From the Archives

Morphine Frontman Remembered as 'An American Original'

Mark Sandman bypassed guitars to create a musical vision all his own

Posted Jul 06, 1999 12:00 AM

Morphine was a sound Mark Sandman heard in his head. As lead singer andsongwriter for the Cambridge, Mass.-based band, Sandman, playing histrademark two-string bass guitar, was one of a handful of Nineties rockmusicians who actually created and perfected his own unmistakable sound.And it was a sound fans worldwide appreciated, buying up nearly twomillion Morphine albums.


Sandman suffered a heart attack during a Morphine concert outside of RomeSaturday night. He died en route to a hospital. Sandman was forty-six.


The fact that the lead singer of one of America's coolest rock bands waspushing fifty was just one of the many unusual things about the singer. A childof the Boston suburbs, Sandman tried college at the University ofMassachusetts for a while, and then fell into a string of odd jobs, fromcab driver to working on an Alaskan fishing boat.


At a time when most musicians are thinking about quitting their bands,Sandman created Treat Her Right, a mid-Eighties rock trio that, like thelater Morphine, featured Sandman on bass but bypassed the traditionalelectric guitar out front. The band scored a minor hit with its swampy single, "I Think She Likes Me" and helped re-energize the Boston rock scene. Along with new acts such as the Pixies and Scruffy the Cat, Treat Her Right introduced the city to a new generation of distinctive rock voices.


Treat Her Right was eventually picked up by RCA, but the major label wasn't quite sure what to do with the college radio act, and the band and the record company quickly parted ways. Soon Sandman was on to other projects, including the band Supergroup, which featured Chris Ballew in his pre-President of the United States days. Ballew, who battled writer's block, later credited Sandman for helping him overcome the plight by re-teaching him the craft of songwriting.


But it was Morphine that best defined the sultry low-rock sound swirlingaround Sandman's head. The band's exotic and relentlessly baritone songs, built around Sandman's bass (along with his moody vocals), Dana Colley's saxophone and Billy Conway's minimalist drums, became instantly recognizable. "You knew it was Morphine from the first note," says Cruz, program director of WFNX in Boston, a longtime supporter of the band. "They were a quintessential Boston band."


The band teamed up with the tiny hometown label Accurate/Distortion torelease its debut, Good. (Sandman wasn't opposed to major labels, it wasjust that none of them were interested in his new band.) Morphine thenquickly moved to nearby Rykodisc Records, where the band put out fivecritically acclaimed albums: Yes, Cure For Pain, Like Swimming, Good and B-Sides and Otherwise. The band's signature songs include the scorching radio hit, "Honey White," along with "Sharks Patrol These Waters," "Good," and "Super Sex."


Touring relentlessly both in the States and abroad, the band delivered exuberantlive shows that inevitably ended with exhausted, sweat-and-smoke-drenched patrons stumbling toward the door. Singer PJ Harvey dubbed Morphine "one of the sexiest bands around." As the band's following grew from word-of-mouth (no nifty videos or catchy novelty singles from these indie rockers), industry pros took note. When Mo Ostin and Lenny Waronker, the legendary music men who ran Warner Bros. for years, left to help launch DreamWorks Records, Morphine was one of their first signings. That, despite the fact Morphine still owed Rykodisc two albums. "Mo and Lenny had to have them," said Don Rose, president of Rykodisc.


Morphine's final album for Rykodisc, a live release, was set to be released in October. Sandman handed in approved masters to the label just days before he died.


Those who knew Sandman remember him as a quiet, thoughtful and nocturnalcharacter, cut from the same cloth as Tom Waits. Usually found Monday nightssipping drafts at Charlie's Tap in Cambridge, Sandman seemed to knowevery musician in town. As a musician he was fascinated by world music,particularly Brazilian records. His loft apartment, where he composed onpiano and often recorded, was always littered with various tapes andDATS.


"He was an American original," said Rose.


A private funeral for family and friends is scheduled for Sunday.Sandman's family has created a trust in his name. Collected donationswill go toward helping teach music in Cambridge's public schools. Sendcontributions to: Mark Sandman Music Education Fund, P.O. Box 382085,Cambridge, MA, 02238.


ERIC BOEHLERT
(July 6, 1999)


Comments

Photo

More Photos

Mark Sandman made music that was instantly recognizable.


Advertisement


Advertisement

Advertisement