worst reunions

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"Worst reunion" could be interpreted a few different ways, so here's my version: Which band damaged their cred the most by reuniting? As in, maybe you used to say "I'm a fan of ___" back in the day, but now, post-reunion, you have to insert some qualifier in there to make sure that people know you only mean the days before they sucked. (OK you can still interpret that in a few different ways so just chill out if you're the kind of person who is already readying an outraged argument on semantics.) I dunno, I guess my point is that sometimes bands reform and suck and you just kind of shake your head but understand that they need money, and other times bands reform and suck and you're like "no wait FUCK that band".

I'm pulling this list from several different sources + i don't know what i'm talking about, so feel free to navigate to the "other" option and explain. Seriously I'm not aiming to be comprehensive and authoritative so please don't freak out that some obvious band isn't included.

Poll Results

OptionVotes
The Pixies (2004) 10
The Doors (21st Century) 5
Black Flag (2013 debacle) 5
The Chameleons (2000) 5
Weezer (2000) 4
Queen (2005) 4
Smashing Pumpkins (2006) 4
Nirvana (McCartney, 2012) 4
Sex Pistols (1996) 3
Sublime (with Rome) (2009) 3
Guns N' Roses (???-Chinese Democracy) 3
Blink-182 (2009) 2
Van Halen (2007 - Roth) 2
Van Halen (2004 - Hagar) 2
Velvet Underground (1993) 1
No Doubt (2008) 1
Echo & the Bunnymen (1997) 1
Slint (2005, 2007, 2013) 1
Pavement (2010) 1
Beatles (Anthology songs) 1
Television (2002) 0
Gang of Four (2005) 0
Black Flag (2003, 2010, 2011) 0
Big Star (1993, 2005) 0
The Stooges (2003) 0
Jesus and Mary Chain (2007) 0


Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:38 (ten years ago)

oh gawd i forgot to include the "other" option. brb i have to find a giant pile of shit and jump into it

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:39 (ten years ago)

i'm just gonna put it out there on the line that the nirvana "reunion" was... ill-advised.

Neil Patrick Haggerty (get bent), Friday, 18 July 2014 03:39 (ten years ago)

a lot of this is just nostalgia but for me it might be between smashing pumpkins and weezer. i was reading the kenny g wikipedia entry today and saw that he had done some weird guest stint on a 2009 weezer song. i watched the video and the entire thing was really sad. then i watched the 1994 say it ain't so performance on letterman and there was something so charming about cuomo's giant khaki pants (similar to what i was wearing in middle school a few years later) and i wished that they had never, ever reunited.

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:42 (ten years ago)

almost everyone else on the list i can sort of forgive because they got a lot older and didn't find much success and they probably ached for one final round on the stage in front of adoring fans. but corgan/pumpkins and weezer didn't wait long enough and were painfully worse upon reuniting, and it makes it harder to listen to their older stuff knowing what was just around the corner

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:44 (ten years ago)

no Eagles, no credibility!

Lee626, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:45 (ten years ago)

goddammit, it's true. :(

and lots of others. it's late and i was just google searching and please forgive me

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:46 (ten years ago)

i did manage to include Sublime (with Rome) though because i know there's a bunch of huge sublime fans on ilm

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:46 (ten years ago)

voted for Sublime With Rome. even without having any particular affection for the original band, the way the 2 surviving members of the band 'reunited' against the wishes of Brad Nowell's family was just scummy. the drummer actually left the band and apologized, so now it's JUST the bassist from Sublime with a couple of other guys.

some dude, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:49 (ten years ago)

Queen (2005), not sure if it was 2005 show i saw on TV but they the lead singer from Foreigner singing. they played both Queen and Foreigner songs. i could not believe my eyes.

Bee OK, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:52 (ten years ago)

The Doors probably would be the next one i'd mostly likely vote for, the way the other 3 guys just kept squeezing everything they could out of that franchise without Morrison really went beyond the usual inevitable cash-ins to something really relentless and desperate.

some dude, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:54 (ten years ago)

Pixies 2k14, anyone?

your best m7 (rip van wanko), Friday, 18 July 2014 03:56 (ten years ago)

i thought about including the american prayer album a separate option. that album was my introduction to the doors in high school, and i really haven't explored them much beyond that tbh. i do remember enjoying the song that had the sleigh bells.

