- Dicky Barrett
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For the New Zealand whaler and trader, see Dicky Barrett (trader).
Dicky Barrett Background information Birth name Richard Michael Barrett Born June 22, 1964
Providence, Rhode Island, U.S.Genres Ska punk
Punk rockOccupations television announcer
musician
radio personality
actor
voice actorYears active 1983–present Labels Taang!
Mercury Records
Big Rig Records
SideOneDummy RecordsAssociated acts Mighty Mighty Bosstones (1985 - 2003, 2007-present)
Toxic Toast
Cheapskates
Impact UnitWebsite Official Site (SideOneDummy Records) Richard Michael Barrett (born June 22, 1964), better known as Dicky Barrett, is the frontman of Ska punk band The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, and the announcer for Jimmy Kimmel Live. Barrett is known for his distinctive loud, gravelly voice.
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Personal life
Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Barrett attended Norwood Junior High School and Xaverian Brothers High School in Massachusetts. He left Xaverian Brothers High School and went on to Norwood Senior High Norwood, MA and later Bunker Hill Community College where he met Bosstones drummer Joe Sirois. He now lives in Los Angeles. He has mentioned that he is the illegitimate brother of ESPN's Bill Simmons and that he is an Irish Catholic.[1]
Music
Prior to his association with the Bosstones, Barrett played in the local Boston area bands Cheapskates, Toxic Toast (as mentioned in Michael Patrick MacDonald's book "Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under"), and Impact Unit.
Barrett has spent the majority of his musical career playing with the Mighty Mighty Bosstones. He appeared on eight full-length albums, three EPs and a live album with the Bosstones, as well as touring continuously throughout the world, until the band's announcement of a hiatus in December 2003. The band's 1997 release, Let's Face It, would prove to be the band's biggest break, mostly due to the first single "The Impression That I Get," which charted at number one on the Billboard charts. The band's latest full length album entitled Pin Points and Gin Joints was released in 2009.
In 2003, Barrett began working on an untitled solo album. The album was said to be a radical departure from the ska-core sound made popular by the Bosstones. Barrett was quoted as saying that the album will be "more somber, darker".[2] Fellow Bosstone, Lawerence Katz, was said to be assisting Barrett with the recording of the album. However there has been no further mention of the album, and its uncertain whether the album will be released.
Barrett has also made guest appearances on tracks from The Unseen, No Use For A Name, Rancid, H2O, Clowns for Progress, the Stubborn All-Stars, The Gaslight Anthem, The Briggs and local Boston band Darkbuster.
Barrett appeared on two Brain Failure tracks, which are featured on their split entitled "Beijing to Boston" with Big D and the Kids Table.
Barrett had guest vocals on the Street Dogs song "Justifiable Fisticuffs" from their first album Savin Hill, on The Gaslight Anthem song "The Patient Ferris Wheel" from their album The '59 Sound, and on "Charge Into The Sun" from The Briggs' album Come All You Madmen . Also H2O songs "Force Field" and "Faster Than The World" from their 1999 album F.T.T.W., as well as Rancid's song "Cash, Culture and Violence" on their album Life Won't Wait.
Barrett announced that the 10th official Hometown Throwdown, will occur between the 26th-30 December 2007 at Cambridge's famed Middle East. Barrett also confirmed that the Bosstones would be joining him. He seemed unwilling to confirm any long-term plans for the band. Aside from the 10th Throwdown, he performed with the rest of the Bosstones on New Year's Eve 2007 in Providence, RI.
The Bosstones returned to the recording studio to record three new songs, which were included with unreleased material and vinyl b-sides on a collection titled Medium Rare released on December 18, 2007.
Radio
Barrett became the host of his own radio show, the "Mighty Morning Show" on Los Angeles radio's Indie 103.1 FM from 2005 until his firing on March 22, 2006, under mysterious circumstances.[3]
He has been a regular on three of Boston's rock stations: WAAF, WBCN, and WFNX.
In 2005, it was rumoured in that Barrett would be Howard Stern's replacement at heritage rock station WBCN.[4]
On the April 13th, 2009 episode of The Adam Carolla Podcast, Dicky Barrett was Adam's guest. Over the years, he has also been a regular guest on Adam's former show, Loveline.
He was a guest on Bill Simmons' The B.S. Report Podcast on December 8, 2009 with Cousin Sal and Super Dave Osborne.
On screen
In the mid-1990s, Barrett appeared as a bus driver on the Nickelodeon show Bus No 9. He also has a cameo role in the film Home of Phobia which was screened at the Sundance Film Festival
While Barrett was with the Bosstones he performed on several television shows, including Saturday Night Live, The Jon Stewart Show, as well as Sesame Street's Elmopalooza. Also, he and the rest of the Bosstones appeared in the film Clueless.
Barrett portrays a prison inmate in the unreleased 1999 film Big Helium Dog.
After the Bosstones went on hiatus Barrett became the announcer for ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live in 2004.
Barrett has also done voice-over work for Minoriteam and appears in the documentary film American Hardcore. He has appeared on an episode of Criss Angel's Mind Freak. As well he portrayed rock pioneer Bill Haley in the miniseries Shake, Rattle, and Roll: An American Love Story.
Barrett in popular culture
In the April 2007 edition of Mad magazine, in the comic strip Monroe, the main character meets a school kid named Dicky Barrett. He looks strikingly similar to the real Dicky Barrett. This is owing to Barrett's association with fellow Kimmel staffer Anthony Barbieri, who writes the Monroe feature.
References
- ^ Ink 19 :: The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
- ^ Sullivan, Jim (2003-12-16). "The Throwdown? No. Bosstones? Who Knows?". Boston.com. http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2003/12/16/the_throwdown_no_bosstones_who_knows/. Retrieved 2007-04-15.
- ^ "Dicky Barrett Speaks: "I was fired that day"". lavoice. http://www.lavoice.org/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1674. Retrieved 2007-04-15.
- ^ Howard Stern.com
External links
Dicky Barrett · Tim "Johnny Vegas" Burton · Ben Carr · Joe Gittleman · Lawrence Katz · Joe Sirois · Chris Rhodes · Kevin Lenear
Nate Albert · Dennis Brockenborough · Josh Dalsimer · Roman Fleysher · Tim BridewellDiscography Studio albums Devil's Night Out (1989) · More Noise and Other Disturbances (1992) · Don't Know How to Party (1993) · Question the Answers (1994) · Let's Face It (1997) · Pay Attention (2000) · A Jackknife to a Swan (2002) · Pin Points and Gin Joints (2009) · The Magic of Youth (2011)EPs and other releases Where'd You Go? (1992) · Ska-Core, the Devil, and More (1993) · Live from the Middle East (1998) · Medium Rare (2007)Singles "Someday I Suppose" · "Don't Know How to Party" · "A Man Without" · "Almost Anything Goes" · "Last Dead Mouse" · "Detroit Rock City" · "Kinder Words" · "Pictures to Prove It" · "Hell of a Hat" · "The Impression That I Get" · "The Rascal King" · "Royal Oil" · "Wrong Thing Right Then" · "Every Trick in the Book" · "So Sad to Say" · "She Just Happened" · "Fabled Barney and the Population" · "You Gotta Go!"Categories:- 1964 births
- American rock singers
- American ska singers
- American radio personalities
- American television personalities
- American Roman Catholics
- Living people
- People from Providence, Rhode Island
- Musicians from Rhode Island
- Ska musicians
- People from Norwood, Massachusetts
- Musicians from Massachusetts
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