The Get Up Kids: Difference between revisions
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| origin = [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]], [[Missouri]], [[United States]] |
| origin = [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]], [[Missouri]], [[United States]] |
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| genre = [[Indie rock]], [[emo]], [[alternative rock]], {{nowrap|[[pop punk]]}}<ref>[m.exclaim.ca/News/get_up_kids_prep_vinyl_reissues_of_eudora_on_wire The Get Up Kids Prep Vinyl Reissues of 'Eudora' and 'On a Wire']</ref><ref>[http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-01-16/entertainment/bs-ae-matt-pryor-interview-20130115_1_new-amsterdams-album-matt-pryor After Break, Bassist Matt Pryor Back to Songwriting - Baltimore Sun]</ref> |
| genre = [[Indie rock]], [[emo]], [[alternative rock]], {{nowrap|[[pop punk]]}}<ref>[m.exclaim.ca/News/get_up_kids_prep_vinyl_reissues_of_eudora_on_wire The Get Up Kids Prep Vinyl Reissues of 'Eudora' and 'On a Wire']</ref><ref>[http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-01-16/entertainment/bs-ae-matt-pryor-interview-20130115_1_new-amsterdams-album-matt-pryor After Break, Bassist Matt Pryor Back to Songwriting - Baltimore Sun]</ref><ref name="get up kids new times">{{cite web |url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2009-09-24/music/the-get-up-kids-really-were-worth-writing-home-about/full/ |title=The Get Up Kids Really Were Worth Writing Home About |publisher=[[Phoenix New Times |date=September 24th 2009}}</ref> |
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| years_active = 1995–2005 <br />2008–present |
| years_active = 1995–2005 <br />2008–present |
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| label = [[Vagrant Records|Vagrant]], [[Doghouse Records|Doghouse]], [[Hassle Records|Hassle]] |
| label = [[Vagrant Records|Vagrant]], [[Doghouse Records|Doghouse]], [[Hassle Records|Hassle]] |
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*Thomas Becker |
*Thomas Becker |
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'''The Get Up Kids''' are an [[United States|American]] [[ |
'''The Get Up Kids''' are an [[United States|American]] [[emo]] band from [[Kansas City, Missouri]]. Formed in 1995, the band was a major player in the mid-90s [[emo]] scene, otherwise known as the "[[Emo#Underground popularity: mid 1990s|second wave]]" of emo music. As they gained prominence, they began touring with bands such as [[Green Day]] and [[Weezer]] before becoming headliners themselves, eventually embarking on international tours of [[Japan]] and [[Europe]].<ref name="Lazy-I">{{Citation |last=McMahan |first=Tim |title=The Get Up Kids |url=http://www.timmcmahan.com/getup.htm |publisher=''The Omaha Weekly'' |date=2002-12-11 |accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref><ref name="rollingstone">{{Citation |last=Edwards |first=Gavin |title=The Get Up Kids Get Up |url=http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thegetupkids/articles/story/5937851/the_get_up_kids_get_up |publisher=''[[Rolling Stone]]'' |date=2002-08-05 |accessdate=2008-03-02|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071230070221/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thegetupkids/articles/story/5937851/the_get_up_kids_get_up |archivedate = December 30, 2007|deadurl=yes}}</ref> They founded Heroes & Villains Records, an imprint of the successful indie rock label [[Vagrant Records]]. While the imprint was started to release albums by The Get Up Kids, it served as a launching pad for several side-projects such as [[The New Amsterdams]] and [[Reggie and the Full Effect]].<ref name="aversion">{{Citation |last=Schild |first=Matt |title=Get Up, Stand Up |url=http://www.aversion.com/bands/interviews.cfm?f_id=36 |publisher=''Aversion.com'' |date=1999-09-06 |accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref> |