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 July 2014 03:56 (ten years ago)

voted for Sublime With Rome. even without having any particular affection for the original band, the way the 2 surviving members of the band 'reunited' against the wishes of Brad Nowell's family was just scummy. the drummer actually left the band and apologized, so now it's JUST the bassist from Sublime with a couple of other guys.

― some dude, Thursday, July 17, 2014 11:49 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I just looked and apparently it's Josh Freese on drums now.

how's life, Friday, 18 July 2014 14:58 (ten years ago)

Thank you for leaving the Who off the list.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:02 (ten years ago)

Inclined to vote for Big Star, more for In Space than their live stuff. Like Cut The Crap, it's been largely written out of their history, but said writing-out happened almost simultaneously with the album's release.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:03 (ten years ago)

when did Weezer even split?

The Doors probably would be the next one i'd mostly likely vote for, the way the other 3 guys just kept squeezing everything they could out of that franchise without Morrison really went beyond the usual inevitable cash-ins to something really relentless and desperate.

p sure it was just two of them for most of the more egregious stuff. by the time Astbury joined one of 'em sued the others to make them change the name

boney tassel (sic), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:04 (ten years ago)

actually I definitely knew that well enough once to make a joke on ILM about it

boney tassel (sic), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:05 (ten years ago)

big star reunion was pretty much the only way you were gonna see chilton live and reliably sing several big star songs. others of that ilk where it's basically a band reforming to tour, play the hits, pay some bills i can't begrudge plus dirtly little secret very often the reunion shows are better than the shows the original time around. weezer seems like the most detrimental in terms of legacy and love from fans. pixies giving them a run for their money though for sure.

balls, Friday, 18 July 2014 15:10 (ten years ago)

Voted python

when there's no more room in heㄥㄥ the thread will walk the earth (wins), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:12 (ten years ago)

ooh stooges a contender in that i treat their post reunion album (albums?) like jordan in a wizards jersey

balls, Friday, 18 July 2014 15:13 (ten years ago)

Weezer for me, I grew up listening to Weezer & Pinkerton and they have shat all over themselves for more than a decade now.

skip, Friday, 18 July 2014 15:15 (ten years ago)

stooges reunion albs p lousy, but the live show i saw, when they performed the whole of Fun House w/Steve Mackay, was a blast and in no way detrimental to their rep

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:19 (ten years ago)

Beatles (Anthology songs)
- one of these songs was fun, one was shit, it made George back some of the money cunto stole off him

Big Star (1993, 2005)
- idk

Black Flag (2003,
- A+ lols, maybe the best reunion ever

...2010, 2011)
- did these happen?

Black Flag (2013 debacle)
- so lame it might not even have been noticed if Flag hadn't happened at the same time. the singer getting fired onstage and relievedly coming out in support of the rival band makes it more amusing

Blink-182 (2009)
- didn't know they split

Echo & the Bunnymen (1997)
- one good song, should have stopped when it turned back to Electrafixion

Gang of Four (2005)
- have heard they've done tours with only Gill and been cancelled once promoters or punters found out, dunno anything else

Guns N' Roses (???-Chinese Democracy)
- never split tbf. I don't count anything post-Adler anyway

Jesus and Mary Chain (2007)
- one good song, some decent gigs

Nirvana (McCartney, 2012)
- not a Nirvana reunion, was fun

No Doubt (2008)
- can't remember if I didn't know whether they'd reunited or split in the first place

Pavement (2010)
- don't care about Pavement but know lots of people who were happy to get to see the members of Pavement play Pavement songs together so this one is 100% positive

Queen (2005)
- dunno which Queen reunion this was or how many members were involved but they've all been embarrassing faragoes

Sex Pistols (1996)
- this would have been great if it was just the press conference, but then they played a bunch of great shows (after a shithouse first one I guess). wonder if the one I saw was the smallest reunion show they've ever played

Slint (2005, 2007, 2013)
- idk

Smashing Pumpkins (2006)
- dunno which one this was but I'm sure it was awful and a petulant use of the name

Sublime (with Rome) (2009)
- insulting revival of the name, mitigated very slightly by the original band being terrible

Television (2002)
- played some good shows afaik?

