4] One of them included the job of a doorman at the Gem Theatre, where he met and became close to guitarist Greg Ahee - then playing in a "caustic punk" band named Butt Babies with bassist Scott Davidson and drummer Alex Leonard (grandson of Elmore Leonard).[8]

In March 2008, while on a trip to Texas with Tyvek, his 72-year-old father died due to complications during a routine hernia surgery. His death acted as a "wake-up call" to Casey,[4][9] and would subsequently have a huge impact on his lyricism.[7] He and Butt Babies started to jam together in 2010, soon adopting the name "Protomartyr" - referencing Saint Stephen.[2][8] Kevin Boyer of Tyvek briefly played bass and later second guitar for the band during their early days, before having to leave due to a heavy work schedule. With the brief exception of Kelley Deal joining the band as a touring member in 2020, the band have primarily remained a quartet ever since.

Career

Since 2010 and up until today, Protomartyr have released more than 6 studio albums and 3 EPs worth of material, and all of their songs have featured Joe Casey on vocals. He is also solely responsible for the band's lyricism across the entirety of their studio output - the only exception being a cover of Preoccupations' "Forbidden" (released on a split single, with Preoccupations' cover of the track "Pontiac 87" as the B-side).[10]

Aside from their 2012 debut No Passion All Technique - which was later reissued in 2019 to positive reviews[11] - all of Protomartyr's albums, including 2018's Consolation EP, have received widespread critical acclaim.[12][13][14][15][16] On review aggregator website Metacritic, the band's discography (excluding their debut and including the Consolation EP) has an average score of 83/100, indicating "[u]niversal [a]cclaim".[17] The Agent Intellect and Relatives in Descent even managed to break the top 5 of Billboard's Top Heatseekers chart,[18] and songs from these two albums have been featured in TV shows such as 13 Reasons Why,[19] The Rain[20] and The OA.[21] They have extensively toured around the world[22][23][24] and have performed at multiple noteworthy festivals such as SXSW, CMJ Music Marathon, and the Pitchfork Music Festival.[25]

Casey has also performed as a guest on numerous other records. He provides backing vocals on Tyvek's 2012 album On Triple Beams (alongside Greg Ahee).[26] He sings lead vocals on the tracks "Rope" and "Slang Words" by The Gotobeds off of their 2016 & 2019 albums Blood Sugar Secs Traffic and Debt Begins At 30 respectively. He is also credited as the composer of the track "Why'd You?" off of the former album.[27][28]

Artistry

Lyricism and themes

"With his suit jacket and dangling cigarette, Casey remains much like the guy down the street who only speaks up when he's had a couple at the bar. With Protomartyr, he often sounds like he just wandered into the room and began riffing on whatever's on his mind while the band ebbs and surges around him. Yet this seemingly stream of consciousness spew is often strikingly sharp and evocative. When Casey latches on to a simple phrase or sentence, it's hard medicine: "I don't want to hear those vile trumpets anymore"; "everything's fine"; "knock it down.""

Greg Kot, Chicago Tribune[29]

According to an interview with Los Angeles Review of Books, Casey writes lyrics after listening to the music composed by the rest of the band.[3] He spoke of his writing process in a Reddit AMA:[30]

It changes from song to song. I will say I tend to go the "stream of consciousness" route at first BUT then heavily edit, add context, and then heavily edit again. Editing is the key.

Casey has been called the group's "wild card" due to his lyrics, described as "free-associative"[31] and "blue collar" "beat poetry".[32][33][34][35] His lyrics often consist of references to pre-Enlightenment sources[3] such as Greek philosophy & mythology.[36] For example, the lyrics to "A Private Understanding" reference Heraclitus,[37][38] while "Bridge & Crown" references the deity Hermes.[39] The philosophical concept of existentialism also informs a lot of his writing.[40][41][42] He has often cited Irish literature as a big influence on his lyrics, a Spin interview noting that he'd "daydream" in college of being to Detroit what James Joyce was to Dublin.[2] He has cited Cré na Cille by Máirtín Ó Cadhain as an inspiration for the track "Caitriona",[3] and has mentioned Flann O'Brian's writings as coming "closest to a style [he] poorly [tries to] emulate from time to time."[6] He references the insights of recurring O'Brian character, De Selby, in "A Private Understanding", particularly through lines such as "the night is an accumulation of dark air."[43]

