Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Green on Red

 
Artist: Green on Red
Green on Red

Group Members:

Dan Stuart, Chuck Prophet, Alex MacNicol, Chris Cacavas, Jack Waterson

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Dan Stuart

Formal Connection With:

Wild Game, Giant Sandworms, Chris Cacavas, Danny & Dusty, Jack Waterson, Chuck Prophet, Opal, Naked Prey
  • Formed: 1981, Tucson, AZ
  • Disbanded: 1993
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Green on Red," "Gas Food Lodging/Green on Red," "Gravity Talks"
  • Representative Songs: "The Drifter," "Gravity Talks," "Cheap Wine"

Biography

Always wary of their Paisley Underground tag, it was only Green on Red's debut EP that leaned on the psychedelic sounds of the '60s before they traded it in for a boozy, all-American sound. They have been credited as latter-day forbears to the No Depression sound forged by Wilco and Son Volt.

Singer and songwriter Dan Stuart, Chris Cacavas (keyboards) and Jack Waterson (bass) formed their first group in Tucson, AZ, in 1979. Relocating to L.A., drummer Steve MacNicol joined up and the band released their debut EP on Steve Wynn's Down There label in 1982. By 1983, the band dumped the trippy psychedelic stuff for Gravity Talks, their Slash debut. By the time 1985's Gas Food Lodging rolled around and the band had added guitarist Chuck Prophet, they were earning critical accolades, but their greatest success came overseas with the release of 1985's No Free Lunch (Polygram). Between albums, Stuart paused to work with Steve Wynn and a smattering of their respective band members for their Danny and Dusty album, a record which allowed Stuart to play on his "drunken bum" persona. Prophet and Stuart continued to hone their darkish, down-and-out loser blues on The Killer Inside Me (1987, Mercury) and Here Come the Snakes (1989, Mercury), but by the time 1989's This Time Around (Mercury) came out, interest in their work stateside had ceased. Cacavas had since left the fold to begin what had become a consistent, albeit overlooked solo career. The Prophet/Stuart duo found an audience for their music in Europe for Scapegoats (1991, China) and Too Much Fun (1992, Off Beat), but ultimately traded in the madness of what had become their collaboration for quieter lives. Stuart relocated to Spain and Prophet continues the solo career he launched in 1990. His 1997 release Homemade Blood (Cooking Vinyl) bears little resemblence to the ramshackle outfit that was Green on Red. As it turns out, Prophet was a sleeper. ~ Denise Sullivan, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Green on Red
Top
Green on Red
Origin Tucson, Arizona
Genres Cowpunk
Country rock
Years active 1980s
Labels Enigma, Mercury
Website greenonred.net
Members
Dan Stuart
Jack Waterson
Chris Cacavas
Chuck Prophet
Jim Bogios
Former members
Van Christian
Alex MacNicol
Keith Mitchell

Green on Red were an American rock band, formed in the Tucson, Arizona punk scene, but based for most of its career in Los Angeles, California, where it was loosely associated with the Paisley Underground. Earlier records have the wide-screen psychedelic sound of first-wave desert rock, while later releases tended more towards traditional Country rock.

Contents

History

The band began in 1979 as The Serfers, a four-piece made up of Dan Stuart (vocals/guitar), Jack Waterson (bass), Van Christian (drums, later of Naked Prey) and Sean Nagore (organ), quickly replaced by Chris Cacavas.[1] In the summer of 1980, the Serfers relocated to Los Angeles, where they changed their name to Green on Red (after the title of one of their songs) to avoid confusion with the local "surf punk" scene. Christian returned to Tucson and was replaced by Lydia Lunch sideman Alex MacNicol.

The band issued a self-released red vinyl EP, sometimes called Two Bibles, though its first widely available record was an EP issued in 1982 by Dream Syndicate leader Steve Wynn on his own Down There label. Green on Red followed the Dream Syndicate onto Slash Records, which released the album Gravity Talks in the fall of 1983. San Francisco-based guitarist Chuck Prophet joined for the 1985 Gas Food Lodging (Enigma), after which MacNicol was replaced on drums by Keith Mitchell (later of Mazzy Star). In 2006 'Gas' was performed live in its entirety as part of the All Tomorrow's Parties-curated Don't Look Back series. Also in 1985, Stuart collaborated with Steve Wynn as "Danny and Dusty" on the album The Lost Weekend (A&M).

A major-label deal with Phonogram/Mercury followed, with the EP No Free Lunch and the album The Killer Inside Me, produced by Jim Dickinson at Ardent Studios in Memphis. The band split up afterwards; Cacavas began recording albums under his own name. When Stuart returned to recording, with the 1989 Here Come the Snakes, it was essentially as a duo with Prophet, using hired backing. Three more albums were released before the pair called it quits, after the 1992 Too Much Fun. Stuart essentially quit music afterwards; Prophet maintains a career as a solo artist and semi-celebrity sideman.

However, in September 2005, the band reformed in "golden era" line-up, Stuart, Cacavas, Prophet and Waterson, with Jim Bogios filling in for Alex McNicol (who died in the meantime) to play a one-off show as part of the celebrations for the 20th anniversary of Club Congress in Tucson. This was followed up by a show in London on 10 January 2006 (ostensibly to complete their aborted 1987 European tour), with more shows promised later in the year (and a second "Danny and Dusty" album came into production, followed by a Double-CD and DVD on Blue Rose Records).

Discography

  • Two Bibles (EP, Green on Red, 1981)
  • Green on Red (EP, Down There, 1982)
  • Gravity Talks (Slash, 1983)
  • Gas Food Lodging (Enigma, 1985)
  • No Free Lunch (EP, Mercury, 1985)
  • The Killer Inside Me (Mercury, 1987)
  • Here Come the Snakes (Mercury, 1988)
  • This Time Around (Mercury, 1989)
  • Scapegoats (China, 1991)
  • The Little Things in Life (China Records 1991)
  • Too Much Fun (Off Beat, 1992)
  • Archives: What We Were Thinking (Normal Records, 1998)
  • Valley Fever - Live at the Rialto (Blue Rose Records - CD + DVD 2006)
  • BBC Sessions (Maida Vale Records, 2007)

Danny & Dusty

  • The Lost Weekend (A&M Rec. – 395 075-1) CCD + LP 1985
  • Cast Iron Soul (Blue Rose Rec. – BLUDP 0418) CD + DVD 2007
  • Here’s to you, Max Morlock (Blue Rose Rec. – BLUDP 0531) DCD + DVD 2007

Notes

  1. ^ Fred Mills. "Downwardly Mobile Ambitions". Liner notes from "What Were We Thinking?" CD 1998. http://guitarbands.de/greenonredhistory.htm. Retrieved 21 October 2009. 

External links


Shopping: Green on Red
Top
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 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 Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Green on Red" Read more