The Chameleons (2000)
- idk

The Doors (21st Century)
- awful, sad revival of pretty bad band

The Pixies (2004)
- played some great shows and made lots of ppl happy. recorded two fantastic songs. carried on inappropriately long, Deal OTM

The Stooges (2003)
- recordings v unnecessary but people get to see some good rock shows and Watt gets paid, plus no-one bought the records, even Skull Ring, so no harm done

Van Halen (2004 - Hagar)
- no way this wasn't terrible

Van Halen (2007 - Roth)
- the Wolfgang thing is p tragic but people getting to see DLR perform Van Halen songs with most of Van Halen can't be all bad

Velvet Underground (1993)
- entertained people, funny when Reed deliberately paces the words all different to f/w ppl singing along

Weezer (2000)
- everything after the second Islands In The Sun video is just "current Weezer" to me, idgaff but the band seem to be having a lot of fun and to have found a regular fanbase who enjoy following their output, good luck to all involved

conclusion: most of these are p good, cancel poll and start again

boney tassel (sic), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:25 (ten years ago)

Heard good things about Television's 1992 reunion shows, and the s/t record was pretty great; certainly at least up there with Adventure.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:28 (ten years ago)

Write-in for Magnetic Fields without Susan Anway

Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:30 (ten years ago)

Jesus and Mary Chain + Pavement both notably better live acts as reunion acts than they were in their original go-round. (OK, to be fair, I didn't see JaMC play live before 1990.)

Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 18 July 2014 15:32 (ten years ago)

Guided By Voices. Bad enough that I began to wonder why I ever thought they were good. Still undecided, but leaning heavily towards purging the 5% of their albums I own (which is like 8) and just keeping Human Amusement.

campreverb, Friday, 18 July 2014 15:51 (ten years ago)

I didn't know that Weezer ever broke up. Feels like there's been a new Weezer album to ignore every two years or so

relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Friday, 18 July 2014 16:39 (ten years ago)

the Go4 reunion album on which they redid their classics is fucking ace.

so .. they get a free pass.

mark e, Friday, 18 July 2014 16:45 (ten years ago)

yeah there has never been a point when Weezer, No Doubt or GNR officially 'broke up.'

some dude, Friday, 18 July 2014 16:52 (ten years ago)

kinda inclined to say the Velvets but their reunion was a blip that doesn't obscure their canonical work at all.

Οὖτις, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:03 (ten years ago)

weezer announced they were 'taking a break' and the members moved to separate cities and started new bands. they reunited for a high paying festival gig and then did a small reunion tour after that that generated befuddling (to me at least) enthusiasm. it's around this time that pinkerton's 'lost classic' status goes mainstream. the green weezer album had high anticipation, came out same day as amnesiac and i can remember maybe a third of the crowd at the midnight sale (remember those?) were there for weezer. interesting if their hiatus has been largely forgotten, like w/ roxy music or talking heads (or sleater kinney except everyone knew they really were taking a break - corin had a baby). a group that just peaks early and then gradually starts to suck more is different than a band that releases to perfect albums (in theory) and then reunites and releases a stream of increasingly worse records. no doubt never actually broke up though i guess you could be forgiven for assuming their hiatus would be like nsync's. gnr either never broke up or never reunited.

balls, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:05 (ten years ago)

I remember a magazine feature on this.
Os Mutantes had a troubled reunion but I don't know if that had anything to do with the reception.
Happy Mondays did their reunion on a Jim Davidson show or something.

I recall some reviews saying the Von live reunion was a disaster.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:09 (ten years ago)

came out same day as amnesiac

what's that? I remember the other big thing that came out that day as Lateralus by Tool.

how's life, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:18 (ten years ago)

It's the Radiohead album.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:24 (ten years ago)

ah - you're right! i confused the midnight sale for radiohead w/ the midnight sale for rem - weezer/tool/rem came out in may, radiohead was june i think

balls, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:27 (ten years ago)

I was just trying to make a dumb joke about amnesia and missing wildly, I guess.

how's life, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:29 (ten years ago)

Distinct memory of buying that Weezer album at midnight, listening to it with my college roommates and realizing they would never be good again.

intheblanks, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:32 (ten years ago)

Personally, I think the Pixies reunion burned through the most goodwill for me, but due to personal/personnel reasons and general dickishness, carrying on too long, etc.

Some of these reunions (thinking of the Stooges and the JAMC here) were actually quite good fun!

But if Slowdive were on this list, I'd have voted for them as worst out of principle. (Also MBV, but I've had retained a lot more goodwill for them if they'd not released an album.)

