Sweet Apple

Sweet Apple
Sweet Apple live at Waterloo Records in Austin, Texas, March 19, 2010. From left, J Mascis, Mark Klein, John Petkovic, Dave Sweetapple and Tim Parnin.
Sweet Apple live at Waterloo Records in Austin, Texas, March 19, 2010. From left, J Mascis, Mark Klein, John Petkovic, Dave Sweetapple and Tim Parnin.
Background information
Genres
Years active2010–present
Labels
Members
Websitesweetapplesongs.com

Sweet Apple is an American rock band formed in 2010.

The group features members of Cobra Verde (singer-guitarist John Petkovic and guitarist Tim Parnin), Dinosaur Jr. (guitarist-drummer J Mascis) and Witch (Mascis, bassist Dave Sweetapple).

The band's music has been described as power-pop, garage, post-punk, psychedelic and hard-rock. Sweet Apple has been called an "indie supergroup." Petkovic, in an interview with Rolling Stone,[1] described the group as "almost like a clubhouse," to explain the various guests that have appeared on the band's recordings, including Mark Lanegan and Robert Pollard (whom Petkovic played with in Guided by Voices).

Sweet Apple has released five 7-inch singles and three albums, including "Sing the Night in Sorrow". "Sing the Night in Sorrow" is the follow-up to Sweet Apple's 2014 album, "The Golden Age of Glitter," which was hailed by Mojo, Esquire, NPR, Rolling Stone and USA Today.

The members of Sweet Apple reside in three different locations: Cleveland; Amherst, Massachusetts; and Brattleboro, Vermont. The distance separating the members made practice impossible and resulted in the band's first live performance doubling as its first practice. Sweet Apple's debut occurred on March 18, 2010, at Threadgill's in Austin, Texas—at the invitation of Roky Erickson, for the psychedelic legend's 8th Annual Ice Cream Social at South by Southwest.

The Austin Chronicle, writing about the event, "a Detroit-rock style outfit Sweet Apple was as immediate and memorable as the free ice cream."[2]

The quartet, which expands to a quintet for live performances, has released a number of music videos.

In early August 2024, bassist Dave Sweetapple died at the age of 58.[3]

  1. ^ "J Mascis Grabs Mark Lanegan, Bob Pollard for Sweet Apple LP - Premiere | Rolling Stone". rollingstone.com. 7 April 2014. Retrieved 2017-07-18.
  2. ^ "Roky Erickson's 8th Annual Ice Cream Social". austinchronicle.com. Retrieved 2017-07-18.
  3. ^ "This Is Just A Tribute: Dave Sweetapple (Witch, Eerie, etc.) Has Died". Metal Injection. 9 August 2024. Retrieved 10 August 2024.