The B-52s: Difference between revisions

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* In [[2004]], [[Subaru|Subaru of New Zealand]] used "Roam" for their television commercial.
* In [[2004]], [[Subaru|Subaru of New Zealand]] used "Roam" for their television commercial.
* In [[2007]], [[Target Corporation|Target Department Stores]] used "Junebug" from the ''Cosmic Thing'' album in a [[television commercial]].
* In [[2007]], [[Target Corporation|Target Department Stores]] used "Junebug" from the ''Cosmic Thing'' album in a [[television commercial]].
*Their first song "Rock Lobster" was also used in the Bam Margera skate film Cky 3 when Raab Himself is running and excreting at the same time.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 16:29, 15 June 2007

The B-52s

The B-52's are a New Wave rock band formed in Athens, Georgia in 1976.

The band's name comes from a particular beehive hairdo that is wrapped around, instead of teased, with an open "hole" in the top. During their early years, wigs of that style were often worn by the band's female singers Cindy Wilson and Kate Pierson. The band was not named after the airplane of the same name.

Wilson and Pierson formed the band with drummer Keith Strickland, guitarist Ricky Wilson (Cindy's older brother) and vocalist Fred Schneider after a drunken night at a Chinese restaurant and played their first gig in 1977 at a St. Valentine's Day party for friends. The B-52's sound is marked by the vocals and lush harmonies of Wilson and Pierson, and the generally monotone or spoken-word vocals of Schneider.

The band's quirky take on the New Wave sound of their era was a combination of dance and surf music set apart by the unusual guitar tunings used by Ricky Wilson. Their costume thrift-store chic set them apart as well. During the Mesopotamia tour, the band's famous wigs were under the care of Jackie Slayton, one of Athens's leading artists and long-time friend of the band.

Early recording success

The B-52's on the cover of their debut eponymous album.

Their first single, "Rock Lobster", recorded for DB Records in 1978 (see 1978 in music), was an underground success that led to the B-52's performing at CBGB's and Max's Kansas City in New York City. "52 Girls" was the B-side. Two versions of the single were released in the UK that featured the B-side "Running Around".

Their debut album, The B-52's, contained re-recorded versions of "Rock Lobster" and "52 Girls", along with six more originals and a remake of Petula Clark's classic "Downtown." It was eventually certified platinum.

The album had greater success overseas, especially in Australia, where it hit #7 on the back of three hit singles: "Planet Claire" (#43), "Rock Lobster" (#3) and "Private Idaho" (#11). "Rock Lobster" gave the band its first entry on Billboard's Hot 100 chart.

The follow-up, Wild Planet, reached the Top 20 on the Billboard 200 in 1980 and was certified gold. "Private Idaho" became their second Hot 100 entry; around this time the B-52's performed a breakout set on Saturday Night Live and were featured at the Heatwave festival in August 1980.

Party Mix! was released next, a remix album that took tracks from the first two LPs and presented them in extended forms.

Mid-point

Although recording sessions with David Byrne (of Talking Heads) failed, the recordings were released as the Mesopotamia EP in 1982 (Party Mix! and Mesopotamia would later be combined and released together on a single CD).

The Whammy! album in 1983 brought the band into electronic and drum machine experimentation, much to the chagrin of some of their early fans. "Legal Tender" became their third chart single. After the initial pressings of Whammy! were released, copyright issues with Yoko Ono led to the song "Don't Worry" being pulled and replaced on future copies of the album with a new track called "Moon 83", a variation on "There's A Moon in the Sky (Called the Moon)" from their debut album.

1984 brought about an eponymous solo album from Fred Schneider (Fred Schneider & the Shake Society) with contributions from bandmates Kate Pierson and Ricky Wilson. Tina Weymouth from the Talking Heads, Keith Haring and RuPaul appeared on the video clip for "Monster", a song about the "monster" in Fred's pants.

That year, the B-52's reformed to record Bouncing Off the Satellites. On October 12, 1985 Ricky Wilson died at age 32 of what was originally reported as cancer but was later revealed to be AIDS-related. Devastated, the band went into immediate seclusion and the album sank without any tour or promotion behind it.

Mainstream success

The B-52's on the cover of their breakthrough 1989 album "Cosmic Thing"

During the two year hiatus that followed Wilson's death, Strickland switched from drums to guitar, and the B-52's emerged in 1988 with a backing rhythm section which included Sara Lee, a former member of post-punk band, Gang of Four. Their song "Cosmic Thing" was a centerpiece of the soundtrack to the movie Earth Girls are Easy. In 1989 the band released the album Cosmic Thing which became their long-anticipated mainstream breakthrough. "Channel Z," a single from the new album, became an alternative and college radio hit, receiving significant airplay on MTV's modern rock show 120 Minutes.

"Love Shack" came next. With its party vibe and colorful music video (featuring a cameo by a then-unknown RuPaul) "Love Shack" not only became their first song to hit the US Top 40, but it went on to peak at #3. That peak was matched in early 1990 when "Roam" also hit #3. In Australia, the country that had most embraced the band a decade earlier, "Love Shack" stayed at #1 for 8 weeks.

A third single, "Deadbeat Club,", which reminisced about the band's early days in Athens and whose video was shot on location and featured a cameo by R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe, became a Top 30 hit. The Cosmic Thing album climbed into the Top 5 and earned multi-platinum certification. The group also had a hugely successful tour to support the record.

Continuing to be busy through 1990, Pierson lent her vocals to Iggy Pop's song "Candy," which gave him his first (and only) Hot 100/Top 40 hit. 1991 saw the repackaging and re-release of Schneider's solo record and gave him his first Hot 100 entry when "Monster" climbed to #85, and Pierson again guest-starred on a popular track, this time it being R.E.M.'s "Shiny Happy People," which hit the Top 10. Pierson appeared on several other songs from the band's chart-topping album, Out of Time.