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The Get Up Kids were viewed throughout their existence as a prototypical emo band, having been major players in the Midwest emo movement of the mid-1990s.<ref>{{Citation |last=Pareles |first=Jon |title=POP AND JAZZ GUIDE |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFDE1E3BF936A35752C1A96F958260 |publisher=''[[New York Times]]'' |date=1999-11-05 |accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref> However, like many early emo bands, The Get Up Kids, sought to dissociate themselves with the term, as it was considered dismissive to be seen as an "emo band."<ref>{{Citation |last=Heller |first=Greg |title=Bands Seek Emotional Rescue |url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/article?f=/c/a/2000/09/10/PK92338.DTL |publisher=''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'' |date=2000-09-10 |accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref> Years later, guitarist Jim Suptic even apologized for having the influence they did on many of the modern third-wave emo bands, commenting that "[t]he punk scene we came out of and the punk scene now are completely different. It's like glam rock now ... If this is the world we helped create, then I apologize."<ref name="apologise">{{Cite web|url=http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4137393-if-this-is-the-world-we-helped-create-then-i-apologise-the-get-up-kids-get-back|title="If this is the world we helped create, then I apologize." The Get Up Kids, Get Back|publisher=[[Drowned in Sound]]|author=James Skinner|accessdate=2009-08-04}}</ref> |
The Get Up Kids were viewed throughout their existence as a prototypical emo band, having been major players in the Midwest emo movement of the mid-1990s.<ref>{{Citation |last=Pareles |first=Jon |title=POP AND JAZZ GUIDE |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFDE1E3BF936A35752C1A96F958260 |publisher=''[[New York Times]]'' |date=1999-11-05 |accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref> However, like many early emo bands, The Get Up Kids, sought to dissociate themselves with the term, as it was considered dismissive to be seen as an "emo band."<ref>{{Citation |last=Heller |first=Greg |title=Bands Seek Emotional Rescue |url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/article?f=/c/a/2000/09/10/PK92338.DTL |publisher=''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'' |date=2000-09-10 |accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref> Years later, guitarist Jim Suptic even apologized for having the influence they did on many of the modern third-wave emo bands, commenting that "[t]he punk scene we came out of and the punk scene now are completely different. It's like glam rock now ... If this is the world we helped create, then I apologize."<ref name="apologise">{{Cite web|url=http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4137393-if-this-is-the-world-we-helped-create-then-i-apologise-the-get-up-kids-get-back|title="If this is the world we helped create, then I apologize." The Get Up Kids, Get Back|publisher=[[Drowned in Sound]]|author=James Skinner|accessdate=2009-08-04}}</ref> |
Revision as of 01:08, 12 October 2013
The Get Up Kids | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Kansas City, Missouri, United States |
Genres | Indie rock, emo, alternative rock, pop punk[1][2][3] |
Years active | 1995–2005 2008–present |
Labels | Vagrant, Doghouse, Hassle |
Members | |
Past members |
|
Website | http://www.thegetupkids.com/ |
The Get Up Kids are an American emo band from Kansas City, Missouri. Formed in 1995, the band was a major player in the mid-90s emo scene, otherwise known as the "second wave" of emo music. As they gained prominence, they began touring with bands such as Green Day and Weezer before becoming headliners themselves, eventually embarking on international tours of Japan and Europe.[4][5] They founded Heroes & Villains Records, an imprint of the successful indie rock label Vagrant Records. While the imprint was started to release albums by The Get Up Kids, it served as a launching pad for several side-projects such as The New Amsterdams and Reggie and the Full Effect.[6]
The Get Up Kids were viewed throughout their existence as a prototypical emo band, having been major players in the Midwest emo movement of the mid-1990s.[7] However, like many early emo bands, The Get Up Kids, sought to dissociate themselves with the term, as it was considered dismissive to be seen as an "emo band."[8] Years later, guitarist Jim Suptic even apologized for having the influence they did on many of the modern third-wave emo bands, commenting that "[t]he punk scene we came out of and the punk scene now are completely different. It's like glam rock now ... If this is the world we helped create, then I apologize."[9]
Due to some internal conflicts, the band broke up in 2005. In 2008 the band announced a 2009 reunion tour to support the tenth anniversary re-release of Something to Write Home About, their most successful studio album. Soon after the reunion, the band entered the studio to write new material.[10] In early 2010, the band released Simple Science, their first release in six years. In 2011 they released another album, There Are Rules.
