Smashing Pumpkins JEFF SCHROEDER Releases Solo Music DEBUT!
JEFF SCHROEDER – SMASHING PUMPKINS GUITARIST
RELEASES SOLO SINGLE DEBUT
“Haenim”
Watch the video for “Haenim” here
At his home studio, he added layers of guitars—including a solo hewing toward elegiac hard rock, and sculpted sounds full of gently buzzing ambience—and mellifluous keyboards. The resulting sonic architecture represents Schroeder’s long-time sweet spot: wistful and beatific music that’s full of longing, but yet sweetly optimistic.
But why a solo outing now? In June 2020, musician Jeff Schroeder found himself back in Los Angeles full-time, living in Koreatown. Even with pandemic-related lockdown measures in place, the Smashing Pumpkins guitarist relished exploring his new neighborhood. During the COVID lockdown, Schroeder took to riding his bike around the neighborhood and experiencing the different types of people and cultures along the way. Among those he encountered: a younger generation of Korean-American artists and restaurateurs striving to honor and chronicle the cultural history and traditions of previous generations. “It was kind of like ‘If we don’t embrace it, this stuff will be forgotten,'” he says. The passion for this kind of preservation resonated deeply with him—Schroeder himself is Korean-American—as did Koreatown’s bustling energy and creativity. These daily bike rides began to influence that art that he was making.
Among other things, Schroeder also saw the recording of “Haenim” as a nod back to his family’s roots in Korea. “Much of my life, my existence of who I am, is because my mom was born there, and was from that generation,” he says. “‘Haenim’ really connects me to that culture.”
Schroeder has been touring and recording with the Smashing Pumpkins since 2006 when a friend texted him that the Pumpkins were looking for new band members and he quickly abandoned the grad school program he was pursuing at UCLA after landing the gig. Playing in Smashing Pumpkins all these years has inspired Schroeder to become “a better technical guitar player,” he says. “There’s things that I hear in my head that I want to be able to play, and so when you reach the kind of technical frontier where you’re like, ‘Okay, there’s certain limitations here,’ I just decided, ‘Okay, I want to be able to play some things in my head that I can’t technically do.'” In recent years, he’s also taken jazz guitar lessons during a time when Smashing Pumpkins was off the road, and contributed to albums by the shoegaze band Ringo Deathstarr and electro-pop act Night Dreamer.
Yet as Schroeder approaches his solo work, he’s looking inward for inspiration—contemplating where he’s been both musically and geographically, and connecting it to where he is in the present day.
“What’s influenced me more than anything is an internal spiritual journey,” he says. “You realize at a certain point in your life that you have all these experiences within yourself—all these tastes and likes that I have, and things that I enjoy—and then there’s part of you that has to translate that and present it to the world.”
