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Anthony LaMarca
Anthony LaMarca
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Key Information

Anthony LaMarca is a drummer, guitarist, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and co-founder of Primary Records.[1] He is currently a member of the War on Drugs, having joined the band on its tour in support of its third studio album, Lost in the Dream (2014), then contributing to their follow-up, A Deeper Understanding (2017), and I Don't Live Here Anymore (2021).

Native to Youngstown, Ohio, LaMarca took part in the local music scene.[2] Promptly upon graduating from The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music in 2009, LaMarca joined St. Vincent as drummer and toured extensively in support of her Actor release. Annie Clark (of St. Vincent) is quoted saying: "Anthony LaMarca is [a] boy wonder, boy genius. He graduated from college and then the next day he went on tour with me, forever. He's just a delight. He's so funny. He came in and tried out and he's just like, everything about what he did was meticulous. Like, he had a very good sounding snare and he brought it. Everything about it—about him—you could tell there was care and thought put into everything he did."[3] His style has also been referred to as a "laid-back Levon Helm-style pocket to rigid Kraftwerkian tick-tock[…]."[4]

He worked with Dean & Britta's project of scoring songs "to accompany Warhol's silent film portraits he shot from 1964 to 1966 at his New York City studio The Factory."[5]

LaMarca co-founded Primary Records with his friend Oren Kessler in 2011 in Brooklyn, New York. On the label is LaMarca's band The Building: a group spawned from his Youngstown roots, including his brother Angelo, wife Megan, and other long time collaborators.[2] LaMarca stated that The Building is "getting ready to release their record The Swooshy Businessman.[6] While this album is not available online, LaMarca began recording and releasing music exclusively recorded at Peppermint Productions. First, Reconciliation (Peppermint Records, 2017), then Petra (Peppermint Records, Concord Records, 2019), Indianola Pizza Dough (Peppermint Records, 2021), and Aspiration (Peppermint Records, 2024).[7]

LaMarca has toured supporting St. Vincent, The Building, Gym Deer, Pony of Good Tidings, Dean Wareham, Dean & Britta, Spoon, and JBM.

References

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from Grokipedia
Anthony LaMarca is an American multi-instrumentalist, guitarist, and singer-songwriter from , best known as the lead guitarist for the indie rock band The War on Drugs. Born around 1988, LaMarca graduated with a BFA in and Contemporary Music from in in 2009. Early in his career, he performed as a drummer and guitarist with artists including St. Vincent and Dean & Britta, before joining The War on Drugs in 2013. His contributions to the band's expansive, guitar-driven sound helped propel their 2017 album to a Grammy Award for Best Rock Album in 2018. LaMarca has since toured extensively with the group, including European and North American legs in 2024. In addition to his work with The War on Drugs, LaMarca fronts the solo project The Building, releasing his debut album in 2017. His second album, PETRA (2019), was largely recorded during his treatment for , a form of blood cancer, with the title serving as both an for "Peace's Eternal Truth Renews All" and a nod to his , who provided emotional support through his illness. Follow-up releases include Indianola Pizza Dough (2021), the introspective Aspiration (2024), which reflects on the death of his father, Angelo LaMarca, with whom he shared a close bond over music and films, and Weapon (2025). LaMarca's music often explores themes of resilience, personal loss, and renewal, blending , folk, and experimental elements.

Early life and education

Early life

Anthony LaMarca was born and raised in , a city long synonymous with the working-class ethos of the , shaped by its steel industry heritage and the economic challenges of . Growing up in this environment, LaMarca was immersed in the cultural fabric of the , where community ties and local traditions influenced his formative years. His father's diverse music collection profoundly shaped LaMarca's early exposure to a wide array of genres, featuring artists such as , , , and , which introduced him to rock, folk, and sounds. Angelo LaMarca, an entrepreneur who owned a computer consulting , actively encouraged his sons' musical interests by sharing his records and attending their performances, including concerts and early band shows. This familial dynamic fostered a supportive atmosphere for creative exploration, with LaMarca's grandfather also contributing through his playing, embedding and traditional music in the household. LaMarca's passion for music emerged in childhood, as he began playing drums around age 4 or 5 after receiving a small drum set as a gift. By age 12, he formed his first band with his brother and cousin, marking the start of his hands-on engagement with instruments and performance.

