- The Afghan Whigs
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The Afghan Whigs
The Afghan WhigsBackground information Origin Cincinnati, Ohio, United States Genres Alternative rock, soul rock Years active 1986–2001, 2006 Labels Sub Pop, Elektra, Columbia, Blast First, Mute Associated acts The Twilight Singers, The Gutter Twins, Hermano Members Greg Dulli
John Curley
Rick McCollum
Michael HorriganPast members Steve Earle
Paul BuchignaniThe Afghan Whigs were a soul-influenced American rock band from Cincinnati, Ohio. PopMatters described the band as "beyond simple genre categorization, and though lauded by the music press, never got their just due."[1]
Contents
Band history
Greg Dulli (vocals, rhythm guitar), Rick McCollum (lead guitar), John Curley (bass), and Steve Earle (drums - not to be confused with country musician Steve Earle) formed the band in Cincinnati late in 1986. [2] The Afghan Whigs had evolved out of Dulli's previous band, The Black Republicans, a band that Curley later joined. McCollum, who Curley would jam with after the Black Republicans broke up, was known for being quiet and contained and for a wide use of effect pedals. After the Black Republicans dispersed, Dulli moved to Arizona, where he wrote half the songs that would become their first album Big Top Halloween (1988) on their own Ultrasuede label. [3] The band signed to Sub Pop of Seattle in 1989. The Afghan Whigs were the first non-Northwestern U.S. band to record for the Sub Pop label.[4] In 1990, their first Sub Pop release Up in It was released. The album was followed by a limited edition single released by No.6 Records under the name 'Ornament' which included vocals by Scrawl singer Marcy Mays.
With the 1992 album Congregation and a limited covers EP, Uptown Avondale, the band adopted what would become their signature soul-influenced sound. The Afghan Whigs soon signed to a major label, Elektra Records, and in 1993 released another album, Gentlemen.[2] The singles “Debonair” (Modern Rock 20 hit) and “Gentlemen” received regular airplay on MTV and college radio. “Fountain and Fairfax” also appeared on the television series My So-Called Life in 1994.
1996 saw the band release the noir-influenced Black Love (the album featured Paul Buchignani on drums in place of Steve Earle). Although the main subjects in previous releases were liquor-drenched obsession, secrets and misery, Black Love was a step into a more dark, seedier and complex side of Dulli’s recording persona.[citation needed] The album peaked at #79 on The Billboard Top 200 chart.
In 1996, Dulli served as executive producer for the soundtrack for the Ted Demme film Beautiful Girls. The Afghan Whigs appeared in the film as a bar band, and contributed two songs to the soundtrack: Frederick Knight’s "Be For Real" and Barry White's "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe".
In 1998, The Afghan Whigs released their sixth album, 1965, on Columbia Records (Michael Horrigan, former Love Cowboys bassist replaced Buchignani). It was the band's last full-length album of original material.
The Afghan Whigs announced their split in 2001, citing the strain of geographic distance between members as the reason.
In 2006, The Afghan Whigs temporarily reunited.[5] The 1965 lineup recorded two new tracks ("I’m A Soldier" and "Magazine") featured on their retrospective titled Unbreakable: A Retrospective 1990–2006, released on June 5, 2007, through Rhino Records.[6]
On June 23, 2009 an Afghan Whigs tribute album was released, featuring contributions from Mark Lanegan, Joseph Arthur and 11 other artists influenced by the band.[7]
Current projects
- Dulli is currently recording and performing with Mark Lanegan as The Gutter Twins
- Dulli continues to record and tour with his evolving collective The Twilight Singers and as a solo artist
- Curley is the bassist of the Staggering Statistics
- McCollum is the guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter for Moon Maan[8]
- Horrigan is the bassist for Brendan Benson
- Earle is the songwriter, lead singer, and guitarist of Earle Grey
Discography
Main article: The Afghan Whigs discography- Big Top Halloween (1988)
- Up in It (1990)
- Congregation (1992)
- Gentlemen (1993)
- Black Love (1996)
- 1965 (1998)
References
- ^ A Prolific Greg Dulli Gets Down on Cover Songs and PopMatters | PopMatters
- ^ a b Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. pp. 10–11. ISBN 1-84195-017-3.
- ^ {{cite book | first= Bob | last= Grendon | year=2008 | title= Gentlemen | publisher= Continuum | pages= 11-15 | isbn= 978-0-8264-2910-0
- ^ Afghan Whigs Bio at Sub Pop
- ^ Afghan Whigs Reunite | Pitchfork
- ^ news : Summer’s Kiss | The Afghan Whigs, Twilight Singers, Gutter Twins, Greg Dulli + More
- ^ Summerskiss Records
- ^ Moonmaan.com
External links
- Summer's Kiss - A Tribute to The Afghan Whigs
- The Afghan Whigs Myspace Page
- The Twilight Singers
- Staggering Statistics
- Moon Maan
- The Afghan Whigs Allmusic entry
- An Afghan Whigs Farewell Essay
- Afghan Whigs at Rolling Stone
Studio albums Extended plays Uptown Avondale · What Jail Is Like EP · The B-Sides / The Conversation · Honky's Ladder EP · Bonnie & Clyde EP · Live at Howlin' Wolf, New OrleansCompilation albums Historectomy · Unbreakable: A Retrospective 1990–2006Singles "I Am the Sticks" / "White Trash Party" · "Retarded" · "Hey Cuz" · "Turn on the Water" · "Conjure Me" · "Mr. Superlove" · "Debonair" · "Gentlemen" · "What Jail Is Like" · "Going to Town" · "Somethin' Hot" · "66"Related articles Categories:- Alternative rock groups from Ohio
- Sub Pop artists
- Mute Records artists
- American rock music groups
- Rock music groups from Ohio
- Musical groups from Cincinnati, Ohio
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