Craig Finn was born in Boston, Massachusetts on August 22, 1971. His family moved to Edina, Minnesota when he was young, and he attended the Breck School in Golden Valley, Minnesota before heading back East to study at Boston College. In 1994, Finn was back in Minneapolis, where he launched the arty indie rock band Lifter Puller, where Finn's dense, personal lyrical style first began to take shape. By 2000, Lifter Puller had broken up and Finn was working in finance when he relocated from the Twin Cities to New York, where he would collaborate with producer Mr. Projectile on the short-lived project the Brokerdealer in 2001 before eventually reuniting with Lifter Puller bassist Tad Kubler to form the Hold Steady in 2003. While the band's whiskey-fueled bar rock sound was a departure from the angular, synth-filled sounds of Lifter Puller, Finn's lyrically dense storytelling style remained intact, making the Hold Steady the thinking-man's bar band.
After five albums with the Hold Steady, which impressed critics and won the group a loyal fan following, the singer and songwriter tried his hand at a solo album during some downtime from his main project, and in 2012 he released Clear Heart Full Eyes on Vagrant Records. In 2015, Finn dropped his second solo album; Faith in the Future, released by Partisan Records, was drawn from a set of songs inspired by themes of loss and survival that Finn wrote in the wake of his mother's death. His third record appeared in March 2017. Like his previous solo work, We All Want the Same Thing sounded like a continued riposte to the wilder side of the Hold Steady, while retaining his much-praised narrative lyrical style, and the track "God in Chicago" was made into an affecting short film. For 2019's I Need a New War, Finn added subtle R&B accents -- choppy guitars and soulful horns -- to put a fresh perspective on his songs of lives in the balance. He began writing his next solo project in 2020 as he was pondering America's reaction to the death of George Floyd and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, filtering his thoughts through the notion of how memory shapes our lives. 2022's A Legacy of Rentals balances smart, inventive arrangements with more of Finn's incisive character studies. ~ Gregory Heaney, Rovi