Home / Tag Archives: Mischievous (page 39)

Tag Archives: Mischievous

Escape the Fate

Produced in 2004, NEVADA post-hardcore group Get away the Fate prided itself, most of all, on a lively and visceral live display. Following demise of their prior band, vocalist Ronnie Radke and bassist Maximum Green recruited keyboardist Carson Allen, guitarist Omar Espinoza, and drummer Robert Ortiz. Debuting live hardly a …

Read More »

Flatfoot 56

Produced in 2000 by siblings Tobin (vocals/guitar), Justin (drums), and Kyle Bawinkel (bass), Chicago-based Celtic punk outfit Flatfoot 56 grew from a straight-up punk trio right into a hard-hitting, Flogging Molly/Dropkick Murphys-inspired Oi! rock and roll outfit using the enhancements of Highland piper Eric McMahon and mandolin/electric guitar player Brandon …

Read More »

Dark Meat

The Athens, GA, music collective Dark Meats were formed by singer/guitarist Jim McHugh and bassist Ben Clack once they moved to Athens from NEW YORK in 2004 and met guitarist Kris Deason (of Subversivo) and drummer Forrest Leffer (formerly of Carrie Countries) while working at a downtown restaurant. The group …

Read More »

The High Court

The band name the High Court doesn’t imply the members of the NJ punk-pop quintet are fans from the judicial system a lot much like its invocation of the term “high” as well as the handy acronym THC — quite simply, that they are fans of weed. That is no …

Read More »

Stuttering John

Most widely known for his infamous superstar interviews for radio’s The Howard Stern Present, “Stuttering John” Melendez was created Oct 4, 1965 in Massapequa, NY. He became an intern on Stern’s plan in 1989, and shortly the host pressed Melendez in to the limelight, exploiting his talk issue while forcing …

Read More »

The Tornados

Among the saddest tales in rock and roll & roll background surrounds the Tornados, an instrumental group from Britain. Although there have been other groups using the same name (observe listing for his or her American surf-band counterparts), this batch of Tornados had been the creation of English maker Joe …

Read More »

45 Grave

.45 Grave was a Los Angeles-based death-rock band whose macabre, morose and sometimes amusing music helped to obtain the goth-rock genre off to its shambling life. In 1985, after getting a fair offer of interest via gloom-ridden gigs and many depressing produces, the band split, with Paul B. Cutler and …

Read More »

3Ds

Created in mid-1988, the brand new Zealand noise pop strap 3D’s comprised vocalist/guitarist David Saunders, bassist Denise Roughan (formerly of Appear Blue Go Crimson, and writer of that group’s big strike “Cactus Kitten”), and ex-Snapper drummer Dominic Rocks. By enough time 3D’s produced their live debut later on in the …

Read More »

The Streets

Mike Skinner’s recordings as the Roads marked the initial attempt to include a degree of public commentary to Britain’s party-hearty garage area/2-stage (and later on grime) motion. Skinner, a Birmingham indigenous who afterwards ventured to the administrative centre, was an outsider in the garage area picture, though his preliminary recordings …

Read More »

The Tubes

The Tubes were arch satirists of popular culture whose outrageous performance art concepts — which swung wildly from softcore pornography to suit-and-tie conservatism — frequently eclipsed their elusive music identity. The origins of the group started in Phoenix, Az in the past due ’60s, where guitarist Expenses Spooner, keyboardist Vince …

Read More »