Everybody who knows him was excited to hear about Jeremy Ylvisaker's latest in a string of high-profile gigs. Everybody, that is, except his mom.
"She said, 'You're joining another band?!' " Ylvisaker recalled.
Not just another band. The Suburbs remain one of Minnesota's most enduring, sweat-honored music acts — an '80s group whose songs their new guitarist actually covered in his junior high school band.
Fans of the buoyant, piano- and horns-infused new-wave art-rock party group are not going to like the circumstances that led up to Ylvisaker's hiring, however. He was brought in after Suburbs co-leader Beej Chaney bowed out of all foreseeable shows with the band, starting with Saturday's turn in the Cabooze's 40th-anniversary concert series.
The wildest of the Suburbs' wild men back in the day, Chaney long ago moved to the Los Angeles area and has endured a traumatic divorce and ailments over the past decade. He had his bandmates issue a statement that said he is taking "a leave of absence to take care of some health and personal issues that have been weighing heavily on his mind and body."
Talking during a rehearsal last week — in the coolly vintage, postwar basement rec room of sound engineer Loren Wicklander's south Minneapolis home — drummer Hugo Klaers explained further.
"Beej went back to California, and he actually took our advice and went to a doctor," Klaers said. "They said, 'You gotta take a break. You're way overstressed.' It was affecting us, too. He'd come here, and we had everybody ready to go. He was never ready and just struggling with stuff."
Chaney's fellow songwriter and childhood buddy, singer/pianist Chan Poling, added, "It's not a replacement for Beej. There's no way you can replace him."