Flop (band)
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Flop | |
---|---|
Origin | Seattle, Washington |
Genre(s) | Pop punk Punk rock |
Years active | 1990—1995 |
Label(s) | Lucky Records (1990) Dashboard Hula Girl (1990) Frontier Records (1992) Sony 550 (1993) Munster Records (1993) Super Electro (1995) Frontier Records (1995) |
Associated acts | Pure Joy Chemistry Set Seers of Bavaria The Fastbacks The Posies |
Website | myspace.com/floptheband |
Members | |
Rusty Willoughby Bill Campbell Paul Schurr (1990-1994) Dave Fox (1994-1995) Nate Johnson |
Flop was an early-1990s pop punk band from Seattle, Washington. The band gained some exposure as a result of a brief appearance in Doug Pray's motion picture documentary Hype!.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] The Beginning (1990-1991)
Flop's original four members consisted of lead singer, guitarist and songwriter Rusty Willoughby, guitarist Bill Campbell, bassist Paul Schurr and drummer Nate Johnson. Willoughby, Campbell and Schurr lived together with a few other friends in a large craftsman-style house in Seattle's U-District near the University of Washington campus.
Willoughby, Campbell and Schurr began jamming together during the declines of their respective bands Pure Joy, Chemistry Set and Seers of Bavaria. Johnson, drummer for seminal Seattle punk band The Fastbacks, frequented many of the parties at the U-District house and eventually joined them, completing the foursome. Never intending to actually become a real band, they toyed with many self-deprecating ames including "Butt Sweat and Tears" and "The Value Village People". Eventually however they lied their way into a show and needed an official name and inspired by the headline for a review of a local play in the newspaper "Resounding Flop" was shortened to "Flop" and a band was born.
The band's first live performance was opening for Game Theory at the University of Washington's HUB ballroom. The promoters originally booked Willoughby's band Pure Joy for the show but Flop played instead, thus notifying his former bandmates of Pure Joy's demise. Pure Joy was still listed as the supporting act on fliers and advertisements.
Flop's live performances over its first two years were marked with near fall-down drunkenness, numerous pitchers of beer poured on band members and audiences alike, and many broken instruments (both theirs and others). Flop was banned from two clubs, one in Vancouver and one in Bellingham during this period.
The band's debut record, The Losing End, was released in 1990 as a 45-RPM 7" EP, and contained four tracks of Flop's earliest material: "The Losing End", "Somehow", "Dissipate" and "Fucking Thing" (shortened to "Ucking" on the sleeve and "F* Thing" on the vinyl artwork at the demand of the record-pressing plant's religious owners). The record was released on the Lucky Records recording label, with cover art provided by Willoughby's brother Randy Willoughby.
Shortly after The Losing End, Flop released its first single, Drugs, featuring a cover version of "Action" by The Sweet. Willoughby has openly expressed disapproval of the record, along with apologies to the record label Dashboard Hula Girl Records, citing unsatisfactory editing and the poor quality of the songs themselves. The sleeve art contains two photos of cadavers in mid-autopsy, taken from one of Schurr's pre-med manuals.
Following the release of Drugs, Johnson left on an Alaska vacation (i.e., gutting fish in a fish-canning boat), putting the band on a year-long hiatus. After Johnson's return to Seattle, the band came back to the studio to record their 1992 debut album, Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer!.
[edit] Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer! (1992-1993)
Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer! was recorded primarily at Egg Studios in Seattle by Kurt Bloch, and was released by Lisa Fancher's Frontier Records. Four of the album's sixteen tracks, "I Told A Lie", "Anne," "Tomato Paste" and "Hello," would later be included on the band's Munster Records 7" EP, We Are You.
According to Rusty Willoughby, the album's basic tracks were recorded hours after a Flop performance in Vancouver, and it was Johnson's return to Seattle from Alaska that "energized" the band into creating the record.
[edit] Whenever You're Ready (1993-1994)
Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer! drew the attention of young A&R man Stuart Meyer at Epic Records, who offered the band a recording contract. The band was signed to the Epic label when their brand of music was at the height of its popularity. Flop recorded its first major label release, Whenever You're Ready, with The Fastbacks' Kurt Bloch. The record was then mixed by Martin Rushent, and was released in 1993 on Sony 550, an imprint label of Epic Records headed by now music mogul Polly Anthony. The record was not commercially successful, however, and the band was dropped by the label.
Following several national and regional club tours, some headlining, others supporting acts like The Lemonheads and The Screaming Trees, Schurr left the band. He was replaced by former Posies bassist Dave Fox following Flop's month-long European tour with The Posies.
[edit] World of Today (1995)
Having already recorded another album's worth of music, Flop returned to Frontier Records to release its third and final LP, World of Today, a pounding, crunching, unapologetic selection of songs with themes ranging from the death of Kurt Cobain to life stories of arsonists. Shortly after its release, Johnson, arguably the heart of the band, left for Europe. Flop disbanded shortly thereafter, playing it's final show at The Casbah in San Diego.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
- Flop and the Fall of the Mopsqueezer! (Frontier Records - 1992)
- Whenever You're Ready (Sony 550 - 1993)
- World of Today (Frontier Records - 1995)
[edit] EPs and Singles
- The Losing End (Lucky Records - 1990)
- Drugs (Dashboard Hula Girl Records - 1990)
- Anne (1993)
- We Are You (Munster Records - 1993)
- Regrets (Sony 550 - 1993)
- The Great Valediction (Sony 550 - 1993)
- Act 1 Scene 1 (Super Electro - 1995)
- Place I Love (1995)
[edit] Compilations
- Another Damned Seattle Compilation (Dashboard Hula Girl Records - 1990)