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Indie rock icon
Mac McCaughan made his name as a vocalist and songwriter of the band
Superchunk, helping to guide them through a long, successful career on the back of his gut wrenchingly honest songs and splitting-at-the-seams vocals. Alongside that, he co-founded Merge, one of the most successful independent record labels to ever press wax. As if that weren't enough, his long-lived side project
Portastatic released a string of increasingly more accomplished records and he's a solid collaborator whose range stretches from teaming with
Robert Pollard in
Go Back Snowball to recording an album of improvised synthesizer and harp duets with
Mary Lattimore. Working under his own name in the 2010's he began to explore synthesizer music, adding it as a spice on 2015's
Non-Believers, then splitting the ticket between keyboard compositions and indie rock on 2021's
The Sound of Yourself. No matter the band, the style or enterprise,
McCaughan's passion never dims and because of this, his bands, his songs, his inimitable voice, and his still-going-strong label form a rock-solid cornerstone of indie rock.
Born in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida on July 12, 1967,
Ralph Lee "Mac" McCaughan was 12 years old when his family moved to Durham, North Carolina. Young
McCaughan was a fan of classic rock acts like
AC/DC,
Led Zeppelin, and
the Who, and while in high school he caught an all-ages show featuring a pair of local hardcore bands, the Ugly Americans and A Number of Things, and he was soon checking out adventurous punk bands such as
Minor Threat,
Hüsker Dü, and
the Minutemen.
McCaughan formed a band called the Slushpuppies, featuring fellow punk convert Laura Ballance on bass, and went on to play guitar with A Number of Things. When he moved to New York City to attend Columbia University.
McCaughan became frustrated with how hard it was to have a band there, and in 1987 he took time off from college and moved to Chapel Hill, a college town not far from Durham.
McCaughan soon re-formed the Slushpuppies with Ballance and started Merge Records to document the bands on the growing Chapel Hill scene. After putting out a cassette by Bricks (a short-lived project featuring
McCaughan, Andrew Webster, and
Laura Cantrell) and a handful of 7" singles,
McCaughan and Ballance formed a new band with
Mac on guitar and vocals,
Cantrell on bass, Jack McCook on guitar, and Chuck Garrison on drums. Naming the band
Chunk after Garrison's nickname, they cut a three-song EP that was released in 1989. After discovering a band in New York was already using the name
Chunk, the group changed its name to
Superchunk, and its first single using the new name, a tunefully ferocious rant against a lazy co-worker called "Slack Motherfucker," became an underground smash.
Superchunk struck a deal with Matador Records, and released their self-titled debut album in 1990. Their second LP, 1991's
No Pocky for Kitty, clicked with critics and fans, and the group became a growing presence on the indie rock scene. When Matador made a deal with Atlantic Records to give some of their artists major-label distribution,
Superchunk parted ways with the label to maintain their independence, and with 1994's
Foolish, they became Merge's flagship act.
McCaughan, meanwhile, stayed busy running Merge and pursuing side projects when not occupied with
Superchunk. He played drums on the first album by
Seam, 1992's
Headsparks, and that same year he agreed to release a handful of lo-fi home recordings using the band name
Portastatic on 18 Wheeler Records, a tiny label run by friend and fan Tom Scharpling (who would later become the host of the popular radio show The Best Show on WFMU). After cutting more songs,
McCaughan issued a
Portastatic album on Merge,
I Hope Your Heart Is Not Brittle. In 2001,
Superchunk went on hiatus and
Portastatic became
McCaughan's primary musical project, recording and touring regularly with a rotating cast of musicians. In 2002, he joined forces with
Robert Pollard of
Guided by Voices to form the ad-hoc group
Go Back Snowball, who released the album
Calling Zero in 2002.
In 2010,
Superchunk returned to active duty with the album
Majesty Shredding, and
I Hate Music followed in 2013. By this time, Merge had grown impressively from a scrappy punk rock label into one of America's most successful independent record companies, over the years releasing albums by
Neutral Milk Hotel,
Bob Mould,
Lambchop,
the Mountain Goats,
M. Ward,
She & Him,
the Magnetic Fields,
Spoon, and
Ex Hex. Merge enjoyed its greatest success with
the Arcade Fire, pushing their 2007 album
The Neon Bible to number two on the Billboard album charts, and their next two long-players, 2010's
The Suburbs and 2013's
Reflektor, all the way to number one. The same year that Merge celebrated its 25th anniversary,
McCaughan set out to blaze a new trail and released his first solo album, the synth pop-influenced
Non-Believers, in May 2015. He delved even further into electronic experimentation with Staring at Your Hologram, an instrumental album that deconstructed and remixed elements of
Non-Believers, twisting the songs into far more abstract forms. The record was released in November of 2015. The next year
McCaughan collaborated with choreographer Sarah Honer for a performance at that year's Moogfest. He played a network of synths and drum machines while Honer and a team of dancers enacted complex movements to the exploratory sounds. Studio recordings of the synth pieces were released in August of 2016 as Music for POMS, both digitally and as a limited-edition cassette. As
Superchunk released a throwback album of the kind of high-energy fuzz pop they were known for with 2017's
What a Time to Be Alive,
McCaughan furthered his deepening fascination with synth sounds, collaborating with ambient harpist
Mary Lattimore on a series of improvisations that was released in 2019 as the New Rain Duets album by the Three Lobed label. Before
Superchunk got another chance to record,
McCaughan finished his second solo album,
The Sound of Yourself. The record alternates the kind of synthesizer pieces he had been exploring with a batch of thoughtful indie rock ballads and features appearances by many Merge artists such as
Mackenzie Scott of TORRES and
Matt Douglas of
the Mountain Goats, along with members of
Yo La Tengo. ~ Mark Deming