Education

LaMarca graduated from Boardman High School in 2005, following which he relocated from , to to enroll at for Jazz and Contemporary Music. LaMarca pursued a BFA in and with a concentration in drum at the , graduating in 2009. The program's curriculum emphasized a blend of technical proficiency, conceptual depth, and historical context in and , allowing students like LaMarca to customize their studies around core areas such as , theory, and ensemble-based . Through rigorous coursework in and small-group ensembles, LaMarca refined his foundational skills on while expanding his versatility as a , incorporating guitar, keyboards, and vocals into his practice. These experiences, including a semester-long internship at the and professional touring that began during his second year, fostered a disciplined approach to performance and songwriting. The New School's collaborative environment also facilitated initial networking opportunities for LaMarca, connecting him with motivated peers and industry professionals in New York City's vibrant music scene, which laid the groundwork for his subsequent career transitions.

Career

Early career and collaborations

Following his graduation from The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music in 2009, Anthony LaMarca began his professional career as the drummer for indie rock artist St. Vincent (Annie Clark), joining her touring band immediately after completing his studies. He contributed to extensive live performances supporting her second album, Actor (2009), including high-profile appearances on late-night television shows and international tours that showcased his dynamic drumming and sampler work alongside violinist Daniel Hart and multi-instrumentalist Evan Smith. This role marked LaMarca's entry into the New York indie music scene, where he honed his skills in high-energy, experimental rock settings. LaMarca soon expanded into film-adjacent collaborations, joining Dean & Britta (Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips) as their drummer and backing vocalist for a multimedia project scoring Andy Warhol's silent films from the 1960s. Commissioned by , the endeavor involved composing original songs and instrumentals to accompany the black-and-white portraits, blending dreamlike pop with ambient textures. The live performances, featuring projected films and the duo's band—including LaMarca on drums and Matt Sumrow on guitar and keys—toured festivals and museums, emphasizing experimental tailored to the hypnotic visuals. This work culminated in the 2010 album 13 Most Beautiful: Songs for Andy Warhol's , which included LaMarca's contributions on tracks like remixes and live recordings, highlighting his versatility in interdisciplinary artistic projects. In late 2010, LaMarca co-founded the Brooklyn-based Primary Records with his longtime friend and fellow Youngstown native Oren Kessler, establishing a platform for emerging talent in the indie landscape. The community-run imprint focuses on aesthetically driven releases across genres, from experimental to , prioritizing long-term artist development, knowledge sharing, and immersive experiences through music, visuals, and objects. Under Primary, LaMarca supported acts that aligned with his interest in innovative, boundary-pushing sounds, while using the label to foster a collaborative network in New York's underground scene. LaMarca's initial forays into solo work reflected a DIY , beginning with the 2012 collaborative album Bread Is First alongside composer Angelo Spagnolo, self-released via . Drawing lyrics entirely from Thomas Merton's spiritual text No Man Is an Island, the record fused indie-folk with experimental electronic and classical elements, featuring lo-fi production that incorporated dissonant feedback, ambient keys, and intertwined vocals for a mystical, introspective atmosphere. Building on this, his 2013 release Songs I Wish I Wrote presented intimate covers of classics like "Just a Gigolo," "" (Roy Orbison), and "Big White Cloud" (), reimagined in sparse acoustic arrangements with raw, home-recorded production that emphasized emotional vulnerability over polish. These early efforts, distributed independently through digital platforms, underscored LaMarca's hands-on approach to songwriting and recording during his freelance years.

Work with The War on Drugs

Anthony LaMarca joined The War on Drugs in 2014 as a during the band's tour promoting their breakthrough album , where his intricate guitar playing added substantial textural depth to their expansive live sound. LaMarca's contributions became central to the band's subsequent studio work, particularly on (2017), where he delivered prominent guitar solos and layered arrangements that enhanced the album's sweeping, atmospheric quality. The record, featuring his performances alongside bandleader , earned the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the in 2018. On the follow-up album I Don’t Live Here Anymore (2021), LaMarca expanded his role as a , contributing keyboards, guitar, and additional layers during early demo sessions in , which allowed for flexible, role-blurring experimentation in the band's songwriting process. His versatility has also shaped live adaptations of these tracks, enabling dynamic rearrangements that maintain the album's emotional resonance on stage. Throughout his tenure, LaMarca has been a key part of the band's rigorous touring schedule, including high-profile support slots and co-headlining runs such as the 2024 Zen Diagram Tour with The National, where his performances help translate the group's studio polish to immersive live experiences. In 2025, he performed with the band at the event honoring . Hailing from , in the American Midwest, LaMarca's background aligns with the band's influences, infusing their music with a sense of vast, introspective Americana.

