Come
Dark and dissonant blues-rock band formed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1990.
Photos
Photos
Devastating, with slow, burning songs that shudder and wince
NY Times
Biography
Come was formed in 1990 in Boston by Chris Brokaw, Arthur Johnson, Sean O’Brien, and Thalia Zedek.
Brokaw and Zedek had been introduced by a mutual friend in Boston shortly before Zedek moved to New York to join legendary noise rockers Live Skull in ’86. They stayed in touch, and Brokaw briefly played in Zedek’s side project Via before forming the influential slow core group Codeine.
Zedek and Johnson first met in the fall of 1988 while on tour with their respective bands Live Skull and Bar-B-Q Killers. O’Brien and Johnson were long-time friends and former housemates from the close-knit Athens, GA, music scene of the ’80s, where Sean played guitar and then bass in the Kilkenny Cats, and each of their bands was featured in the 1987 documentary Athens, GA–Inside/Out.
1990 found all four musicians living in Boston, and they decided to join forces to see what might happen. The musical chemistry was immediate, and it wasn’t long before the band had its first show and a recording offer from Sub Pop.
Come’s first release was “Car” b/w “Last Mistake,” the August 1991 installment in the first volume of Sub Pop’s Singles Club. The single made them one of the most highly touted new acts on the underground scene, and there was more than one label eager to release the band’s first full-length effort. Come chose Matador in the US and Placebo in the UK to put out their debut album Eleven Eleven in 1992. The album was a great success with both critics and fellow musicians, and tours followed with Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., Sugar, and Pavement, among others.
Come released their second album, Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, in 1994, again on Matador and Placebo. It was to be the last album recorded with the rhythm section of Johnson and O’Brien.
Come’s third record, 1996’s Near Life Experience, was recorded with two different rhythm sections: Tara Jane O’Neil and Kevin Coultas from the now-legendary Louisville band Rodan, and Chicago’s Mac McNeilly (The Jesus Lizard) and Bundy Brown (Tortoise). It was released on Matador in the United States and on Domino in Europe.
The band’s final release, 1998’s double album Gently, Down the Stream, was again released on Matador/Domino and featured a new rhythm section of Daniel Coughlin on drums and Winston Braman on bass. After extensive touring on the release in both Europe and the States, the band went on hiatus, and both Brokaw and Zedek pursued solo careers and other musical collaborations.
In 2010, the original lineup of Brokaw, Johnson, O’Brien, and Zedek reunited to play Matador Records’ 21st anniversary celebration in Las Vegas, as well as a sold-out show at TT the Bear’s in Boston. The following year they reunited again to play shows in Boston and at the Bell House in Brooklyn. In 2013 Matador’s expanded reissue of Eleven Eleven was released, and the original lineup embarked on extensive tours in both Europe and the USA. 2018 saw several more shows, with festival appearances in Athens and Atlanta, GA, and a two-night residency at Brooklyn’s Union Pool.
In October 2021, an expanded edition of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell was released as part of Fire Records’ reissue series of the band’s complete catalog. This release included Wrong Sides, an additional album of non-LP tracks and never-before-released recordings by the band’s original lineup from 1991–1995, from their very first single, “Car”/“Last Mistake,” to their last studio recording, “Cimarron.” And in February 2022 the Peel sessions from 1992 and 1993 soon followed.
Following their live shows in 2022 in support of both releases with the original lineup of Brokaw, Johnson, O’Brien, and Zedek. Come will be touring the US, UK and Europe this summer. They release ‘Near Life Experience’ on 2nd June on Fire Records.
Knotty, torrential guitars and anguished vocals
Pitchfork
Listen - ELEVEN:ELEVEN
Album Quotes - Eleven:Eleven
Like watching someone howl into a rainstorm.
Entertainment Weekly
A uniquely sludgy, electric, and strong fusion of sounds and styles, combining extreme angst and commanding power.
AllMusic
LISTEN - DON'T ASK DON'T TELL
ALBUM QUOTES - DON'T ASK DON'T TELL
Ruptures of euphoria despite the overwhelming heaviness
Mojo
Crushingly heavy blues, a bleak beauty admired by sympathetic spirit Kurt Cobain
Uncut
More Press Quotes
“Zedek’s songs sound like the roared recital of a life well lived” Mojo
“Always focused, always intense” Mojo
“Its songs are havens for outsiders under unspecified threat” Uncut (Don’t Ask Don’t Tell)
“These waves of music wash you clean” Uncut (Don’t Ask Don’t Tell)