Frenzal Rhomb | |
Background Information | |
Origin | Sydney, Australia |
Genre | Punk Rock |
Years active | 1991-present (on hiatus) |
Label(s) | Epitaph Australia Epic Liberation Shagpile Fat Shock How Much Did I Fucking Pay For This |
Associated Acts | Self Righteous Brothers Mindsnare |
Website | http://www.frenzalrhomb.com.au |
Members | |
Jason Whalley Lindsay McDougall Tom Crease Gordy Foreman | |
Former Members | |
Lex Feltham Ben Costello Bruce Braybrooke Karl Nat Nykyruj |
Frenzal Rhomb is an Australian punk band that formed in 1991, based in the city of Sydney. The band's current lineup is Jason Whalley (vocals), Lindsay McDougall (guitar), Tom Crease (bass) and Gordy Foreman (drums). McDougall is also responsible for Rock Against Howard, a compilation by Australian musicians against John Howard's government.
History[]
After touring as the support act while American punk bands The Offspring, Bad Religion and Blink 182 were in Australia, the group released their first album, 1995's Coughing Up a Storm (although their first release had been 1994's Dick Sandwich EP). Retitled Once a Jolly Swagman Always a Jolly Swagman, the album was issued on America's Liberation label two years later. Fat Mike, owner of Fat Wreck Chords and member of NOFX, got his hands on a copy of this album when NOFX toured with Frenzal in 1996. Impressed with what he heard, he apparently asked Jay if he'd fancy to bet the fate of the band to a game of pool. A victory to Jay later, Fat Mike had signed the band to Fat Wreck and released the 4 Litres EP, and soon became one of the biggest independent Australian bands. With the release of their second album Not So Tough Now, they were the self proclaimed 'Punkest Band on Earth'. In September 1997, the band released the album Meet The Family, their first with new guitarist Lindsay McDougall after original guitarist Ben Costello left to become a full time animal rights activist. The album was the first Frenzal LP to be certified gold in Australia. Frenzal Rhomb were also the headliners for the Australian leg of the 1998 Vans Warped Tour (they were recruited for the American edition as well).
The LP A Man's Not A Camel was released in Australia in March 1999 and was supported by a nationwide tour. It remains Frenzal Rhombs' highest placing album to date, reaching 11 on the ARIA charts (it also spawned Frenzal's highest placing single, "You Are Not My Friend", which reached No. 48). Overseas gigs in the USA were dropped after singer Jason Whalley suffered a heart attack in late 1999 and Frenzal Rhomb spent the first few months of 2000 lying low. They returned with the album Shut Your Mouth in November 2000, originally released on Epic Records in Australia, an off-shoot of Sony. After poor sales and reviews and an awkward few months, Sony dropped the band in mid 2001 and they then signed with Epitaph Records in Australia.
Without warning in April 2002, Lex Feltham left Frenzal Rhomb. The band claimed many wild stories about why he left, but one of the most amusing was that he was fired after thinking that Frenzal Rhomb should incorporate synth and keyboard work. The last song he recorded with the band was a cover of Midnight Oil's "The Dead Heart" for a tribute album. Rumours of him being a DJ in Sydney have surfaced, yet nothing concrete. After holding auditions in Sydney, Tom Crease was announced as the new Frenzal Rhomb bass player.
The band also appeared on the "World of Instruments" segment of "John Safran's Music Jamboree", where they played the song "Punch In The Face"
In April 2003, the band released Sans Souci. The album was Frenzal's most critically successful to date (save for perhaps Coughing Up A Storm, or Not So Tough Now) and was hailed as a return to form. Fat Wreck Chords were planning to release a vinyl LP of the album (as they had done with the preceding two albums) but withdrew it at the last moment.
The band released Forever Malcolm Young in 2006 with a minor radio hit in the title track and some controversy over the song "Johnny Ramone was in a Fucking Good Band, but He Was A Cunt". National touring followed, along with the announcement that Jay would be leaving both Frenzal and his job at Triple J to go on a world travel with his girlfriend.
2009 has seen Frenzal re-unite and plan "The Boys are Back in Brown" Australian tour.
