D.O.A. (band)

D.O.A. (band)
D.O.A.

D.O.A. playing in Montreal, 2010, Dan Yaremko, Joey Keithley with drummer Jesse Pinner in the back
Background information
Origin Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Genres Punk rock, hardcore punk, heavy metal
Years active 1978–present
Labels Sudden Death
Members
Joey Shithead
Dan Yaremko
Jesse Pinner
Past members
Chuck Biscuits
Randy Rampage
Dave Gregg
Simon "Stubby Pecker" Wilde
Zippy Pinhead
Wimpy Roy
Greg James
Dimwit
Kerr Belliveau
Chris Prohom
Jon Card
Ken Jensen
Ford Pier
John Wright
Brien O'Brien
The Great Baldini
Kuba Ohms
James Hayden
Floor Tom Jones

D.O.A. is a hardcore punk band from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. They are often referred to as the "founders" of hardcore punk, along with Black Flag, Bad Brains, Teen Idles, and Minor Threat. Their second album Hardcore '81 was thought by many[1] to have been the first actual reference to the second wave of the American punk sound as hardcore. Singer/guitarist Joey "Shithead" Keithley is the only founding member to have stayed in the band throughout its entire history. However, original bassist Randy Rampage has been active in the band in recent years and has played on one of the band's last three albums, although he is not in the current lineup. D.O.A. has often released music on Jello Biafra's Alternative Tentacles Records, and they have released an album with Jello Biafra titled Last Scream of the Missing Neighbors.

D.O.A. has always maintained an uncompromising anarchist populist political stance. The band is known for its outspoken political opinions and has a history of performing for many causes and benefits. Its slogan is "Talk minus Action equals Zero." The band has been active on many issues, including Anti-racism, anti-globalization, freedom of speech, and the environment.

Founder Joe Keithley now spends a great deal of time working with his record company Sudden Death Records which has branched off into many areas of music.

Contents

History

D.O.A was preceded by The Skulls, an early Vancouver-area punk-rock band that included future D.O.A members Joey “Shithead” Keithley, Brian “Wimpy Roy” Goble, and Ken "Dimwit" Montgomery.

When the Skulls broke up, Joey Shithead (guitar/vocals) formed D.O.A with Dimwit's brother Chuck Biscuits on drums and Randy Rampage on bass and vocals. The band put out a few singles and E.P.'s on Shithead's own Sudden Death label, and toured North America, sometimes with violent clashes with audience members and police. Their early sound was very basic, raw singalong melodic punk rock, with a lot of similarity to early punk bands like The Sex Pistols and the early albums by The Clash and The Ramones.

In 1980, they added second guitarist Dave Gregg, and put out their full-length debut Something Better Change on Friends Records. This was followed quickly by Hardcore '81, which is often credited with being the namesake for the hardcore punk movement. The music, as well, had gotten faster and more powerful and dynamic, a blueprint for the emerging hardcore sound.

Randy Rampage left the band on January 1, 1982, to be replaced by ex-Skulls drummer Dimwit on bass. After a short tour of California, Chuck Biscuits left the band and joined Black Flag. Dimwit switched back to drums and Subhumans's singer Wimpy Roy was hired as the new bass player and second singer, leaving Keithley as the only remaining original member.[2] This lineup would last from 1982–1983 and later 1985-1986 and produced several notable releases, including the EP War on 45 (now expanded into a full-length album). War on 45 found the band expanding their sound with touches of funk and reggae, as well as making their anti-war and anti-imperialist political stance more clear. 1985's Let's Wreck The Party and 1987's True (North) Strong And Free saw the band taking on a more mainstream, hard-rock oriented production, but without watering down the band's political lyrical focus. Meanwhile, the band's lineup changes continued after Let's Wreck the Party, with Dimwit replaced by Kerr Belliveau. Belliveau stayed only three weeks with the band but recorded the Expo Hurts Everyone 7" as well as two songs for True (North) Strong and Free before being replaced by Jon Card from Personality Crisis. Dave Gregg quit in 1988 after D.O.A. fired their manager Ken Lester, to which he was very close. The band hired Chris Prohom from the Dayglo Abortions as a replacement.[3]

1990's Murder featured rawer, almost thrash-metal production, rather than their original basic punk sound. The same year also produced a collaboration with Dead Kennedys singer Jello Biafra with Last Scream of the Missing Neighbors. In August 1990, Joey decided he was breaking up D.O.A. but, at the suggestion of promoter Dirk Dirksen, they did a farewell tour of the West Coast, playing their "final" show on December 1, 1990 at the Commodore in Vancouver. In 1991, they released a posthumous live album entitled Talk Minus Action = 0 while Joey tried to become an actor.[4]

However, 19 months after D.O.A. broke up, Joey Shithead and Wimpy Roy had reunited as D.O.A in the summer of 1992. Fellow Canadian punk rock veteran John Wright from NoMeansNo suggested they hire Ken Jensen from Red Tide as the new drummer, which they did.[4] The new lineup released an EP and two albums in the early 90's, 13 Flavours Of Doom and Loggerheads. These albums found the band replacing the more hard-rock oriented sound of the 80's with a return to punk rock, although it was a heavier, tighter brand of punk than their earlier work. These albums were produced by Wright, who also played keyboards on the recordings. The band then added Ford Pier on guitar and vocals.

Tragedy struck in 1995 when drummer Ken Jensen died in a house fire. The "Ken Jensen Memorial Single" EP was released on Alternative Tentacles, including two tracks each from D.O.A. and Red Tide. With John Wright filling in on drums, ninth full-length The Black Spot was recorded. The album featured a more basic, sing-along type punk rock sound that was reminiscent of the band's late 70's and early 80's output.

The late 90's found the band's lineup in turmoil, with Wimpy Roy leaving the band after a decade and a half of service. Keithley experimented with different bassists and drummers, managing to release another album of basic hardcore punk-rock style music with Festival Of Atheists. By the early 00's, the band had found a permanent drummer in the form of The Great Baldini. In 2002, Keithley put out his first solo album, Beat Trash, and original bassist Randy Rampage returned to the band after nearly 20 years for the Win The Battle album. However, the reunion did not last, with Rampage leaving the band again after the recording of the album, to be replaced by Dan Yaremko.

"The Lost Tapes" was the first release on Keithley's revived Sudden Death label, followed by "Festival Of Atheists". During this period, Keithley also oversaw the re-release of the band's classic early records on Sudden Death, many of which had been out of print for many years.

In 2003, Vancouver Mayor Larry Campbell declared December 21 to be "D.O.A. Day" in honour of the band's 25th anniversary.[5] In the same year, the band released a career-spanning retrospective entitled War And Peace. 2004 found the band releasing the ska-flavoured Live Free or Die. In 2006, Randy Rampage rejoined D.O.A. for his 3rd stint in the band.

The lineup remained stable until 2008, when The Great Baldini left the band to be replaced by new drummer James Hayden. Also in 2008, it was announced that Bob Rock, of Metallica fame would be producing the band's next album in time for their 30th anniversary.[6] James Hayden quit before D.O.A. started to record to be replaced by Floor Tom Jones In September 2008, D.O.A. released Northern Avenger and embarked on their 30th anniversary tour. On the eve of the tour, it was announced that Randy Rampage was being replaced by Dan Yaremko once again.

D.O.A. played several dates in the summer of 2009 as part of the Van's Warped Tour 2009.

On May 1, 2010, D.O.A. released their fourteenth full-length album, their second to be titled "Talk Minus Action = Zero." Drummer Jesse Pinner from the band Raised by Apes took the place of Floor Tom Jones beginning on D.O.A.'s Canadian tour in August 2010 because Floor Tom Jones, a Canada Post employee, couldn't free himself from his job to tour.[7]

