Son of Dork

Last updated

Son of Dork
Also known asSOD
Origin United Kingdom
Genres Pop punk
Years active2005–2008
LabelsMercury, Sicpuppy
Past members James Bourne
Steve Rushton
David Williams
Chris Leonard
Danny Hall

Son of Dork were a British pop punk band formed by James Bourne after his previous band, Busted, split in January 2005. [1] The name of the band came from a scene in the 1990 film Problem Child where the chant "Son of Dork" is used. Their debut single, "Ticket Outta Loserville", was released in November 2005, reaching No. 3 on the UK Singles Chart. [2] Their second single, "Eddie's Song", reached No. 10 in January 2006.

Contents

Formation

James Bourne placed adverts in publications such as NME and The Stage in order to recruit potential band members for his new project.[ citation needed ] The members that were chosen had all been involved in bands. Drummer Danny Hall had previously spent ten years with hardcore metal band "Spiral Rocks" and Punk band "Like I Care", whereas guitarist Chris Leonard had been in band "Stamford Amp", the house band on BBC's The Saturday Show in 2002 and had also toured with acts including Brian McFadden and Busted.[ citation needed ] Steven Rushton was dividing his time between former band "Mr Cheerful", college studies and a job in Sainsbury's.[ citation needed ] Bourne decided to name the band after a scene in the film Problem Child. [3]

Music career

Welcome to Loserville: 2005 - 2007

In November 2005, Son of Dork released their first single "Ticket Outta Loserville" which reached number 3 in the UK Charts, followed a few weeks later with their debut album Welcome to Loserville . Follow-up single "Eddie's Song" was released in January 2006 and reached number 10 in the UK charts. Son of Dork then penned their next single "We're Not Alone" for Ant and Dec's film Alien Autopsy , although it was never released as a single.[ citation needed ]

On 6 February 2007 Son of Dork toured with Wheatus, Army of Freshmen, and Bowling for Soup in The Get Happy '07 Tour. The tours were met with a favourable reception and the band performed a new song originally for the deluxe edition of their Welcome to Loserville album called "Colgate Smile".

The band during most of 2007 went under Bourne's self-created record company Sic Puppy Records. [4] During this time they headlined The Sic Tour which gave several unsigned bands an opportunity to perform to the public. The gig took place in Shepards Bush Empire on 24 March and the band debuted new songs including "What Happened To Your Band?" and "Go Home Monday".

Split and further projects: 2008 - present

Although there has never been an official announcement, Son of Dork's split in 2007 was confirmed by Bourne on a tweet in November 2020. He stated 'In the background I was being heavily sued in the high court of justice for the rights to all the Busted songs. I left the band to give my undivided attention to fighting this case which after 4 years I won. Then I started trying to bring my music career back to life.' [5]

Post-split, Bourne would go on to join pop-rock supergroup McBusted before rejoining Busted in 2015. Steve Rushton began a solo career in the US, contributing to soundtracks to films Hannah Montana: The Movie, G-Force and Race To Witch Mountain. He also provided the theme song to The Suite Life on Deck .

On the possibility of a reunion, Bourne stated in an interview that if he was to reform Son of Dork he would only bring back the members who wanted to come back. [6] There was a reunion of sorts when Steve Rushton, Chris Leonard and James Bourne, along with the Welsh duo Lilygreen & Maguire, all recorded a cover of Michael Jackson's "Man in the Mirror". [7] In 2019, Bourne stated he'd had ideas for a Son of Dork concept album. [8] In January 2024, Bourne reiterated on the social media site X that he'd do another album if 'people wanted it'. [9]

Members

Tours

Welcome to Loserville Live Radio Tour 2006

Legacy

In 2009, lead-singer James Bourne co-wrote a musical alongside Elliot Davies based on the band's debut album Welcome to Loserville, titled Loserville. [10] The production was named alongside Tim Minchin's Matilda as evidence of a resurgence in new British musicals by The Stage newspaper after the Leeds opening. In 2012, it opened in the West End. [11]

The song What Happened To Your Band was originally slated to appear on the Welcome To Loserville deluxe album, however after the cancellation Bourne repurposed the song for McBusted. It was later covered and included in Busted's fourth album Half Way There. [12]

Discography

Studio albums

YearAlbum detailsPeak positions Certifications
(sales threshold)
UK
[13]
2005 Welcome to Loserville 35

Singles

YearSinglePeak chart positionsAlbum
UK
[13]
IRE
[15]
2005"Ticket Outta Loserville"315Welcome to Loserville
2006"Eddie's Song"1024
2006"We're Not Alone"Non-album single for Alien Autopsy soundtrack

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References

  1. "Busted star James Bourne heads for Loserville". BBC News. 18 June 2012.
  2. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 514. ISBN   1-904994-10-5.
  3. "Son of Dork (Sonofdorkmusic) on Myspace".
  4. "Sicpuppy Records - Making New Music Happen". Archived from the original on 3 February 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2009.
  5. @JamesBourne (20 November 2020). "In the background I was being heavily..." (Tweet) via Twitter.
  6. Genchi, Frankie (3 June 2010). "James Bourne – Future Boy Interview – Flecking Records". Fleckingrecords.co.uk. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  7. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine : "Man In The Mirror Acoustic". YouTube .
  8. @JamesBourne (9 April 2019). "Late at night I think about the albums I might make in my lifetime. I have an amazing idea for an SOD concept album. Only time will tell" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  9. https://twitter.com/JamesBourne/status/1745181141974323689
  10. "Loserville: The Musical (2009) | British Youth Music Theatre".
  11. "Busted star's Loserville musical set for West End". BBC News. 23 August 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  12. Robinson, Peter (18 December 2014). "McBusted: Busted + McFly = one of 2014's most unlikely pop stories". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  13. 1 2 "The Official Charts Company – Son of Dork". Official Charts Company . Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  14. "British Phonographic Industry search results". British Phonographic Industry. Archived from the original on 6 October 2017. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  15. "irishcharts.com – Discography Son of Dork". Hung Medien. Retrieved 16 December 2010.