Night Ranger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Night Ranger | |
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Origin | San Francisco, California, USA |
Genre(s) | Hard rock, Glam metal, Melodic rock |
Years active | 1982–1989 1991–present |
Label(s) | MCA, BGO, CMC International Universal, Legacy Recordings |
Associated acts | Rubicon, Damn Yankees, Shaw/Blades |
Website | NightRanger.com |
Members | |
Kelly Keagy (drums, lead vocals) Brad Gillis (guitar, backing vocals) Jack Blades (bass, lead vocals) Christian Matthew Cullen (keyboard, backing vocals) Joel Hoekstra (guitar, backing vocals) |
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Former members | |
Jeff Watson (guitar, backing vocals) Alan Fitzgerald (keyboard, backing vocals) Jesse Bradman (keyboard, backing vocals) Gary Moon (bass, lead vocals) David Zaijcek (guitar, keyboard, backing vocals) Michael Lardie (keyboard, backing vocals) Reb Beach (guitar, backing vocals) |
Night Ranger is an American rock band formed in San Francisco, California that gained significant popularity during the 1980s with a series of successful albums and singles.[1] The band's first five albums sold over 10 million copies worldwide, and gave the band international recognition.[1] The quintet is perhaps best known for the power ballad "Sister Christian", which peaked at #5 in early 1984.
After their success waned in the late 1980s, the band split up in 1989 and its members pursued other musical endeavours including both group and solo efforts.[2][3][4] Several members released an album without original singer Jack Blades in the mid-1990s, but the band soon re-united to release two new albums in the latter half of the decade. Despite the departure of original keyboardist Alan Fitzgerald and guitarist Jeff Watson, the band has continued to tour into 2008 and remains very popular in Asian countries including Japan.[5]
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early beginnings
The group's origin can be traced back to Rubicon, a pop group led by Jerry Martini, who gained fame as a member of Sly and the Family Stone. After Rubicon's demise in 1979, bassist Jack Blades formed a hard rock trio[4] with drummer Kelly Keagy and guitarist Brad Gillis. Performing under the name Stereo, the threesome later added keyboardist Alan Fitzgerald, a former member of Montrose (and the offstage keyboard player for Van Halen during the 1990s). Fitzgerald soon recommended enlisting a second virtuoso guitarist, so Jeff Watson, who led his own band in Northern California, was added to the group. The seeds were sown for a new melodic hard rock band, initially called simply Ranger.
[edit] 1980s
In 1982, the band changed its name to Night Ranger after a country band, The Rangers, claimed a trademark infringement. By this point, they had recorded Dawn Patrol for Boardwalk Records, opening for ZZ Top and Ozzy Osbourne; the latter performer employed Brad Gillis as an alternate guitarist for the recently deceased Randy Rhoads. When Boardwalk folded under, producer Bruce Bird secured Night Ranger a deal with MCA Camel in 1983.
Their first three albums struck a balance between hard rockers laden with sexual innuendo and accessible pop ballads to guarantee airplay. Dawn Patrol, Midnight Madness, and Seven Wishes all reached RIAA platinum status and garnered the band international fame. 1987's Big Life fell short of Platinum status at around 800,000 copies. Thereafter, the group's fortunes began to decline.
Night Ranger's overall image tended to be somewhat cleaner than MTV contemporaries like Mötley Crüe or Ratt which helped the band flourish during a decade characterized by PMRC controversy. Moreover, their Top 20 anthem, "(You Can Still) Rock In America," appealed to a patriotic trend in 1980s rock, pushed forward by both Ted Nugent and Sammy Hagar (Jack Blades would later form a popular supergroup with Nugent, called Damn Yankees)[4].
Negative criticism abounded during the band's heyday; Rolling Stone's review of Seven Wishes took a swipe at Night Ranger's "formula" of "sub-Broadway" ballads. Other critics were less flattering, with terms such as "poseurs" and "pomp-rockers" in various music guides. But favourable critics, such as Hit Parader, underscored Jack Blades' puppy-dog appeal, which won over female fans, while Gillis and Watson's duelling guitars pleased the same male audience that guitar-driven bands such as Van Halen had already begun to cultivate. Both guitarists also featured prominently in magazines like "Guitar for the Practicing Musician."
Dawn Patrol's first single, "Don't Tell Me You Love Me," received a boost through its MTV video airplay and peaked modestly at #40 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. "Sing Me Away," a concert favourite sung by Keagy, failed to chart even though it also featured on MTV.