History
Early years (1995–1997)
While in high school, Ryan Pope, Rob Pope, and Jim Suptic formed a short-lived band called Kingpin. Matt Pryor had been writing songs since he was a teenager, and was playing in a band called Secret Decoder Ring.[11] Following the demise of the two bands in 1995, The Get Up Kids were formed. The band originally planned on calling themselves "The Suburban Get Up Kids", until reasoning that there were fewer band names beginning with the letter 'G' than there are with the letter 'S', and that therefore they were more likely to be noticed in a record store if their name began with a 'G'.[5] The band was formed on October 14, 1995 on Suptic's 18th birthday.[12]
At the time the lineup consisted of Pryor on guitar and lead vocals, Suptic on guitar, Rob Pope on bass, and Thomas Becker on drums. However, Becker soon left for college in California, and was replaced by Nathan Shay, who was attending school with Suptic at the Kansas City Art Institute.[12] In 1995, Pryor, Suptic, and friend Kevin Zelko saved to self-release "Shorty/The Breathing Method", their first 7-inch. However, due to an unwillingness to tour, Shay was replaced by Robert's younger brother Ryan in April 1996.[13] The band became increasingly popular in the burgeoning underground Midwestern music scene, forming strong relationships with bands such as Rocket Fuel Is The Key, Coalesce and Braid. After the "Shorty" 7-inch, the band released "A Newfound Interest in Massachusetts" on Contrast Records.[14] Encouraged by interest stirred by the band's first 7-inch, they recorded their first EP, Woodson. Two songs of which were released by Contrast Records as a 7-inch titled "A Newfound Interest in Massachusetts" or more commonly known as "The Loveteller 7", with Doghouse Records releasing a CD-EP version which included the songs from both Woodson and A Newfound Interest in Massachusetts[12] as a well as the two song Woodson 7". After Woodson, Doghouse approached the band with a two-album contract, offering them $4,000 to record their first full-length album.[12]
Four Minute Mile (1997–1998)
After signing to Doghouse, the band drove to Chicago to record their debut full-length album with producer Bob Weston of Shellac. The album was recorded in only two days, with the band leaving on Friday after Ryan Pope got out of school and finishing in the early hours of Sunday morning.[13] Two months after recording the album, the band embarked on their first national tour with Braid and Ethel Meserve with the first date of the tour taking place the day after Ryan's high school graduation.[12]
It was on that tour that the band met James Dewees, the new drummer for Coalesce while the bands were playing together in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.[12] After the show, the members of the two bands became close friends, eventually leading them to record a split 7-inch produced by Ed Rose entitled "The Get Up Kids / Coalesce". For the split, each band covered one of the other's songs in their own style. Coalesce did a post-hardcore cover of "Second Place", and The Get Up Kids recorded a power-pop rendition of "Harvest of Maturity".[12]
A few months later, the band released their debut full-length record Four Minute Mile, bringing a great deal of attention from critics, fans and labels alike. The band was invited to join Braid on their 1998 tour of Europe and the band rapidly created an overseas fanbase.[12]
While the band was receiving rapidly increasing national and international attention, they became unhappy with Doghouse Records' ability to keep up with the increasing popularity of the band.[13] The Get Up Kids announcement to leave Doghouse Records brought interest from prominent record labels including Sub Pop, Geffen and Mojo Records.[13] The band made a decision to sign to Mojo, but before the contracts were signed, they began to have second thoughts. The main issue was over the label's insistence on owning merchandising rights, a large source of the band's income.[12] Moreover, the band was insulted the label requested they re-record "Don't Hate Me" from Four Minute Mile for their next record, feeling that the label believed it was "the best that [they could] write".[13] Before the deal with Mojo was official, the band met Rich Egan, founder of Los Angeles-based Vagrant Records. He convinced the band to sign to Vagrant instead, offering them $50,000 to record a second album, as well as their own imprint, Heroes & Villains Records.[12]
Something to Write Home About (1999–2001)
In 1998, James Dewees recorded his first solo album under the pseudonym Reggie and the Full Effect. While Dewees wrote the songs himself, he asked Matt Pryor and Rob Pope to help record some of the instrumentals. The resulting album, Greatest Hits 1984-1987 incorporated a great deal of synthesizer keyboards, leading Pryor to ask Dewees to collaborate with The Get Up Kids on some new songs they were writing.