Branwell with an N, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:34 (ten years ago)

Dunno, I think the album was good enough to justify..

Mark G, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:39 (ten years ago)

Only one of these bands made a record with Skrillex.

voodoo chili, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:46 (ten years ago)

Keeping my fingers crossed for a new Slowdive album. Would have been nice if Chapterhouse had another album in them but it was just a live tour.

I'm not actually that enthused about live reunions in general.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:50 (ten years ago)

See, I don't mind live reunions. It's a moment, a rush, a single night of nostalgia. It's when they gotta go and piss all over their legacy by recording something that sounds so completely out of date and embarrassing that I wish it hadn't happened. I have a lot more respect for bands that do the reunion gigs, then leave it at that.

Branwell with an N, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:55 (ten years ago)

There's a few album-reunions that worked, though -- Mission of Burma, the Who, New York Dolls...

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 18 July 2014 17:57 (ten years ago)

GBV otm
leaning way too hard on the unsustainable "party band" model
no respect for selves

La Lechera, Friday, 18 July 2014 17:59 (ten years ago)

Violent Femmes 2013 reunion deserves mention here if only because they almost immediately fired Victor Delorenzo and replaced him with Amanda Palmer's friend.

cwkiii, Friday, 18 July 2014 18:01 (ten years ago)

kinda inclined to say the Velvets but their reunion was a blip that doesn't obscure their canonical work at all.

this reunion actually seems like part of the legend at this point

it probably would have been really embarrassing if it happened in the 00s

iatee, Friday, 18 July 2014 18:05 (ten years ago)

Very few of these I actually want to player-hate on at all, worse things they could do with their songbook and time. but there are a few.

Velvet Underground is kind of embarrassing in hindsight thanks to lou's "Severin take the whip baby severin take the whip now" scattage but as a young aspiring alt-kid at the time i was ecstatic.

queen + paul rodgers was actively embarrassing and while i wish may & taylor had just done some kind of low key small hall thing where they'd just sing the stuff they wrote I can't hate on them for wanting to do "we will rock you" at the big places and they've since replaced rodgers with adam lambert so they've learned their lesson.

The post-Deal Pixies have been pretty embarrassing but i was all for the foursome raking in the $$$ on the road.

So I'm probably voting for Doors 21st Century because holy shit Ian Astbury are you fucking kidding me

da croupier, Friday, 18 July 2014 18:06 (ten years ago)

LL - I seem to remember from past posts ya dig the GBV - I'm disappointed on that 'OTM'. Give the new stuff a chance - I'd rank Cool Planet up there w/ Propeller, UTBUTS, Vampire On Titus ... I think they're post 2011 stuff (yes, 'let's go eat the factory' was a mis-step) gets better as each album comes out. Now that they've gotten rid of Fennell as a drummer, they're only sounding better. Yes the Pollard 'bro'-y' performances are a little cringeworthy live, but the original spirit is there for sure. Don't give up. They won't hit re-united MoB or DJr. levels, but I think what they're putting out is special in its own right.

That said - Black Flag debacle may be worst on this list.

BlackIronPrison, Friday, 18 July 2014 18:07 (ten years ago)

do people still hate the pixies for that reunion? those shows in 2004 or so were pretty good.

does branwell still think slowdive should not have reformed given that the album the wound up putting out is exceptional as have all their live shows?

akm, Monday, 20 November 2017 13:33 (seven years ago)

"Kraftwek. Although, like Boney M, they put on a hell of a show.

― everything,"

if they put on a great show (and they do) I don't know why they'd be up for consideration. also I don't know that I'd ever consider kraftwerk as split up and reformed. they just evolve slowly over huge periods of time.

akm, Monday, 20 November 2017 13:34 (seven years ago)

"what are the biggest sham reunions that have happened? I don't mean "XXX plays the hits of YYY" type reunions, I mean reunions that went under the band's original name with 65-80% of the original members missing, or with the band's most identifiable member not joining (and not for a reason of "being dead")..."

the current iteration of Yes with Steve Howe is pretty much like this, now that Squire is dead. The only other very long time members you have are Geoff Downes, who was only on one proper Yes album at the time, and Alan White, who actually may or may not be involved alf the time because he can't drum anymore and they get a second drummer to follow him. If Howe had any sense he'd join the other Yes with Anderson, Wakeman and Rabin and do a final thing before hanging it up.

akm, Monday, 20 November 2017 13:36 (seven years ago)

Is White’s lack of chops why they take the songs at such a deadly slow tempo, or is it just a function of all these old guys needing the extra room?

cosmic brain dildo (Sparkle Motion), Monday, 20 November 2017 15:27 (seven years ago)

A sham reunion that never happened -- few bought tickets, so it was cancelled:

http://www.thewho.net/australia/images/cominglge.jpg

Ironically, it was Pete Townshend who suggested Daltrey and Entwistle tour Australia without him and call it "The Who."

