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  1. Past members: Mark Eitzel; Scott Alexander; Greg Bonnell; Brad Johnson; Vudi; Danny Pearson; Matt Norelli; Tom Mallon; Lisa Davis; Mike Simms; Bruce Kaphan; Tim Mooney; Marc Capelle; Steve Didelot; Sean Hoffman; Lliam Hart; Website: www.american-music-club.com

  2. US alternative rock band founded in 1983 in San Francisco. Sites: americanmusicclub.com , MySpace , Wikipedia , Bandcamp. Members: Brad Johnson (2), Bruce Kaphan, Dana Schechter, Daniel Pearson, Jonathan Heine, Lisa Davis, Marc Capelle, Mark Eitzel, Mark Pankler, Matt Norelli, Tim Mooney, Tom Mallon. Variations: Viewing All | American Music Club.

  3. Category:American Music Club members - Wikipedia. Members of the American indie rock band American Music Club . Pages in category "American Music Club members" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . E. Mark Eitzel. K. Bruce Kaphan. M. Tim Mooney. Vudi. Category: Musicians by band.

  4. Active. 1980s - 2010s. Formed. 1982 in San Francisco, CA. Disbanded. 2010. Genre. Pop/Rock. Styles. Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative Singer/Songwriter, Alternative/Indie Rock, Indie Rock, Sadcore, Adult Alternative Pop/Rock, Slowcore. Group Members. Mark Eitzel, Vudi, Brad Johnson, Bruce Kaphan, Dan Pearson, Matt Norelli, Tim Mooney.

  5. Fans 1. Do you like this band? Line-up. Mark Pankler aka Vudi. Guitar. Steve Didelot. Drums, Back vocals. Mark Eitzel. Vocals, Guitar. Sean Hoffman. Bass, Back vocals. Past members. Brad Johnson. Keyboard. Bruce Kaphan. Lap steel. Jason Borger. Keyboard. Dan Pearson. Bass. Tom Mallon. Drums. See more. Albums. All Albums Live Compilations.

  6. American Music Club discography and songs: Music profile for American Music Club, formed 1982. Genres: Slowcore, Folk Rock, Singer-Songwriter. Albums include California, Everclear, and Mercury.

  7. American Music Club stood apart in the late 1980s as one of the groups that transformed roots-rock into an intimate, almost transcendental experience. Mark Eitzel's laconic pessimism, halfway between Gram Parsons's calm despair, Nick Drake's funereal lament, and Tim Buckley's dreamy agony, acted as the center of mass for the atmospheric psychodramas of Engine (1987).