Night Ranger's hold solidified with their second album, Midnight Madness, which pushed the band from opening act to headliner status by the summer of 1984. Apart from "Rock in America," Night Ranger released two ballads: "When You Close Your Eyes" (#14) and "Sister Christian," (#5) written and sung by Kelly Keagy for his younger sister, Christine. "Sister Christian" proved to be the band's milestone -- as well as a millstone -- as future events turned out.[3]
According to a later interview with Brad Gillis, "Sister Christian" had actually been completed in 1982. But Gillis said the band chose not to release it on "Dawn Patrol" because they were afraid of losing their hard rock credentials. "Sister Christian," soon became a prom favourite, as well as a cautionary anthem for teenage girls across conservative Middle America, warning them not to "give it up before their time is due," as the song's second verse urged.
In 1985, Night Ranger continued headlining their own tours in support of Seven Wishes, which followed a very loose concept of the band flying across the ocean in a WWII B-25 Mitchell bomber. Jack Blades later reported he and Brad Gillis were fascinated by World War II planes. Night Ranger's "Sentimental Street" video even placed them in an Amelia Earhart scenario, which reported the entire band lost at sea. Like Midnight Madness, Seven Wishes was also blessed with three hit singles: "Sentimental Street" (#8; sung by Kelly Keagy), Jack Blades' mid-tempo rocker "Four In The Morning" (#19), and the pleasant, acoustic-flavoured "Goodbye" (#17), which saw the band veering toward an overtly commercial direction.
Between 1984 and 1987, Night Ranger branched out into soundtracks, recording or contributing songs to several teenage films. In 1984, the band released "Interstate Love Affair" (later appearing on Seven Wishes) for Teachers, starring Nick Nolte. The band also received exposure on two Anthony Michael Hall vehicles, Sixteen Candles (1985) and Out of Bounds in (1986). "Rumours in the Air" from Midnight Madness appeared on the former, while the latter featured "Wild and Innocent Youth," a Blades-Keagy composition unreleased by the band.
In 1987, they co-wrote the title theme to the Michael J. Fox film The Secret of My Success, which served as the lead single from Big Life. Unfortunately, Night Ranger faced stiff competition from glam bands such as Bon Jovi and Poison, while overall tastes had begun to shift toward "bad boy" groups, such as Guns N' Roses. Moreover, some Night Ranger fans perceived the band's Hollywood flirtations as evidence of "selling out," reflected by a decline in album sales for Big Life.
Despite a collection of fairly mature songs, including the nuanced "Rain Comes Crashing Down," none of the chosen singles from Big Life hit the Top 40. "Secret of My Success" stalled just short of hit single status, despite heavy MTV rotation in 1987. Night Ranger also openly quarrelled with MCA over choosing "Hearts Away" in lieu of one of the heavier songs. Their label expected another Top 10 ballad, like "Sister Christian" or "Sentimental Street," but "Hearts Away" failed to catch on during Night Ranger's 1987 tour — a vigorous series of dates across North America and the Caribbean.
In 1988, Man In Motion promised a return to earlier form, with more hard rock to anchor the group's sagging fortunes. However, Alan Fitzgerald left during the recording, requiring a touring keyboardist (Jesse Bradman) to be hired for the road. Furthermore, none of the singles were distinguished enough to gain radio airplay, and MCA once more chose ballads over rockers. "I Did It For Love" (written by Russ Ballard) fared poorly, even with a cameo appearance by Morgan Fairchild in the video. Although the band still views "Restless Kind" as a favourite, it also failed to chart. Man in Motion thus became the first Night Ranger album not to achieve gold or platinum status.
[edit] 1990s
After a mediocre tour in 1988-1989 supporting the album, Jack Blades left Night Ranger to form the popular supergroup Damn Yankees with Ted Nugent and Tommy Shaw of Styx and the group broke up.[4] In 1991 Kelly Keagy and Brad Gillis enlisted Gary Moon to replace Jack Blades as bassist and decided to continue in a trio format after Jeff Watson left to renew his solo career. Night Ranger recorded one album, Feeding Off The Mojo in 1995, which did not improve the band's profile despite a rigorous tour schedule in the early 1990s. For the 1995 tour to promote Mojo David Zaijcek(from the group Airborne) was added on keyboards and guitar to bolster the group's stage sound. In 1996 Jack Blades returned to Night Ranger, which reformed with all five original members for two studio albums on CMC Records, who engineered a similar comeback for Styx. While Neverland and Seven did not become as successful as the band's early material in the United States, they became quite popular in Japan. The band tours sporadically in between solo albums and projects. Jack Blades also serves as chief counsellor for the Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp.