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 20 November 2017 15:38 (seven years ago)

And the current lineup of Dr. Feelgood has no original members, despite the fact that three of the original four are still alive.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 20 November 2017 15:40 (seven years ago)

I think that's been the case for about 20-25 years? *consults Wikipedia* yes, since Lee Brilleaux died in 1994.

Colonel Poo, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:01 (seven years ago)

Yeah, but it's a "showband" innit?

Mark G, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:05 (seven years ago)

Yeah, dunno if they even count as a "reunion," sham or otherwise, since I think they just kept slotting new people in whenever someone left.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 20 November 2017 16:06 (seven years ago)

It's sort of like The Lurkers (a band without a thread, btw)

The original four split up. They reformed with a new vocalist, and the bass player that replaced the original one for a few singles.

Gradually, they all left apart from that 'replacement' bass player, and that's been the band for the past 20 years. This band are not really representative of the original band, but the continuum is there, sort of.

Anyway, the three original original Lurkers have reformed and they're The Lurkers GLM (as in Gods Lonely Men, their second album).

Still, Howard Wall is having none of it.

Mark G, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:09 (seven years ago)

Yeah I think they can be grouped with Napalm Death xp

Colonel Poo, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:10 (seven years ago)

Pop Will Eat Itself's current line-up is just one original member

Colonel Poo, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:14 (seven years ago)

Mentioned in the AC/DC thread, but with Malcolm now dead, Cliff retired, Brian going deaf, and Phil in legal limbo, the current line-up is just Angus and whomever.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:16 (seven years ago)

But is there an actual line-up? Obviously it's too soon to answer, but.

Mark G, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:18 (seven years ago)

Well, maybe Axl? Whoever it is will comprise an essentially entirely new band.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:23 (seven years ago)

ACDCINXS

Mark G, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:24 (seven years ago)

I fully expect that post to pop up in the "First Mentions" thread in five years.

Mark G, Monday, 20 November 2017 16:25 (seven years ago)

J Geils Band touring without J Geils was always hilarious

fuck you, your hat is horrible (Neanderthal), Monday, 20 November 2017 19:19 (seven years ago)

Pop Will Eat Itself's current line-up is just one original member

― Colonel Poo, Tuesday, November 21, 2017 3:14 AM (three hours ago)

Even weirder is that it's one member, the singer from Gaye Bykers On Acid, and three younger dudes from nu-metal bands. Also amusingly, the reunion originally included all five classic-era members, but one by one the rest left because they couldn't work with Gra... who'd been the first to quit in 1995. (Back then they carried on for a year, until splitting over ego that the lead singer had writers' block and the late-joining drummer was bringing most of the songs.)

Mentioned in the AC/DC thread, but with Malcolm now dead, Cliff retired, Brian going deaf, and Phil in legal limbo, the current line-up is just Angus and whomever.

― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, November 21, 2017 3:16 AM (three hours ago)

For all that it will feel sad and weird if Angus carries on (though if he'd rather tour than mourn, good on him), the "whomever" is currently a guitarist who was in the band in 1988 and grew up with, went to school with (shout-out to Ashfield Boys High), & learnt guitar with the Malcolm & Angus, and a drummer who was in the band from 1989 to 1994. Plus Axl, who's a better singer than Brian Johnson.

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Monday, 20 November 2017 20:11 (seven years ago)

the

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Monday, 20 November 2017 20:12 (seven years ago)

For sure. And Tommy Stinson played bass in GNR longer than Duff, Richard Fortus longer than Slash and Dizzy longer than anyone but Axl.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 20 November 2017 20:17 (seven years ago)

Ha, well. My point was that Angus has striven to only use prior AC/DC members in the recent replacement calamities, not just getting in some randos and one actual Replacement.

(pre-Cliff bassist Mark Evans still plays live on the reg, but there's deep beef there.)

