Head with wings

Remembering Morphine’s Mark Sandman
By TED DROZDOWSKI  |  July 6, 2009

090602_sandman2_main
LOW GLOW By the time Mark Sandman died, Morphine had evolved into the most instantly recognizable sound of the alternative-rock era.

Mark Sandman died with his boots on. Or at least the rock-and-roll equivalent of the Old West gunfighter’s epitaph: with his bass strapped across his chest while playing the music he loved with his band Morphine, at the Nel Nome del Rock festival in Palestrina, Italy, on July 3, 1999.

Before the Newton native’s heart stopped, at age 46, it seemed he’d always been in motion. Sandman’s pre-Morphine résumé included stints as a construction worker, a hobo, and a commercial fisherman. He was stabbed in the chest once while driving a cab. In Morphine’s early days, he even applied to drive a delivery truck for the Boston Phoenix. (He didn’t get the job.)

By then, he’d also been part of the influential band Treat Her Right. Formed in 1984 by Sandman, David Champagne, Jim Fitting, and Billy Conway, THR played alt-blues nearly 20 years before that appellation became common, touring internationally and opening for Bob Dylan. Next came Morphine, second only to the Pixies as the most influential band to emerge from the Boston-Cambridge club scene of the ’90s.

With Sandman’s death, Morphine ceased to exist, after a decade of evolving the most instantly recognizable sound of the alternative-rock era. Sandman coined the term “low rock” to describe the blend of the one- and two-string basses he played, Dana Colley’s baritone and bass saxophones, and the drumming of Jerome Deupree — who was later replaced by Conway and rejoined near the end to make Morphine briefly a quartet.

“Establishing a recognizable sound is the mark of a great artist,” says Conway, speaking over the phone from his new home in Montana. “Here’s a guy who invents a new instrument, creates a band to go with it, writes songs for that band, and then travels around the world playing those songs. We knew we were lucky when we worked with Mark.”

And Sandman sometimes worked in mysterious ways.

“Mark invited me to jam right after the light bulb for Morphine went on above his head,” recalls Colley, who put together a band with Deupree and local slide-guitarist Jeremy Lyons to play a tribute to Sandman in Palestrina this weekend. “Mark was sitting on the piano bench in his little apartment on Williams Street in Cambridge, with the one-string bass he’d just made, and singing. I had my baritone sax. The ideas were flowing beautifully. After about 10 minutes, he said, ‘All right. Let’s go get a drummer and get some gigs.’ ”

The next rehearsal was at Deupree’s practice space, beneath a deli in Everett. “It was . . . cool,” the drummer recounts. “We went upstairs to the deli after playing, and Mark said, ‘Morphine. I’ve already got the name.’ ”

And so it went on, for five studio albums and a slew of tours.

When Morphine weren’t on the road and he wasn’t recording in his Cambridge loft and studio, Sandman could usually be found watching bands from the back of the Middle East, the Plough & Stars, Lizard Lounge, or T.T. the Bear’s.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Full speed ahead, Floating heavyweights, Review: Cure For Pain: The Mark Sandman Story, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Dana Colley, Dana Colley, Monique Ortiz,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY TED DROZDOWSKI
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   TOM HAMBRIDGE | BOOM!  |  August 23, 2011
    Roots rock is the new country and ex-Bostonian Tom Hambridge is the style's current MPV.
  •   COUNTRY STRONG | SOUNDTRACK  |  January 11, 2011
    This steaming pile of songs is emblematic of the state of mainstream country music — all artifice, no heart, calculated anthems written to formula and meant, like the film itself, to do no more than capitalize on the genre's current success and rob its undiscriminating fans.
  •   MARC RIBOT | SILENT MOVIES  |  November 02, 2010
    This exceptional, eccentric guitarist has traced a slow evolution from screamer to dreamer.
  •   IN MEMORIAM: SOLOMON BURKE, 1940 — 2010  |  October 11, 2010
  •   REVIEW: RONNIE EARL AND THE BROADCASTERS | SPREAD THE LOVE  |  September 07, 2010
    Boston-based blues-guitar virtuoso Ronnie Earl seems to be considering his past on his 23rd album as a leader.

 See all articles by: TED DROZDOWSKI