The neo-psychedelic band
the Green Pajamas were founded in Seattle in 1984 by
Jeff Kelly and
Joe Ross. A lifelong music fan,
Kelly began composing his first songs at the age of 11, forming a group called the Electric Garbage Cans; after his parents purchased him a reel-to-reel tape recorder, he spent his teenage years compiling literally hundreds of cassettes of original material. After graduating college,
Kelly briefly joined a new wave band dubbed
the Larch; he met
Ross at a party soon after, and formed
the Green Pajamas, informed by their mutual love of
the Beatles and inspired by the Los Angeles "paisley underground" community.
After debuting in 1984 with the cassette
Summer of Lust on the Green Monkey label, the group issued a flurry of tapes before recording its full-length debut,
Book of Hours, in 1987. After 1990's
Ghosts of Love,
the Green Pajamas went on hiatus, and
Kelly issued the solo LP
Coffee in Nepal in 1991; finally, in 1997 the band resurfaced with
Doctor Dragonfly as well as
Indian Winter, a compilation of singles and compilation tracks.
All Clues Lead to Meagan's Bed followed in 1999 and
Seven Fathoms Down and Falling arrived in 2000.
The following year
the Green Pajamas released the
In a Glass Darkly EP, which was inspired by J.S. Le Fanu's writing, as well as the full-length
This Is Where We Disappear. A mishmash of discarded singles and outtakes,
Narcotic Kisses was released in 2002 along with a full-length album,
Northern Gothic. The band celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2004, commemorating the event with a 14-track retrospective disc,
Through Glass Colored Roses, and a live in-studio album,
Ten White Stones. Another full-length studio effort, the unabashedly psychedelic
21st Century Séance, was released the following year. In 2006 the band released yet another compilation disc,
Night Races into Anna, followed by the all new conceptual piece
Poison in the Russian Room in 2009.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi