Throughout several lineup changes, the one constant
of Montreal (and later, Los Angeles)-based indie poppers Nerdy Girl was
singer/songwriter Cecil Seaskull.
Seaskull's high, wobbly pitched but unmistakably affecting voice,
matched with lyrics that sound like pages from a smart but rueful single
woman's diary, were Nerdy Girl's trademarks, and while the group never
gained more than a small audience of twee pop hipsters, their records
have a literate intelligence that makes them considerably more
interesting than most of the artless lo-fi caterwauling of their era.
Half Italian-American and half French-Canadian,
Seaskull (born Cecil Castellucci) was raised in Montreal before moving
to her father's hometown of New York City to attend the New York High
School of the Performing Arts (yes, the Fame school). Upon graduation,
Seaskull attended the film school at New York University before
returning to Montreal and joining the all-female punk trio Bite. When
that group dissolved, Seaskull formed Nerdy Girl as a duo with guitarist
Gordon Hashimoto on Valentine's Day, 1994. Taking their name from an
early Seaskull song about her lifelong obsession with Star Wars --
Seaskull admits to sleeping on Luke Skywalker sheets well into her late
twenties -- the duo released a self-titled 1994 EP that was
appropriately enough divided into sides marked "Luke" and "Leia."
Hashimoto left after a follow-up single was recorded and Seaskull
replaced him with a full band including guitarist Gabriel Levine,
bassist Ron Woo and drummer Kim Temple. That lineup recorded both the
1995 EP Dime Store Hussy
and Nerdy Girl's first and only full-length release, 1996's masterful
Twist Her, a mature, reflective album with echoes of both Joni Mitchell's Blue and Liz Phair's Exile in Guyville
in Seaskull's hauntingly personal but never exhibitionistic lyrics and
the simple but graceful indie pop arrangements.
The usual hassles of keeping a stable band lineup
intervened shortly after the recording sessions for Twist Her and both
Levine and Temple left the group. Seaskull recruited guitarist/violinist Jessica Moss
and drummer Eric Craven, but while this version of Nerdy Girl did tour
extensively and also recorded a handful of tracks for compilation
albums, Seaskull unceremoniously retired the band name in early 1998. Cecil Seaskull's first solo album, Whatever, featuring a guest performance by fellow Montreal-native Rufus Wainwright, was released in 1998 by the Toronto-based indie Teenage USA.