Vernor Winfield
McBriare Smith IV was born in British Columbia, Canada, and was raised in Alberta.
He was named after his great-grandfather, Vernor
Winfield Smith, who was the Minister of Railways and Telephones in Alberta
in the 1920s. His mother changed his name to McBriare Samuel Lanyon DeMarco when he was five years old. It was
not long before he was nicknamed Mac
DeMarco.
DeMarco came from musical roots. His maternal grandmother
was an opera singer in New York City and later became a teacher at the Alberta
College Conservatory of Music. His grandfather played the saxophone, his aunt
was a singer and his mother was a musician. DeMarco began playing music at the
age of 14 and played in several bands while in high school. Upon graduating
from high school in 2008, he moved to Vancouver, where he became a multi-instrumentalist
and a multimedia artist. There he launched his recording career in 2009, calling
himself Makeout Videotape. He also worked
on what he called "psychedelic" video projects. DeMarco moved again to
Montreal in 2011, but failing to find work as a musician. To earn cash, he
participated in medical experiments and worked on a road paving crew. He
persisted in recording and releasing singles, EPs and albums, however, and
gained a small word-of-mouth following. He moved to Brooklyn in 2013 and
released the Salad Days album on
April 1, 2014.
DeMarco's early recordings included skits, slowed-down
vocals and adventurous arrangements. His style of music has been described as "blue
wave", "slacker rock" and "off-kilter pop", and his live
shows were often spectacles that included off-color jokes, nudity and lewd
acts. In recent years, he seemed like a candidate for the Jackass series. None of this was evident when DeMarco performed a
free in-store appearance at the Other
Music record store tonight. Accompanied only with his acoustic guitar, his
songs were simplified to where he appeared to be a traditional
singer-songwriter, albeit more jovial than self-revealing. One might think he
was maturing, but he is still only 23 years old. There was a hint of a
transition from his crazier days, however, as he sang the chorus to the song
"Salad Days."
Oh mama, actin’ like
my life’s already over,
Oh dear, act your age
and try another year.
With an electric band, DeMarco might sound more unique. Solo
tonight, the bare bones approach was enjoyable but less than riveting. Mac DeMarco will perform with a band at Webster Hall's Grand Ballroom on April 9.
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