You can imagine how any musician would have felt in Clara Salyer's shoes: After a couple of years of building up a local buzz and a couple of months working on an ambitious album, her guitarist suddenly formed his own group and wound up adorning magazine covers in England -- more or less breaking up her band.
Now imagine you were an 18-year-old in that situation, one who got a GED during her sophomore year of high school so she could dedicate herself to music.
"I was devastated for a while," the singer/guitarist, now 19, admits. "Every part of my body wanted to be happy for him and encourage him, but no matter what I couldn't. I was jealous and wanted to give up music."
Salyer's daydreamy indie-pop band Total Babe abruptly came to an end last summer when guitarist Jordan Gatesmith signed to Rough Trade Records with his other band, Howler. As most Twin Cities music scenesters know, Gatesmith is basically living out every rock 'n' roll kid's dream now.
It's hard to begrudge him that, and Salyer doesn't. But she also doesn't need to explain why the first batch of songs from her new band, Prissy Clerks, sound lost, frustrated and disenchanted.
Formed in October and playing only their seventh gig Friday as part of Vita.mn's Are You Local? contest, the quintet is steeped in fractured, reverb-heavy guitar work à la '90s indie-rock bands such as Sebadoh and Pavement. That's balanced out with accordion-buoyed melodies and the girl-gone-mild, slacker-poet frontwoman quality that Salyer carries over from Total Babe.
Prissy Clerks -- like Total Babe, not a band to Google blindly (sexual content might come up) -- also features Total Babe drummer Tim Leick and another high school friend of Salyer's, accordionist Emily Lazear, who still attends Hopkins' Main Street Performing Arts School. Its other members tip the age scale: Guitarist Dylan Ritchie, also in the band Teenage Strangler, is 30; and bassist Howard Hamilton III is "too old to talk about it" (he's at least twice Salyer's age).
Hamilton, best known as the singer/guitarist in Red Pens, was helping Total Babe record its still-unreleased album. He sympathized with Salyer when the band went kaput.