Shmap'n Shmazz

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Burritos, Inspiration Point, Fork Balloon Sports, Cards in the Spokes, Automatic Biographies, Kites, Kung Fu, Trophies, Banana Peels We've Slipped On, and Egg Shells We've Tippy Toed Over,Template:Sfn more commonly known as Shmap'n Shmazz,Template:Efn is the only full-length studio album by the American emo band Cap'n Jazz. It was released in 1995 on the record label Man With Gun. Cap'n Jazz's lineup at the time of recording comprised Tim Kinsella on lead vocals, Davey von Bohlen and Victor Villarreal on guitar, Sam Zurick on bass guitar, and Mike Kinsella on drums.

The band formed in Buffalo Grove, Illinois, where the members had met as teenagers at Wheeling High School. Influenced by the Midwestern punk scene, the band developed an idiosyncratic sound characterized by enigmatic wordplay, chaotic guitar melodies, and vocals presented in a naïve art style, with Tim alternating between spoken word, singing, and shouting.

Cap'n Jazz broke up shortly after the album's release due to Villarreal suffering a non-lethal drug overdose during a tour. The album eventually went out of print for many years as the band members pursued other musical endeavors. When many of the band members' new projects gained attention in subsequent years, the success of their bands helped the album obtain a cult following.

Shmap'n Shmazz is regarded as a foundational album of Midwest emo and a milestone in the genre, helping emo become a more widely accepted subset of indie rock. All of the album tracks were re-released on the band's anthology album Analphabetapolothology, and Cap'n Jazz reunited in 2010 and 2017 to perform tracks from the album.

Background and production

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Tim Kinsella (pictured, 2006) was the frontman for Cap'n Jazz and formed the band during his high school years.

In 1989, Tim Kinsella met Sam Zurick on the first day of high school and became friends due to their mutual taste in music. Tim later met Victor Villarreal while skateboarding at Wheeling High School. Villarreal introduced Tim to his band, Toe Jam. Toe Jam contained two other members at the time: Jim, a neighbor of Villarreal, and Jeff, the high school's football star running back.Template:Sfn Tim joined the band as a guitarist, Zurick joined as a "roadie", and Tim's younger brother, Mike, joined as a rhythm guitarist.Template:Sfn Despite these initial collaborations, the songs produced by the original lineup of Toe Jam failed to captivate Tim and Mike, who found the music "mundane".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Jim and Jeff later quit the band. After their departure, the remaining band members overhauled the band; Zurick started playing bass guitar, while Mike started playing drums after being gifted a drum kit by his mother.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The band chose the name "Cap'n Jazz" after Zurick blurted the name while eating the cereal Cap'n Crunch with the band.Template:Sfn The band started touring and recording multiple extended plays. Davey von Bohlen, from Milwaukee, joined the band as a second guitarist, having previously played in the band Ten Boy Summer.Template:Sfn In 1994, Mark Corley, the owner of the record label Man With Gun, persuaded Tim to record a full-length album for the label.Template:Sfn

The band recorded the album at Idful Music Corporation, owned by Brad Wood, while Casey Rice produced the album. While recording for vocals, little thought was put into structure, which Tim said hindered his relearning of the lyrics.Template:Sfn PitchforkTemplate:'s Ian Cohen noted the vocal structure as the band focused on "shout first, process later".Template:Sfn The band recorded the album during the final five days of 1994.Template:Sfn

Composition and lyrics

Script error: No such module "Listen". Musically, the album is described as "frantic," and has been categorized as math rock, post-hardcore, and emo with its subgenre Midwest emo.Template:Sfn[1] However, Tim believed it was more of a different type of punk at the time, claiming it was "weirdo punk". Tim's cousin Nate Kinsella said the uniqueness of the songs made him assume that Tim "was a manic".Template:Sfn Theo Katsaounis, a future drummer for the band Joan of Arc where Tim was the frontman, also noted that he would "freak out" with a French horn on live sessions.Template:Sfn AllMusic's Steve Huey describes the band as shifting from emo's musical focus to post-hardcore and post-punk to a more art punk style.Template:Sfn

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When Cap'n Jazz was happening, we didn't ever thought of ourselves as an emo band. Maybe they all called this "emo band" but I thought we were like "weirdo punk band". I never felt connected to [the emo] scene. It was also like jockish, you know?

—Tim KinsellaTemplate:Sfn

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Tim wrote most of the album's lyrics and recorded his vocals with a naïve art style and amateur singing, becoming the band's focal point.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Critics described Tim's lyrics as cryptic and surrealist.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Tim claimed that most of the lyrics were written when he took psilocybin mushrooms for the first time.Template:Sfn PitchforkTemplate:'s Ian Cohen has said that, despite the enigmatic lyrics and "incomprehensible guitar interplay", it still expressed the same ideas as other influential emo bands like Rites of Spring or Sunny Day Real Estate.Template:Sfn Bob Nanna, who played in the emo band Braid, is credited on the song "Yes, I Am Talking to You" for the line "I'm dying to tell you I'm dying".Template:Sfn The band also credited Ryan Rapsys for the track "Precious" and Kevin J. Frank for "¡Qué Suerté!".Template:Sfn

