Saturday, 12 July 2008

Fear

Fear   
Artist: Fear

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Punk-Rock
   



Discography:


The Record   
 The Record

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 15




Along with Black Flag and the Circle Jerks, Fear helped define the sound and style of L.A. hard-core. Although they actually formed during the low gear undulation of toughie game in 1977, Fear didn't release an album until five-spot age subsequently, by which clock time they'd honed a hot, thrashy attack that, for all its fury, was surprisingly miserly and sometimes even intricate. Which is to say that, musically, the dance band wasn't as rough as frontman Lee Ving's outrageous, humorously offensive lyrics, which were geared to urine off anyone inside earreach, especially women and homosexuals; his vulgarity was equalled only by his sincere passion of beer. Fear's original incarnation fell apart subsequently scarce iI albums, simply Ving began touring with new lineups once more in the '90s.


Fear was formed in Los Angeles by vocalist Lee Ving (whose past tense is shrouded in secret, though he's rumored to be a Vietnam old hand), with the catch one's breath of the original lineup including tip guitar player Philo Cramer, bassist Derf Scratch, and drummer Johnny Backbeat. Rhythm guitar player Burt Good became a fellow member for a short fourth dimension in 1978, only became unnecessary when Ving decided to lease up the official document. The same year, Backbeat was replaced by Spit Stix. Fear issued its debut single, I Love Livin' in the City, at the beginning of 1978 on Criminal Records. They were in no benjamin Rush to record an album, however, and exhausted the adjacent few days without a track record look at; instead, they for the most part played punk clubs around the Los Angeles region, cultivating a volatile, confrontational stage presence. Fear's explosive appearance in theatre director Penelope Spheeris' tough chronicle The Decline of Western Civilization cemented their fable, and they found a devoted fan in comedian John Belushi, wHO talked Saturday Night Live into having the band on as a musical guest for the Halloween episode in 1981. Not a band to act in a public forum, Fear invited a tamp down of skinhead slam-dancers onstage for their performance, resulting in dear studio price and a spot of on-mic profanity.


Now notorious on a home degree, Fear lastly landed a criminal record get with Slash in 1982, and released their debut album, The Record, which nigh critics static agree was their best and funniest field day. Scratch left the stria afterwards on in the year, and was replaced first gear by Eric "Kitabu" Feldman (wHO appeared on the late-1982 single Fuck Christmas), then the Red Hot Chili Peppers' Flea; in 1984, Flea was in turn replaced by the Dickies' Lorenzo Buhne. 1983 base Fear taking some fourth dimension off for english projects; Stix went to Europe and united Nina Hagen's band, Cramer formed a stria called M'Butu Ngawa, and Ving chased a successful playacting vocation, acting sundry baffling guys in films like Flashdance (the peel nightclub possessor) and Streets of Fire, among others. In 1985, Fear released its second album, More Beer, simply presently drifted aside into other projects; they disbanded in 1987.


In 1991, near of Fear's prime batting order -- Ving, Cramer, and Stix, plus fresh bassist Will "Sluggo" McGregor -- reunited and began playing concerts once more. Live...For the Record was released later that year. Cramer and Stix both discontinue in 1993, end the reunion; Ving began touring with some other group, Lee Ving's Army, which included guitarist Sean Cruse, former Frank Zappa bassist Scott Thunes, and drummer Andrew Jaimez. This mathematical group finally became the modern Fear batting order, and entered the studio in 1995 to criminal record the band's first album of new material in a decennium, Get Another Beer With Fear, which was released by Sector 2. Over the future few years, Thunes was replaced by Mondo Lopez, and Cruse by Richard Presley; in 2000, the revamped Fear returned on the Hall of Records label with American Beer, some other all-new album.





Eddie Vinson and The Cannonball Adderley Quintet