Named after a brilliant red hair dye, Detroit's
Outrageous Cherry explores the sunnier side of droning, fuzzy indie rock. The band started as a recording project in 1992 but blossomed into a full-fledged group when singer/guitarist/producer
Matthew Smith, bassist
Chad Gilchrist, guitarist
Larry Ray, and drummer
Deb Agnolli began performing live in 1993.
Outrageous Cherry's wistful noise-pop debuted with a limited-edition 7" of "Pale, Frail Lovely One" on the local Third Gear label. The song's deceptively simple, garagey sound formed the template for the group's style: on albums like 1994's
Outrageous Cherry and 1997's
Nothing's Gonna Cheer You Up,
Smith's and
Ray's alternately jangly and feedback-laced guitars and
Agnolli's minimalist, floor tom-and-snare drumming combine with sweet vocals for a sound that falls between nostalgic and experimental.
Along with his duties in
Outrageous Cherry,
Smith also performs in the country-tinged
Volebeats and often collaborates with
His Name Is Alive's
Warren Defever on producing and recording projects, as does
Gilchrist, doubling as
Outrageous Cherry and
His Name Is Alive's bassist. In 1999,
Aran Ruth replaced
Gilchrist on bass, and the group released its first album for Del-Fi's new music imprint, DF2K,
Out There in the Dark. The group also contributed a version of "Keep Everything Under Your Hat" for that year's
Skip Spence tribute,
More Oar. The band moved to
Alan McGee's new label, Poptones, for their next album, 2001's prog- and space rock-influenced
The Book of Spectral Projections, which was reissued the following year by Rainbow Quartz.
Outrageous Cherry stayed with that label for their two 2003 releases,
Supernatural Equinox and the
Stay Right Here for a Little While EP. Another EP,
Why Don't We Talk About Something Else, arrived late in 2004, followed by the full-length
Our Love Will Change the World in early 2005. The aptly named
Stay Happy, which followed in the poppier vein of
Our Love Will Change the World, arrived in fall 2006. In 2009, the band released their ninth album, Universal Malcontents, followed quickly the following year by Seemingly Solid Reality.
–
Heather Phares, Rovi