In 1990 Cindy Wilson took time off from the band, with Julee Cruise filling in for her parts on the eventual tour. As a trio, The B-52's released Good Stuff in 1992, which gave them another top 40 hit. It is also the group's most overtly political album, having been activists and fund-raisers for environmental, AIDS and animal rights causes for many years.[1] Subsequent singles were not as successful and the album sold nowhere near as much as Cosmic Thing.

The band had its most recent chart entry in 1994 when, as "The BC-52's" they appeared in The Flintstones live-action movie and sang the title song. In the 1990s, ex-Duran Duran drummer, and Falun Gong activist, Sterling Campbell joined the band, but left in 2000 to tour with David Bowie and was replaced that year by Zachary Alford. A career retrospective, Time Capsule: Songs For a Future Generation, appeared in 1998 and Cindy Wilson rejoined the group on two new songs and a tour to promote the collection. A more extensive anthology, Nude on the Moon: The B-52's Anthology appeared in 2002.

As of 2006 the B-52's continue to perform, electrifying audiences with their quirky, innovative style and lush vocals. Recently, the band announced they are working on a new album and a compilation of new remixes of their earlier work. On the band's official website [1] Fred Schneider recently commented that the band is "working away" and looking forward to "another productive session... there is still plenty of work to do".

Side projects, solo albums & collaborations

  • Prior to the formation of The B-52's, Kate Pierson was the lead singer of a folk band called the Sun Donuts.
  • Guitarist Ricky Wilson features on the track "Breakin' In My Heart" from Tom Verlaine's self-titled 1979 debut solo album.
  • Fred Schneider's solo album, Fred Schneider & The Shake Society, was released in 1984, and again in 1990 in a repackaged form.
  • Fred contributed vocals to Richard Barone's 1990 allbum Primal Dream, appearing on Mr. Used To Be.
  • Kate contributed vocals to Iggy Pop's hit single "Candy" from his 1990 album Brick by Brick.
  • Kate appears on The Bongos album Beat Hotel, contributing vocals to Apache Dancing.
  • Kate appears on three tracks from R.E.M.'s chart topping album Out of Time – "Shiny Happy People", "Me In Honey", and "Country Feedback."
  • In 1996, Fred Schneider released a second solo album, Just Fred, produced by Steve Albini, who is famous for having worked with bands such as Nirvana.
  • Since 1999, Kate has been an occasional member of the successful Japanese pop group NiNa.
  • The B-52's performed the titular theme song that plays during the opening sequence of Rocko's Modern Life during seasons 2 and later.
  • In 2003, Cindy Wilson performed solo and released several MP3s under the name The Cindy Wilson Band.

Discography

Albums

Year Album U.S. UK
1979 The B-52's 59 22
1980 Wild Planet 18 18
1982 Party Mix! 55 36
1982 Mesopotamia EP 35 18
1983 Whammy! 29 33
1986 Bouncing off the Satellites 85 74
1989 Cosmic Thing 4 8
1990 The Best Of the B-52's: Dance This Mess Around (UK only) - 36
1991 Party Mix / Mesopotamia EP (re-issue) 184 66
1992 Good Stuff 16 8
1998 Time Capsule: Songs for a Future Generation (singles collection) 93 37
2002 Nude on the Moon: The B-52's Anthology 136 57

Singles

Year Song U.S. U.S. Dance US Modern Rock UK Album
1979 "Rock Lobster" 56 - - 37 The B-52's
1979 "Planet Claire"/"Rock Lobster"/"Dance This Mess Around" - 24 - - The B-52's
1980 "Private Idaho" 74 - - - Wild Planet
1980 "Private Idaho"/"Give Me Back My Man"/"Party Out of Bounds" - 5 - - Wild Planet
1980 "Give Me Back My Man" - - - 61 Wild Planet
1982 "Mesopotamia"/"Deep Sleep"/"Cake" - 13 - - Mesopotamia
1983 "Legal Tender" 81 - - - Whammy!
1983 "Whammy Kiss"/"Legal Tender"/"Song for a Future Generation" - 9 - - Whammy!
1983 "Song for a Future Generation" - - - 63 Whammy!
1986 "Rock Lobster"/"Planet Claire" (re-issue) - - - 12 -
1986 "Summer of Love" - 3 - - Bouncing Off the Satellites
1986 "Girl from Ipanema Goes to Greenland" - 10 - - Bouncing Off the Satellites
1987 "Wig" - - - 79 Bouncing Off the Satellites
1989 "(Shake That) Cosmic Thing" - - 7 - Earth Girls Are Easy soundtrack,
Cosmic Thing
1989 "Channel Z" - - 1 61 Cosmic Thing
1989 "Love Shack" 3 7 1 2 Cosmic Thing
1990 "Roam" 3 10 6 17 Cosmic Thing
1990 "Deadbeat Club" 30 - - - Cosmic Thing
1992 "Good Stuff" 28 - 1 21 Good Stuff
1992 "Is That You Mo-Dean?" 78 - - - Good Stuff
1992 "Tell It Like It T-I-Is" - - 13 61 Good Stuff
1993 "Hot Pants Explosion" - - - - Good Stuff
1994 "(Meet) The Flintstones" (as "The BC-52's") 33 3 - 3 The Flintstones soundtrack
1998 "Debbie" - 32 35 - Time Capsule: Songs for a Future Generation
1999 "Love Shack '99" 153 - - 66 -
  • In the 1970s and 1980s, Billboard's Dance Chart policy allowed multiple songs (or in some cases all songs) from an album or an EP to occupy the same position if more than one track was receiving significant play in dance clubs.

Videos

Laserdisc

Biographical books

Miscellanea

External links