M.I.R.V.

For the article about the ICBM technology, see Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle.

M.I.R.V. was a band based in the San Francisco, California, Bay Area. Founded in 1993, it initially consisted of the band's namesake guitarist and singer, Marc "Mirv" Haggard; bassist Craig McFarland; drummer David Kobza; and guitarist Bryan Kehoe, who also contributed vocals and keyboards. Kehoe left the band in 2001 to form The Kehoe Nation and was replaced by Spent Poets singer Adam Gates, aka The Filthy Ape. Recently, the band has been playing shows as a 5-piece with both Kehoe and Gates. Their musical style is diverse, and includes elements of hard rock, heavy metal, funk, country, opera, experimental, electronica, and polka.

Career

Kehoe-era M.I.R.V. shows often featured songs punctuated by interludes of lunacy, usually featuring a verbal interchange between Haggard and Kehoe. Often Haggard would announce a contest for the women in the audience, after which the winner would be cajoled into grabbing Kehoe's groin, causing him to sing in a high pitched operatic voice. Kehoe would often sing the Neapolitan standard "'O Sole Mio" following the antics. M.I.R.V. shows would regularly feature Haggard playing an electric saw during portions of the concerts.

M.I.R.V.'s first album Cosmodrome was written and recorded mostly by Haggard and featured a character named Granddad, later revealed to be Primus' Les Claypool, who also put the record out on his own Prawn Song label. The album features songs interspersed with skits and is generally regarded as a concept album. The next two records were released on Poison Eye, M.I.R.V.'s own label, and feature primarily music. It was these later two albums that saw the band form into a four piece touring outfit, as opposed to a studio project.

The band has toured worldwide alongside acts like Jerry Cantrell, Fishbone, Primus, and has played with groups like Cheap Trick, Run DMC, Papa Roach and Nuclear Rabbit.[1]

Singles

The band's song "Monkey Boy" was featured in a commercial for the game Fighting Vipers on the Sega Saturn.

M.I.R.V.'s song "Shave My Face Off" was featured in the sixth season of MTV's Beavis & Butthead on March 7, 1996.[2] Neither Beavis or Butthead showed approval or disapproval of the video, but their discussion mainly centered around the protagonist's ownership of a television, a recliner, and some beer.

Discography

References

External links

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