The Building project

Following his return to , in the mid-2010s, Anthony LaMarca launched The Building in 2017 as his primary solo outlet for personal songwriting, enlisting his brother and wife as collaborators. The project's debut , Reconciliation, released on April 28, 2017, via Peppermint Records, captures introspective folk-rock explorations amid personal challenges, with recording split between sessions in 2015 before and after LaMarca's diagnosis. Produced and performed primarily by the LaMarca brothers, the was engineered by Gary Rhamy at Peppermint Recording Studio in and mixed by Kevin Ratterman. The Building's sophomore effort, , arrived in October 2019 on , drawing inspiration from LaMarca's relapse of during production and his , Petra, who provided emotional support through sessions. The album incorporates dissonant guitar elements, such as howling feedback from a pedal into an Gemini 2 amp, contrasting quieter acoustic passages on a Gibson nylon-string guitar to evoke tension and release. Emotional lyrics grapple with mortality and a yearning for normalcy, as in the track "," where LaMarca expresses a desire to "be boring again." Self-produced at home in Youngstown between tours, features contributions from Angelo LaMarca and Megan LaMarca, with final editing and mixing handled by Anthony during treatment. In 2021, LaMarca released Indianola Pizza Dough on April 23 via , a mixtape-style collection honoring his family's historic pizza shop on Indianola Avenue in Youngstown and the adjacent Peppermint Productions studio, known for polka recordings like Frank Yankovic's Grammy-winning work. The album blends personal family history with ethnic music influences, including overdubs on new songs, serving as an audio tribute to great-aunt Seminara and local recording legacy. Produced and performed by LaMarca with engineering by Gary Rhamy, it reflects his multi-instrumental approach in Youngstown's intimate studio environment. Aspiration, released on October 4, , via , stands as a dedication to LaMarca's late father, Angelo, who died in 2023, weaving themes of , familial bonds, and Catholicism through reflections on shared interests like and . Tracks such as "The Ballad of Father Madden" and "Echo" highlight father-son parallels, with lyrics evolving in poignancy after his father's passing. Recorded starting in April 2023 at Peppermint Studios, LaMarca played all instruments himself, with engineering by Gary Rhamy and mastering by Adam Boose. Throughout The Building's evolution, LaMarca has embraced self-production and multi-instrumental recording in Youngstown, often at Peppermint Studios or his home setup, allowing for raw, autobiographical expression distinct from his ensemble work elsewhere. This process underscores the project's intimacy, from overdubbed layers in Indianola Pizza Dough to solo performances on Aspiration.

Other musical endeavors

LaMarca has performed as a with indie rock acts including , St. Vincent, and , contributing drums and guitar to live sets and recordings that highlighted his versatility in the genre. In 2014, he released the album Sings the Great Songs, a collection of interpretive covers spanning standards like "Apache" by and "Guess I'm Dumb" by , emphasizing his affinity for niche jazz, rock, and pop influences through solo arrangements. LaMarca followed this in 2018 with the single "The Man in Red," an original track blending introspective lyrics with atmospheric indie production, released via Peppermint Records. Beyond his work scoring music for Andy Warhol's silent films with Dean & Britta, LaMarca contributed additional music as composer for the independent film The Dish & the Spoon (2011), directed by Alison Bagnall, and played electric guitar for the drama There There (2022), directed by Andrea Arnold. LaMarca has made guest appearances on indie albums, notably playing drums on Dean Wareham's 2024 solo release That's the Price of Loving Me, where his contributions supported the album's blend of post-punk and folk elements alongside Wareham's guitar work. As co-founder of Primary Records, LaMarca has overseen ongoing label activities, producing releases such as In One Wind's 2011 album How Bright A Shadow!, which features his engineering and multi-instrumental input, and supporting affiliated artists like Land of Leland, whose self-titled 2010 EP marked an early milestone for the Brooklyn-based indie imprint. In , LaMarca recorded parts performed by his wife Megan for Heaven's single "The Fire You Know" from their album Dream Aloud. He also released a new project titled Weapon through an unconventional rollout involving the Int'l Herald newspaper, with copies containing unique tracks on the back page, and performed at a tied to this release. Additionally, The Building is preparing to release an album titled The Swooshy Businessman.

