The 222s | ||
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The 222's playing in Montreal in 2010: Cerrato, Barry, Rondeau |
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Background information | ||
Origin | Canada | |
Genres | Punk Rock | |
Years active | 1978–1982, 2010–present | |
Labels | Rebel Sonik's Chicken Shrimp |
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Associated acts | Acrylic Nudimension Bram The 39 Steps Pillbox (NYC) Southern Death Cult The Throbbing Purple |
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Website | www.the222s.com | |
Members | ||
Chris Barry Pierre Major Joe Cerratto Louie "Louie" Rondeau |
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Past members | ||
Music sample | ||
"I Love Suzan" (1978)
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The 222s are a Canadian punk band first active from 1977 to 1981. They are most famous for their 1978 single "I Love Suzan".[1] They reformed in 2010.
Contents |
The 222s, who took their name from a Canadian pain killer of the same name,[2] were formed by guitar player Pierre "Al Cleann" Major and singer Jean "Frisson" Brisson in the summer of 1977, joined a few months later by bass player and drummer Angel Calvo and drummer, keyboardist and singer Louis "Louie Louie" Rondeau.
Bass player Christian "Chris O'Bell" Belleau replaced Calvo a year later. In the summer of 1978 Jean Frisson quit the band and moved to New York to become a nude dancer.[3] just as the 222s were about to record their first 7",[2] "I love Suzan/The first Studio Bomb," so Rondeau did the lead vocals in addition to drumming. Released in 1978 on band manager François Doyon's Rebel Records, it was the first punk rock single ever released in Montreal and in the province of Quebec.[4]
A 16 years old Chris Barry became the official singer[5] after being introduced to the other guys by Tracey Howe[3] after the release of the 7". He brought his friend, bass player Joe Cerrato to the band in 1980 when Belleau quit the band. Doyon then came into contact with some gangsters from Laval[3] who wanted to try their hands in the music business. The band had been doing a cover of Michel Polnareff's La Poupée qui fait non at their shows for more than a year and the gangsters wanted to turn that song into a provincial hit, like garage band Les Sultans had done in 1966 and market the 222s to the teenybopper public, so they offered to finance the band's second 7".[3][4][5]
They recorded in one of the gangster's house but weren't getting along with them, considering they didn't know anything about music.[3] After a few days of fighting, the mobsters showed the band a gun and told them that there wouldn't be any more fighting. The band finished the record in fear the same day, quit the mobster's house and never got back there.[3][4][5]
The 7", which featured an instrumental version of the song on the B-Side, was released in 1981 on Gamma Records [6] and was a minor regional hit, getting a fair amount of airplay in Quebec but the band was ashamed of it and thought it sounded terrible,[4] among others because the mobster's replaced Barry's voice in the choruses with his sister's voice and his own.[3] This accelerated the demise of the group, which went their separate ways shortly after, in November 1981, because the band members didn't agree about the direction they should take musically.[3][4][5]
Over the course of their career, the 222s toured Canada as extensively as any band could, and even in the USA where they toured with the Nuclear Accidents and ventured off to play at the famous Max's Kansas City in New York City on several occasions.[2][7]
The 222s have kept a legendary status as Quebec's first punk band to release a record and a series of TV appearances they did in the late 70s and early 80s on a local Community television show called The Musi-Video show, which was produced by Doyon's business partner Marc Fontaine,[3] have since resurfaced on Youtube and elsewhere and have sparked a renewed interest in the band,[2] as well as Montreal label Sonik's Chicken Shrimp Records releasing an anthology of the band's demos in 2007 under the name "Montreal Punk '78-'81".[2]
Chris Barry was homeless and returned to North America after CBS Records had listened to some Bram demos and decided to pay for his plane ticket. Not getting along with Bramon, Chris kicked him from the band and reformed the 222's in Montreal with former members Pierre Major and Joe Cerrato in 1984.[5] With the addition of drummer André Gagné and guitar player Richard Paul, they became the 39 Steps and released several albums [2] as well as playing themselves in the Woody Allen movie 'Hannah and Her Sisters', playing the 222's hit "Slip into the Crowd" at the CBGB.[4][5][9] After that, Chris moved to New York to join the band Pillbox (NYC).[4][5][7] He was back in Montreal in the 90's, where he started to study at the university as well as writing a weekly column for the Montreal Mirror.[5] He also started the band Acrylic[4][5] with bass player Roger Dawson, drummer Dave Jones and guitar player Klaus Frostell. Acrylic recorded an album that was never released because the record company went bankrupt.[10] He then started The Throbbing Purple[4][5] in the 2000s with Dawson and Unruled guitar player Michel "Wax" Cyr" and ex-Subhumans drummer Dave "Salty" Macanulty. The band released the "Let it Writhe" CD in 2006 on Sonik's Chicken Shrimp Records but Cyr and Macanulty were soon replaced by other musicians a few months after the CD was released.[5]
In 2010 the official lineup of Chris, Joe, Louie and Pierre reformed at the suggestion of John Kastner from the Asexuals[4] and performed several successful shows at the 2010 NXNE Toronto festival. They also played a show in Montreal with the Asexuals.[2][4]