Candy (band)

For the Georgian teen pop girl group, see Candy (Georgian band).
Candy
Origin Los Angeles, California
Genres Power pop, Glam metal
Years active 1985–1987
Associated acts Guns N' Roses
The Nymphs
Past members Jonathan Daniel
John Schubert
Kyle Vincent
Geoff Siegel
Gilby Clarke
Ryan Roxie

Candy were a Los Angeles-based rock band, featuring future Guns N' Roses guitarist Gilby Clarke and singer-songwriter Kyle Vincent. Original members were Vincent on lead vocals, bassist Jonathan Daniel, drummer John Schubert, and guitarist Geoff Siegel, who departed the group after six months and later joined the Nymphs. Their music has been described as power pop.

Biography

Their only studio album, titled Whatever Happened To Fun, produced by Jimmy Ienner, was released in 1985, when the band toured the United States opening up for Rick Springfield and later Corey Hart. Wally Bryson from the Raspberries served as musical director on the album, which was recorded at Criteria Studios in Miami, FL. The music video for the single Whatever Happened To Fun, directed by Dominic Orlando, was filmed on location in Hollywood, with Candy performing to a street crowd and a mural of famous old Hollywood stars.

In 1986, Vincent left the band to pursue a solo career, with Clarke taking over as lead vocalist and guitarist Ryan Roxie joining the lineup. After Clarke left, the remaining members joined up with new lead vocalist Shane and became the Electric Angels. Vincent has since enjoyed a successful solo career, releasing over 10 albums, touring, and scoring a Billboard Adult Top 20 single, "Wake Me Up (When The World's Worth Waking Up For)"; Daniel is a manager of many top acts in the recording industry; and Schubert is a teacher in Southern California.

In 2003, SongTree Records released "Teenage Neon Jungle (Rare & Unreleased)", a 25-track collection of the band's demos, live tracks, and post-Candy projects, both solo and band.[1] In 2012, "Whatever Happened To Fun" was released for the first time on CD on the Rock Candy label.[2] Demos for a second, unreleased album included several fan favorites such as Dance America, Matinee and Sound of a Broken Heart.[3]

Discography

Studio albums

Singles

External links