Lewis also lectured on the topic of Watchmen at the Institute For Cultural Studies at the University of Leuven, Belgium, in 2000, and the text of his lecture ("The Dual Nature of Apocalypse in Watchmen") was published in the book The Graphic Novel, edited by Jan Baetens, in 2001.[5]
Starting in 2000, he spent about two years living in Austin, Texas, playing open mic nights, working odd jobs and distributing his autobiographical comics to local coffee shops.
Musicedit
Several of his musical influences have been acknowledged in his songs such as "Williamsburg Will Oldham Horror", and "The History of The Fall." Lewis' lyrics are complex and literate, often combining a nihilistic world-view with a hopeful message and sharp wit. Growing up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, his songs are also highly informed by his home surroundings, with songs name-dropping places such as Williamsburg, the FDR Drive and the East River.
Lewis is often regarded as part of the antifolk movement,[6] foremost because he was one of the many bands and performers (including The Moldy Peaches, Kimya Dawson, Diane Cluck, Regina Spektor, Major Matt Mason USA and Lach) who played in the 1990s at New York's SideWalk Cafe and its biannual antifolk festivals and open mic events. His music also possesses certain traits of a perceived antifolk style – a downbeat self-deprecating humor, an off-kilter singing style, a mixture of acoustic and 'punk' songs which feature themes of everyday occurrences and feelings. Lewis himself does not mind the 'antifolk' tag: "I think it's a cool title. The fact that no one knows what it means, including me, makes it kind of mysterious and more interesting than saying that you're a singer/songwriter or that you play indie rock."[7]
After being signed by the British record label Rough Trade in 2001, Jeffrey Lewis released his first official album The Last Time I Did Acid I Went Insane. Also that year (in February), Lewis was visited by Kimya Dawson while living in Austin, Texas. Over the week she stayed there, they wrote five songs. These songs were later re-recorded with a full band and released by K Records under the moniker "The Bundles," on an album of the same name, in 2010.[8]
In 2003 Rough Trade released the album It's the Ones Who've Cracked That the Light Shines Through, credited to Jeffrey Lewis with Jack Lewis and drummer Anders Griffen. His third Rough Trade record, City and Eastern Songs, was released in the UK in November 2005 and in the US in September 2006. Most of Lewis's albums also include his brother, Jack Lewis, who wrote or co-wrote and sang and played bass on a number of the songs. In October 2007, Rough Trade released 12 Crass Songs, a Jeffrey Lewis album consisting entirely of songs written by the British punk band Crass, reworked to match Lewis's antifolk style.
He has also performed and collaborated with Kimya Dawson of The Moldy Peaches as well as Diane Cluck. Some of his hand-drawn comics appear in the cover art of his CD releases.
The New York Times online Op-Ed page "Measure For Measure" hired Jeffrey Lewis to write a number of short essays on the topic of songwriting, some of which he drew in comic book form. All went up on The New York Times website at intervals from 2008 to 2013.[10][9]
Lewis has created a number of illustrated historical songs, usually sung while flipping through accompanying books of color drawings, including ten such pieces which are in use by The History Channel on their website.[11]
In November 2011 The New York Times ran a feature article on Jeffrey Lewis in the Arts section of November 23, written by Ben Sisario.[12]
Lewis published a comic strip in The Guardian newspaper in London. It was entitled "What Would Pussy Riot Do?" and it was printed on the occasion of a new release of a single with the same title.[13]
In a January 2018 "MusicMakers" interview with Adafruit, Lewis announced he was working on numerous new projects, including "Writing a new issue of my comic book series, mastering an album I recorded of covers of Tuli Kupferberg songs, mixing an album I recorded in collaboration with Peter Stampfel, and working on writing and recording new songs with my band for my own next album. Remastering and repackaging my old 2005 album “City & Eastern Songs" for a deluxe vinyl re-issue."[14]
Artwork and writingedit
Jeffrey has his own comic book series titled Fuff (formerly called Guff). The series ended in 2020 with issue 12. In 2021 the Complete Fuff Comix Collection was released, a bundle of all 13 issues with an exclusive dust jacket and 3 page bonus comic.[15]
In March 2009, he designed the cover to the sixth issue of Bearded magazine.
