Deerhunter is an experimental noise rock band from Atlanta, fronted by the compellingly odd singer
Bradford Cox.
Cox's vocal style blends vocal experimentation along the lines of
Meredith Monk or
Yoko Ono with a more direct and punky howl inspired by
the Fall's
Mark E. Smith.
Cox is also a striking on-stage presence: the exceedingly skinny 6'4" lead singer has Marfan syndrome, a genetic disorder of the connective tissue that gives him abnormally long and spindly limbs. (The late
Joey Ramone was another well-known frontman with Marfan syndrome.)
Cox often exaggerates his otherworldly look by performing in Victorian-style party frocks and engaging in
Iggy Pop-style acts of ritual self-abasement while his bandmates churn out an aggressive mix of industrial-grind guitars and fractured dance rhythms that often recalls earlier Georgia art punks like
the Method Actors and
Pylon.
Deerhunter was formed in 2001 by
Cox and drummer and keyboardist
Moses Archuleta; guitarists
Colin Mee and
Lockett Pundt and bassist
Josh Fauver completed the lineup over the following years.
Deerhunter signed with the local Atlanta indie Stickfigure Records for their 2005 debut: nominally untitled, the album is also known as "Turn It Up, Faggot" (a phrase that doesn't appear on the sleeve), an insult that
Cox claimed was often thrown at the band during their gigs.
Deerhunter then signed to the higher-profile indie Kranky (
Godspeed You Black Emperor!, etc.) for their second album,
Cryptograms, as well as the EP
Fluorescent Grey.
Mee left
Deerhunter and was replaced by former cheerleader Whitney Petty. The band recorded their third album
Microcastle at New York City's Rare Book Room studio; the album was released digitally two months before it arrived on CD in fall 2008; like
Fluorescent Grey, it found
Brad Cox and company moving in a more pop-oriented direction. The band toured extensively on the indie festival circuit, but took a break in 2010 to record their fourth album, Halcyon Digest, in their homebase of Athens, GA.
–
Stewart Mason, Rovi