Not sure if this is Cafe Society or IMHO, but since it’s really about bands I put it here.
I’m from Boston. When I think of the music scene here several bands come to mind; Aerosmith, J Geils Band, the Pixies, and, of course, Boston. I suppose I could also add the Boston Pops.
So, what are the bands that represent your city/area? Granted, places like NY and Memphis might be a bit of a problem, but give it a shot.
In order of exact proximity: Cradle of Filth, Busted, McFly, and The Darkness.
I think I’d prefer to point out that the great man John Peel lived not far away.
Iron Butterfly were the San Diego hometown heroes when I was a kid. About our only other claim to rock ‘n’ roll fame back then was Gary Puckett. Today San Diego is probably best known for Rocket from the Crypt.
I now live in San Mateo. Santana recorded Abraxas here.
Easy one here Seattle home of Grunge :rolleyes: Pearl Jam. Oh and that dead guy.
But before that…sound…we had Jimi Hendrix, Heart, Steve Miller, The Kingsmen. Not sooo bad.
Gah, I don’t know which is worse. My hometown of Miami is responsible for the Latin-pop sounds of Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine, the disco of KC and the Sunshine Band, and the raunchy, booty-shaking hip-hop style called bass. My current home of Orlando released Lou Pearlman’s mass-produced boy bands on the world: Backstreet Boyz, N’Sync, 98 Degrees, and O-Town. On behalf of both cities, I humbly apologize to the rest of you.
Hamilton, Ontario produced Tranquility Base, who were the first rock-roup-in-residence with the Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra. The group featured Ian Thomas, one of our favorite sons. Canada’s legendary party band Crowbar were locals, as were singer Ray Materick, and pub rockers Teenage Head. Neil Peart, drummer from Rush, is from there. Members of The Band, while not residents of Hamilton, were born and/or raised in the area. Bob Bryden was a member of Christmas, whose few records go for hundreds of dollars if you can find any copies. He founded Benzene Jag in the 1980s. They’re only known to locals, and did not gain any kind of widespread fame, but anyone who saw them can still remember it. Tom Wilson & The Florida Razors were being greased up by Sony Music as the Next Big Thing, but most of the members could not cross the border due to possession convictions, so their career died just before birth when they couldn’t make their media debut in NYC.
Oh, I forgot: San Diego likes to claim Frank Zappa because he lived there briefly during his high school years. Zappa did refer to himself at least once in an interview as being “from San Diego.”
Well, growing up, Houston was kind of a dead spot musically. The hometown heroes were always ZZ Top and Clint Black. There was always a little brewing under the surface, especially amongst Texas blues, but it was always the first two that you thought of when you thought Houston music.
Over the past decade or so, there has been quite a branching out. I think the H-town rap scene of DJ Screw, Slim Thug, UGK, Pimp C, Bun B, Lil’ Flip and others as well as La Mafia and Selena and the other big Tejano acts could very well line up next to country and Southern rock.
Growing up in the mid 1980s, Jean Michel Jarre did this whole downtown concert thing with lasers called Rendez-Vous which set the record for the largest concert ever. That certainly entered the Houston music mythos, even though he is obviously not a native…
No, the blonde dead guy that shot himself, or his wife did, or someone. You, know, he thought he as Jim Morrison, but without the voice or talent… intitals KC