Dead Hot Workshop

Last updated
Dead Hot Workshop
Origin Tempe, Arizona
Genres rock
Members
  • Brent Babb
  • Curtis Grippe
  • Kylie Babb
  • Thomas Laufenberg
Past members
  • Steve Larson
  • Brian Griffith
  • Scott Palmer
  • Chris Whitehouse

Dead Hot Workshop is an American rock band based in Tempe, Arizona.

Contents

The band was a popular fixture of the Tempe music scene in the 1990s, when Tempe was being dubbed as "The Next Seattle" by music reps, and as a region that would produce many new, talented bands that would be ripe for national discovery. [1] The band got their start at a Tempe club named Long Wong's, which at the time was at the center of downtown Tempe's music scene and the starting point for bands such as the Gin Blossoms, The Refreshments and The Pistoleros, who all (including Dead Hot Workshop) signed with major record labels in the 1990s. [2] During the mid-1990s, the band toured using a used 1992 van named "Sugar", that the Gin Blossoms had taken on tour ten times before Dead Hot Workshop acquired it. [3] The band released its album White House and then EP River Otis in 1994. [4] [5]

In 1995 Dead Hot Workshop released 1001 , their first album produced by a major record label. Even though they were considered to be in the shadow of the Gin Blossoms, the album was reviewed to have a "gritty, sandblasted edge" that the Gin Blossoms were missing. The music was described as having a mix of country, folk and rock influences from artists such as Neil Young, Allman Brothers, Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings, while maintaining its "90s garage-band relevance". [6] The album contains fourteen tracks, [7] including "Burger Christ", "Choad", [8] "I Dream of David", "117", "Bob Hill Climbin'", "A", [9] and "Jesus Revisited". [4]

Houston Press rated the album 1001 four out of five stars. [6] Allmusic reviewer Tim Griggs rated it three out of five. [9]

In 2005 1001 was included in the East Valley Tribune's Top 25 albums by Valley Bands, a list that included albums from bands such as The Refreshments, Jimmy Eat World, the Gin Blossoms and the Meat Puppets. [8] In 2006, 1001 was listed as one of the "Top 25 albums by Valley bands", calling singer and songwriter Brent Babb the "Poet Laureate of Mill Avenue", and the album explained why there were so many literature majors from Arizona State University hanging out at Dead Hot Workshop shows during the peak of Mill Avenue's music scene in the 1990s. [8]

In 2019 the band was inducted into the Arizona Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame. [10] The band performed a set and was joined by past members Steven Larson and Brian Griffith.

Members

Discography

[11]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tempe, Arizona</span> City in Arizona, United States

Tempe is a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States, with the Census Bureau reporting a 2020 population of 180,587. The city is named after the Vale of Tempe in Greece. Tempe is located in the East Valley section of metropolitan Phoenix; it is bordered by Phoenix and Guadalupe on the west, Scottsdale and the Salt River Pima–Maricopa Indian Community on the north, Chandler on the south, and Mesa on the east. Tempe is also the location of the main campus of Arizona State University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gin Blossoms</span> American alternative rock band

Gin Blossoms is an American alternative rock band formed in 1987 in Tempe, Arizona. They rose to prominence following the 1992 release of their first major label album, New Miserable Experience, and the first single released from that album, "Hey Jealousy". "Hey Jealousy" became a Top 25 hit and went gold, and New Miserable Experience eventually went quadruple platinum; four other charting singles were released from the album. The band's follow-up album, Congratulations I'm Sorry (1996), went platinum and the single "As Long as It Matters" was nominated for a Grammy Award. Gin Blossoms broke up in 1997. Since reuniting in 2001, the band has released Major Lodge Victory in 2006, No Chocolate Cake in 2010, and Mixed Reality in 2018.

<i>New Miserable Experience</i> 1992 studio album by Gin Blossoms

New Miserable Experience is the second studio album by alternative rock band Gin Blossoms, released on August 4, 1992. The album was released to little fanfare and relatively lackluster reviews. However, nearly a year after its release the lead single "Hey Jealousy" entered the top 40. With "Found Out About You" following a few months later, the album eventually reached multi-platinum status.

Douglas Owen Hopkins was an American musician and songwriter. He co-founded Gin Blossoms, a popular modern rock band of the early 1990s, with Richard Taylor. He was the band's lead guitarist and a principal songwriter. Hopkins' writing credits included the hits "Hey Jealousy", "Found Out About You", "Hold Me Down" and "Lost Horizons".

The music of Arizona began with Indigenous music of North America made by Indigenous peoples of Arizona. In the 20th century, Mexican immigrants popularized Banda, corridos, mariachi and conjunto. Other major influences come from styles popular throughout the rest of the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robin Wilson (musician)</span> American musician

Robin Wilson is an American musician most notable for his work as the lead vocalist of the alternative rock band Gin Blossoms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jesse Valenzuela</span> American rock musician

Jesse Valenzuela is an American rock musician and singer who is perhaps best known as a member of the alternative rock band Gin Blossoms. He was originally the vocalist in Gin Blossoms when the band first formed in 1987.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hey Jealousy</span> 1989 song by Gin Blossoms

"Hey Jealousy" is a song by American rock band Gin Blossoms. The song was included on the group's debut album, Dusted (1989), and was re-recorded for their 1992 album, New Miserable Experience. It was written by lead guitarist Doug Hopkins, who was fired from the band before New Miserable Experience was released.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers</span> American rock band from Tempe, Arizona

Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers is an American rock band from Tempe, Arizona.

