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The Knack

 
Artist: The Knack
The Knack

Group Members:

Prescott Niles, Bruce Gary, Doug Fieger, Berton Averre, Billy Ward, Terry Bozzio

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

The Playmates, Pop Rocks, Big Wednesday, Pranks, Popsicko, Pop Sickle, Fletcher, LMNOP, The Critics, Weezer, Off Broadway, Good Times Crisis Band, Forest & Crispian, Marvelous 3, The Kings, Supremium

Performed Songs By:

Doug Fieger, Berton Averre
  • Formed: 1978, Los Angeles, CA
  • Disbanded: 1981
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Get the Knack," "The Retrospective: The Best of the Knack," "Get the Knack/...But the Little Girls Understand"
  • Representative Songs: "My Sharona," "Good Girls Don't," "Baby Talks Dirty"

Biography

Forming in Los Angeles in the late '70s, the Knack (Doug Fieger, vocals/guitar; Berton Averre, lead guitar; Prescott Niles, bass; and Bruce Gary, drums) were neither punk nor rock, but pure simple pop, standing out among the musical dross that littered the Sunset Strip. Signing with Capitol after a feeding frenzy of label offers, the Knack released their debut, Get the Knack, in 1979. With its leadoff single, "My Sharona," the Knack climbed both the album and singles charts (eventually selling millions of copies around the globe), gained wide commercial acceptance, and regenerated the power pop scene that had laid dormant for half a decade. The Knack's image, or lack thereof, was often unfavorably compared to the Beatles, but their music relied on the rough punchiness of the Kinks and the Who rather than the Fab Four. Their refusal to do interviews turned critics against them, and by the time they released their second album, ...But the Little Girls Understand, less than a year after the debut, the backlash had already begun ("Knuke the Knack").

The Knack began a quick spiral downward that they were never to recover from. Their third album, Round Trip, was adventurous and daring and received favorable reviews, but the band decided to split up soon after the album was released. Due to their continuing underground popularity, the Knack resurfaced almost a decade later (minus Bruce Gary) and recorded the abysmal Serious Fun before hiding out once again to lick their wounds. Due to the appearance of "My Sharona" on soundtracks and compilations, the Knack were thrown in the midst of a revival of sorts, reuniting and playing the occasional show in L.A. Bruce Gary temporarily returned to the fold, but by the time the Knack released their second "reunion" album, Zoom, during the Summer of 1998, the drum stool had been filled by Terry Bozzio (formerly of Missing Persons, Frank Zappa's band, etc.). Still, the bandmembers hoped that a whole new generation of music fans would get the Knack with the release of 2001's Normal As the Next Guy, an album that found the group at its best when discarding old formulas. ~ Steven "Spaz" Schnee, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Knack
Top
The Knack
Genre(s) Rock
New wave
Power pop
Years active 1978–1982
1986–1992
1994
1997-present
Label(s) Capitol
Charisma[1]
Members
Doug Fieger
Berton Averre
Prescott Niles
Former members
Bruce Gary

The Knack is a Los Angeles-based rock quartet that rose to fame with their first single, "My Sharona", an international hit in the second half of 1979.

The "power pop" of "My Sharona", coupled with the band's "retro" 1960s look, earned the band comparisons to the early Beatles. Many music critics of the era disliked disco, which dominated the music industry at the time, and were, at best, coolly receptive to other developing genres like punk rock, new wave and heavy metal music. The Knack's power pop and hard rock influences earned them some critical credibility. After subsequent albums, there was a critical backlash against the band[2] and they broke up amidst internal squabbles. They have re-united periodically over the years and are currently still active.

Contents

History

Singer Doug Fieger, a native of Detroit, Michigan, had previously played in an eclectic rock band called Sky as well as The Sunset Bombers. Fieger is the brother of Detroit-area attorney Geoffrey Fieger, best known for representing Dr. Jack Kevorkian in a series of assisted suicide cases. Of the four original members of The Knack (Fieger, Berton Averre - Guitar, Prescott Niles - Bass, and Bruce Gary - Drums), Fieger, Averre and Niles still currently play as The Knack. Bruce Gary died from lymphoma on August 22, 2006 at the age of 55.

Bruce Gary left the band well before his death, becoming a respected producer (archive recordings of Jimi Hendrix and new recordings of The Ventures) and a very successful sideman performing live and on studio sessions with artists such as Jack Bruce, Mick Taylor, Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Cherie Currie, Robby Krieger, Spencer Davis, Stephen Stills, Rod Stewart, and Sheryl Crow. He did not join the more recent Knack reunions.

Several drummers have played for the group since Gary's departure including Billy Ward (Serious Fun album), Terry Bozzio (Zoom album), and David Henderson as 'Holmes Jones' (Normal as the Next Guy and Live at the Rock N Roll Funhouse albums). Currently Pat Torpey (Mr. Big) is playing the drums for the group.

All four original band members, including Bruce Gary, reunited in the studio for one last time in recent years to record a track for a multi-artist compilation album saluting the British band Badfinger. In 2005, The Knack made an appearance on the TV program Hit Me, Baby, One More Time.

In 2006, during a performance in Las Vegas, Doug Fieger became disoriented, developed a dull headache and grasped for the words to songs that he had written and performed for years. [3] Diagnosed with two brain tumors, Fieger underwent surgery and radiosurgery and returned to performing.

Doug Fieger appeared in the Countdown Spectacular 2 concert series in Australia between late-August and early-September 2007. He sang The Knack favourite "My Sharona" only.

Lawsuit

Members of The Knack have filed a lawsuit[4] against popular rap music group Run DMC for copyright infringement. The lawsuit alleges that the defining guitar riff from "My Sharona" was used without permission in the Run DMC track "It's Tricky" from their 1986 album Raising Hell. The amount of damages sought is currently unspecified.

Discography

Studio album
  • Get the Knack (1979) #1 (6 weeks) US, #65 UK 2x Platinum
  • ...But The Little Girls Understand (1980) #15 US Gold
  • Round Trip (1981) #93 US
  • Serious Fun (1991)
  • Zoom (1998)
  • Normal As The Next Guy (2001)
  • Re-Zoom (Zoom with Bonus Tracks) (2003)
Live Album Released on CD and DVD
  • Live From the Rock n Roll Funhouse (2001)
Live Concert Released on Laserdisc
  • The Knack Live at Carnegie Hall (1979)
Live Concert Released on DVD
  • World Cafe Live: The Knack in Concert (May 2007)
Compilation Albums
  • My Sharona (1995)
  • Retrospective (1992)
  • Proof: The Very Best Of The Knack (1998)
Documentary DVD
  • Getting The Knack (2004)
Singles
  • "My Sharona" (1979) #1 (6 weeks) US, #6 UK, #1 Australia (5 Weeks)
  • "Good Girls Don't" (1979) #11 US, #66 UK
  • "Baby Talks Dirty" (1980) #38 US
  • "Can't Put A Price On Love" (1980) #62 US
  • "Pay The Devil" (1981) #67 US
  • "Rocket O' Love" (1991) #9 US (mainstream rock tracks)

Audio sample

References

  1. ^ http://www.geocities.com//patmil007/mayy2814.jpg
  2. ^ "The Knack: Biography : Rolling Stone". http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/theknack/biography. Retrieved 26 June 2009. 
  3. ^ http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/71052.php
  4. ^ MusicRooms.com (2006). The Knack vs. Run DMC Lawsuit. Retrieved 2006-09-18.

External links


 
 

 

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