Through his work as both a performer and producer,
Don Fleming was a longtime mainstay of the contemporary underground rock scene. He first emerged during the early 1980s fronting the Washington D.C.-based
Velvet Monkeys, debuting in 1981 with the tape-only Everything Is Right; Future followed two years later, and in 1986 the group appeared with
Half Japanese on a split cassette issued on the K label. The group dissolved soon after, at which time
Fleming and drummer
Jay Spiegel relocated to New York and formed B.A.L.L. with Shimmy Disc honcho and
Shockabilly alum
Kramer, debuting in 1987 with Period. Upon B.A.L.L.'s demise,
Fleming re-formed the
Velvet Monkeys, this time with an all-star lineup including
Dinosaur Jr.'s J Mascis,
Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and
Pussy Galore's Julia Cafritz; Rake, a concept album in the tradition of '70s-era exploitation soundtracks, followed in 1990.
Upon debuting his latest band
Gumball with the Special Kiss LP,
Fleming moved into outside production, teaming with
Kim Gordon to helm Hole's 1991 debut
Pretty on the Inside. That same year, he also produced
Teenage Fanclub's excellent God Knows Its True EP, reteaming with the group for the full-length
Bandwagonesque, widely acclaimed among the year's best efforts. A year later, in addition to
Gumball's Super Tasty EP, he also played in the alt-rock supergroup Dim Stars and produced the
Screaming Trees' Sweet Oblivion; the
Posies' Frosting on the Beater followed in 1993, as did
Gumball's Super Tasty. In 1994,
Fleming surprised many by producing material for
Alice Cooper's Last Temptation album. After their Revolution on Ice,
Gumball disbanded, and with the 1996 EP Because Tomorrow Comes, he began a solo career. In 1998,
Fleming co-produced
Sonic Youth's A Thousand Leaves. ~ Jason Ankeny