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Monday, 20 November 2017 21:57 (seven years ago)

Pwei; ditto The Wonder Stuff! Matey and the only other person who can stand to be in the same room as him; his wife. Plus 3 other ransoms.

piscesx, Monday, 20 November 2017 22:55 (seven years ago)

Wonder Stuff more egregious: when reformed PWEI got down to a duo, they changed the name as it had become something else; after it went down to one, he asked the others if they'd mind him forming a new PWEI and they all gave their blessing on the principle of "well we're not going to use the name, go ahead mate."

Whereas the members of the reformed Wonder Stuff who were managing the band and running the website found out that noted rhyming slang Miles Hunt had decided they weren't in the group anymore, when fans emailed to ask why the advertised tour dates weren't on the website. (Hunt's "main" band The Miles Hunt Club weren't selling tickets or CDs, so he just decided to rebadge them as the Wonder Stuff before sending the second album to print.)

The PWEI drummer, who's always had a gigging career, did a stint in the Stuff for a year or two recently, and the bassist stands in with EMF on their occasional reunion gigs, so I believe there have been nostalgia all-dayers with three Poppies playing, but only one in "PWEI."

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 11:13 (seven years ago)

Current Eagles is pretty weird: Don Henley, Joe Walsh & Timothy B. Schmit, with Vince Gill and Deacon Frey. So you've got founder Don, longtime replacements Joe and Timothy, ringer Vince Gill and dead founder's son Deacon.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 21 November 2017 16:36 (seven years ago)

Pwei; ditto The Wonder Stuff! Matey and the only other person who can stand to be in the same room as him; his wife. Plus 3 other ransoms.

Quite like the idea of them being ransoms, not randoms.

"Please let us go."

"YOUR FAMILY HASN'T PAID YET. Now, again with "Welcome to the Cheap Seats.""

"Argh, noooo...."

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 21 November 2017 16:51 (seven years ago)

Anyway, Simple Minds I guess sorta half counts though Jim and Charlie have doggedly stuck it out all these years, somehow.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 21 November 2017 16:52 (seven years ago)

The best worst might still be the fake Zombies that toured after the group dissolved, with no original members.

The original line-up declined to regroup for concerts following the belated American success of "Time of the Season". In turn, various concocted bands tried to capitalise on the success and falsely toured under the band's name. In a scheme organized by Delta Promotions, an agency that also created fake touring versions of The Animals and The Archies, two fake-Zombies were touring simultaneously in 1969, one hailing from Texas, the other from Michigan. The Texas group featured bassist Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard, soon to be members of ZZ Top. Another group toured in 1988, going so far as to trademark the group's name (since the band had let the mark lapse) and recruit a bass guitarist named Ronald Hugh Grundy, claiming that original drummer Hugh Grundy had switched instruments.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 21 November 2017 17:06 (seven years ago)

okay that's great about ZZ Top. never knew. wonder if any of the fake Archie Bell & The Drells outfits contained the seeds of greatness.

gimme the beet poison, free my soul (Doctor Casino), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 17:08 (seven years ago)

there was a completely fake fleetwood mac lineup that toured in 1974

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleetwood_Mac#1974:_The_fake_Fleetwood_Mac

akm, Tuesday, 21 November 2017 18:40 (seven years ago)

hahahahaah thread delivers

fuck you, your hat is horrible (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 19:19 (seven years ago)

the current Beach Boys touring act is pretty much Mike Love, Bruce Johnston, John Stamos, and a whole buncha hired guns that are in their 30s-40s.

so as you can imagine, all the Brian Wilson songs sound hella fucking weird.

fuck you, your hat is horrible (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 19:20 (seven years ago)

^ absolute nonsense. Stamos is not in the band, Cowsill and Foskett are both 61, Totten I'm guessing is in his '50s since he's been playing for over 30 years, and I'd never pay to see them but "as I can imagine," hiring the dude who was Brian's right-hand-man and musical director for his entire solo touring career would be the best possible way to make the Brian songs not sound hella fucking weird.

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 19:48 (seven years ago)

looked up the keyboard player: he's 56 and has been in the touring band for 20 years

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 20:02 (seven years ago)

I was guessing based on the way that they looked. I was off a few decades I s'pose. (this was also 8 years ago that I saw them)

Stamos is not in the band full-time, but he played pretty much the entire show that I saw. Even sang lead on a song. It became a Stamos side-show at times, they kept drawing reference to him.

