Translator (band)

Translator
Origin Los Angeles/San Francisco, California, United States
Genres Alternative rock, new wave, post-punk
Years active 1979–1986, 2012-present
Associated acts Pearl Harbor and the Explosions
Romeo Void
Wire Train
Members Steve Barton
Bob Darlington
Larry Dekker
Dave Scheff

Translator is a San Francisco rock band that had success during the 1980s, and that continues into the present day. They created a sound that spanned updated British Merseybeat and stripped-down punk-like rock to psychedelia. Inspired by the Beatles, Cream and 1960s California folk-rock bands such as The Byrds, their guitar-based music was very popular during the early 1980s on non-commercial campus radio, new wave music stations and mainstream classic rock radio. The group's stripped-down music and sometimes ironic and disturbing existentialist lyrics also helped to make them a significant influence on alternative rock.

History

The four-piece band was formed in Los Angeles in 1979 when singer/songwriter/guitarist Steve Barton linked up with Larry Dekker on bass and Dave Scheff on drums. A second singer/songwriter/guitarist, Robert Darlington, joined soon after and completed the lineup. The combination of 2 talented songwriters and a powerful energetic rhythm section became the key to their success.

Translator then relocated to San Francisco where they were signed to Howie Klein's independent label, 415 Records, on the strength of the demo tape they sent to college radio station KUSF: the loose and rambling yet laconic "Everywhere That I'm Not" has remained the band's signature tune. The song was featured on Translator's debut album Heartbeats And Triggers, which was recorded with the widely respected producer David Kahne. As a result of 415 Records' national distribution arrangement with Columbia Records the debut album received strong promotion and became an underground and College radio hit in 1982. “I remember being on our first tour when we were playing at the Ritz (in New York) and thinking no one was gonna come,” recalled Barton. “And I remember coming around the corner and seeing this line going out the door and down the block and it was like ‘Oh my God...we sold the place out!’.[1]


Between 1983 and 1986, the band completed three more albums for the same label. They received significant airplay for "Un-Alone", from the second album No Time Like Now (1983), once again produced by Kahne. For the third and fourth albums Translator worked with the Ramones' producer Ed Stasium. The self-titled third album Translator (1985) contained fan-favorites "Gravity", "O Lazarus" and "Fall Forever". The video for the LP's single, "Come With Me", was filmed on location in India. Their fourth album, Evening of The Harvest (1986), featured "Standing In Line" and "Stony Gates of Time."

Translator's music continues to have underground appeal and was featured on at least 3 different compilation albums during the 1980s and 1990s. In 2007 all four original albums were re-issued on CD by Wounded Bird Records with previously released bonus tracks. This series made their entire 1980s work on CD for the first time.

Translator released a new album, Big Green Lawn, on April 17, 2012 through Redeye Distribution. The album is the band's first since 1986.[2]

In 1996, ten years after their official breakup, the band was paid its "highest compliment" when Beatles fans mistook their take of the instrumental "Cry for a Shadow" for a new recording by the Fab Four from the Anthology sessions; in fact it was a Translator B-side from 1983.[1][3]

In March 2015, Omnivore Recordings released a 22-song compilation of Translator's studio demos, spanning 1979–1985, titled Sometimes People Forget. The well-received album sparked a tour by the band, which included San Francisco, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Portland, and Seattle.

Previous Translator reunion shows include the South By Southwest festival in Austin in 2006, and shows in Los Angeles and a sold out date at Slim's in San Francisco in September 2009.

Solo careers and other projects

Steve Barton works as a solo recording artist. He recently completed his latest album, Before I Get Too Young, produced by Marvin Etzioni from Lone Justice and Willie Aron, due for a 2015–2016 release. The band for this album is made up of Dave Scheff on drums, Derrick Anderson on bass, Willie Aron on piano, organ and guitar, Marvin Etzion on guitar. Nelson Bragg plays percussion, and Pete Thomas from Elvis Costello's band plays drums on three of the songs.

Barton's other solo albums are The Boy Who Rode His Bike Around The World (1999), Charm Offensive (2004), Flicker Of Time (2007) and Projector (2012). In 2010, a 20-song CD on Spectra Records titled Gallery was released, featuring tracks from his three initial solo albums, plus four new songs with his solo band at the time, Steve Barton and the Oblivion Click, which included Barton, Robbie Rist, and Derrick Anderson.

Dave Scheff has continued drumming, most recently with the orchestra at Teatro ZinZanni, on a 2008 summer UK tour with Dead Kennedys, and (together with Larry Dekker, guitarist Peter Wiley and keyboardist and singer Cynthia Haagens) in Bang Bang Men, and SF soul-pop group Half True.

Robert Darlington released his first solo album, Prism, in 2012. He is also a published author, beginning with a collection of his poetry titled Ether.

Larry Dekker continues to play bass, characterized as powerful and melodic, for various bands.

Personnel

Discography

Studio albums

Singles

EPs

Compilations

References

  1. 1 2 Sclafani, Tony (April 13, 2007). "Lost in Translation: Despite ties to Beatles, '80s rockers Translator just missed the big time". Goldmine. Retrieved January 16, 2016.  via HighBeam Research (subscription required)
  2. "All About The Band". Translator Music. 2010-09-02. Retrieved 2014-07-22.
  3. "Allmusic: Translator Biography". Retrieved 2008-05-12.

External links

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