Eels Souljacking

The Eels have a recent CD, Souljacker, their fourth. They should be happy, but E, the singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist who leads the band, is rarely, if ever, happy. He has the soul of a Russian. At their best, E's Eels combine rocking rhythm, deft expression of the tragic, and a melodic delicacy that bleeds poignancy into the tragedy.

E has a very unusual pedigree for a rocker, or for anyone for that matter. His father was famed physicist Dr. Hugh Everett III, "one of the most important scientists of the 20th century," according to Scientific American, and the author of the "relative-state metatheory," which came to known as "Everett's Many-Worlds Theory," wherein quantum paradoxes are resolved by the "many-worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics. Per Douglas Jones,

    According to this interpretation, whenever numerous viable possibilities exist, the world splits into many worlds, one world for each different possibility (in this context, the term "worlds" refers to what most people call "universes"). In each of these worlds, everything is identical, except for that one different choice; from that point on, they develop independently, and no communication is possible between them, so the people living in those worlds (and splitting along with them) may have no idea that this is going on.

In other words, Everett came up with the idea of parallel universes that has launched a thousand science fiction scenarios and graduate school papers.

Everett and his wife Nancy had two children, Elizabeth and Mark, who grew up in suburban northern Viginia. Mark was drawn not toward theoretical physics but toward the records his older sister played. At the age of six, Mark wheedled a $15 drum set out of his parents from a garage sale. According to his bio, he played those drums every day for the next ten years. Amidst teenaged trouble in school and even with the law, Mark added piano and guitar to his repertoire. His circle of friends included several Marks, so they went by their initials. Over time, "ME" was simplified to "E."

By the age of 20, E was obsessed with writing and recording songs, which he did daily for the next seven years. Looking for a change, he drove to Los Angeles and, interspersed with "shitty" jobs to pay the rent, resumed his routine. In '91 the obsession paid off and E got a two-record deal with Polydor Records. His oddly constrained, resigned, world-weary but brave voice was already fully formed, and his first CD, A Man Called E yielded an alt-rock radio hit in "Hello Cruel World" in '92. His second, Broken Toy Shop, came out in '93.

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Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and former publisher of Blogcritics.org, and former publisher of Technorati.com, which both rule. He is now editor, co-founder, and CEO of The Morton Report.

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