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I'm Everyone I've Ever Loved

100.1K streams

100,141

Martin Mull & His Fabulous Furniture I...

89.6K streams

89,551

Near Perfect / Perfect

46.8K streams

46,817

Biography

Although best known as a comic actor on television shows ranging from the 1970s talk show satire Fernwood 2 Night to '90s teen fluff sitcom Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Martin Mull was also a gifted musician who released several fine albums toward the beginning of his career. While his peculiar sense of humor is evident on all of his albums, Mull is no Weird Al-style parodist; his albums are skewed singer/songwriter pop/rock with a strong jazz influence, which just happen to have funny lyrics. Mull was born in Chicago in 1943. Somewhat surprisingly given his later success as a performing artist, he originally trained to be a painter. After receiving a master's degree from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1967 and studying in Italy, Mull settled in the Boston area and became involved in the local improvisational comedy and folk music scenes to supplement his income while continuing his painting career. Eventually forming a full band called Martin Mull and His Fabulous Furniture (which at one point included future Cars keyboardist Greg Hawkes), he signed to the fledgling Capricorn label in 1972; his self-titled debut was one of the imprint's first releases. Although Martin Mull is an excellent album nestled somewhere between Warren Zevon and Leon Redbone, widespread commercial success seemed unlikely. A live album called Martin Mull and His Fabulous Furniture in Your Living Room!! showed that the idiosyncratic performer was developing quite the cult following, based on the enthusiastic audience at that gig. The live album also provided an outlet for Mull's standup comedy skills, as some of the song introductions go on longer than the songs themselves. Mull released two more albums on Capricorn -- 1973's Normal and 1974's Days of Wine and Neuroses -- which broke little new ground commercially but refined his style. His music was becoming considerably more jazz-based (much of Days of Wine and Neuroses has a definite Fats Waller feel) and his lyrics more bizarre and cutting. Unfortunately, his sales remained minimal, and Capricorn dropped him, only to release the compilation No Hits, Four Errors: The Best of Martin Mull following his television success. Just after a one-off album on Vanguard, 1975's stripped-down In the Soop, Mull's career took a much different turn when he was hired as wife-beating villain Garth Gimble on Norman Lear's satirical soap opera Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. Although Mull's character was quickly killed off -- speared to death on a Christmas tree -- he was popular enough that Lear created a spin-off for Mull, a deadpan parody of local TV talk shows called Fernwood 2 Night, starring Mull as smarmy Barth Gimble and Fred Willard as his dense co-host. The show was never more than a cult favorite, but it was popular enough to get Mull a new recording deal with ABC Records. 1977's I'm Everyone I Ever Loved basically picks up where Days of Wine and Neuroses left off, but 1978's Sex & Violins is a full-fledged orchestral album in the tradition of Frank Sinatra's records with Nelson Riddle, arranged and produced by Frank DeVol, a noted composer of television themes who played bandleader Happy Kyne on Fernwood 2 Night. Although the entire enterprise is dripping with irony, from Harry Shearer's opening remarks as an ABC Records spokesman onward, there's also an obvious love of the style on display. ABC Records imploded not long after the release of Sex & Violins, and Mull signed to Elektra for what would prove to be his final album, 1979's Near Perfect/Perfect. A return to the low-key pop/rock style of his first two records, it's also the most overtly comedic of Mull's albums. After this, he returned to his first love, painting, scoring numerous one-man shows at museums around the world, supplementing his work with medium-profile television acting and writing gigs. In 1998, Rhino released the two-disc set Mulling It Over, collecting the best material from his four Capricorn albums. Mull died after a long illness on June 27, 2024, at the age of 80. ~ Stewart Mason, Rovi