Local H

Local H

Local H in concert
Background information
Origin Zion, Illinois, United States
Genres Alternative rock, grunge, post-grunge, hard rock, punk rock
Years active 1987–present
Labels Island (1995-1999)
Palm Pictures (2001-2002)
Thick (2003)
Studio E (2004)
Cleopatra (2005)
Shout! Factory (2008)
Associated acts Triple Fast Action
The Prairie Cartel
Rights of the Accused
A Band Called Horse
Scott Lucas and the Married Men
Website http://www.localh.com
Members
Scott Lucas
Brian St. Clair
Past members
Joe Daniels
Matt Garcia

Local H is an American rock duo, formed by Joe Daniels (drums) and Scott Lucas (lead vocals, guitar, bass) in Zion, Illinois in 1987. Local H's 1996 album, As Good as Dead, includes the top 10 hit "Bound for the Floor" Author, rock critic and Rolling Stone contributor Greg Kot and the Chicago Tribune named the band its 2008 Chicago "Band of the Year", calling them "as good a rock band as any to call Chicago home in the last decade."[1] Online Metacritic calls Local H "rock’s greatest unknown two-man band" and says of their newest album, 12 Angry Months, "the ten year anniversary of Pack Up the Cats marks not some complacent CD reissue with bonus tracks, but rather a great new album that flips the bird to anyone who thought Local H was history along with their era."

Contents

History

Local H was originally a three-piece band which consisted Joe Daniels on drums, Scott Lucas on vocals and guitar, and Matthew Garcia on bass. In 1987, while attending high school in Zion, IL, Joe Daniels and Scott Lucas began playing together. Later, Matthew Garcia joined them, and they formed Local H in 1990. In 1993, Garcia left the band. Lucas and Daniels began looking for a replacement for Garcia, but eventually continued the band as a duo with Lucas singing, playing guitar, and bass guitar (by having a high school friend modify his guitar with a bass pick-up).

Together Daniels and Lucas recorded and released three studio albums: Ham Fisted (1995), As Good as Dead (1996), and Pack Up the Cats (1998). With 1996's 'As Good as Dead' the band found a major commercial success in "Bound for the Floor" which rose to #5 on the US Alternative Billboards and #10 on the US Hot Mainstream Rock Billboards. Tracks "Eddie Vedder" and "Fritz's Corner" both made Top 40 on the Alternative and Mainstream Rock Billboards.

In July 1999, after a complicated year with their label, original drummer Joe Daniels left the band. He was replaced by former member of Triple Fast Action, drum tech for Cheap Trick, and "one of the hardest working drummers in rock history"[2], Brian St. Clair. Lucas and St. Clair released the band's fourth album Here Comes the Zoo in 2002 under the Palm Pictures record label. The No Fun EP followed in 2003 and their fifth album, Whatever Happened to P.J. Soles?, was released in April 2004 to favorable reviews.

In 2005, the band received a good deal of publicity after recording a cover of the Britney Spears single "Toxic." The studio-record can now be found as the last, and only studio recorded, track of Alive '05, a live album the band released in 2005 that constituted the sixth major release from the band.

On April 5, 2011, the ICON release of the band's Island recordings became their first "best-of" compilation. In an April 22, 2011 interview with The Delaware County Daily Times, Scott Lucas commented on the release saying, “It’s kinda weird but kinda cool because it doesn’t cover our entire career, so I was like, “Let’s call it The Island Years.”

Throughout 2011, the band has played new songs that are expected to be on an upcoming album. These songs include "Another February," "Paddy Considine," and "Cold Manor." In a June 28, 2011 guest appearance on the movie review podcast/website "CinemaJaw," Lucas claimed that the next album would be out before the upcoming 2012 elections—mainly because so much of the album's content deals with it directly—expecting it to be released by February 2012.[3] In the same interview, Lucas also suggested that a working title for the album was "Hallelujah My Bum," named for a movie from the Depression Era.

On January 1, 2012, during the band's New Year's show at The Bottom Lounge in Chicago, Scott announced that he and Brian would begin recording for the next album in Chicago within 2 weeks.

Live shows

Local H is known for their frequent and energetic live shows. The members of the band can usually be found at their own merchandise table after shows, signing autographs and selling band t-shirts.

Local H also has a reputation for creative ideas with regards to its live shows. In addition to playing a show in Chicago every New Year's Eve, the band has also participated in several unconventional concerts over the years, such as allowing one fan to select an album name from a hat, and then playing that album in its entirety. In 2005, Local H performed an "all request tour" in which a ballot containing a breakdown of most of the bands' songs organized into various categories, resembling a traditional sushi menu, was handed out to the audience upon admittance to the venue. Audiences were allowed to pick seven songs from the "menu" and the setlist for each show was derived from these ballots.

In 2003, the band auctioned off a live show to the winner of an eBay auction. The band subsequently performed this concert at Duke O'Briens, a pub in Crystal Lake, IL.

In the summer of 2007, Local H played an early morning show at U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago before a White Sox game. Tickets to this show were only available by spotting Scott Lucas in public and speaking the phrase "Attention all planets of the Solar Federation, we have assumed control" directly to him. Later that same year, Local H announced a contest in which fans could make videos of themselves covering Local H songs. The winner would then get to be the opening act for Local H's New Year's Eve show later that year. A band from New York called Kung-Fu Grip won the contest with their cover of a song from Local H's No Fun E.P.

During the spring months of 2010, Local H embarked on their "6 Angry Records" Tour. Each show began with Scott holding a hat filled with slips of paper containing the band's album names. After interviewing members of the audience about which album they'd like to hear, one audience member would choose an album from the hat. The band would then play that album on the spot in its entirety, following by an encore of other Local H favorites and covers.

Band members

Current members
Former members

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

Compilation albums

Extended plays

Singles

Year Single Peak chart positions Album
US Hot 100 US Main US Mod UK
1994 "Cynic" Ham Fisted
"Mayonnaise and Malaise"
1996 "High-Fiving MF" As Good as Dead
"Bound for the Floor" 10 5
1997 "Eddie Vedder" 38
"Fritz's Corner" 36
1998 "All the Kids Are Right" 19 20 Pack Up the Cats
"All-Right (Oh, Yeah)"
2001 "Half-Life" 40 Here Comes the Zoo
2002 "Hands on the Bible"
2004 "California Songs" Whatever Happened to P.J. Soles?
2005 "Toxic" Alive '05
2008 "24 Hour Break-Up Session" Twelve Angry Months
2009 "Machine Shed Wrestling"
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory.

Split singles

Year Single Other artist Peak positions
US Main US Mod
1994 "Disgruntled Xmas"/"White Christmas" Sybil Vane
2000 "Birth, School, Work, Death"/"Corporation" The Blank Theory
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory.

Demo releases

Videos

Compilations and soundtracks

See also

References

External links