According to Ben Ratliff - who considers The Agent Intellect to contain "[s]ome of the strongest lyrics of 2015" - Casey's lyrics often render "Detroit as a pile of symbols and emotions".[44] "Casey writes lyrics about the lives of the working class and dystopian visions from the heartland", writes Lauretta Charlton for The New Yorker, noting - as have other sources, including Casey himself - the influence Detroit has had on his lyrics.[45][3][46] His lyrics on Relatives in Descent have been labeled by many as political,[47][48][49] despite Casey refusing to label it an "anti-Trump" album, finding it no less political than the band's previous releases up until that point.[50] Ana da Silva of The Raincoats compares his apocalyptic lyricism on Ultimate Success Today - with its "theme of things ending, above all human existence" - to Cormac McCarthy's The Road.[51] Alexis Petridis finds Casey's "pre-cognitive powers" in his lyricism on the album to be similar to those of Mark E. Smith, one of many critics/sources to find similarities between the two as well.[52][53]

Vocal style and live performances

Casey has been described as having a baritone and a "half spoken, half sung" sprechsang vocal style, which he pejoratively describes as "mumbling".[54][53][55][56] It has been compared to Ian Curtis, Nick Cave and Mark E. Smith.[57][58][59][60]

Casey has often been singled out in reviews of Protomartyr's live performances.[61][62] In fact, humorous critical descriptions of his introverted appearance and "anti-charisma[tic]" onstage persona have even been compiled on a widely referenced Tumblr blog titled DESCRIPTIONS OF JOE CASEY.[63][64][50][65] “Joe is one of the best lead singers right now,” Parquet Courts’ Andrew Savage claimed in an interview with Spin, “His whole stage thing is awesome, but it’s not even a ‘thing’—it's just who he is.”[2]

Casey suffers from stage fright,[2][66][67] and claims that on-stage drinking - a common feature of his live performances, where he brings "at least 6 beers" - helps him deal with it.[2][30][68][69]

Artwork

Cover artwork designed by Casey (featuring a drawing by Alex Leonard) for the Protomartyr split single with R. Ring, A Half of Seven (2015).

Casey is responsible for the entirety of Protomartyr's album and flyer artwork,[30][69] and consciously chooses to leave them uncredited.[70] He describes his process and the origins of his aesthetic as follows:[6]

Well, the printing process is me going to FedEx Kinko's and fudging around with the copiers there. Just tape and scissors and a rudimentary understanding of how the xeroxs work. I stumbled into "my aesthetic" that way. And being rushed and reusing a previous show flyer for the first two albums cemented the strong, simple portrait as my cover manifesto.

He also listed his influences as follows:[6]

I grew up with a bunch of Frederic Remington books which affected me deeply. I like Albrecht Dürer, of course. Old punk flyers. Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon. Caravaggio. Jacques-Louis David, Théodore Géricault, etc. etc.

All of his artwork is displayed on his blog titled These Hungry Times.

Personal life

According to an interview conducted in 2020, Casey still lives in his family house on 6 Mile Road.[71] He originally lived there with his mother, until he and his brothers decided to relocate her to the suburbs due to her worsening Alzheimer's disease in 2014.[2] Her affliction was the inspiration behind the lyrics to the song "Why Does It Shake?".[72] Casey's mother died in 2021.[73] Casey got engaged the following year,[74] and got married in Detroit on May 20, 2023.[75]

Casey is a "movie lover",[76][52][77] and his favorite games include NFL Blitz and Red Dead Redemption 2.[6] He is a life-long fan of the Detroit Tigers.[78][3]