Personal life

Family and influences

Anthony LaMarca was born to Angelo F. LaMarca Sr. and Gina Seminara LaMarca in Boardman, Ohio, where his family maintained strong ties to the local community through pizza businesses, including his brother Mario's shop in Boardman and the legacy of his great-aunt Margaret Seminara's pizza shop on Indianola Avenue in nearby Youngstown. His father, who passed away in May 2022 after a battle with , played a pivotal role in fostering LaMarca's early passion for music by sharing his extensive record collection, which spanned diverse genres from and to and . The two shared a deep bond over music and films, with LaMarca often noting their striking similarities, as reflected in the song "" from his 2024 album Aspiration, where he sings, "I look just like him." LaMarca's broader family provided consistent emotional and practical support throughout his life and career. His brothers, Mario—who operates a pizza shop in Boardman—and Angelo Jr., have pursued their own successful paths while remaining close. LaMarca's wife, Megan, has been a steadfast partner, contributing to his sense of stability amid personal hardships. Extended family members, including a niece and nephew, demonstrated their support by creating a painting for him during his hospital stay, an act that inspired themes of healing in his songwriting. His father, in particular, actively attended his children's band performances, reinforcing a family culture that valued creative expression. The paternal influences from LaMarca's youth endured into adulthood, evolving alongside his immersion in indie folk and rock scenes. While his father's eclectic collection laid the foundation for his broad tastes, LaMarca has cited figures like John Cougar Mellencamp as subconscious inspirations, reflecting a rooted, regional sensibility that aligns with his peers. These early exposures informed his songwriting, where personal family experiences manifest as themes of loss and reconciliation; for instance, Aspiration grapples with the sudden grief of his father's death, serving as a to process unresolved emotions and honor their shared life.

Relocation and lifestyle

LaMarca relocated from his hometown of , to in 2009 to attend for Jazz and Contemporary Music, seeking formal training in jazz and contemporary styles. During the 2010s, he immersed himself in Brooklyn's vibrant urban , where he co-founded Primary Records in late 2010 with longtime friend Oren Kessler, establishing a platform for emerging artists rooted in community collaboration. This period involved intensive recording and touring, fostering connections within New York's dynamic creative environment. Around 2017, LaMarca returned to Youngstown, driven by a deepening sense of homesickness and a desire to integrate family into his work, including collaborating with his wife on recordings and videos, and his brother in projects like The Building. This move shifted his lifestyle toward a more grounded routine, centered on a home studio setup that allowed for personal reflection and local production at facilities like Peppermint Productions. He balances extensive touring commitments with The War on Drugs—such as North American legs supporting album releases—with everyday life in , where his , Petra, serves as a steadfast companion and even inspired elements of his songwriting. His father's record collection and emphasis on familial ties further reinforced LaMarca's commitment to maintaining strong connections to his roots amid these transitions.

Artistic style and reception

Musical style

Anthony LaMarca is renowned as a whose work emphasizes intricate guitar textures, propulsive drum grooves, and layered vocal harmonies, blending elements of , folk, and to create a contemplative and emotionally resonant sound. His guitar playing often features fingerpicked acoustic patterns on instruments like a 1967 Gibson nylon-string model, producing sparse yet delicate arrangements that prioritize organic warmth over dense production. Drum grooves in his compositions draw from his early experience as a for artists like St. Vincent, providing rhythmic foundations that evoke a sense of Midwestern introspection, while vocal harmonies add a haunting, multi-dimensional depth, as heard in tracks with rich, overlapping lines. This fusion of genres results in music that feels both expansive and intimate, distinguishing his solo project The Building from more orchestral ensembles. LaMarca's style has evolved from drum-centric contributions in collaborative settings to guitar-driven, self-produced layers in his solo endeavors, reflecting a shift toward greater personal expression through multi-tracked . Early work highlighted rhythmic precision and supportive grooves, whereas later projects incorporate ambient folk simplicity with indie-pop subtlety, allowing for a more unadorned emotional delivery. In albums like , this evolution manifests technically through the integration of arrangements for textural contrast, enhancing his multi-instrumental versatility. A hallmark of LaMarca's approach is the deliberate use of dissonance to heighten emotional rawness, achieved through techniques such as howling feedback generated via a guitar and Hot Drive pedal into an amplifier, creating off-kilter motifs that disrupt otherwise pretty, quiet melodies. This technical contrast—pairing serene acoustic passages with abrasive sonic interruptions—evokes a sense of without relying on overt , as in Petra's recurring feedback elements that symbolize inner turmoil. While sharing the expansive, influences of , LaMarca's sound adopts a more intimate Midwestern folk twist, emphasizing tender, elegiac qualities over cinematic grandeur, as evident in the organic layering of his recent release Aspiration.

Critical reception

Anthony LaMarca's guitar work with The War on Drugs has been widely praised in reviews of the band's albums, particularly for its contributions to the immersive, layered sound that earned critical acclaim and awards. On the 2017 album , which won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the , LaMarca's guitar parts were noted for enhancing the record's expansive, driving arrangements. Critics highlighted his role in tracks like "Thinking of a Place," where his solos added emotional depth and propulsion to the band's style. Similarly, in reviews of 2021's , LaMarca's "exquisite guitar musicianship" was singled out for its bursts of icy precision and melodic support, contributing to the album's polished yet introspective vibe. LaMarca's solo project, The Building, has received strong praise for its emotional depth and lo-fi authenticity, especially in albums like (2019) and Aspiration (2024). Petra, recorded amid LaMarca's cancer battle, was lauded by Under the Radar for its "magnificently understated" intimacy and raw exploration of vulnerability, with tracks like "Life Half Lived" capturing the pain of personal loss through sparse, heartfelt arrangements. Guitar.com described the album as a "stark, bleak, unflinching" yet significant work, emphasizing its dissonant beauty and the therapeutic role of LaMarca's guitar and vocals in processing illness. NPR's World Cafe session further acclaimed Petra for its spiritual renewal and acronymic title inspired by LaMarca's dog, positioning it as a poignant renewal amid adversity. For Aspiration, early user reception on platforms like Album of the Year reflected high appreciation for its indie rock warmth, building on the project's growing profile. LaMarca's earlier solo efforts under The Building, such as the 2017 album , were viewed as promising but niche, with Psychedelic Baby Magazine praising its "inwardly driven" artistry that "melts your soul" through gentle, introspective folk-indie songs, though it remained under the radar compared to his band work. Coverage has evolved to broader recognition, signaling a shift toward wider appeal. Critics often highlight recurring themes in LaMarca's reception, including a balance of accessibility and experimentation, as seen in Petra's blend of familiar Midwestern roots with unconventional dissonance. This "Midwestern soul"—evoking heartfelt, hometown-driven songwriting—infuses his guitar-driven compositions with warmth and introspection, earning consistent praise for their organic authenticity across both collaborative and solo outputs. In 2025, LaMarca released Weapon under The Building, which received positive local coverage for its innovative distribution (not on streaming platforms) and personal storytelling, continuing themes of resilience through multi-instrumental arrangements including and handclaps.

Discography

Solo releases

Anthony LaMarca's solo releases prior to his work with The Building encompass a series of self-produced albums and EPs that highlight his early songwriting, interpretive covers, and experimental inclinations, primarily issued through his co-founded label Primary Records in . These works, recorded during his time in New York, reflect a DIY with LaMarca handling much of the instrumentation and production himself. His debut solo effort, Bread Is First (2012), is a collaborative album with Angelo Spagnolo featuring original songs that delve into introspective and spiritual themes, such as and existential reflection, through haunting, folk-inflected arrangements. Released on June 17, 2012, via Primary Records, the 11-track record includes pieces like "New Seeds" and "The Poverty of Death," blending , sparse percussion, and layered vocals to evoke a sense of personal revelation and atmospheric unease. Critics noted its eerie, preacher-like quality, likening it to a journey through a foreboding . In , LaMarca released Songs I Wish I Wrote, a collection of covers that demonstrate his vocal phrasing and interpretive depth on classic tunes from the mid-20th century. Issued on January 15 via and Primary Records, the album reimagines songs like "Just a Gigolo" (originally by ) and "Tears on My Pillow" (), infusing them with a intimate, lounge-style delivery accompanied by minimal and guitar. The 10 tracks showcase LaMarca's ability to personalize standards, emphasizing emotional nuance over strict replication. That same year, Rumble emerged as a concise EP of instrumental explorations rooted in and rock traditions, serving as an early experimental outlet for LaMarca's guitar work. Released on July 9, 2013, through Primary Records, the two-track release features the title instrumental "Rumble," evoking gritty, raw energy with distorted riffs and rhythmic drive, alongside "A Man and the Blues (Pt. 1)," which nods to influences. Recorded in New York, it highlights LaMarca's multi-instrumental versatility in a stripped-down format. LaMarca continued his focus on covers with Sings the Great Songs (2014), an album that further accentuates his vocal range and creative arrangements of timeless compositions. Self-released on June 10, 2014, via and Primary Records, the 10-song set includes renditions of "" (The Shadows), "Guess I'm Dumb" (), and "She's Funny That Way" (standard), delivered with swing-inflected jazz elements, subtle orchestration, and a warm croon. These recordings, produced in New York studios, underscore LaMarca's talent for reinterpreting pop and rock classics with fresh, heartfelt arrangements.