Release

The album was released in 1995 through Man With Gun Records. To promote the album, the band embarked on a tour. However, at the time, Zurick and Villarreal were addicted to drugs to the point where both of them thought Tim was straight-edge since he did not "[show] up to school on acid every day".Template:Sfn Mike commented on the band's attempts to intervene on the problem, particularly about Villarreal, but no successful attempt was made.Template:Sfn

After playing a show in the first week of the tour in Little Rock, Arkansas, Villarreal was seen by the other band members urinating all over himself and other equipment.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Band members described the moment as terrifying due to his eyes being "rolled back", how his body being "jitterily", and Villarreal being uncommunicative.Template:Sfn The band transported Villarreal to an emergency room, where it was revealed that Villarreal suffered an overdose caused by Ritalin.Template:Sfn

Villarreal was released to the band members the morning after, although still unconscious.Template:Sfn The band members were conflicted on the course of action the band should take. Von Bohlen and Tim advocated for canceling upcoming tour dates and continuing with the tour, while Mike and Zurick insisted on disbanding. Ultimately, Cap'n Jazz disbanded, leading to the end of the tour as the band members returned home.Template:Sfn Several members pursued other musical endeavors following the dissolution. Von Bohlen formed The Promise Ring, Mike attended the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and formed American Football there, Tim formed Joan of Arc, and Villarreal and Zurick created Ghosts and Vodka.Template:Sfn

Reception and legacy

Due to the band breaking up shortly after the release, the album received minimal attention from publications.Template:Sfn The band reissued their album, including their extended plays, appearances in compilation albums, and unreleased content on their anthology album on Jade Tree titled Analphabetapolothology in 1998.Template:Sfn This was due to many fans contacting the band members about how they could find the album during their concerts with other bands.Template:Sfn Jason Ankeny of AllMusic called the reissue "excellent".Template:Sfn Nick Mirov of Pitchfork called it the "Holy Grail to the post-emo indie-rock world".Template:Sfn Mirov further praised Tim's vocals for his rapid-fire delivery of lyrics, describing the album as a "messy glory".Template:Sfn Folk singer Devendra Banhart described Cap'n Jazz as inspiring in his career due to how Tim attempts to be Arthur Rimbaud and compared Tim's vocals to "going to the zoo on quaaludes, but all the other animals are on speed".Template:Sfn

Shmap'n Shmazz is considered to be a significant influence on the Midwest emo scene.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn NME listed the album as one of "20 Emo Albums That Have Resolutely Stood The Test of Time".Template:Sfn In Rolling StoneTemplate:'s list of the 40 greatest emo albums of all time, the album came in 7th, with Suzy Exposito writing that the album was "a significant blueprint for dozens of emo and post-hardcore acts to follow".Template:Sfn The opening track, "Little League", appeared 3rd on a best-of emo songs list by Vulture.Template:Sfn Vulture described the song as "like a teenager's bedroom — a seemingly incoherent mess that, upon closer inspection, reveals the most intimate secrets".Template:Sfn Several bands and artists have cited Shmap'n Shmazz and Cap'n Jazz as influences on their music, including Algernon Cadwallader,Template:Sfn Ryley Walker,Template:Sfn and The Get Up Kids.Template:Sfn

File:DaveyVonBohlen.jpg
Band member Davey von Bohlen (pictured) initially said that he had "regret and contempt for the entire Cap'n Jazz experience".Template:Sfn Despite this statement, he joined back on a reunion tour in 2010.

Many of the band members reflected positively on the record. Villarreal claimed that the music they recorded was therapeutic and allowed him to release his emotions.Template:Sfn However, band member von Bohlen was rather dismissive about the album after its release.Template:Sfn He cited only "regret and contempt" for the recording in an attempt by the Phoenix New Times for an interview in 1997.Template:Sfn When Phoenix New Times interviewed Tim about Cap'n Jazz, he said that von Bohlen might hold some contempt due to him having to commute an hour and a half for practice, his appearance in the band being short, and von Bohlen not getting along with Villarreal.Template:Sfn Von Bohlen specifically said that the commute was the main issue. He stated that when his car died, he was "Greyhound-bussing it to Chicago after work" and wanted to join another band.Template:Sfn Cap'n Jazz reunited for multiple tours, but although present during Cap'n Jazz's 2010 reunion, von Bohlen was notably absent from the 2017 reunion due to scheduling conflicts, with both it and the 2025 reunion having Tim and Mike's cousin Nate fill in for von Bohlen.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Shmap'n Shmazz has been reissued by Polyvinyl, first on cassette in 2018 and then on vinyl in 2025.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Track listing

All music by Cap'n Jazz. All songs produced by Casey Rice.Template:Sfn Template:Tracklist

Personnel

The album's personnel are found in its booklet.Template:Sfn

Additional personnel
  • Anja Westerweck – backing vocals (on track 1, credited for "kitty, kitty cats")
  • Casey Rice – tambourine (on tracks 1, 3), recording, mixing
  • Kevin J. Frank – piano (on track 8), songwriting (on track 12)
  • Ryan Rapsys - songwriting (on track 11)
  • Bob Nanna - songwriting (on track 6, credited for the line "I'm dying to tell you I'm dying")

References

Notes

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Citations

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Sources

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External links

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