Chris Mars

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Radio Hook Word Hit 02:56 Tools
Popular Creeps 00:00 Tools
When I Fall Down 00:00 Tools
Reverse Status 00:00 Tools
Outer Limits 00:00 Tools
Monkey Sees 00:00 Tools
Before It Began 00:00 Tools
Get Out of My Life 00:00 Tools
Better Days 00:00 Tools
Last Drop 00:00 Tools
Happy Disconnections 00:00 Tools
Midnight Carnival 00:00 Tools
I, Me, We, Us, Them 00:00 Tools
Ego Maniac 00:00 Tools
City Lights on Mars 00:00 Tools
White Patty Rap 00:00 Tools
Don't You See It 00:00 Tools
Public Opinion 00:00 Tools
Forkless Tree 00:00 Tools
Hate It 00:00 Tools
No Bands 00:00 Tools
Stuck In Rewind 00:00 Tools
Weasel 00:00 Tools
Brother Song 00:00 Tools
All Figured Out 00:00 Tools
Mary 00:00 Tools
Lizard Brain 00:00 Tools
Candy Liquor 00:00 Tools
Skipping School 00:00 Tools
Bullshit Detector 00:00 Tools
Whining Horse 00:00 Tools
Car Camping 00:00 Tools
New Day 00:00 Tools
E.I.B. Negative 00:00 Tools
The Conquering Cow Farmer 00:00 Tools
No More Mud 00:00 Tools
Cadaver Dogs 00:00 Tools
Haunted Town 00:00 Tools
Floater 00:00 Tools
Water Biscuits 00:00 Tools
Demolition 00:00 Tools
Don’t You See It 00:00 Tools
Nightcap 00:00 Tools
Sheep Spine Shimmy 00:00 Tools
The Down Drag 00:00 Tools
Black Days 00:00 Tools
Narrow 00:00 Tools
It's a Long Life 00:00 Tools
Janet's New Kidney 00:00 Tools
The Weather 00:00 Tools
Where and Why 00:00 Tools
I'll Be Gone 00:00 Tools
Emo Dreams 00:00 Tools
Long Long Way from Home 00:00 Tools
Funeral Hymn of the Small Critter Holocaust 00:00 Tools
Two Dreams 00:00 Tools
Funeral Hymn for the Small Critter Holocaust 00:00 Tools
Take It Away 00:00 Tools
Pull The Lever 00:00 Tools
Sing Our Song 00:00 Tools
July 2016 00:00 Tools
Underneath the Waterline 00:00 Tools
Down By The Tracks 00:00 Tools
Dawn Dawn 00:00 Tools
Just in Time 00:00 Tools
Let's Talk About It 00:00 Tools
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Chris Mars (b. April 26, 1961) is an American musician. He was the drummer for seminal Minneapolis, Minnesota alternative rock band The Replacements and later joined informal supergroup Golden Smog before launching a solo career. He is a talented painter, and has more or less left music behind to concentrate on showing his artwork. Mars detailed the kind of hellraising that he and the other Replacements indulged in when they were together in Rolling Stone's Alt Rock-A-Rama. Among other incidents, he wound up being thrown in jail for playing chicken with an unmarked police car. He also, in conjunction with bandmate Bob Stinson, sabotaged a gig where he knew there would be a lot of record industry personnel in attendance by going to a novelty store and purchasing some bottles of stink juice. Mars barely appeared on The Replacements' final album, All Shook Down. He quit before the subsequent tour, unhappy with Paul Westerberg's control of the band. His first solo album was a revelation for fans and critics used to his fairly limited role in The Replacements. He wrote and sang the entire album and added guitar and keyboards to his drumming duties. Except for the presence of bassist J.D. Foster and brief contributions from Soul Asylum's Dave Pirner and Dan Murphy, it was essentially a D.I.Y. affair. Mars was not interested in touring behind his third album, Tenterhooks. Another band, The Wallmen, toured behind it with a cardboard cutout of Mars onstage. He would go on to release one more album before turning his attentions to his artistic career. His painting style, examples of which graced all of his album covers, is marked by nightmarish landscapes and grotesque, distorted figures. He draws inspiration from his older brother's struggle with schizophrenia. He generally likes to use oils or pastels, although he ventures into other media like acrylic and scratchboard. He created a 13-minute animated film about his work titled The Severed Stream. His work, which has fetched prices upwards of $30,000, has been featured throughout the United States and Canada. He has had solo exhibitions at The Erie Art Museum, The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, The Steensland Museum and the Coker Bell Gallery. In interviews, he typically shows little interest in speaking about music. In late 2005, Mars rejoined the other two surviving Replacements, Paul Westerberg and Tommy Stinson, to record two new songs for a best-of compilation. He only sang backup on the two tracks while a session musician did the actual drumming. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.