Horace Pinker

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Horace Pinker
Origin Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genres Punk Rock
Punk Pop
Indie Rock
Years active 1991present
Labels Jump Start
Arctic Rodeo
OffTime
Thick
JumpUp!
Associated acts Jawbreaker
Website Official site
Members Greg Mytych
Bryan Jones
Scott Eastman
Past members Bill Ramsey
Don Meehleis
Chris Bauermeister
Matt Arluck
Miguel Barron
Karl Eifrig
Jeff Dean
Jonathan Richardson
Jesse Everhart
Gregg Dessen

Horace Pinker is an American punk rock band formed in 1991 in Tempe, Arizona and currently based in Chicago, Illinois. They play an energetic, melodic form of pop-punk, filled with catchy hooks and political lyrics, and are staunch supporters of independent music.

Horace Pinker has played in more than 21 countries all over the world from Europe, Brazil, China and Australia. They have played some of the biggest festivals including the Dynamo Open Air in the Netherlands, Popkomm in Germany, Belgium’s Groezrock, 2007 Vans ZonaPunk Tour in Brazil, PouzzaFest in Montreal and The Fest 11 in Gainesville, FL. They continue to defy the trends and release records with thoughtful lyrics and powerful music that cannot be pinned down to a simple category or genre.

Since their formation they have toured North America with Agent Orange, Jawbreaker, All Systems Go and have shared the stage with the likes of Green Day, Bad Religion, Fugazi, Rise Against, Blink 182, The OffSpring, and Jimmy Eat World (just to name a few).

They have appeared on over 30 compilations around the world, 12 EP’s (including a split with Face To Face and an EP on Fat Wreck Chords), the top-selling DVD video compilations Cinema Beer Nuts (Hopeless) and Punk Broadcast System (Coldfront) plus numerous TV shows and features in various magazines.

They have toured the world relentlessly for the releases of Power Tools (Justice), Burn Tempe To The Ground (Onefoot), critically acclaimed Pop Culture Failure (Jump Up!) and Copper Regret (Coldfront) that featured Chris Bauermeister formerly of Jawbreaker on bass, Red-Eyed Regular (OffTime), Texas One Ten (Thick), the retrospective Carnival Nostalgia: 2000-2006 (Enemy One) and 2011′s Local State Inertia (Jump Start, Arctic Rodeo/OffTime).

Reviews have focused on the bands’ commitment to combine their trademark pop hooks with the buzz of a two-guitar attack, aggressive pop punk sound that eludes categorization by blurring the lines between multiple genres.

2010 had the band touring China, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand as well as in the studio recording the follow up to 2005’s Texas One Ten. After a tour of Canada in August 2011 they will released their new record “Local State Inertia” in Europe October 2011 followed by a European tour in March 2012. The US release for “Local State Inertia” was November 2012 on Jump Start Records.

Line up

  • Current Members
    • Greg Mytych - bass, vocals
    • Bryan Jones - drums (founding member)
    • Scott Eastman - guitar, vocals (founding member)
  • Former Members
    • Bill Ramsey - drums (founding member)
    • Miguel Barron - bass (Deminer, Armchair Martian)
    • Matt Arluck - guitar (Deminer, Sweet Cobra)
    • Chris Bauermeister - bass (Jawbreaker)
    • Jesse Everhart - guitar
    • Jonathan Richardson - guitar/bass (Early Day Miners)
    • Gregg Dessen - bass (founding member)
    • Karl Eifrig - bass (Lynyrd's Innards, Mexican Cheerleader)
    • Don Meehleis - guitar, vocals
    • Jeff Dean - guitar (The Bomb, All Eyes West, Noise By Numbers)

Discography

  • Full-lengths & EPs
    • Powertools (1994, Earwax/Justice)
    • Burn Tempe to the Ground (1996, Onefoot)
    • Copper Regret (2000, Coldfront)
    • Pop Culture Failure (2000, Jump Up!)
    • Red-Eyed Regular (2003, OffTime)
    • Texas One Ten (2005, Thick)
    • Carnival Nostalgia: 2000-2006 (2007, Enemy One Records)
    • Local State Inertia (2011, Arctic Rodeo Recordings)
    • Local State Inertia (2012, Jump Start Records)
  • Seven-inches
    • Big Ugly (1991, Earwax)
    • Forty-Seven (1992, Earwax)
    • Knives, Guns, & Ammo (1993, Rhetoric)
    • Disposable comp (1994, Social Retard)
    • Face to Face/Horace Pinker split (1994, Rhetoric)
    • DIY Polemic Machine (1995, Blurr)
    • Selling Out the Scene (1995, Evade)
    • Horace Pinker / Doc Hopper split (1995, OffTime)
    • I Hate Horace Pinker (1995, Fat Wreck Chords)
    • 80's Punk comp (1995, Suburban Zine)
    • Live in New Zealand (1996, only 7 pressed)
    • Horace Pinker Live (1997, V.M.L.)
  • Numerous Compilations

Television

Horace Pinker songs were used in the following television programs:

External links

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