Queens of the Stone Age: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Kiryl Rusetski
No edit summary
imported>Kiryl Rusetski
Line 2: Line 2:


==History==
==History==
Queens of the Stone Age formed in 1996, and were originally named Gamma Ray, until a band in Germany which had the same name threatened to sue. Gamma Ray's original line up included Van Conner of The Trees, Matt Cameron of Soundgarden, as well as Dinosaur Jr's Mike Johnson. They released a 7" EP on vinyl, which included the track "If Only Everything", which would later appear on their self titled debut album as "If Only". After the lawsuit, Homme rechristened the band to "Queens of the Stone Age", a moniker given to his former band Kyuss by producer Chris Goss, and added Alfredo Hernandez, former Kyuss drummer, to the line up. Together, with Homme taking over both guitar and bass duties, they recorded the self-titled debut album just under a month in 1998 in Palm Springs, California. It was released shortly thereafter, and was greeted with a warm reception. Following the release, former bass player of Kyuss and close friend of Homme Nick Oliveri joined the band, and performed on bass for the tour accompanying he release of the LP.
Queens of the Stone Age formed in 1996, and were originally named Gamma Ray, until a band in Germany which had the same name threatened to sue. Gamma Ray's original line up included Van Conner of The Trees, Matt Cameron of Soundgarden, as well as Dinosaur Jr's Mike Johnson. They released a 7" EP on vinyl, which included the track "If Only Everything", which would later appear on their self titled debut album as "If Only". After the lawsuit, Homme rechristened the band to "Queens of the Stone Age", a moniker given to his former band Kyuss by producer Chris Goss, and added Alfredo Hernandez, former Kyuss drummer, to the line up. Together, with Homme taking over both guitar and bass duties, they recorded the self-titled debut album just under a month in 1998 in Palm Springs, California. It was released shortly thereafter, and was greeted with a warm reception. Following the release, former bass player of Kyuss and close friend of Homme Nick Oliveri joined the band, and performed on bass for the tour accompanying he release of the LP. Hernandez left the band shortly after the completion of the tour, and the band, fresh with a record deal with Interscope, went back into the studio from December 1999 to February 2000 To record their second LP, Rated R. Jointly produced by Chris Goss and Josh Homme, also known as The Fiffiff Teeners, and joined by a variety of guests such as Mark Lanegan, Nick Eldorado, and a tag-team drummer combo of Nick Lucero and Gene Trautmann, Rated R took a stylistic turn for the band down a more modern, mainstream rock route while still being influenced by their stoner rock past.

Revision as of 10:50, 5 June 2013

Queens of the Stone Age is an American rock band, formed in 1996 in Palm Desert, California. The band is well-noted for their signature style of heavy, riff-oriented hard rock music. Since their foundation, the only constant member of the band has been Josh Homme, while other current band members include Troy Van Leeuwen (guitar, lap steel, keyboard, percussions, backing vocals), Michael Shuman (bass guitar, keyboard, backing vocals), Dean Fertita (keyboards, guitar, percussions, backing vocals) and recent addition Jon Theodore (drums).

History

Queens of the Stone Age formed in 1996, and were originally named Gamma Ray, until a band in Germany which had the same name threatened to sue. Gamma Ray's original line up included Van Conner of The Trees, Matt Cameron of Soundgarden, as well as Dinosaur Jr's Mike Johnson. They released a 7" EP on vinyl, which included the track "If Only Everything", which would later appear on their self titled debut album as "If Only". After the lawsuit, Homme rechristened the band to "Queens of the Stone Age", a moniker given to his former band Kyuss by producer Chris Goss, and added Alfredo Hernandez, former Kyuss drummer, to the line up. Together, with Homme taking over both guitar and bass duties, they recorded the self-titled debut album just under a month in 1998 in Palm Springs, California. It was released shortly thereafter, and was greeted with a warm reception. Following the release, former bass player of Kyuss and close friend of Homme Nick Oliveri joined the band, and performed on bass for the tour accompanying he release of the LP. Hernandez left the band shortly after the completion of the tour, and the band, fresh with a record deal with Interscope, went back into the studio from December 1999 to February 2000 To record their second LP, Rated R. Jointly produced by Chris Goss and Josh Homme, also known as The Fiffiff Teeners, and joined by a variety of guests such as Mark Lanegan, Nick Eldorado, and a tag-team drummer combo of Nick Lucero and Gene Trautmann, Rated R took a stylistic turn for the band down a more modern, mainstream rock route while still being influenced by their stoner rock past.