Extra Action Marching Band | |
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2006 East Coast Tour |
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Background information | |
Origin | Oakland, CA |
Genres | Marching band, Punk rock |
Years active | 1998-Present |
Website | extra-action.com |
The Extra Action Marching Band is an American musical group loosely based on the American marching band construct. The instrumentation is entirely brass and drums. At performances, provocatively flamboyant cheerleaders with pom-poms and flags engage the audience.
"There's really no need to introduce the Extra Action Marching Band: The Bay Area institution has been crashing parties, invading bars, and blowing minds with its signature "high school marching band on acid" punk-meets-Sousa bombast for years now. The tuba players, flag team, and percussion section take perverse delight in twisting the staid conventions of their respective forms, and it can be downright disorienting to spot a sexy trombone player." - Hiya Swanhuyser – SF Weekly 2005
“… performance at the… Hollywood Bowl… Not bad for a bunch of temperamental weirdos who were once paid in gift certificates to a sex toy shop [payment for playing at the opening of Good Vibrations vibrator store for women]” –SPIN Magazine, Feb 2006
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Simon Cheffins of the San Diego based Crash Worship started Extra Action in 1999 after relocating to Bay Area. Since then, the band has expanded from a loose configuration under a dozen to approximately 35 plus members.
Perhaps the band's most ambitious (non musical) project, a to-scale replica of a wooden seagoing vessel built around a schoolbus, was called "La Contessa", and was burned to the ground in early December 2006 by Mike Stewart, a disgruntled Nevada resident who owned the land that La Contessa was being stored on.[1]
The band's musical styles and influences include the Master Musicians of Joujouka, funk, circus music, New Orleans jazz, Black Sabbath, and gypsy music from Eastern Europe.[2]
The group has often appeared uninvited at corporate events, protests, marches, weddings, and other public occasions.[3] They appeared unexpectedly at a book signing by David Byrne, which impressed Byrne so much that he invited them as an opening act for various performances in California.[3]
Other performance highlights include stopping at the Hollywood Bowl, and later sloshing through 3 inches of toilet water that covered the entire floor of the sandiego club, the casbah. There was a tour of the American South, that re-created Black Sabbath's heavy metal debut classic, with plain ole heavy eXtreme Elvis on vocals. After these performances, Extra Action performed at other large venues such as the Download Festival (U.S. version), where they performed on stage with Modest Mouse and The Arcade Fire, as well as the Fusion Festival (Germany) and the Rock For People Festival (Czech Republic) in 2007, and festival I.D.E.A.L in France (2008),to name a few. However, the band is most at home in small to medium sized venues where they can get up close and personal with their audience (often spending more time in the audience than on stage). Sex and sensuality play a key role in this group's dynamic and stage (as well as floor) presence. Also of note is the manner in which the band uses "military-style" formations to careen through, corral, and otherwise manipulate their audiences.
"Witness them perform and they don't as much walk on stage as storm it . . .Their music has been described as a fusion of Balkan brass and New Orleans funk, which references circus themes and Black Sabbath's first album." - Dazed & Confused (magazine)
"When they marched onto the stage at Shoreline Amphitheater to join Arcade Fire (after crashing the women's room) at last year's Download Festival — ragtag horn and drum corps ripping through a few numbers as the flag girls and boy bumped and grinded in blond wigs and glittery G-strings — you realized what was really missing from indie at this performance, at so many performances: sex appeal. Theater. A drunken mastery of performance and the dark arts of showmanship, along with the sense of team spirit linked to so much marching band imagery bandied about in today's pop." - Kimberly Chun, San Francisco Bay Guardian
Europe 2007: NYC, Holland, Germany, Czech, Austria, Switzerland, Italy
East Coast 2006: New York, Asbury Park,Boston, Providence
East Coast 2005: Chicago,Detroit, Toronto,some hippy festival somewhere in Connecticut,Providence, New York,
Europe 2004: Holland, Germany, Czech, Serbia, Austria
Playing Black Sabbath's first album with Extreme Elvis 2003: New Orleans,Fort Worth, austin, Phoenix, Las Vegas, LA, San Francisco