Math and Physics Club began as a basement project for longtime friends Charles Bert (vocals) and James Werle (guitar). Their first release was a digital-only single on Comfort Stand Recordings which featured an early version of the song "Graduation Day", along with a b-side titled "Everybody Lies". Both songs featured keyboards by early collaborator Andrew Hall, according to the Comfort Stand web site, and who is also credited with playing keyboards on two songs on their first EP, and is credited as a co-writer with the band on the song "Nothing Really Happened" on their third EP. By mid-2004, the band's lineup featured Kevin Emerson on drums, Saundrah Humphrey on violin, and Ethan Jones on bass. The band's initial demo attracted the attention of both Jimmy Tassos of
Matinee Recordings and the influential
KEXP DJ John Richards. As they played their third show in December, they were already receiving considerable attention, including frequent spins on
KEXP. The four-song EP
Weekends Away was released in February 2005 and received heavy radio play on stations such as
KEXP and
WOXY, picking up several reviews from the indiepop press. By late spring the band finally had a handful of shows under its belt, including a few West Coast stops with new labelmates
The Lucksmiths, and an appearance at the annual
Sasquatch! Music Festival (headlined by the
Pixies). The
Movie Ending Romance EP was released in July 2005 to further reviews and growing live audiences. The audience at the San Francisco Pop Festival saw them perform 'A is for Alphabet' with
Razorcuts leader
Gregory Webster on vocals. In September 2005, the band enjoyed playing to a packed crowd at Seattle’s
Bumbershoot music festival. Shortly afterward, the band began recording their debut LP
Math and Physics Club which was released a year later in October 2006, meriting a favorable review from
Pitchfork Media The band's third EP ''
Baby I'm Yours was unveiled on October 1, 2007 with a short tour through southern California. Saundrah left the band in late 2007, and drummer Kevin Emerson left the band officially shortly thereafter, although he has continued to drum on their recordings. In the summer of 2009, they began recording their second full-length album at Jupiter Studios in Seattle with producer Martin Feveyear (Mark Lanegan, Presidents of the USA), which emerged in June 2010 as I Shouldn't Look As Good As I Do.'' Bassist Ethan Jones toured with indie-rock three-piece Eux Autres briefly between 2010 and early 2011, playing shows supporting Wild Flag on the West Coast of the US, and touring the UK, France and Italy. In the Summer of 2011, Math and Physics Club toured the UK for the first time, with stops in Glasgow, Manchester, London, Nottingham and at the Derby-based Indietracks festival. In August 2012, they began recording their third LP in at K Records' Dub Narcotic Studio, with Bob Schwenkler engineering. On January 23, Matinee Recordings announced on their Facebook page that this material would be released in 2013 as
Our Hearts Beat Out Loud. The group's fourth album,
Lived Here Before, was released on January 26, 2018. Bert and Werle were both raised in
Olympia, Washington, home of
K Records and
Kill Rock Stars, and they soaked up a thriving indie music scene. Before convening Math and Physics Club they were in a band called Drive Car Girl (named after a
Beat Happening song). They played about a dozen shows at local clubs and coffee houses with a set of 12-15 original songs, along with covers of songs by
REM,
Nancy Sinatra and
Kraftwerk. Former members of Drive Car Girl include Brent Cole
Whats Up Magazine and Sean Berry
Double Crown Records. Elsewhere, Ethan shared guitar chords with high school friend
Carrie Brownstein and later, as a student at
The Evergreen State College featured in
Jenny Jenkins' musical "Love Is Stupid" opposite
Mirah. Ethan also began the Internet's first Beach Boys related mailing list, called "surfsup", in January 1994. James Werle died of cancer in September 2018. ==Influences==