[edit] 2000s
Night Ranger continues to play the summer festival circuit. In 1999 they joined other 1980s bands in the second instalment of the Rock Never Stops Tour.
In 2003 Alan Fitzgerald was replaced by Great White guitarist/keyboardist Michael Lardie. Fitz handled offstage keyboards once again for Van Halen.
In 2007, while working on Hole In The Sun, Jeff Watson was fired from the band. His replacement for the remainder of the tour was Winger/Whitesnake guitarist Reb Beach. Lardie and Beach have currently left the band to focus on projects from Great White and Winger/Whitesnake. According to the bands MySpace site, Joel Hoekstra has replaced Beach and Christian Matthew Cullen has replaced Lardie.
In January 2008, in a podcast interview with Stuck in the 80s, Jack Blades said the band's latest album -- Hole in the Sun -- would be released in April 2008 and will be supported by a national tour. In addition, Blades said the band was flying to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in late January to play a special show for the Navy and Marines troops on the island. To date night ranger have sold 16 million albums worldwide.[6]
[edit] Band members
[edit] Line-ups
(1982-1988) |
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(1988) |
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(1988-1989) |
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(1989) |
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(1989) |
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(1989-1991) |
(Night Ranger disbanded) |
(1991) |
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(1991-1995) |
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(1995-1996) |
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(1996) |
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(1996-2003) |
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(2003-2007) |
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(2007) |
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(2007-2008) |
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(2008-present) |
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[edit] Discography
[edit] Studio albums
- 1982 - Dawn Patrol #38 US Platinum
- 1983 - Midnight Madness #15 US Platinum
- 1985 - Seven Wishes #10 US Platinum
- 1987 - Big Life #28 US Gold
- 1988 - Man in Motion #81 US
- 1997 - Feeding off the Mojo
- 1997 - Neverland
- 1998 - Seven
- 2008 - Hole in the Sun [7]
[edit] Other releases
- 1989 - Greatest Hits
- 1990 - Live in Japan
- 1997 - Rock in Japan '97 (Japanese release)"
- 1998 - Rock Masterpiece Collection
- 1998 - Keep Rockin': Best Selection '97 – '98
- 2000 - The Millennium Collection
- 2005 - Hits, Acoustic & Rarities (re-recorded hits)
- 2005 - Rock Breakout Years: 1984 [Live]
- 2006 - The Best of Night Ranger Live
- 2007 - Night Ranger Live
- 2007 - Extended Versions (Live)[8]
[edit] Singles
Year | Song | US Hot 100 | US Mainstream Rock | Album |
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1983 | "Don't Tell Me You Love Me" | 40 | 4 | Dawn Patrol |
1983 | "Sing Me Away" | 54 | 39 | Dawn Patrol |
1983 | "(You Can Still) Rock In America" | 51 | 15 | Midnight Madness |
1984 | "Sister Christian" | 5 | 2 | Midnight Madness |
1984 | "When You Close Your Eyes" | 14 | 14 | Midnight Madness |
1985 | "Sentimental Street" | 8 | 3 | Seven Wishes |
1985 | "Four In The Morning (I Can't Take Anymore)" | 19 | 13 | Seven Wishes |
1985 | "Goodbye" | 17 | 16 | Seven Wishes |
1987 | "The Secret Of My Success" | 64 | 12 | Big Life |
1987 | "Hearts Away" | 90 | - | Big Life |
1988 | "I Did It For Love" | 75 | 16 | Man In Motion |
1988 | "(Don't Start Thinking) I'm Alone Tonight" | - | - | Man In Motion |
[edit] External links
- Official Night Ranger Website
- Official Jack Blades Website
- Jack Blades interview on Stuck in the 80s
- Official MySpace Site
[edit] References
- ^ a b Sony Music Biography
- ^ Brad Gillis. Official Community of Night Ranger. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.
- ^ a b Kelly Keagy. Official Community of Night Ranger. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.
- ^ a b c d Jack Blades. Official Community of Night Ranger. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.
- ^ CD Universe Bio
- ^ Stuck in the '80s | tampabay.com: Archives
- ^ Night Ranger Discography. Official Community of Night Ranger. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.
- ^ Night Ranger Discography. Official Community of Night Ranger. Retrieved on 2008-05-21.