The next year, The Get Up Kids released Red Letter Day, a five-track EP produced by Ed Rose to fulfill their two-record deal with Doghouse. It was Dewees' debut on a Get Up Kids record, although he was still credited as featured musician. The cleaner, more focused sound of the EP provided the chance to experiment with the inclusion of keyboards and is a bridge between the raw sound of Four Minute Mile and the more dynamic style of their next studio album.[12]
After the release of Red Letter Day, Dewees joined the band full-time and the band began recording their second studio album in Los Angeles in June 1999 with producer Alex Brahl. Before the album went into production, Vagrant Records co-owner John Cohen borrowed money from his parents, who had mortgaged their house in order to fund the production of the album. On September 21, 1999, the band released Something to Write Home About on Vagrant Records. The album's lyrics reflected the record label strife the band had experienced and their distance between friends and family back home after their move to Los Angeles.[12] Something to Write Home About has been singled out as the band's only 'true' emo album, as the album's aesthetic fit more into the contemporary definition of the genre.[15] Furthermore, the album single-handedly turned the struggling Vagrant label into one of the top indie labels in the country, selling over 140,000 copies after its release.[12][16] Not only did the album make The Get Up Kids the poster children for emo, but it also launched the genre into a public consciousness broader than the scattered local scenes that had previously embraced it. The album gave Vagrant Records the financial backing to grow and sign a string of other bands. At the same time, the addition of keyboards alienated some fans who thought it moved the band away from the contemporary punk scene's DIY ethic.[6][17]
The Get Up Kids toured relentlessly for almost three years in promotion of the record.[18] As well as touring Europe, Japan, and Australia, they shared bills with acts such as Green Day, The Anniversary, Koufax, Hot Rod Circuit, Jebediah, Weezer and Ozma.[19] Their 2000 tour with The Anniversary and Koufax was sponsored by Napster.[12][20] Their fanbase kept expanding through word of mouth. Venues booked months in advance could no longer hold the demand by the time the band arrived in town and fans were forced to stand outside to see them perform.[12] To capitalize on anticipation for the band's next album, Vagrant Records released a rarities compilation Eudora in 2001.[13] Eudora consisted of alternate takes, covers, and B-sides since the band's formation. Likewise, Doghouse released a re-mastered edition of Four Minute Mile and a compilation entitled The EPs: Woodson and Red Letter Day, combining the two Doghouse-owned EPs on one compact disc.
On a Wire (2002–2003)
After three years of touring for Something to Write Home About, the band was beginning to feel burned-out on that material and was looking to experiment with a more mature sound. They also wanted to find a new producer to challenge them creatively, approaching Nigel Godrich and Gil Norton with offers, although both declined.[12] Finally, the band settled on Scott Litt, best known for his work with R.E.M. and Nirvana.[21] The band's third studio album, On a Wire was released on May 14, 2002, debuting the band's new sound. Just as Something to Write Home About alienated fans with its more produced sound, On a Wire was criticized by fans who were disappointed with the album's softer musical direction.[22] Specifically, the reviewer for Alternative Press wrote "Unfortunately, the visceral energy of their early days is lost in their newfound maturity."[23]
While many fans were upset with this sudden change of direction, the album was generally well received by mainstream publications. Entertainment Weekly was highly positive, writing that "This is the group at their best."[24] In his review of the album, Rolling Stone writer Barry Walters wrote "On a Wire quivers with the anxieties that must have arisen as the Get Up Kids left behind what originally made them. Straining vocals, racing tempos and walls of distortion give way to softer singing, spacious guitars and prominent keyboards . . . The Get Up Kids dig deeper into themselves. What they find is often subtle, less visceral but far more tender."[25] The poor public reception of the album had a larger impact on the band's popularity as a whole. The band embarked on a tour to promote the album in the late spring soon after the album was released, only to find that they had far less support from both their fans and their record label. Using the financial and critical success of Something to Write Home About, Vagrant signed several other headlining emo bands such as Alkaline Trio, Dashboard Confessional, and Saves the Day. The Get Up Kids were no longer the label's top priority, and certainly not after the lukewarm reception of On a Wire.[12] In an interview with Alternative Press, lead singer Matt Pryor considered the dramatic change in style on On a Wire seriously dented the momentum the band had built up since Something to Write Home About, allowing later bands such as Dashboard Confessional to take much of the fan base that The Get Up Kids had previously earned.[13] In an interview, Pryor confessed that he didn't think that "anyone, including Vagrant, gave that record a chance".[12] Even though they had avoided the term since its inception, it was at this point the band actively began trying to shed the term "emo", a word that had defined them for years but had come to mean something different. Pryor commented on the album, saying "We really didn't give two shits if anyone liked the record or not, we were really confident that we were going to kill this 'emo' stigma that we had and take the people with open minds with us and leave everyone else in the dust."[12]
