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The Fiery Furnaces are brother and sister
Eleanor (vocals, guitar) and Matt
(keyboard, guitar) Friedberger. Live, Toshi Yano and Andy Knowles
complete the four-piece.
Eleanor and Matt were born and raised in Chicago but moved to
Brooklyn, where they formed different incarnations of The Fiery
Furnaces, ranging from three-piece to five-piece. The Fiery
Furnaces have been touring as a band since 2000; their first
live performance was at Enid's in New York City in November
that year. A series of appearances throughout NYC resulted in
them being discovered by British underground label Rough Trade,
which they signed up with in 2002. This was followed by the
release of the brilliant debut 'Gallowsbird's
Bark' in September of the following year. The critically
acclaimed album, which the band had recorded as a demo, established
The Fiery Furnaces as one of the most exciting new bands in
recent years. The band has been
touring restlessly since the release.
Shortly after releasing 'Gallowsbird's Bark' The Fierys recorded
their second studio album, 'Blueberry
Boat', which they released in the Summer of 2004. The
band had their first major US tour throughout September and
October 2004, which included a series of dates opening for Wilco.

The following is the official press
biography from the band's label.
Eleanor was constantly ridiculed in the
crudest and least interesting manner by her brother Matthew. He,
for his part, had to suffer such things as her coming in the
room and various other affronts: for instance, talking, or
watching the TV show she wanted or putting on a record she might
like to hear.
So Eleanor had to hide her likes and
dislikes until he left. It was a beautiful day. She stood at a
second-floor window, watching as Dad drove Matt off, and
roughly, excitedly, triumphantly put "Houses of The Holy" into
the CD player, turning up the volume on what used to be her
brother's stereo. Matthew had only liked The Who. He had Who
records and videotapes, and as a youth, down in the basement, he
tried to make Who noises. But he failed miserably and, with
black jealousy, guarded the scene of his humiliation and
insufficiency, that basement, where he kept the tape recorder.
In fact, Eleanor was hit over the head, stabbed in the knee and
smashed on the foot for coming down in the basement. But that
didn't make his songs any better.
Years later, when Matthew - his pride gone,
his spirit, such as it was, crushed - encouraged Eleanor to come
down in the basement to make their first Fiery Furnaces music
together. Maybe he should have hit and stabbed and smashed her.
But he just swore. Things had changed. For in the meantime,
while plagiarizing her way to a University of Texas B.A.,
Eleanor worked as a telemarketer for the Texas Republican Party.
Her subsequent adventurous life - think of the courage these
expeditions required - included a year spent in London and trips
with her mother to Italy, Greece, and the south of France. Her
enthusiasm for restaurants, shopping and like-minded people led
her to come help, in her small way, gentrify the north end of
Brooklyn. And there she lives, with a surprisingly
well-developed and wholly undeserved sense of
self-righteousness, no observable interests except her own
enjoyment of such sophisticated things as cookery and movies, an
impressive ability to aggrandize herself at the expense of her
already unappealing older brother, taking very long walks, her
mind completely blank. Her musical expertise extends so far as
to include buying and listening to records and having boyfriends
who were, once were, or wanted to be in musical groups. And her
greatest achievement remains hitting a 3-run triple, which
earned her a headline in the Chicago Sun-Times, "Friedberger's
Big Day Powers Oak Park." But in the story beneath, she was
misquoted. Her older brother went to Germany at 17 and managed
to learn not a word of German or even have a good time -
apparently pining for mommy and daddy, and doggy, and the
comforts of home, which he was incapable of enjoying in the
first place. After failing repeatedly at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he cleverly stayed in that
fascinating metropolis until he was 26. He then moved back in
with his mother, sealing his fate and cementing his status as
parasite and waster of indulgence and advantage. Looking for
further opportunities to squander goodwill and embarrass
himself, he later imposed upon a high school friend to help him
move to New York (because his sister made it clear he couldn't
stay with her). He was, you see, the proud author of such works
as Spider Spite, Toad King Land and Banobazus Persian Prince.
But certainly those things are terrible and only give evidence
of no-talent and periods of excess sponging. No one doing a good
job and paying the rent could ever have time for something as
stupid and illiterate as Toad King Land. By the way, he has
musical ability only as compared to his sister. His only
achievement, in fact, is a series of short videos, made with a
student he worked with in Urbana, Illinois. But Matthew never
bothered to do the narration he promised to the student's
mother. And the poor student is now dead.
God rest his soul.
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