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The Flaming Stars

 
Artist: The Flaming Stars
The Flaming Stars

Group Members:

Joe Whitney, Huck Whitney, Mark Hosking, Paul Dempsey, Max Decharne

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Performed Songs By:

Max Decharne

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1994, Los Angeles, CA
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "London After Midnight: Singles, Rarities and Bar Room Floor-Fillers 1995-2005," "Sunset & Void," "Sell Your Soul to the Flaming Stars"
  • Representative Songs: "Bring Me the Rest of Alfredo," "The Face on the Bar Room Floo," "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye"

Biography

The garage band the Flaming Stars came together in 1994 under the guidance of ex-Gallon Drunk drummer Max Decharne (vocals/keyboards). Joining him are Paul Dempsey (bass), Joe Whitney (drums), Mark Hosking (guitar), and Huck Whitney (guitar). The Flaming Stars, who spark a haunting swagger similar to Nick Cave and the Tindersticks, spent the next year wowing European audiences while honing a dark, guitar-driven sound. In March 1995, the Flaming Stars issued their debut EP, Hospital, Heaven or Hell. U.K. radio personalities John Peel and Steve Lamacq were instant fans of the first single, "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye," and praised the song on their respective radio shows. Several John Peel session releases would be issued throughout the remainder of the '90s. In spring 1997, the Flaming Stars recorded and released Bring Me the Rest of Alfredo Garcia while Sell Your Soul to the Flaming Stars appeared three months later. Tours of the U.K. were massively successful, gaining the Flaming Stars momentous airplay in England. They weren't exactly superstars, but fans quickly absorbed the band's sinister rock appeal. The band issued the dramatic, epic A Walk on the Wired Side in winter 2001. It was an angry, cynical record, but equally passionate and sultry. "Some Things You Don't Forget" was a moderate hit in Europe, but the Flaming Stars remained practically unknown in America. Still, the band trudged on; they inked a deal with Jello Biafra's Alternative Tentacles label, giving the Flaming Stars an outlet to introduce themselves to America. The theatrical performance of Ginmill Perfume appeared in October 200, tantalizing tales of exotic travels were found on the Sunset & Void album in fall 2002, and the down-and-dirty saga of Named and Shamed arrived in 2004. Soon after, the group's longtime label in the U.K., Vinyl Japan, folded and they moved over to the Big Beat label, which wasted no time in releasing the excellent career retrospective London After Midnight: Singles, Rarities and Bar Room Floor-Fillers 1995-2005. The band's eighth studio album, Born Under a Bad Neon Sign, followed in fall 2006. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Flaming Stars
Top
The Flaming Stars
Genre(s) Garage Punk
Indie rock
Years active 1994 - present
Label(s) UK - Ace Records/
Big Beat Records(current),
Vinyl Japan
US - Alternative Tentacles
Associated acts Gallon Drunk
Website http://www.myspace.com/theflamingstars
Members
Max Décharné
Huck Whitney
Mark Hosking
Paul Dempsey
Joe Whitney

The Flaming Stars are an English underground garage punk band known for their gritty rock and their brooding edge. The Flaming Stars can be compared to artists such as the Tindersticks and The Bad Seeds.

Contents

History

The band was formed in 1994 by lead singer and Ex-Gallon Drunk drummer Max Décharné, guitarists Huck Whitney and Mark Hosking, bassists Paul Dempsey, and Joe Whitney on the drums. The band was signed to the London-based, but Japanese owned, Vinyl Japan UK Ltd. The band first gained attention in Europe when they released their EP "Hospital, Heaven or Hell" which received praise from well known English radio personalities John Peel and Steve Lamacq, respectively. Because of this, they recorded six John Peel Sessions which were released throughout the 90s and eventually released together in 2000 on a double-disc album called The Six John Peel Sessions [1].

In 1996, the Stars released their first album, Songs From the Bar Room Floor, which was followed by Sell Your Soul to the Flaming Stars in 1997. In 2001, The Flaming Stars released A Walk on the Wired Side, a slight departure from their previous works. The album takes less from 1960's style garage rock and instead focused more on creating their own unique sound. The Stars gained a mild hit in the UK from their album A Walk on the Wired Side with the song, "Some Things You Don't Forget". The band received considerable attention in the U.K.'s underground scene while remaining fairly unknown in the United States. The Flaming Stars, not content with one album every few years, released their fifth studio album, Sunset & Void, in 2002.

Two years later in 2004, the Flaming Stars released Named and Shamed, their 10th anniversary album. In early 2006, Vinyl Japan went into receivership and the Stars were signed to Big Beat Records, which is owned by Ace Records [2]. On March 16, they released their first album on Big Beat, a 42 track compilation record titled London After Midnight: Singles, Rarities and Bar Room Floor-Fillers 1995-2005. In September 2006, they released their seventh studio album, Born Under A Bad Neon Sign.

Discography

Studio albums

Singles/ EPs

  • "Hospital, Heaven or Hell" (tracks "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye / Davy Jones' Locker / Like Trash / Revenge" - Vinyl Japan, March 1995)
  • The Face On The Bar Room Floor / Get Carter (Vinyl Japan, August 1995)
  • Money To Burn / Bandit Country / A Hell of a Woman / New Shade of Black (Vinyl Japan, December 1995)
  • Downhill Without Brakes / Broken Heart / Eat Your Heart Out / Burnt Out Wreck of a Man (Vinyl Japan, May 1996)
  • Ten Feet Tall / Spaghetti Junction (Vinyl Japan, December 1996)
  • Bury My Heart At Pier 13 / Down to You (live in London) (Vinyl Japan, March 1997)
  • New Hope For The Dead / Are You Being Served (Vinyl Japan, October 1997)
  • Sweet Smell Of Success / The Day The Earth Caught Fire / Never Missed You Tonight / A Place in the Sun (Vinyl Japan, April 1998)
  • Only Tonight (Vinyl Japan, November 1999)
  • You Don't Always Want What You Get / Saturday Night Special (Vinyl Japan, January 2001)
  • One Lonely Night / Days Like This (Alternative Tentacles, September 2001)
  • A Little Bit Like You / The Man Who Would be B.B. King (Vinyl Japan, September 2002)
  • Spilled Your Pint / Sixty Nine (Vinyl Japan, Bang! Records, 2004)
  • Stranger On the Fifth Floor / New Hope for the Dead (live in Germany) (Vinyl Japan 2005)

Other albums

Tracks on Other Compilations

  • The Face on the Bar Room Floor appeared on "Various Artists do the Nuclear Tests in Paris and Beijing" (Vinyl Japan, 1995) NB The Earls of Suave track "A Cheat" also appears on the same CD. The Earls featured many of The Flaming Stars.
  • Bring Me the Rest of Alfredo Garcia appears on the 'CD magazine' "Volume 15" (Volume, 1995)
  • Back of My Mind appeared on "Cowpunks" (Vinyl Junkie, 1996)
  • Like Trash appeared on "What Did You Come Down Here For? Music from Club Zitt" (Genki, 1996)
  • A Hell of a Woman appeared on "Plan Boom" (What's That Noise, 1998)

External links


 
 

 

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