Banned from Triple J[]
Prior to their employment at the station, their music was banned for a time by Triple J after Frenzal Rhomb criticised the station on air for playing the "same 40 songs".[1]
Jackie O controversy[]
The band caused a stir in the world of Australian commercial radio in July 2004 when they were threatened to be "buried" by commercial station 2Day FM, after an incident involving the band and 2Day FM presenter Jackie O at Bass in the Grass in Darwin[2]. Showing up almost too late to catch any of the gig she was supposed to MC, Jackie O attempted to speak with the audience during Frenzal Rhomb's already dramatically reduced set time. The band began playing over the top of her and Lindsay was heard saying "Jackie O... what the fuck?". Jackie O and her co-presenter, Kyle Sandilands called Jay while on air to demand an apology. There is controversy in regards to who the 'winner' of the on-air argument was, Kyle and Jackie O believing Jay to be hypocritical and offensive, while fans of the Frenzal Rhomb camp believed Jay to be calm and lucid while Jackie O and Kyle were childish and insulting. It cannot be denied that both parties exchanged insults, Jay asking Jackie O if she was "so precious that she couldn't handle a little bit of heckling"[3] while Kyle threatened violence, commercial penalties and called Jay an idiot. ABC Television's Media Watch covered the exchange and raised further issues about the conduct of Kyle and Jackie O. The whole conversation was streamed by bombshellzine.com and transcribed by Craig New on the 'OutwiththeNew' website and also on Frenzal Rhomb's myspace but it is no longer accessible from these sources. The conversation is currently on Youtube[4]. This incident resulted in Frenzal Rhomb being removed from the playlist of all Austereo radio stations, including the 2DayFM network and Triple M.
Current involvements[]
Jason Whalley and Lindsay McDougall also worked on radio as Jay and the Doctor. Their biggest role was as Triple J's breakfast show hosts from 2005 through 2007. Drummer Gordy Forman also plays in the Melbourne hardcore giant Mindsnare.
Jay and Lindsay also have a musical side project with Bow Campbell from Front End Loader, called the Self Righteous Brothers. Largely based on the outrageous American band, The Frogs, the Self Righteous Brothers are an essentially acoustic acts with very explicit lyrics covering the topics such as pregnant junkies and incest.
Frenzal Rhomb's most recent release was October 14th's Forever Malcolm Young which includes, for a limited time, a special edition DVD cover the bands touring exploits from 2002 up until 2005. It is titled Sucking All Over the World.
On Friday 26 September 2008 a bulletin[5] was posted on Frenzal Rhomb's myspace stating the possibility of touring again:
"So it looks like Jay is coming home from his year-long overseas jaunt sometime in Feb, and there's a 95% chance we're gonna do a Capital City tour in March. I say 95% because there's every possibility, being that Jay's been to some fucked up, out of the way places, that he'll come back as a dreadlocked, pot-smoking hippy who's pretty much resigned from society and won't even remember that he's in a band. . .oh, wait a minute. . . Anyway, we're going to tour, and as soon as we have more info, you'll fucken know about it. Up ya bum, and GO HAWKS. gordy"
Members[]
- Jason Whalley (vocals, guitar)
- Lindsay McDougall (lead guitar)
- Tom Crease (bass)
- Gordy Foreman (drums)
Former[]
- Lex Feltham (bass)
- Ben Costello (guitar)
- Bruce Braybrooke (drums)
- Karl (drums)
- Nat Nykyruj (drums)
Discography[]
Albums[]
- Dick Sandwich (1994)
- Coughing up a Storm (1995)
- Not So Tough Now (Jul 1996)
- Once a Jolly Swagman Always a Jolly Swagman (title of US release of Coughing Up a Storm) (1997)
- Meet the Family (Sep 1997)
- Mongrel (Sep 1998)
- A Man's Not a Camel (Mar 1999)
- Shut Your Mouth (Nov 2000)
- Sans Souci (Apr 2003)
- For the Terms of Their Unnatural Lives (2004)
- Forever Malcolm Young (2006)
EPs and singles[]
- Sorry about the Ruse (1994/Re-released in 1997)
- 4 Litres 7" (1995)
- Parasite (1996)
- Punch in the Face (1996)
- Disappointment (1997)
- There's Your Dad (1997)
- Mr. Charisma (1997)
- Mum Changed the Locks (1998)
- Some of My Best Friends Are Racist (1998)
- We're Going Out Tonight (1999)
- You Are Not My Friend (1999)
- Never Had So Much Fun (1999)
- I Miss My Lung (1999)
- War (2000)
- Coming Home (2001)
- Bucket Bong (2003)
- Punisher (2003)
- Looking Good (2004)
- Forever Malcolm Young (2006)
Other[]
- Short Music For Short People (1999)
- Rock Against Howard (2004)
References[]
- ↑ http://www.smh.com.au/news/TV--Radio/Early-morning-wakeup-call/2005/01/28/1106850095448.html
- ↑ Media Watch - Kyle & Jackie O - revenge
- ↑ A transcript and streaming audio of Jay and Lindsay's infamous interview with Jackie O and Kyle Sandilands (transcript, STREAM)
- ↑ Audio of interview
- ↑ http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID=30474454&blogID=436157259
External links[]
- Frenzal Rhomb official site
- Frenzal Rhomb's Blog
- Frenzal Rhomb on MySpace
- Frenzal Rhomb Discography at MusicBrainz
- Fat Wreck Chords
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Frenzal Rhomb. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Less Than Jake Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |