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Guttermouth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Guttermouth
Singer Mark Adkins
Singer Mark Adkins
Background information
OriginHuntington Beach, California
Genres
Years active1989–present
Labels
MembersMark Adkins
Justin VanWestbroek
Matt Wills
Taylor Beckemeyer
AJ Condosta
Past membersTim Baulch
Barry Burnham
Derek Davis
Paul Fang
James Nunn
Scott Sheldon
Stever Rapp
Donald Horne
Hunter Munich
Ryan Farrell
Brandon Zinkil
Chad Billhook
Dave Brandon
Smith Armstrong
Kevin Clark
Chubby (twice)
Adam the Woo (Adam Williams)
Donnie Barnes

Guttermouth is an American punk rock band formed in 1989 in Huntington Beach, California. They have released nine full-length studio albums and two live albums and have toured extensively, including performances on the Vans Warped Tour. They are infamous for their outrageous lyrics and behavior which are deliberately explicit, offensive and intended to shock, though usually in a humorous and sarcastic manner. This behavior has sometimes resulted in high-profile problems for the band, such as being banned from performing in Canada for eighteen months and leaving the 2004 Warped Tour amidst controversy over their political views and attitudes towards other performers.[1][4]

Band history

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Formation

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The members of Guttermouth began playing music in various parts of Orange County, California in the early 1980s. Singer Mark Adkins performed in the La Habra punk rock band Republic in 1982 with guitarist and classmate Scott Sheldon. Adkins has remained the sole permanent member of Guttermouth over all its iterations; some of the songs written by Sheldon and Adkins at this time would later be used in Guttermouth and would remain in their live set throughout their career.[5] Republic broke up in 1984 and the two moved on to other projects: Sheldon played in a band with drummer James Nunn while Adkins tried various other musical projects, including one with Nunn. Adkins joined guitarists Eric "Derek" Davis and Barry Burnham, bassist Paul "Fang" Denis, and drummer Tim Baulch in their band Critical Noise. Baulch suggested the name Guttermouth for the new lineup, and this early incarnation of the band played shows, parties and skateboard demo's during 1988 until Davis relocated to nearby Huntington Beach in 1989, effectively dissolving the group. About a year later Adkins and Nunn also moved there. Adkins approached Burnham and Baulch about starting the band back up but the two declined. Adkins and Davis recruited Sheldon to replace Burnham and Nunn to replace Baulch. They also recruited an early fan of the band, bassist Clint Weinrich to join them. This solidified the "original" lineup of the band with Mark Adkins on vocals, Scott Sheldon and Eric Davis on guitars, Clint Weinrich on bass and James Nunn on drums, a lineup which would remain consistent over the next six years and two albums.[5]

First album

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By the summer of 1989, Guttermouth began performing in Huntington Beach and Orange County, building a small but enthusiastic local following. Their music was heavily influenced by the Los Angeles and Orange County punk rock scenes of the 1980s which included bands like the Adolescents, The Vandals, Social Distortion, Fear, the Descendents, Angry Samoans, Bad Religion and Black Flag.[5] From these influences Guttermouth developed their own style of fast punk tempos with humorously sarcastic and offensive lyrics coupled with equally outrageous and offensive behavior, developing a reputation for chaotic live shows.[5] In 1991, they were approached by local record label Dr. Strange about putting out an album, and entered Westbeach Recorders to record and release their first 7-inch record, Puke. Later that year they released another 7-inch, Balls, and finally their first LP, aptly titled Full Length LP.[5]

Full Length proved to be a success for the band, expanding their fan base and giving them opportunities to perform throughout southern California alongside other popular punk rock bands. The album was soon re-released in CD format by Dr. Strange and an animated music video was made for the song "1, 2, 3…Slam!" to be played on local punk rock and skateboarding video programs. The band continued to play locally, developing friendships with fellow Orange County punk bands such as The Offspring and the Vandals. They played a show opening for the Vandals at the Ice House in Fullerton which was filmed for the Vandals live album Sweatin’ to the Oldies. Guttermouth continued to promote Full Length over the next few years and also released 7-inch vinyl singles for the new songs "Veggicide" and "P.C." In 1993, they recorded the 7-inch EP 11oz. as the first release put out by newly formed label Hopeless Records.

Friendly People and tours

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By 1994, Full Length had been available for almost four years and the members of Guttermouth were preparing to write a second album. They originally considered releasing the album themselves, but were soon approached with an offer from Offspring singer Dexter Holland, who in the wake of his own band's success was starting an independent record label and wanted to put out Guttermouth's next album as his first release.[5] They agreed and recorded the album Friendly People as the first release on Holland's new label Nitro Records, and filmed an independent music video for the song "End on 9." Guttermouth would remain with Nitro over the next five years, releasing an album each year on the label.

1994 also found the band playing to a much larger audience. The success that year of The Offspring's album Smash and Green Day's Dookie had brought the southern California punk rock scene into the national spotlight. Thanks to their friendship with The Offspring and their new record deal with Nitro, Guttermouth found themselves embarking on their first national and world tours opening for larger punk bands.[5] However, their typically outrageous behavior would often find them at odds with the other bands, audiences, and venues at which they played. After about six months of touring with this reputation the band found themselves banned from performing in numerous cities and clubs and blacklisted by many of the bands with whom they had hoped to tour. To the band, however, this behavior was typical and in keeping with the anarchic ideals that were at the core of the punk movement.[5]

At one point, the band found themselves ejected from a tour while in South Carolina, where they booked themselves at a club and recorded a performance which would later be released as Live From the Pharmacy.[5] Adkins was arrested and briefly jailed in 1995 on charges of inciting a riot during a Guttermouth show at the Glen Helen Blockbuster Pavilion in San Bernardino, but evidence was insufficient to file charges.[6][7]

Lineup change

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The following year found the band returning home to California and experiencing a lineup change. Clint Weinrich married in the spring of 1995, and to fill in for him on a European tour the band recruited Steve "Stever" Rapp, a college friend of Nunn's who was playing in a band called The Grabbers. Things worked out well with Rapp on this tour and he soon became the band's permanent bass player.[5] The new lineup entered the studio and recorded their third album Teri Yakimoto. By all accounts the recording process was plagued with problems, and at one point most of the recordings were scrapped and re-recorded with a new producer. The result was an album that continued the fast and sarcastic Guttermouth tradition but was more melodic and pop-influenced than their previous albums.[5] The band continued to tour and expand their fan base, and filmed a music video for the song "Whiskey." With their popularity growing Nitro Records re-released Full Length in CD format with bonus tracks under the title The Album Formerly Known as Full Length LP.

In 1997, the band recorded Musical Monkey, an album which captured their chaotic energy and sharp sense of humor. It is considered by many to be the best representation of their "classic" sound, and songs such as "Lucky the Donkey," "Do the Hustle," "Lipstick" and "Perfect World" became staples in their live set.[8] The following year they released Live From the Pharmacy, a recording of a live show from 1994 that also included four new songs engineered by Vandals guitarist Warren Fitzgerald and liner notes written by Nunn recounting the band's history. In 1998 Guttermouth was banned from performing in Canada for one year on charges of public indecency after Adkins exposed himself onstage in Saskatoon.[6][7][9][10] According to Adkins: "oh, I was guilty [...] What I would do is grab two young girls out of the audience and I would have them hold up this sheet in front of me, and Jamie, the drummer at the time, would say this magical incantation, if you will, and I would be standing there stark naked."[11] Combined with a drunk driving charge from the United States, the incident led Adkins to be arrested on immigration charges, detained for five days, and then deported, though Guttermouth would return to Canada a few years later. After obtaining a full pardon from the Canadian judicial system, no record remains on file.[10][11][12][13]

Rapp left the band in 1999, at which point Nunn moved from drums to bass and new drummer William "Ty" Smith was brought in.[1] That year the band recorded and released Gorgeous, their most aggressive album to date and their final album for Nitro.

Move to Epitaph

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In 2000, Guttermouth appeared performing in the Kung Fu Films movie That Darn Punk, an appearance which stemmed from their longtime friendship with the Vandals. That year the band also signed to Epitaph Records, the label operated by Bad Religion's Brett Gurewitz which had grown throughout the 1990s into one of the largest independent labels in the country. For their 2001 album Covered With Ants the band combined their punk rock sound with instruments they had not used on albums before, including organ, banjo and fiddle. A music video was filmed for the song "She's Got the Look" and the band continued to tour.

As the band prepared to work on their next album in 2002, founding member James Nunn left the group. While original bassist Clint Weinrich filled in on tours, guitarists Eric Davis and Scott Sheldon played bass for the album's recording along with studio bassist Hedge.[14] The musical direction shifted to territory the band had not hitherto explored, and the resulting album Gusto was substantially different from their previous efforts, with a slower speed and more melody and pop influence. Though the band's irreverent sense of humor remained intact, the music was much less characteristically "punk" than anything the band had played before.[15] Response to the album was mixed, and the band members would later look back on it as something of a failed experiment.[15][16][17][18] In 2003 Weinrich again rejoined the band for a series of shows including a performance at the House of Blues in Anaheim which was filmed and released by Kung Fu Records as a live concert CD and DVD package. The show's closing performance of "Perfect World" was removed from the DVD release of the show because a minor could be seen drinking alcohol on stage with the band. However, on the packaging of the DVD itself it is said that it was edited due to a frenzied crowd that damaged equipment, although the audio portion was preserved on the CD.[19]

The band's next album Eat Your Face, released jointly through Epitaph and Volcom Entertainment in 2004, was hailed as a return to form. Founding guitarist Eric Davis had left the band and been replaced by Donald "Don" Horne, while former Slick Shoes bassist Kevin Clark filled the vacant bass position.[1] Musically the album returned to the fast, loud punk rock style the band was known for, with many of the songs recorded in just a few takes. Lyrically it retained the band's sense of biting sarcasm and expressed dissatisfaction with the U.S. electoral system and the current state of punk rock in the mainstream, amongst other topics.[20][21]

Warped Tour controversy

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In the summer of 2004, Guttermouth embarked on the Vans Warped Tour, playing on the Volcom side stage. In keeping with their reputation for outrageous and offensive behavior, Adkins would often openly insult other acts from onstage, declaring that bands such as Simple Plan and My Chemical Romance cared more about their fashionable clothing and popularity than about the quality of their music. The band members also mocked what they saw as an uninformed political display of many bands on the tour by selling T-shirts and displaying banners that jokingly proclaimed support for President George W. Bush (many of the bands and media booths supported an anti-Republican stance in the months leading up to the 2004 presidential election). After several weeks on the tour Guttermouth was "politely" asked to leave, fueling rumors that other performers had petitioned to have them ejected.[4] Eventually, however, Adkins issued a statement apologizing to Warped Tour manager Kevin Lyman and admitting that the band had left the tour voluntarily, due in part to his distaste for the political atmosphere surrounding it.[1]

Recent activity

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In 2005, drummer Ty Smith left Guttermouth and was replaced by Ryan Farrell. Bass player Kevin Clark departed the following year and founding member Clint Weinrich returned to the group.[1] This lineup recorded the band's tenth album Shave the Planet, released in 2006 by Volcom Entertainment. The album found the band once again using their brand of humorous punk rock to poke fun at a number of subjects.[22] Although Weinrich remains a member of the band, Clark has since rejoined the group and handles most of the touring.[23] In June 2008, Farrell announced that Sheldon had left the band to focus on his family, having recently had a fourth child.[24] The band's official Myspace profile lists Sheldon's replacement as Dave Luckett, with Donald Horne being replaced by Hunter Munich.[25] In December 2008, Adkins announced that the band had returned to Hopeless Records, one of their first record labels, in celebration of their 20th Anniversary, and that Guttermouth is working on a new album.[26] A further line-up change occurred in 2009, when Munich was replaced by Brandon Zinkil.[27]

After a hiatus and further controversy on a 2013 tour, singer Adkins moved to Mexico and reformed the band in 2015.[28][29]

Guttermouth with Bird Attack Records and Rude Records released Got it Made, a six-song EP, on July 15, 2016. The band followed up with another studio EP titled New Car Smell in 2017, along with a live recording titled The Whole Enchilada. Those two releases were also under the Bird Attack Records and Rude Records labels.

Guttermouth completed a successful tours of Australia in 2023 and 2024, and returned to touring in Florida and both Northern and Southern California.

Band members

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Current members

  • Mark Adkins – vocals and MC (1989–present)
  • Justin Van Westbroek[30] – bass (2009–2015, 2017–2018), drums (2015–2017), guitar (2018–present)
  • Matt Wills – guitar (2010–present)
  • Taylor Beckemeyer – bass (2017–present)

Past members

  • Eric "Derek" Davis – guitar (1989–2004)
  • Scott Sheldon – guitar, keyboards (1989–2008)
  • Clint "Cliff" Weinrich – bass (1989–1995, 2002–2004[31])
  • James Nunn (aka Captain/Admiral James T. Nunn) – drums (1989–1999), bass (1999–2001)
  • Steve "Stever" Rapp – bass (1995–1999)
  • William Tyler "Ty" Smith (credited as T. Bradford on Gorgeous) – drums (1999–2005)
  • Donald "Don" Horne – guitar (2004–2008)
  • Ryan Farrell – drums (2005–2011)
  • Dave Luckett – guitar (2008–2013)
  • Kevin Clark – bass (2004–2009, 2015–2017)
  • Hunter Munich – guitar (2008–2009)
  • Brandon Zinkil – guitar (2009–2010)
  • Alex Flamsteed – drums (2011–2015)
  • Geoff Armstrong – guitar (2013–2018)
  • Donnie Barnes - guitar (2018)
  • AJ Condosta – drums (2017–2024)