The Refreshments were an alternative rock band from Tempe, Arizona. The band is best known for the single "Banditos" from their 1996 breakthrough album Fizzy Fuzzy Big & Buzzy, and also for "Yahoos and Triangles", the theme song to the long-running animated series King of the Hill. The latter was a piece the band traditionally performed at soundchecks. The Refreshments disbanded in 1998, although Roger Clyne and P.H. Naffah continue to tour and play Refreshments songs along with new music as Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers.

<i>Major Lodge Victory</i> 2006 studio album by Gin Blossoms

Major Lodge Victory is the fourth studio album by the power pop band Gin Blossoms. It was the first album released by the band since their 1997–2002 breakup. It was released on August 8, 2006, on Hybrid Recordings, making it the Gin Blossoms' first new album in over 10 years.

Hans Olson, is an American musician and songwriter. He is a singer and plays an amplified acoustic guitar and a harmonica in a neck rack. He is known as one of the best "harp-in-a-rack" players in the world. Olson helped to establish and organize the Phoenix Blues Society (1988), the Arizona Green Party (1991), the Arizona Blues Hall of Fame (1995), the Arizona Music Heritage Foundation and the Arizona Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame (2002). In 1996, Olson was inducted into the Arizona Blues Hall of Fame. Both Phoenix Magazine and Phoenix New Times named Olson as one of the most influential musicians in Arizona.

The Jetzons were an American new wave band from Tempe, Arizona. The band comprised guitarist Bruce Connole, keyboardist Brad Buxer, bassist Damon Doiron and drummer Steve Golladay. After the band separated, Buxer became the musical director for Michael Jackson. An unreleased Jetzons song, "Hard Times", was rewritten for use the 1994 video game Sonic the Hedgehog 3.

Bruce Connole is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist. He was the lead singer for the Jetzons and several other bands based in the Southwest United States.

Stephen Ashbrook is a Phoenix, Arizona based singer songwriter. Ashbrook rose to fame in the mid-1990s in his home state of Arizona, riding the wave of the Tempe music scene while performing with his band Satellite. Many bands, including the Gin Blossoms, The Refreshments and Dead Hot Workshop, found success with this guitar-driven rock music. Ashbrook has toured with Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers, among others, and has performed for President Bill Clinton.

Long Wong's on Mill was a club in Tempe, Arizona. Long Wong's on Mill was the center of the Tempe music scene, which peaked in the early 1990s, and it was where the Tempe band the Gin Blossoms got their start. In turn, the popular band made the club famous. Long Wong's also featured Tempe based bands such as Dead Hot Workshop and The Refreshments, who would all go on to sign with major record labels. Long Wong's closed on April 3, 2004.

<i>1001</i> (album) 1995 studio album by Dead Hot Workshop

1001 is an album by the American alternative rock band Dead Hot Workshop, released in 1995. A commercial disappointment, it was the band's only album to be put out by a major label.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nico Holthaus</span>

Nico Holthaus is an independent American autodidact/polymath, writer, musician, filmmaker, producer of music, haunted attractions, and documentary and narrative films. He has won critical acclaim as the executive producer of the national Main St. Inc series and Dear America, a documentary that promotes Senator Mike Gravel’s National Initiative for Democracy, featuring Direct democracy proponents such as Ralph Nader, Noam Chomsky, Daniel Ellsberg, Pete Seeger, Max Brooks, production members of the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series, ex-Nirvana bassist and chairman of FairVote Krist Novoselic and Chancellors, Senators, Representatives and other notable public figures around the world.

Arthur Eugene "Buddy" Edwards III is an American writer and musician. He has written three novels and the screenplay for the movie adaptation of his first novel Stuck Outside of Phoenix. He was co-founder, co-songwriter and bass player with The Refreshments, a band that sold over 400,000 units worldwide, had a hit single "Banditos", and wrote and recorded the theme song for the Fox television series King of the Hill.

Prehab, previously known as the Bedspins, is an American band that formed in 1992 in Tempe, Arizona.

References

  1. Hansen Orf, Chris (February 9, 2006). "Keep an eye out for these Valley artists in 2006". East Valley Tribune. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  2. Hansen Orf, Chris (January 13, 2005). "All's quiet on the Mill Avenue music front". East Valley Tribune. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  3. Bond, Jonathan (November 16, 1995). "Four Thousand Miles from Tempe". Phoenix New Times . Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  4. 1 2 Sprague, David (April 22, 1995). "TAG's Dead Hot Workshop Offers Eclectic 1001". Billboard. pp. 12, 31. Retrieved February 4, 2017. Continues at page 31.
  5. Crigler, Pete (2013). Majorlabelland and Assorted Oddities. Bloomington, Indiana: iUniverse LLC. p. 37. ISBN   978-1-4917-0601-5. LCCN   2013949734 . Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  6. 1 2 Rowland, Hobart (January 4, 1996). "Sound Check". Houston Press . Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  7. 1001 (Media notes). Dead Hot Workshop. Tag Recordings / Atlantic Records. 1995. 92565-2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  8. 1 2 3 Hansen Orf, Chris (December 14, 2006). "Top 25 albums by Valley bands". East Valley Tribune. Retrieved February 3, 2017.
  9. 1 2 Griggs, Tim. "1001 – Dead Hot Workshop". Allmusic. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  10. Masley, Ed (July 3, 2019). "Tempe legends relive their Mill Avenue glory days at Arizona Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony". The Republic. Retrieved 2020-11-13.
  11. https://www.discogs.com/artist/1577212-Dead-Hot-Workshop?superFilter=Releases&subFilter=Albums