They sound weird because they're not Brian Wilson. I didn't say they didn't sound "good" - but they didn't sound like the Beach Boys, either.

fuck you, your hat is horrible (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 21:21 (seven years ago)

there's also the fact that unlike you, I've heard them

fuck you, your hat is horrible (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 21:24 (seven years ago)

so because John Stamos guested at one show you saw eight years ago, all of the changes to lineup, arrangements and setlists that writers about the Beach Boys have noted since then never happened, and Jeff Foskett did not swap places with Matt Jardine after the 50th anniversary tour that only used two of Mike's players. since I saw that lineup, I guess I have a better claim to "having heard them" than you?

according to http://esquarterly.com/bellagio/gigs.html, Stamos has guested at three shows in the last eight years (two of which were benefits for Goodwill in Orange County, organised by Stamos, whose brother in law is the CEO). the Mike & Bruce band play over 150 shows a year.

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Wednesday, 22 November 2017 00:03 (seven years ago)

it's entirely plausible that they sounded weird eight years ago (especially if they were playing to the sort of crowd that would even care if Stamos was there!), or that 20 of those 150 shows a year are duds now due to any number of factors. but to double down on saying "the current touring act" sounds weird on songs Brian Wilson wrote, when Mike's Beach Boys started adding loads of Brian album tracks and non-hits into their setlists for non-state-fair gigs in 2011, and JEFF FOSKETT (re-)JOINED IN 2013, is pretty pointless.

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Wednesday, 22 November 2017 00:15 (seven years ago)

hiring the dude who was Brian's right-hand-man and musical director for his entire solo touring career

Apols for a dumb question but who are you talking about here, Sic?

Tim, Friday, 24 November 2017 11:44 (seven years ago)

Stamos was on the UK tour earlier this year.

PaulTMA, Friday, 24 November 2017 12:20 (seven years ago)

omg who cares who is a bigger authority on the shitty mike/bruce band? yah even foskett sucks now with that shitshow. jesus.

kurt schwitterz, Friday, 24 November 2017 12:23 (seven years ago)

Tim - he's talking about Jeff Foskett

kurt schwitterz, Friday, 24 November 2017 12:24 (seven years ago)

Ah OK, I was under the impression that Darian Sahanaja was the Musical Director / Band Leader for most of Brian's solo touring, hence my confusion.

Tim, Friday, 24 November 2017 12:33 (seven years ago)

When I saw Bri perform Pet Sounds last year, the band leader was the sax playing guy, Paul Von Mertens - confirmed in this piece about the group:

https://www.npr.org/2016/07/09/484983061/pet-sounds-and-the-band-that-gets-to-play-it-onstage

Ward Fowler, Friday, 24 November 2017 12:43 (seven years ago)

that's interesting - can you remember whether Darian was in the band that night? I know he's not there the whole time these days. This one (from 2015) says he'd been musical director since 1999: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/meet-brian-wilsons-secret-weapon-darian-sahanaja-20150630

Tim, Friday, 24 November 2017 13:54 (seven years ago)

I don't think he was, Tim - but there were a lot of ppl on stage!

Ward Fowler, Friday, 24 November 2017 14:04 (seven years ago)

two weeks pass...

and I'd never pay to see them but "as I can imagine,"

unexpectedly I saw them for free two days ago, standing eight feet from the stage

it is with a heavy heart I must report that the "Beach Boys" sounded fucking great

shackling the masses with plastic-wrapped snack picks (sic), Sunday, 10 December 2017 08:04 (seven years ago)

not a fan to begin with, but the sublime one seems particularly gross/egregious.

© louis jagger/richards (Pillbox), Sunday, 10 December 2017 08:16 (seven years ago)

like if they could afford or legally rationalize touring with a hologram, they would totally be doing that.

© louis jagger/richards (Pillbox), Sunday, 10 December 2017 08:18 (seven years ago)

Well, they in that case is just Eric Wilson the bass player and Rome Ramirez at this point, as Sublime drummer Bud Gaugh quit in regret pretty early on and hired gun Josh Freese left a year or two ago.

In March 2015, Ramirez appeared on Blues Traveler's album Blow Up the Moon, co writing the song "Castaway" and "Vagabond Blues" with Dirty Heads.

how's life, Sunday, 10 December 2017 13:33 (seven years ago)


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