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Led by singer, guitarist, and songwriter
Thalia Zedek,
Come generated a singular fusion of blues, post-punk, and indie rock, whose dark, dissonant tone is powerful and evocative. The buzz and slash of
Zedek's guitar soars and dives over the precise scatter of the rhythm section, while her vocals are a primal howl whose canny use of dynamics adds depth and shading to the challenging emotional landscape of her lyrics.
Come made a striking debut with 1992's Eleven : Eleven, they wowed critics with 1994's
Don't Ask Don't Tell (widely regarded as their best album), and 1996's Near Life Experience saw them reworking their sound after replacing their original rhythm section.
Born in Washington, D.C. in 1961,
Thalia Zedek already had an impressive resumé in underground rock circles before she formed
Come in 1990. A fearless personality who was open about her recovery from heroin addiction and her queer sexuality,
Zedek started making music in the late '70s after relocating to Boston, and she'd worked with the groups White Women and Dangerous Birds before founding her own band, a gritty post-punk outfit known as Uzi. Uzi issued one six-song EP for Matador prior to their premature breakup; in the wake of the group's collapse, she accepted an invitation to play guitar in a pre-stardom lineup of
White Zombie, moving to New York City to help keep up with their busy schedule.
In 1990,
Zedek quit
White Zombie and moved back to Boston, putting out feelers about launching a new project. As it happened, guitarist
Chris Brokaw (who played drums in the slowcore band
Codeine), bassist Sean O'Brien (formerly of the Kilkenny Cats), and drummer
Arthur Johnson (ex-Bar-B-Q Killers) had just started a band when they lost their lead singer and guitarist, and they asked
Zedek to take his place.
Come spent their first year of existence exploring improvisation and jamming together before recording "Car," a single for the Sub Pop label that made them one of the most talked-about new bands in indie rock. Matador Records signed
Come, and in just over a week, they recorded 1992's Eleven : Eleven, a keenly atmospheric effort that won rave reviews in the indie music press, while
Bob Mould,
J. Mascis, and
Kurt Cobain all offered praise for the band.
Come delivered their second full-length release in 1994, and
Don't Ask Don't Tell received even stronger press than Eleven : Eleven. Former
Dream Syndicate leader
Steve Wynn showed his admiration for
Come by recruiting them to be his backing band for his album
Melting in the Dark, which was issued in 1996. That same year,
Come issued their third LP, Near Life Experience, but by the time they began work on the project, Sean O'Brien and
Arthur Johnson quit the group, and two different rhythm sections sat in for the recordings --
Bundy K. Brown of
Tortoise and Mac McNeilly of
the Jesus Lizard played on half the songs, while
Tara Jane O'Neil (of
Rodan and
the Sonora Pine) on bass and Kevin Coultas (another
Rodan alumnus) on drums handled the chores for the rest of the album.
After touring behind Near Life Experience (which included dates opening for
Sugar,
Dinosaur Jr., and
Sonic Youth),
Come began work on album number four, 1998's Gently, Down the Stream, their longest record at 66 minutes, with
Zedek and
Brokaw joined by bassist Winson Bramen and drummer Daniel Coughlin. Following the touring cycle after Gently, Down the Stream's release,
Zedek and
Brokaw opted to take a hiatus from the group. The band never fully reunited after that, though
Zedek and
Brokaw remained on good terms and
Come would play occasional reunion shows in the 2000s and 2010s.
Chris Brokaw went on to a solo career and recorded with
the Lemonheads,
Consonant, and
the New Year.
Thalia Zedek, meanwhile, recorded and toured with her Thalia Zedek Band and in the experimental trio E. In 2021,
Come's
Don't Ask Don't Tell was reissued in a special expanded edition, adding ten demos, single sides, and unreleased tracks to the original ten-song effort. ~ Mark Deming