Former touring musicians

  • Chad Billhook – bass (2013–2014)
  • Adam the Woo (Adam Williams) – bass (2014)[32]

Timeline

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Discography

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Studio albums

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Ankeny, Jason. "Guttermouth biography". AllMusic. AllMusic. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  2. ^ Ulibas, Joseph (May 17, 2015). "Let's help Guttermouth 'Shave the Planet'". AXS.
  3. ^ "idio – Content Intelligence". idio. 23 June 2020.
  4. ^ a b White, Adam (August 2, 2004). "Guttermouth off Warped Tour". Punknews.org. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Nunn, James (1998). Live From the Pharmacy (CD booklet). Guttermouth. Huntington Beach, CA: Nitro Records.
  6. ^ a b "Guttermouth press release (.pdf)" (PDF). Volcom Entertainment. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
  7. ^ a b "O.C. Singer Faces Charge of Indecency", Los Angeles Times, pp. sec. B, p. 3, 1998-04-14[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Review: Musical Monkey". Punknews.org. December 21, 2004. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  9. ^ Carman, Keith (2005-03-03). "No need to jump on the bandwagon". Fast Forward Weekly. Archived from the original on 2005-04-09. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
  10. ^ a b "Guttermouth Live on da Web". Punknews.org. 2000-09-03. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
  11. ^ a b Alexander, Dave (2002-10-10). "A foot in the Guttermouth?". See Magazine. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
  12. ^ "Guttermouth lives up to its name". Knight Ridder Newspapers. 2001-06-20. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
  13. ^ Elliott, Craig (2001-06-07). "Guttermouth at Punk-o-rama". See Magazine. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
  14. ^ Heisel, Scott (April 26, 2002). "Guttermouth gets a new old bassist". Punknews.org. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  15. ^ a b "Review: Gusto". Punknews.org. August 6, 2002. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  16. ^ "Review: Gusto". Punknews.org. August 3, 2002. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  17. ^ "Review: Gusto". AllMusic. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  18. ^ Adkins, Mark (Singer, Commentator) and Ty Smith (Drummer, Commentator) (2003). Guttermouth Live at the House of Blues. Seal Beach, California: Kung Fu Films. Event occurs at 0:14:53. Smith: 'God, after Gusto I think we should make about three good records.'...Adkins: 'Well, we all make mistakes in life.' Smith: 'Some worse than others.' Adkins: 'Some people have kids, some people make a record called Gusto.'
  19. ^ Adkins, Mark (Singer, Commentator) (2003). Guttermouth Live at the House of Blues. Seal Beach, California: Kung Fu Films. Event occurs at 0:49:55. Usually we end the set with "Perfect World," but we couldn't have it on the videotape because there was like 200 kids on stage and we broke all the monitors and that's the bill I was talking about earlier, like $800, $1,800 dollars or something like that. All the little jacks broken off, it was pretty chaotic and a good time for everyone.
  20. ^ "Review: Eat Your Face". Punknews.org. July 13, 2004. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  21. ^ "Review: Eat Your Face". AllMusic. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  22. ^ (editor), Brian (August 22, 2006). "Review: Shave the Planet". Punknews.org. Retrieved 2007-08-09. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  23. ^ "Guttermouth: Still Unusual? Still Punk Rock?". Retrieved 2008-09-20.
  24. ^ Farrell, Ryan (2007-06-09). "I report the news! it's my birthright people: Part 1". Myspace. Archived from the original on 2008-05-13. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  25. ^ "Guttermouth's official Myspace profile". Myspace. Archived from the original on 2008-05-13. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  26. ^ "Guttermouth's official Myspace profile". Myspace. Archived from the original on 2009-02-24. Retrieved 2008-12-06.
  27. ^ "Guttermouth's official Myspace profile". Myspace. Archived from the original on 2009-02-24. Retrieved 2009-03-08.
  28. ^ "Guttermouth's Mark Adkins On His Crazy Life After That Last "Fucked Up" Australian Tour – Music Feeds". Music Feeds. 2015-03-13. Retrieved 2015-12-16.
  29. ^ "Guttermouth Front Man Mark Adkins Loves Playing Punk and Talking Shit". OC Weekly. 2014-01-30. Retrieved 2015-12-16.
  30. ^ "It's tough to bad-mouth Guttermouth". Charleston City Paper.
  31. ^ "Guttermouth – Live at the House of Blues DVD".
  32. ^ "Move To Bremerton, We'll Hang Out – My Last Day In The Pacific Northwest / An MXPX Kinda Town | TheDailyWoo YouTube". YouTube.
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