Comics
Reflections on Tomorrow thus a yesterday Flower Shall Doom (1998)
The Worldwide Comix Scavenger Hunt vol 1 (1998–2003)
Reflections #2 (1998–2003)
Trip to Key West (1999)
1999 European Travel Diary (1999)
Jeff's Austin Diary (2001)
Come to My Show (2004) (reissued as "Fuff # 0" in 2011)
Guff # 1 (2004) (reissued as "Fuff # 1" in 2005)
Guff # 2 (2005) (reissued as "Fuff # 2" in 2008)
Guff # 3 (2005) (reissued as "Fuff # 3 in 2008)
Fuff # 4 (2006)
Fuff # 5 (2006)
Fuff # 6 (2007)
Fuff # 7 (2008)
Fuff # 8 (2010)
Fuff # 9 (2014)
Fuff # 10 (2014)
Fuff # 11 (2016)
Fuff # 12 (2020)
Complete Fuff Comix Collection (2021)
The Art of Touring (2007) (A compilation book featuring a comic story that also appears in Fuff # 6)
Comic book press kit for Mountain Goats' album Heretic Pride (2008)
The chapter "Tuli Kupferberg" in The Beats: A Graphic History (2009) (co-author)[16]
Statics: Issue #1 (2022)
Statics: Issue #2 (2023)
Discographyedit
Albums and EPsedit
When Madman Was Good - Version One (1997)
When Madman Was Good - Version Two (1998)
Indie-Rock Fortune Cookie (1998)
Journey to the Center of the Earth (1999)
The Only Time I Feel Right Is When I'm Drawing Comic Books (2000)
Punk Against Trump Vol. 2 (2020) – "2nd Amendment Song"[29]
Coalition (2020) – "Oh My Little Life On Earth"[30]
Referencesedit
^Andrew Purcell. "Andrew Purcell interviews Jeffrey Lewis | Music". The Guardian. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"Jeffrey Lewis: Cosmic And Tongue-In-Cheek 'Dream-Songs'". NPR. October 3, 2011. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"Comic artist, musician Jeffrey Lewis blends genres with quirky 'anti-folk' style | Latitude 65". Newsminer.com. June 2, 2012. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^David Jeffries (November 2, 1975). "Jeffrey Lewis | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^Baetens, Jan, ed. (2001). The Graphic Novel. Leuven University Press. ISBN 90-5867-109-7. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^Caroline Sullivan. "Jeffrey Lewis – review | Music". The Guardian. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"BBC Collective with Jeff Lewis". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"Music". The Guardian. January 1, 1970. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^ abLewis, Jeffrey (February 13, 2012). "A Song of Woe, Gone Viral (Bonus Comic Strip) @ The Opinionator". The New York Times. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^Jeffrey Lewis (December 11, 2008). "Strictly Personal @ The Opinionator". The New York Times. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"The French Revolution (2:49) TV-PG: Step into the the excitement and chaos of the French Revolution as told by musician and artist Jeffrey Lewis". Archived from the original on January 23, 2013. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
^Sisario, Ben (November 22, 2011). "How to Become a Big Fish in an Indie-Rock Aquarium". The New York Times. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^Jeffrey Lewis (September 1, 2013). "What would Pussy Riot do? – a Jeffrey Lewis comic strip | Music". The Guardian. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"MusicMakers003: Jeffrey Lewis". Blog.adafruit.com. January 1, 2018. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
^"The Complete FUFF (all 13 issues!)". The Jeffrey Lightning Lewis Store. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
^Pekar, Harvey; Buhle, Paul (2009). The Beats. Hill and Wang. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-8090-9496-7.
^"Music – Review of Jeffrey Lewis – A Turn in the Dream-Songs". BBC. October 1, 2011. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
^"Bandcamp release – Jeffrey Lewis –". April 1, 2018. Retrieved July 11, 2018.