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Royal Crescent Mob

 
Artist: Royal Crescent Mob
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Omerta," "Spin the World," "Something New, Old, and Borrowed (S.N.O.B.)"

Biography

In early 1985, the Red Hot Chili Peppers took a swing through Ohio, and within a matter of mere months, the city of Columbus produced the Royal Crescent Mob. "The R.C. Mob," as they were affectionately known to fans, was an appropriate moniker in that they were to the Red Hot Chili Peppers what Royal Crown Cola once was to Coke; similar in taste but different, some preferred Royal Crown to Coke, and it still moved plenty of cases of soda -- at least for a time. The Mob, main members being singer David Ellison, guitarist B. Emch, and bassist Harold "Happy" Chichester, were a force to be reckoned with in the Midwestern American club scene of the late '80s, routinely packing houses beyond capacity and regaling enthusiastic crowds with a tightly played and highly appealing blend of punk and funk. Their two big numbers early on were an original called "Get on the Bus" and a cover of Ohio Players' "Love Rollercoaster," and both were featured on their independently produced, six-track EP Land of Sugar, which appeared in 1986. The drummer's chair was a revolving door in the Mob until Carlton Smith settled into the job in 1987.

Although poorly recorded and difficult to find even when new, Land of Sugar was quickly snapped up by college radio stations and went into heavy rotation, generating enough interest in the Royal Crescent Mob that they were able to distribute their next two independent releases through Celluloid. Omerta and Something Old, New and Borrowed (aka S.N.O.B.) appeared in short order, and the latter title is sort of like "Land of Sugar II" in that it incorporates all six of the previous releases' songs. Both of these records did very well at college radio, and in late 1988, the majors came calling. The Royal Crescent Mob settled with Sire, which released the band's Richard Goetterer-produced major-label debut, Spin the World, in 1989. At that point, it seemed like the Mob, likewise, was on top of the world, but of Spin the World's ten tracks only "Hungry" charted on the Modern Rock chart, and it peaked at number 27.

Midnight Rose's appeared in 1990, and by this time the Royal Crescent Mob, at least in the studio, were trying to move away from "the white boy funk thing" into something that was more like "regular rock," and who can blame them? The Red Hot Chili Peppers were already doing the same thing. Midnight Rose's failed to click, and the Royal Crescent Mob were subsequently dumped by Sire, even as their live shows continued to draw huge crowds. Although the Mob were able to muster up a disc of a live set, Good Lucky Killer, in 1993, their days were already done by this point. Happy Chichester later formed the group Howlin' Maggie, and in an interview taken long after the Mob split, he stated that while relations between Sire and the Royal Crescent Mob remained positive, the promotion and publicity for their releases were done out of house. As a result, the Mob were unable to communicate with that part of their operation, and felt that it ultimately let them down. On the other hand, the Royal Crescent Mob's greatest strength was as a live act -- they could really turn on a crowd in a big way -- and this did not translate to the medium of recording with ease. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Royal Crescent Mob
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Royal Crescent Mob was a four-person punk-funk band from Columbus, Ohio formed in 1985. Also known to their fans as the R.C. Mob the band members included "Brian (B)Emch" (guitar), David Ellison (vocals, harmonica), Harold "Happy" Chichester (bass, vocals) and Carlton Smith (drums). The band released five albums of material and one ep in their nine year career. Two of these albums were released on Sire, a Warner Brothers Records subsidiary. In the late 1980s and early 1990s the band gained some national exposure by opening up for other major artists such as The Replacements, The B-52's, and The Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Smith would also record several tracks with 24-7 Spyz for their 1996 Heavy Metal Soul By The Pound album. Chichester went on to form Howlin' Maggie, worked with the Afghan Whigs, was a founding member of the Twilight Singers and is currently pursuing a solo career. Ellison has gone on to tour managing such artists as Alanis Morissette, Indigo Girls, Goo Goo Dolls, Avril Lavigne, and Panic at the Disco.

Contents

Discography

  • Land of Sugar EP (No Other) 1986
  • Omerta (Moving Target/Celluloid) 1987
  • Something New, Old and Borrowed (Moving Target/Celluloid) 1988
  • Spin the World (Sire) 1989
  • Midnight Rose's (Sire/Warner Bros.) 1991
  • 13 Destruction (Mobco) 1992
  • Good Lucky Killer (Enemy) 1994

Top songs (album)

  • "Get on the Bus" (Omerta)
  • "Big Mistake" (Midnight Rose's)
  • "Nanana" (Spin the World)
  • "Time Bomb" (Midnight Rose's)

Singles

Year Title Chart positions Album
US Hot 100 US Modern Rock US Mainstream Rock UK
1989 "Hungry" - 27 - - Spin the World

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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