The Building releases

The Swooshy Businessman, the debut album by The Building, was self-released in 2012 via Primary Records. The 16-track record draws on the band's Youngstown, Ohio roots, featuring introspective indie folk songs that explore personal and local themes. Reconciliation, the full-length debut album by The Building, was released on April 28, 2017, via Peppermint Records. Featuring eight indie folk tracks, the album draws on themes of family bonds and life in Youngstown, Ohio, reflecting the LaMarca brothers' roots. Key songs include "Taken Away," which opens with introspective lyrics, and "If I," emphasizing emotional reconciliation. In 2019, The Building followed with the EP Just for Once, a four-track release on via Records, highlighting brevity and raw emotion through stripped-down arrangements. It includes outtakes from the prior album alongside new material, such as the solo version of "Have to Forgive," a poignant reflection on letting go, and the title track "Just for Once." The EP's intimate style underscores themes of forgiveness and simplicity. That same year, on October 11, The Building issued via , an album born from personal hardship during Anthony LaMarca's battle with . The nine songs incorporate guitar dissonance to convey vulnerability and renewal, with standout tracks like "All Things New," co-written with his brother , and "Purifier," evoking spiritual cleansing amid illness. The title references LaMarca's dog, symbolizing companionship through adversity. Indianola Pizza Dough, released on April 23, 2021, via Peppermint Records, embraces experimental with a mixtape-like structure, layering original songs over and tamburitza recordings to honor family history and culture during the pandemic era. The 14-track album captures introspection through eclectic sounds, including nuanced like "Reconciliation Pt. 1" and stirring fusions, paying tribute to LaMarca's great-aunt and the family's shop. Much of the recording occurred in Youngstown. The 2024 album Aspiration, released on October 4 via Peppermint Records, serves as a to Anthony LaMarca's late father, Angelo, who passed away two years prior. Spanning 10 tracks of reflective indie folk, it explores memory and familial ties, with key songs such as "Forgive Again," delving into themes of absolution, and "," evoking lingering presence. Other highlights include "The Ballad of Father Madden" and the title track "Aspiration."

Contributions to other artists

LaMarca has made notable contributions as a and to several prominent artists' recordings, often leveraging his skills as a . On and St. Vincent's collaborative album (2012), he provided drums for the track "Who," adding to the album's distinctive brass-heavy, art-pop sound during overdub sessions. This appearance marked an early high-profile credit in his career, aligning with his touring role as St. Vincent's drummer at the time. In the indie rock sphere, LaMarca contributed drums and vocals to Dean & Britta's 13 Most Beautiful... Songs for Andy Warhol's Screen Tests (2008), a collection of originals and covers inspired by Warhol's films, where he supported the core duo of Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips alongside guitarist Matt Sumrow. He later reunited with Wareham for the solo album That's the Price of Loving Me (2025), drumming on five tracks and contributing to its dreamy, Galaxie 500-inflected aesthetic produced by Kramer. More recently, LaMarca played guitar and keyboards on Craig Finn's Always Been (2025), enhancing the album's narrative-driven songs alongside contributions from other members like David Hartley. Additionally, he served as and on Stutter Steps' album Reeling (2020), led by frontwoman Sherine Harrison, and collaborated on their subsequent pandemic-era 7-inch single featuring tracks "Lift" and "The Bend." These efforts highlight LaMarca's versatility in supporting both established and emerging indie artists.

References

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