Gabba (band)

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Gabba is a London-based British tribute band performing ABBA songs in the stripped down punk style of the Ramones, a style of pop punk they dubbed discopunk and claim to have invented[1]. They formed in 1996 and took their name in 1999. They have released three albums as of 2006.

Contents

[edit] History

Gabba was informally formed in 1996[2] by Stig Honda, alleged "professor at the Osaka Rock 'n' Roll High School", who enrolled five students from all over the world to fuse the disco pop of Abba and the punk rock of the Ramones, creating "discopunk".

In 1999, the band took its name of "GABBA, The Discopunk Sensation". The name is an acrostic on the members' nicknames, echoing both the Ramones' "Gabba Gabba Hey" and the name of Abba.

Their second recording and official debut album, the CD Leave Stockholm (1999), was produced by Stigma Records (UK) and sub-distributed by Rough Trade Records.

According to a band statement [1], " [In 2001] GABBA release their complex 3rd album, the Spanish language "Tijuana Dance". However, the album was banned and withdrawn from sale after just 1 week for being "Anti-Establishment", due to some confusion over Bee Bee's appalling Spanish translations which inadvertently accused the Queen of England of being a Nazi Stormtrouper (in a stupor, no less). It is unclear if the album will ever be released again. "

[edit] Media attention

They have been aired mostly in the UK[3][4], on Steve Lamacq's BBC Radio 1 The Evening Session[5], on BBC Television's The Beat Room[6], on BBC Radio Scotland's The Beat Patrol[7], and webcast on Virtue TV[8] (now Interoute TV).

They have been written about in magazines such as Mojo[9], Melody Maker[10], NME[11], Time Out, Music365.com[12], CMJ New Music Monthly[13], The Ramones UK Fan Club Newsletter[14], and the London Evening Standard.

They have played along bands such as Negativland, The Rezillos, and Chicks on Speed, in various outlets in London, and at the 1999 Xmas parties of Rough Trade Records[15] and Fierce Panda Records[16].

In related medias, their autobiographical musical short film "Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment" (written and directed by Cliff Homow [2], alias "Cliffy Hormone", and Midge Devitt) won the 2003 "Special Independent Film Award" at London's counterculture Portobello Film Festival[17].

[edit] Members

On stage, acrostically
Backstage
  • Stig Honda (Japan) - business manager, lyrics (represents Stig Anderson, ABBA manager)
  • Phil Smegma (UK) - production manager (represents Phil Ramone and Phil Spector, Ramones producers)
  • Monte Malmönik (Sweden) - road manager (represents Monte Melnick, Ramones roadie)

(The countries of origin are alleged by the members, who could possibly be all British.)

[edit] Discography

Albums
  • (199?) Missile to Malmö (deleted)
  • (1999) Leave Stockholm (CD out-of-print, now in MP3s and BitTorrent)
  • (2001) Tijuana Dance (banned)
Singles and songs on compilations
  • (2001) "Gabba Gabba" on Life's a Gas (international tribute album[18] to the late Joey Ramone)
  • (2005) "Gabba Gabba" single on iTunes UK

[edit] Trivia

  • In 1999, Bjöey was reportedly the 7th tallest man in Britain[19] at 7'5" (2.26 m)[20], the same height than the Wookie Chewbacca in Star Wars. (At the same time, the tallest man in Britain is 7'7½", the tallest in the world is 7'9".)
  • Most Gabba details are references to the Ramones with some ABBA thrown in. For instance, Missile to Malmö alludes to the Ramones' Rocket to Russia with the Swedish town of Malmö, just like Leave Stockholm alludes to Leave Home in Sweden. One of their promo photo [3] recreates the cover of the album Ramones. Etc.
  • The smegma is a secretion of genitals. "Malmönik", being Malmö and the suffix -nik, means "someone from Malmö".

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gabba claiming to be "the inventors of Discopunk" in the October 1999 item
  2. ^ An old version of Bjöey's profile mentions he went to Osaka in 1996 - cached in 2000 at Archive.org
  3. ^ "Up and coming music bands" at Alternative-Links - cached in 2005 at Archive.org
  4. ^ Gabba's list of TV, radio, and live tour shows
  5. ^ Photos of Gabba live in 1999 on BBC Radio 1's Evening Session - cached in 2000 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  6. ^ Photos of Gabba live in 1999 on BBC Television's The Beat Room - cached in 2000 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  7. ^ Photos of Gabba live in 1999 on BBC Radio Scotland's The Beat Patrol - cached in 2001 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  8. ^ Gabba live on a 2000 webcast on VirtueTV - cached in 2001 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  9. ^ Screen copy of the article in Mojo (September 1999) by Jim Irvin - cached in 2001 at Archive.org
  10. ^ Screen copy of the article in Melody Maker (July 10 1999) - cached in 2001 at Archive.org
  11. ^ NME (August 14 1999)
  12. ^ Screen copy of the article in Music365.com (June 10 1999) by Steve Jelbert (from The Independent) - cached in 2004 at Archive.org
  13. ^ Screen copy of the article in CMJ New Music Monthly (Issue 83, July 2000) - cached in 2003 at Archive.org
  14. ^ Screen copy of the article in The Ramones UK Fan Club Newsletter (Number 24, February 2000) - cached in 2001 at Archive.org
  15. ^ Gabba live at the 1999 Xmas party of Rough Trade Records - cached in 2000 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  16. ^ Gabba live at the 1999 Xmas party of Fierce Panda Records - cached in 2000 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  17. ^ Portobello Film Festival report of the 2003 awards - cached in 2004 at Archive.org
  18. ^ Track listing of Life's a Gas - cached in 2001 at Archive.org (JavaScript required for images)
  19. ^ Bjöey "the 7th tallest man in Britain" as reported by Melody Maker - cached in 2001 at Archive.org
  20. ^ Bjöey's profile mentions his height - cached in 2000 at Archive.org

[edit] External links

Official links
Resource links
Crazy fans links