Valentine's Special

 

Omaha's Indie Rockers

In 1993, a group of high school friends and neighbors pooled their talent for making music into a home-grown record label. What began as a handful of homemade cassette tapes distributed by a small group of buddies has turned into the multimillion dollar company of today, Omaha’s Saddle Creek Records.

Story by Molly Garriott, Photography by Mike Whye

 

They performed in Omaha’s clubs and coffee shops and recorded their music at home using old-fashioned portable tape machines. No one knew it at the time, but it was the start of something big.
Omaha's Indie Rockers Opening Page

Alternative rock was thriving in the early 1990s, bringing small, independent (“indie”) record labels into the mainstream music world. In Omaha, a network of young musicians found support from fans, but the established record labels weren’t interested. So the musicians created a company of their own.

Lumberjack Records, the first incarnation of what would become Saddle Creek Records, was conceived in the bedrooms and basements of its founding members: Robb Nansel, Tim Kasher, A.J. and Mike Mogis, Matt Maginn, Ted Stevens, Justin and Conor Oberst, and Stephen Pedersen.

Pedersen, vocalist and guitar player of Criteria, attributes the prolific songwriting of the label’s early years to the need to fill a gap. “In the beginning, many of the bands focused so much on music because, for better or worse, there was not much for high school-aged kids to do in Omaha,” he said.

“So, we just hung out in each other’s basements and played music or went to local rock shows.”

“The earliest of the label’s recordings were made in basements, kitchens, and bedrooms on portable 4- and 8-track tape machines,” said Ryan Fox, Saddle Creek’s project manager and member of the band The Good Life. “It may seem like primitive technology to some people in this age of digital infatuation, but there’s a certain charm in it. And really, it’s about presenting the song however possible with the tools at hand.”

Omaha's Indie Rockers Spread 1

It’s also about self-reliance. “If we can make our records ourselves and release them ourselves,” Fox said, “we can do it on our terms rather than having to compromise for motivations that come from elsewhere.”

High school gave way to college, and many of the original Saddle Creek musicians attended the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, where the music making continued. In a business course, Nansel and Mogis were required to create a business of their own. With Lumberjack Records, they already had the framework for the assignment; all they needed was a plan to present to their professor and class. While their classmates developed boutiques and eateries, Nansel and Mogis distributed music they and their friends had produced.

Omaha's Indie Rockers Spread 2

Saddle Creek Records officially began in 1996. A distribution company had already claimed the Lumberjack name, so the musicians chose Saddle Creek Records, after a street in Omaha and the title of a song by Polecat, a Lumberjack Records band. The name caught on. The musicians were often nicknamed “the Creekers,” and the phrase was used as a promotional tag for an evening concert in which the various bands shared the stage.

Nansel conducted business out of a spare bedroom, and band members pitched in and did what was necessary to produce music. They wrote and recorded music, designed CD covers, packaged and distributed the finished product. This “all hands on deck” approach was embraced by the bands as a way to ensure Saddle Creek’s survival and independence.

(The complete story appears in the July/August 2007 issue of Nebraska Life Magazine.)

Click here to purchase this issue, or click here to subscribe (1 Yr • $21, 2 Yrs • $38).