References

  1. "ACE Repertory". ASCAP Repertory Search. ASCAP. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Cover Story: His City of Ruins". Spin. August 4, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Loss, Robert (17 December 2018). ""A Proper Cynic": An Interview with Protomartyr's Joe Casey". Los Angeles Review of Books.
  4. 1 2 3 Carew, Anthony (January 23, 2018). "Protomartyr's Joe Casey: 'I just wanted to be able to shout over loud music'". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. "Ep. #245: Joe Casey of Protomartyr". March 30, 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "r/indieheads - Joe from Protomartyr AMA". Reddit.
  7. 1 2 "Protomartyr: A New Decade's Burden". The Line of Best Fit.
  8. 1 2 "Joe Casey". Talkhouse.
  9. "Odd Jobs: a Conversation with Protomartyr and Preoccupations". Talkhouse.
  10. "Protomartyr - "Forbidden" (Preoccupations Cover)". Spin. October 24, 2018.
  11. "Protomartyr - No Passion All Technique [Reissue]". Album of the Year.
  12. "Ultimate Success Today by Protomartyr". Metacritic.
  13. "Consolation [EP] by Protomartyr". Metacritic.
  14. "Relatives in Descent by Protomartyr". Metacritic.
  15. "The Agent Intellect by Protomartyr". Metacritic.
  16. "Under Color of Official Right by Protomartyr". Metacritic.
  17. "Protomartyr". Metacritic.
  18. "Protomartyr". Billboard.
  19. Nguyen, Hanh (April 7, 2017). "'13 Reasons Why' Soundtrack: Listen to This Haunting Playlist From Netflix's Heartbreaking Series". Indiewire.
  20. Keaney, Quinn (May 26, 2018). ""My Children" by Protomartyr". POPSUGAR Entertainment.
  21. "The OA - Season 2 Soundtrack". March 24, 2019.
  22. "Protomartyr Gigography, Tour History & Past Concerts – Songkick". www.songkick.com.
  23. "5 Questions with: Protomartyr". BrooklynVegan. March 13, 2014. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  24. "Behold, Post Punk Band Protomartyr Will Perform in Jakarta!". April 27, 2018.
  25. Roberts, Randall (March 16, 2014). "SXSW 2014: All hail the losers, the misanthropes and the unhip". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  26. "On Triple Beams - Tyvek | Credits | AllMusic". Allmusic.
  27. "Blood//Sugar//Secs//Traffic - The Gotobeds | Credits | AllMusic". Allmusic.
  28. "Debt Begins at 30 - The Gotobeds | Credits | AllMusic". Allmusic.
  29. Kot, Greg (September 29, 2017). "World's compass feels askew on Protomartyr's 'Relatives in Descent'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
  30. 1 2 3 "r/indieheads - Joe from Protomartyr, AMA today". Reddit.
  31. "Protomartyr | Biography & History". AllMusic.
  32. Turner-Heffer, Adam. "Ultimate Success Today". Under the Radar.
  33. Ham, Robert (September 28, 2017). "Protomartyr spins tales of lost souls and tortured romantics in 'Relatives In Descent'". Alternative Press.
  34. Media, ReFrame (July 25, 2020). "Protomartyr and the Power of Repeating Yourself". Think Christian.
  35. "ALBUM REVIEW: Protomartyr – Ultimate Success Today | NARC. | Reliably Informed | Music and Creative Arts News for Newcastle and the North East". NARC Magazine.
  36. "Protomartyr: Ultimate Success Today". Pitchfork.
  37. "Protomartyr's "A Private Understanding" Is the Sound of Confusion". Vice.
  38. "Protomartyr – "A Private Understanding"". September 29, 2017.
  39. "Protomartyr – Bridge & Crown". Genius.
  40. "Protomartyr's Joe Casey on Why He's Obsessed with Decay". TIDAL Magazine.
  41. "What's The Meaning Of Life? Ask Protomartyr". NPR.
  42. "In Conversation: Joe Casey Discusses Protomartyr's Latest Attempt at a "Happy" Album". FLOOD.
  43. Protomartyr – A Private Understanding, retrieved 2021-11-15
  44. Ratliff, Ben (December 11, 2015). "Popcast: Joe Casey of Protomartyr". The New York Times.
  45. Charlton, Lauretta. "Fighting Technology and Kombucha and Complacency with Protomartyr". The New Yorker.
  46. "Protomartyr, Their Love for Detroit and Debut Performance in Indonesia". June 24, 2018.
