Coney Hatch
Coney Hatch | |
---|---|
Origin | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | Hard rock |
Years active | 1982–present(?) |
Associated acts | Soho 69 |
Coney Hatch is a Canadian hard rock band who released three albums in the 1980s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and guitarist Carl Dixon, lead vocalist and bassist Andy Curran, guitarist Steve Shelski and drummer Dave 'Thumper' Ketchum. The band was known for its ear-damagingly loud live shows.[1]
History
Coney Hatch formed in 1981,[2] and began performing and developing original material. The band's first album was produced by Kim Mitchell and released in 1982.[3] Ketchum left the band in 1983, and was replaced by Barry Connors who formerly drummed with the band Toronto.[4]
In 1983 Coney Hatch opened for Iron Maiden at most of the concerts on their World Piece Tour.[5][6]
The band performed at the Hollyopenwood Palladium in 1985 with Rough Cutt and Accept.[7]
In April, 2008 Carl Dixon was very seriously injured in a car accident in Australia. On August 5, 2010 the original Coney Hatch line up including the now recovered Carl Dixon played a reunion show at the Phoenix Concert Theatre in Toronto. It was the first performance from the original line up since 1993.[8] A further live date was scheduled for the Firefest rock festival in Nottingham, England on 23 October 2011.[9] Coney Hatch performed at the Rock n' Roar weekend event August 16 & 17, 2013 in Spanish, Ontario.[10]
Members
Dixon later played with April Wine and Guess Who, toured solo and released two solo albums.[3] In 2015 he wrote A Strange Way to Live, which includes his experience playing as part of Coney Hatch.
Curran also released a solo album and two hit singles, was nominated for two Juno Awards and awarded one for "Most Promising Vocalist" in 1991.
Shelski has written several instrumentals for TSN;
Former members are Paul Van Remortel, Eddy Godlewski, Kevin (James) Labrie,[11] Paul Marangoni, Phil Naro, Andy Curran, and Dave Ketchum.
Name
The band was named after the Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum (1851–1993) in London.[12]
Discography
- Coney Hatch (1982) Released internationally by Mercury-PolyGram Records and Casablanca Records (Japan)
- Outa Hand (1983)
- Friction (1985)[3]
- Best of Three (1992)
- Four (2013)[13]
Singles
- [1982] Devil's Deck [music video]
- [1982] Hey Operator (#19 Canada)
- [1982] Monkey Bars
- [1983] Don't Say Make Me
- [1983] First Time For Everything [music video]
- [1983] Shake It [music video]
- [1985] Fantasy [music video]
- [1985] Girl From Last Night's Dream
- [1985] She's Gone
- [1985] This Ain't Love
References
- ↑ Bob Mersereau (2007). The Top 100 Canadian Albums. Goose Lane Editions. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-86492-500-8.
- ↑ "Coney Hatch". Colin Larkin (1995). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Guinness Pub. p. 913. ISBN 978-1-56159-176-3.
- 1 2 3 "'It's a miracle I survived and lived long enough to get to the hospital'". Soo Today, Sep 30, 2016 4:00 PM by: Donna Hopper
- ↑ "Proudly Canadian: Toronto". Cashbox Canada, , 04/24/2014
- ↑ "33 Years Ago: Iron Maiden Release ‘Piece of Mind’". Loudwire, By Jon Wiederhorn May 16, 2016.
- ↑ Eddie Trunk (24 September 2013). Eddie Trunk's Essential Hard Rock and Heavy Metal. Abrams. pp. 608–. ISBN 978-1-61312-553-3.
- ↑ Box Score Top Grossing Concerts. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 1 June 1985. pp. 48–. ISSN 0006-2510.
- ↑ Keith Sharp (14 April 2014). Music Express: The Rise, Fall & Resurrection of Canada's Music Magazine. Dundurn. pp. 81–. ISBN 978-1-4597-2196-8.
- ↑ Nottingham Firefest 2011 official website
- ↑ "Come Rock ‘n’ Roar Spanish 2013 what a bash". By KEVIN McSHEFFREY and JESSICA BROUSSEAU, The Elliott Lake Standard, August 21, 2013
- ↑ "Dream Theater: Uniting Prog And Metal". Team Rock, 15 Jun 2005 / by Dave Ling
- ↑ "CanConRox - Coney Hatch". www.canadianbands.com. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
- ↑ "Publishing Briefs: Raleigh Signs Elvis Presley Deal, Imagem and Cutcraft, Downtown to Represent Edizioni Curci". Billboard, 3/3/2016 by Ed Christman
External links
- Coney Hatch (Official band site)
- Carl Dixon
- CanConRox entry
- Barry Connors