Roger Meade Clyne | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Roger Meade Clyne |
Born | Tucson, Arizona | January 13, 1968
Origin | Tucson, Arizona |
Genres | Rock, Americana, classic rock |
Occupation(s) | Singer, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, harmonica, kazoo |
Years active | 1992–present |
Labels | Emma Java |
Website | http://www.azpeacemakers.com/ |
Roger Meade Clyne (born January 13, 1968) is the lead singer, primary songwriter, and rhythm guitar player for the American rock band Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers. His previous bands include The Refreshments and the Mortals.
Clyne and the Peacemakers (also known as RCPM) released their eighth full-length studio album, "Native Heart", on June 30, 2017. His musical career has spanned three decades, including several hits with The Refreshments and penning the theme song for the animated television series King of the Hill . He wrote and recorded the victory song for his hometown Major League Baseball club, the Arizona Diamondbacks, entitled The D-Backs Swing. [1]
Much of Clyne's music throughout his career revolves around life in Arizona and Sonora, Mexico. He was born in Tucson and grew up in Tempe where he balanced life as a suburban kid while visiting his grandparents' ranch in southern Arizona, where, he rode horses, herded cattle and fixed fences.
As a youth and young adult, his frequent trips south of the border to Mexico have influenced his music. Clyne attended college at Arizona State University, where he played with several bands. [2]
While at ASU, he did a Spanish immersion class and lived with a family in Enseñada, Mexico. During that same stay, he also did an ethnography for Anthropology credit of his choice of subject, mariachis. This meant Clyne would follow them around town and interview them while buying them beers and gaining their trust. [ citation needed ]
Every album since then that Clyne has written for both The Refreshments and RCPM has had mariachi horns on it. His love of a beach town on the Sea of Cortez in Sonora, Mexico called Puerto Peñasco (Rocky Point) came through when he decided to have his band play there for a concert in 2000. What began as a one-night, one-band concert there grew into what is now a four-day annual music festival named Circus Mexicus. The event brings over 5,000 people and two events, the Hot Dog & a Smile and the Rock & Beach Soccer tournament, both raise money for charities based in Rocky Point. [3]
Clyne owns his own tour bus and tours all over the United States every year. His other interests include his own brand of ultra-premium tequila, named Roger Clyne's Mexican Moonshine Tequila, which was renamed Canción in 2021. [4] [5]
He is also part-owner of a bar in Puerto Peñasco called Banditos.
Clyne and his wife, Alisa Nicole Clyne, live in Tempe; they have three children. [6]
In the 2011 novel Donations to Clarity by Noah Baird (Published by Second Wind Publishing), two characters were named after Roger Clyne- A newscaster 'Echo Clyne' and her cameraman 'Roger'. [7]
In 2016, Popmotion Pictures created a documentary of The Refreshments to celebrate their first album, "Fizzy Fuzzy, Big & Buzzy", turning 20 years old. Named "Here's to Life," the documentary was released in March, 2017 and featured in the Phoenix Film Festival. [8]
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 the location of the main campus of Arizona State University.
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.
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.
Puerto Peñasco is a small city located in Puerto Peñasco Municipality in the northwest of the Mexican state of Sonora, 100 kilometres (62 mi) from the border with the U.S. state of Arizona. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 62,689 inhabitants. It is located on the northern shores of the Sea of Cortez on the small strip of land that joins the Baja California Peninsula with the rest of Mexico. The area is part of the Altar Desert, one of the driest and hottest areas of the larger Sonoran Desert.
Jorge Alberto de la Rosa Gonzalez is a Mexican former professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Milwaukee Brewers, Kansas City Royals, Colorado Rockies, Arizona Diamondbacks and Chicago Cubs.
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.
José L. Hernández is a Mexican mariachi musician.
Fizzy Fuzzy Big & Buzzy is an album by the American band the Refreshments, released in 1996. Many of the tracks are re-recordings of songs from their debut, Wheelie, which saw a limited release. The album title is an homage to the Who's Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy.
No More Beautiful World is the fourth studio album released by Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers. It was released on 20 March 2007 and was produced by Clif Norrell, who had previously worked with Roger Clyne on The Refreshments album Fizzy Fuzzy Big & Buzzy
"Cielito Lindo" is a Mexican folk song or copla popularized in 1882 by Mexican author Quirino Mendoza y Cortés. It is roughly translated as "Lovely Sweet One". Although the word cielo means "sky" or "heaven", it is also a term of endearment comparable to "sweetheart" or "honey". Cielito, the diminutive, can be translated as "sweetie"; lindo means "cute", "lovely" or "pretty". The song is commonly known by words from the refrain, "Canta y no llores", or simply as the "Ay, Ay, Ay, Ay song".
Paul "P.H." Naffah is best known as the former drummer for the Refreshments. He is now the drummer for Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers, the band he created with fellow Refreshment Roger Clyne.
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 went on to sign with major record labels. Long Wong's closed on April 3, 2004. Wild Bill lived there in the late 1980's - early 1990's.
Dead Hot Workshop is an American rock band based in Tempe, Arizona.
"Banditos" is a song by American band The Refreshments from their album Fizzy Fuzzy Big & Buzzy. The song is the band's best-known hit.
The Bottle & Fresh Horses is the second and final album by the alternative rock band the Refreshments, released in 1997.
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.
Turbo Ocho is the fifth studio album released by Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers. It was released on April 29, 2008.
Danny Torgersen is an American musician, vocalist, and trumpeter from Phoenix, Arizona best known for his work as the lead singer for the Phoenix-based progressive rock band Captain Squeegee.