  47. Naftule, Ashley (October 14, 2017). "Joe Casey on Why Protomartyr's Not a Political Band". Phoenix New Times.
  48. "An Interview With Protomartyr Frontman Joe Casey About 'Male Plague' & Nuclear Annihilation". Gothamist. October 27, 2017.
  49. "Official Protomartyr Sex Pillows!". Spin. October 5, 2017.
  50. 1 2 "Protomartyr On New Album 'Relatives In Descent'". Stereogum. September 26, 2017.
  51. "Protomartyr announce new album, 'Ultimate Success Today' out May..." Domino Recording Company.
  52. 1 2 "Protomartyr: "The world may decide that, actually, this is our last album"". NME. July 15, 2020.
  53. 1 2 Petridis, Alexis (July 16, 2020). "Protomartyr: Ultimate Success Today review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week". The Guardian.
  54. McMenamin, Ed. "Protomartyr on "Relatives in Descent"". Under the Radar.
  55. Morgan, Steven (August 20, 2018). "What's The Deal With Protomartyr?".
  56. "Protomartyr's Joe Casey Discusses "Ultimate Success Today," Collaboration, and Writing | Feature Interview". POST-TRASH.
  57. Callwood, Brett (January 16, 2013). "Punk N' Disorderly". Metro Times. Archived from the original on March 31, 2014. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  58. Terry, Josh (February 26, 2014). "Listen: Protomartyr's new song "Come & See"". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  59. McDermott, Patrick (February 24, 2014). "Stream: Protomartyr, "Come & See"". The Fader. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  60. Minsker, Evan (June 17, 2013). "Protomartyr - No Passion All Technique". Pitchfork. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  61. "Industry & Insight: Protomartyr, Live in London". The Line of Best Fit.
  62. Morgan, Steven (August 18, 2018). "LIVE: PROTOMARTYR GET INTENSE".
  63. "DESCRIPTIONS OF JOE CASEY". Tumblr.
  64. "INTERVIEW: Protomartyr | NARC. | Reliably Informed | Music and Creative Arts News for Newcastle and the North East". NARC Magazine.
  65. Marshall, Bob. "Protomartyr's Joe Casey Isn't Too Old For Indie Rock". BuzzFeed.
  66. "Protomartyr relies on authenticity and stage fright". Detroit News.
  67. "Protomartyr frontman Joe Casey talks post-punk favorites and his band's next album - Las Vegas Weekly". Las Vegas Weekly.
  68. Jenkins, Mark (February 15, 2016). "Protomartyr lives at Black Cat". The Washington Post.
  69. 1 2 "Second Impressions of Protomartyr". Vice.
  70. Joseph, Dan (February 7, 2018). "All In Until it Stops: JOE CASEY with Dan Joseph". The Brooklyn Rail.
  71. Fitzmaurice, Larry. "Protomartyr's Joe Casey on Drinking, Feeling Sick, and What Could Disappear". Last Donut of the Night.
  72. "Q&A: Protomartyr On Their New Album The Agent Intellect + "Why Does It Shake?"". Stereogum. 2015-07-14. Retrieved 2021-05-13.
  73. "@poormrratty - Instagram photos and videos". Instagram. April 22, 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-12-26. Retrieved May 13, 2021. The best mom. Born on a kitchen table and passed on peacefully on the shoulder of one of her sons. Anybody that knew her loved her and any good in me is thanks to her. 1933-2021 (Rocking out with DMX, Monte Hellman, Walter Mondale etc, etc)[self-published]
  74. "@poormrratty - Instagram photos and videos". Instagram. Retrieved 2022-01-02. I asked and she said, "sure, I guess" or something like that. Was looking for someone to have Mom's ring and I think she fits the bill nicely. Now we are going to a Wild West Town.[self-published]
  75. https://www.instagram.com/p/CsjZRJ7rAvY4VBXzUUuxqWhQ-SKM-LEPCrXf0o0/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
  76. "Movie Recommendations For Quarantine Viewing From Protomartyr's Joe Casey". NPR.
  77. "Protomartyr's Joe Casey tells us about what he's read, watched & listened to during lockdown". Brooklyn Vegan.
  78. "Talking Detroit Jock City With Protomartyr's Joe Casey". Vice.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.