The Beauty Shop

For the 2005 film, see Beauty Shop.
The Beauty Shop

The Beauty Shop in 2007
Background information
Origin Champaign, Illinois, U.S.
Genres Americana
Alternative rock
Alternative country
Years active 1999–2008
Labels Parasol Records
Shoeshine Records
Snapper Records
Associated acts The Living Blue, Lorenzo Goetz, Headlights
Website www.thebeautyshopband.com
Past members John Hoeffleur (vocals, guitar) (1999–2008)
Casey Smith (drums) (1999–2001)
Ariane Peralta (bass) (2000–2006)
Joe Martin (drums) (2002)
Steve Lamos (drums) (2004)
Brett Sanderson (drums) (2004–2005)
Ben Ucherek (drums) (2005–2008)
Eric Fisher (bass) (2006–2008)

The Beauty Shop was an Americana rock / alt country band, led by singer-songwriter-guitarist John Hoeffleur, based out of Champaign, Illinois. Formed in 1999, they released two EPs and two full length albums before disbanding in 2008. Hoeffleur described their music as "influenced by old-school punk (Wire, Minutemen, Misfits) and old-school country (Hank, Lefty, Patsy, Johnny) with a dash of singer/songwriter (Leonard Cohen, Nick Drake)".[1]

History

The Beauty Shop was formed by John Hoeffleur and drummer Casey Smith in 1999, in Champaign, Illinois. Hoeffleur (b. Arlington Heights, Illinois, 26 November 1977) grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, and graduated from the University of Illinois. He had previously played with local band The Blackouts, and on his own playing in local coffee shops.

The duo’s first release was The Grief EP, a self-released limited edition recorded in Smith's home, which they sold at local concerts.[2] The EP caught the eye of the Urbana, Illinois-based record label Parasol Records, who signed the band to produce an album. At the same time, the band put out hand-written ads for a bassist, and recruited Ariane Peralta. The band released their first album Yr. Money or Yr. Life in October 2000. The album garnered many positive critical reviews, and the band attracted a growing audience at its live performances, boosted when they opened at the last minute for The Violent Femmes in Champaign. According to one reviewer, "the unsettling cover art reflected the bleakness of Hoeffleur's lyrical vision … spinning tales of dysfunctional characters drawn into seemingly terminal decline."[3]

In August 2001, Smith left the band, and Hoeffleur played several solo shows before he and Peralta recruited drummer Joe Martin in early 2002. By that time, the album had been licensed to Shoeshine Records in Scotland, who released it in the UK. Shoeshine also released a limited-edition 7" single of "Death March", the single from Yr. Money or Yr. Life. The band toured across the UK in July 2002 to promote the album's release, again gaining critical acclaim. However, they then took a second hiatus after Martin left, with Hoeffleur playing solo shows in the UK, and Peralta concentrating on school.

The Beauty Shop reformed in 2004 to record a second album, Crisis Helpline, with drummer Steve Lamos. In July 2004 they returned to live performance in the USA, with drummer Brett Sanderson, of The Blackouts. Crisis Helpline was released in Europe in September 2004, the record company concentrating on seeking to break the band there first. They also released a 7" and CD single, "Monster", which enjoyed considerable airplay on BBC 6 in the UK. A second single, "Rumplestiltskin Lives", was released to UK radio stations in spring 2005.

The band then signed to Bryan Morrisson’s label, Snapper Records, in summer 2005. The label released two further singles in the UK, Paper Hearts for Josie (August 2005) and A Desperate Cry for Help (October 2005). New drummer Ben Ucherek replaced Sanderson for the filming of the video for "A Desperate Cry for Help". In April 2006, they released a hybrid album of the best tracks from their previous releases, Yard Sale.

Their song "I Got Issues" was listed in Maxim magazine as "the #4 Song to download if you're missing Johnny Cash". They often include cover songs as B-sides. Their single release Monster includes a cover of the Misfits' "Hybrid Moments", Paper Hearts for Josie included The Pixies' "Gouge Away", A Desperate Cry Help contained Judas Priest's "Breaking the Law", and Death March featured a cover of Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus". The band often played at The Great Cover-up, an annual Champaign-Urbana based charity show.

Bassist Ariane Peralta left in late 2006 to pursue a Ph.D. at university. She was replaced by Eric Fisher, formerly of the band Lorenzo Goetz.

In October 2007, the band released a new EP, Just Some Demos, on their own label.

In late 2008, after the group disbanded, a new song entitled NuFuture was released on their MySpace page. The band's final demos were given a digital-only release as Just Some More Demos in January 2009.

Disbanding

The Beauty Shop disbanded in the summer of 2008 with the departure of Eric Fisher to Oregon and Ben Ucherek focusing his time on his new band Golden Quality. John Hoeffleur wrote: "If you hadn't noticed, game over. No "last" self-congratulatory bullshit show. Tough shit. I'll leave the door open to the band being reborn somehow, but I don't see it as particularly likely. I feel ok about it. I'm not quitting music or doing anything crazy like getting a real job, but not having TBS as the focus has freed me to pursue other musical interests I'd been only casually interested in until now. I will be doing this in Chicago. I'm stoked. It might be a solo record, and you might recognize some songs. Or maybe not. The point is I don't know, for first time in a long time, and I love it. Fun.

"A departing speech - CU music scene has a lot of problems right now impeding local people from making progress making music, and local people themselves are chief among those problems - the only solution is taking a little ownership (back?) and growing a lot of balls to jump up and do the right thing, say what needs to be said, keep everybody (EVERYBODY!) honest. A good scene doesn't happen by smiling at each other and cheerleading - you have to go the show, you have to share the headliner spot, you have to work with people you don't know or even don't like, you have to have fights over things that matter, and you have to resolve them. And you have to do it a lot. Because you have to maintain a sense that you are all in the same boat, and I don't feel much of that anymore, not like I did in the past. Given that very few of us seem to have this viewpoint or the wherewithal to address any of those issues (fear?), I'd say CU will continue to get what it deserves. Which is to say, screwed."

"I will blather about this endlessly if you buy me a drink. You have roughly a week and half to take me up on that and then I will officially be an expat and not fit to comment. I'm reminded of the scene in "Half-Baked" where that Puerto Rican cat quits his job at the fast food place, and he points at customers as he talks into the bendy microphone, "Fuck you, Fuck you, Fuck you, you're cool, fuck you..." right on down the line."

"On a more pleasant note (which I wouldn't put to a vote) -We have some demos we recorded in the winter that I will probably release digitally because they won't be good for anything or anyone just sitting on my shelf, so we'll actually have a nice posthumous release, watch this space for details on "Just Some More Demos." If you can come up with a better title that communicates that these are demos, not accurately conjured musical perfection, then by all means have at it."

The band played its final show on June 6, 2008 at the Canopy Club in Urbana, Illinois.

In mid-2009, Hoeffleur formed a new band, Heyokas, with Kelly McMorris (keyboards), Marc Turner (bass), and Jesse Greenlee (drums).

Discography

Major Releases

Singles / Misc.

References

External links

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