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Indie pop act
Big Troubles began working together in 2009, but their music speaks of their love for the sounds of the '80s and '90s, ranging from shoegaze bands, jangle pop, and the C-86 brigade to lo-fi pop and the first stirrings of grunge.
Big Troubles were formed by
Alex Craig and
Ian Drennan, two friends from Ridgewood, New Jersey who attended high school together. The two shared enthusiasm for the likes of
Teenage Fanclub,
My Bloody Valentine,
Sugar,
the Cleaners from Venus, and
Let's Active, and when they both went off to college --
Craig attending New York University and
Drennan enrolling at Tufts University in Massachusetts -- they stayed in touch and began writing songs together. In 2009,
Craig and
Drennan started recording as
Big Troubles, sometimes meeting for songwriting and recording sessions and other times swapping tapes back and forth long distance.
Big Troubles' first album, 2010's
Worry, was very much a homemade affair, recorded on a four-track cassette deck with a primitive drum machine handling the percussion and
Craig and
Drennan overdubbing overdriven electric guitars and outdated analog synths into the sound of a full band. Released by Olde English Spelling Bee Records,
Worry received enthusiastic reviews and
Craig and
Drennan assembled a version of the band to go out on the road, recruiting drummer
Sam Franklin and bassist Luka Usmiani. (This lineup also serves double duty as the live embodiment of
Franklin's lo-fi side project Fluffy Lumbers.) For their second album, 2011's
Romantic Comedy,
Big Troubles de-emphasized the lo-fi side of their sound and honed in on their pop influences; the four-piece edition of the band recorded the LP with producer and jangle pop hero
Mitch Easter, while
Chris Stamey of
the dB's also contributed to the sessions. ~ Mark Deming