Discography

Studio Albums

  • Something Better Change (1980)
  • Hardcore '81 (1981)
  • War on 45 (1982)
  • Let's Wreck The Party (1985)
  • True (North) Strong And Free (1987)
  • Murder (1990)
  • Last Scream of the Missing Neighbors (1990)(With Jello Biafra)
  • 13 Flavours Of Doom (1992)
  • Loggerheads (1993)
  • The Black Spot (1995)
  • Festival Of Atheists (1998)
  • Beat Trash (2002) - Solo Project from Joey "Shithead" Keithley
  • Win The Battle (2002)
  • Live Free Or Die (2004)
  • Northern Avenger (2008)
  • Kings of Punk, Hockey and Beer (2009)
  • Talk-Action=0 (2010)

Compilation Albums

  • Bloodied But Unbowed (1984)
  • The Dawning Of A New Error (1985)
  • Greatest Shits (1991)
  • Moose Droppings (1993)
  • The Lost Tapes (1998)
  • War And Peace (2003)
  • Greatest Shits (2005)
  • Punk Rock Singles 1977-1999 (2007)

Live Albums

  • Talk Minus Action Equals Zero (1991)

Singles, 7"s, EPs

  • Disco Sucks (4-song 7 inch EP on Sudden Death)
  • The Prisoner/Thirteen (7-inch on Quintessence)
  • Disco Sucks (re-released on Quintessence)
  • World War Three/Whatcha Gonna Do (7-inch on Quintessence; Ltd edition on Sudden Death)
  • Triumph Of The Ignoroids (4-sing 12-inch EP on Friends Records)
  • White Noise Tour (bootleg) (??)
  • Positively D.O.A. (7-inch EP on Alternative Tentacles)
  • Right To Be Wild (7-inch single feat. Fuck You b/w Burn It Down)
  • General Strike/That's Life (7-inch single)
  • Don't Turn Yer Back... (Peel Session) (4-song 12-inch EP on Alternative Tentacles)
  • Expo Hurts Everyone (7-inch EP with 3 other bands)
  • It's Not Unusual (7-inch EP on Alternative Tentacles)
  • The Only Thing Green
  • Ken Jensen Memorial Single (7-inch EP on Alternative Tentacles)
  • Sex, Drugs and Rock & Roll
  • Split w/ d.b.s.
  • Nervous Breakdown (Split with Dog Eat Dogma)
  • Beat 'Em, Bust 'Em
  • Just Play It Over And Over
  • Are U Ready (Split with Thor)

Music Videos

  • World War III
  • War
  • Dance O' Death
  • Takin' Care Of Business
  • Behind The Smile
  • We Know What You Want
  • Where Evil Grows
  • Death Machine
  • Hole In The Sky
  • I See Your Cross
  • Order
  • World Falls Apart
  • Driving To Hell And Back
  • Mexican Holiday
  • Police Brutality
  • Human Bomb
  • I Live In A Car
  • That's Why I'm an Atheist

Videos

  • Best Of Flipside
  • Live at the Assassination Club (1984)
  • Warrior (1986)
  • The End
  • Greatest Shits Video
  • Smash The State (2007)
  • American Hardcore (film) soundtrack song Fucked Up Ronnie

Compilations

Books

  • I, Shithead: A Life in Punk (Arsenal Pulp Press) link

References

  1. ^ Zach Baron, October 25, 2006, Pitchfork Media
  2. ^ Keithley, Joey (2003). I, Shithead: A life in punk. Arsenal Pulp Press. pp. 107–111. ISBN 1-55152-148-2. 
  3. ^ Keithley, Joey (2003). I, Shithead: A life in punk. Arsenal Pulp Press. pp. 202. ISBN 1-55152-148-2. 
  4. ^ a b Keithley, Joey (2003). I, Shithead: A life in punk. Arsenal Pulp Press. pp. 219–224. ISBN 1-55152-148-2. 
  5. ^ John Lucas. "D.O.A.’s punk veterans won’t give up the fight". The Georgia Straight. http://www.straight.com/article-69929/d-o-a-s-punk-veterans-won-t-give-up-the-fight. Retrieved 2007-05-20. 
  6. ^ Punknews.org | D.O.A. recording with Bob Rock
  7. ^ ""Pincher is going across canada with punkrock legends D.O.A." on the "Raised by Apes" blog". http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=22342223&blogId=538222802. 

External links



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