Results for Fireball Ministry
On this page:
 
Artist:

Fireball Ministry

Fireball Ministry

Formed:
1999

  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Major Members: Emily J. Burton, James A. Rota

Biography

The members of hard rock trio Fireball Ministry -- Emily J. Burton, James A. Rota, and Helen Storer -- christened themselves with religious titles (bishop, reverend, and sister, respectively) in keeping with their band name, and issued their debut album, Ou Est La Rock?, in 1999 on Bong Load Records. By 2001, Storer left the band and John Oreshneck (drums) and Janis Tanaka (bass) joined the group just in time for the recording of FMEP. A deal with Nuclear Blast surfaced by 2002. The Second Great Awakening, which was produced by Grammy Award-winning Nick Raskulinecz (Foo Fighters, Queens of the Stone Age, System of a Down), marked Fireball Ministry's second album in 2003. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Representative Albums:

Their Rock Is Not Our Rock, Ou Est la Rock?, Second Great Awakening

Similar Artists:

7 Zuma 7, Firebird, The Atomic Bitchwax, Unida, Solarized, Church of Misery, Nebula, Queens of the Stone Age, Electric Wizard, Orange Goblin, Spiritual Beggars, Sons of Otis, Sheavy, Acrimony, Dieselhed, Slo Burn, Fu Manchu, Lutefisk, Acid King, The Obsessed, Kyuss, Sleep

Influences:

Saint Vitus, Monster Magnet, Black Sabbath
 
 
Wikipedia: Fireball Ministry
Fireball Ministry
Fireball Ministry, The Second Great Awakening era: John Oreshnick, Janis Tanaka, James A. Rota II, Emily Burton]]
Fireball Ministry, The Second Great Awakening era: John Oreshnick, Janis Tanaka, James A. Rota II, Emily Burton]]
Background information
Origin Los Angeles, California
Genre(s) Heavy metal
Stoner metal
Hard rock
Years active 1999 - present
Label(s) Bongload Records
Small Stone Records
Nuclear Blast
Liquor and Poker Music
Website Official Site
Members
James A. Rota II
Emily Burton
John Oreshnick
Johny Chow
Former members
Helen Storer
Brad Davis
Janis Tanaka
Yael

Biography

Conceived in Cincinnati in the late 90's by Rota and Burton, the band moved to New York City before settling in Los Angeles. After several years appearing with various big name bands in the genre (Danzig, Anthrax, Motörhead, Slayer) but without a breakthrough in sales they have found their own sound and are fast gaining a wider following. The track "King" was selected by Bam Margera and appeared on his Viva La Bands compilation. The band teamed up with Bam's brother Jess Margera when they toured Europe with CKY in 2004.[1] In addition, the track "The Broken" was included in the World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) video game WWE SmackDown! vs. RAW 2006 for the Sony PlayStation 2, further expanding the band's audience.

The band went through four different bass players, starting with Helen Storer, who played on the "Ou Est La Rock?" CD and was replaced by Fu Manchu bassist Brad Davis on FMEP, who was himself replaced by former L7 bass player Janis Tanaka on The Second Great Awakening. Former Systematic 4-stringer Johny Chow then took the place of Tanaka for the "Their Rock Is Not Our Rock" album, which was recorded at Dave Grohl's 606 West studio and like their previous works was produced by genre legend Nick Raskulinecz. In another Margera hook-up they supported CKY on their 2005 Adio Footwear-sponsored tour, having already opened for them on their UK Tour in 2004. Original drummer John Oreshnick took a leave of absence due to family issues in the Fall of 2006 to be replaced by Yael during their recent tour. Yael and Johny Chow were former bandmates in My Ruin. Yael subsequently left the band in Winter 2006, and Oreshnick rejoined.

Rota considered becoming an ordained minister, but was persuaded not to on account of possible legal and taxation issues. However, he did eventually become ordained and performed wedding ceremonies for Matt Deis of CKY and Erica Beckmann in November 2005, and Bam Margera and Melissa Rothstein in February 2007.

Inspiration

The band's imagery draws heavily from Christianity, with "ministry" in their name, the albums "The Second Great Awakening," and "Their Rock Is Not Our Rock," a reference to Deuteronomy 32:31. MTV.com described the band's music as having "a musical chemistry between the members... that makes their songs buzz with warmth".[2]

Current members

James A. Rota II- Guitar/Vocals
Emily Burton - Guitar
John Oreshnick - Drums
Johny Chow - Bass

Former members

Helen Storer - Bass, founding member (1999-2001)
Brad Davis - Bass (2001-2002)
Janis Tanaka - Bass (2002-2004)
Yael - Drums (2006)

Discography

Studio albums

Compilations

Notes


     
     

    Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "Fireball Ministry" at WikiAnswers.

     

    Copyrights:

    Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fireball Ministry" Read more

    Search for answers directly from your browser with the FREE Answers.com Toolbar!  
    Click here to download now. 

    Get Answers your way! Check out all our free tools and products.

    On this page:   E-mail   print Print  Link  

     

    Keep Reading

    Mentioned In: