Van Duren was part of the early Memphis power pop scene that spawned the legendary
Big Star, and made several underexposed, small-label records during the late '70s.
Duren began playing in bands at the age of 13 in 1966 and attended high school with eventual
Big Star drummer
Jody Stephens; he auditioned to replace
Chris Bell in
Big Star in 1974, shortly after the completion of
Third/Sister Lovers. In 1975, he and
Stephens collaborated on some demos that were produced by former
Stones manager
Andrew Loog Oldham (whom he met through producer
Jon Tiven), and a year later he was playing in a group called the Baker Street Regulars with both
Bell and
Stephens. In 1977,
Duren traveled to New England to record for
Tiven's new Big Sound label; his solo debut,
Are You Serious?, was released in March 1978. The album was released in Europe as
Staring at the Ceiling on Big Sound. A second album,
Idiot Optimism, was recorded in 1978 and 1979, though disagreements and financial difficulties prevented it from being released (until it was licensed to the Japanese Air Mail label in 1999).
Duren returned to Memphis in 1981 and the following year put together a band called
Good Question, which gigged around the city off and on for the next 18 years. In 1999,
Duren collaborated with fellow Memphis power popster
Tommy Hoehn on the album
Hailstone Holiday, on which he received co-billing. Unfortunately, health problems forced
Duren to severely curtail his activities in 2000, which led to the breakup of
Good Question.
–
Steve Huey, Rovi