Guilt Show (2003–2004)
In 2003 the band began recording their fourth studio album. The album would be the first recorded in Black Lodge Studios in Eudora, Kansas, a studio renovated and owned by the Pope brothers and producer Ed Rose. The writing process for the album was different than their past efforts, as most of the songs were written by only three of the band members. In the early stages of writing, Jim Suptic was on his honeymoon. James Dewees was involved in a difficult divorce, and much of his creative efforts inspired by those events went into the fourth Reggie and the Full Effect album Songs Not to Get Married To.[13] While this led to a less collaborative effort than in the past, it gave the Pope brothers a more substantial role in writing than ever before. In an interview with Alternative Press, Pryor confirmed the song "Never Be Alone" was written by Rob Pope about his 2003 divorce from The Anniversary keyboardist Adrianne Verhoeven.[13]
This fractured approach to the writing process began to strain relationships in the band, at one point leading Suptic to consider quitting the band.[12] Pryor drew lyrical inspiration from the lives of friends and people he knew, extracting stories of abuse, betrayal and guilt. The album's lyrics also delve into incidents of adultery ("Wouldn't Believe It", "How Long Is Too Long") and the album's first single "The One You Want" is said to be about a woman who Pryor says "Sucks the soul out of people".[26]
In March 2004, the band released their fourth studio album Guilt Show, produced by Ed Rose. Sonically, the album combined the more measured, sophisticated sound of On a Wire with the frenetic style of their earlier work.[27] Guilt Show, which was titled after a misreading of a flier saying "Quilt show", was very well received both critically and commercially.[26][28] The more pop-driven tone of the album reunited the band with many fans who were disenchanted after On a Wire, while also staying close enough to the evolution of the last album to interest newer fans and critics. However, their return was overshadowed by the booming popularity of other contemporary emo bands such as Dashboard Confessional, who invited the band to open for them on the 2004 Honda Civic Tour.[29]
Breakup (2004–2005)
Over the course of the tour with Dashboard Confessional, relationships between the band members continued to decline.[13] The band's live shows had deteriorated, and Rob and Suptic had both threatened to quit multiple times.[12] Matt Pryor's wife had recently given birth to their first child, and being away from his family had made him irritable and standoffish.[30] After the Honda Civic tour ended, the band embarked on their world tour, including stops throughout Europe, Japan and Australia. However, their live performance hit an all-time low, with Pryor at times refusing to even sing large portions of songs.[12]
At one tour date in England, the tensions came to a head when Ryan Pope confronted Pryor over his recent despondence, leading to a band meeting where Pryor confessed his desire to reduce his commitment to the rest of the group.[12] After some discussion, the band agreed that their hearts were no longer in it and at the end of the tour they would quietly end the band.[31] Once the tour ended, the band went on an unofficial hiatus, not playing as a group until the next January, when they played a show at the Granada Theater in Lawrence, Kansas to celebrate the band's tenth anniversary. The show was recorded and released the following May as the band's first live album, Live! @ The Granada Theater.
On Tuesday, March 8, 2005, The Get Up Kids announced that after ten years, they were calling it quits.[31] They embarked on a national farewell tour, ending the band after a sold-out show on July 2, 2005 in their hometown of Kansas City, Missouri at the Uptown Theater.[32]
After breakup (2005–2008)
After the band played their final show, the members continued to be involved in music in various ways. Rob and Ryan Pope have taken charge of Black Lodge Studios, the recording studio that the band formed with the recording of Guilt Show alongside limited stints playing with Koufax.[33] Rob was a founding member of Lawrence, Kansas group White Whale before joining the indie rock group Spoon.[34][35]
Matt Pryor continued as part of The New Amsterdams, an acoustic alt-country group he had formed in 2000.[36] In 2007 he formed The Terrible Twos, a children's band that has released two albums on Vagrant Records.[36] In July 2008, he released Confidence Man, his debut solo album.[36]
Jim Suptic went on to form Blackpool Lights with former members of Butterglory and The Creature Comforts.[37] He is also one of the co-founders of Curb Appeal Records, a Kansas City-based record label that released Blackpool Lights' debut album This Town's Disaster, plus albums by Smoking Popes and The New Amsterdams.[38]
James Dewees continued his side project Reggie and the Full Effect.[39] After the breakup of The Get Up Kids, Dewees toured with New Found Glory as their touring keyboardist.[40] After another brief tour opening for Hellogoodbye in 2006, he joined My Chemical Romance as touring keyboardist on their 2008 world tour.[41] After returning home from the tour, he released the fifth Reggie and the Full Effect album on Vagrant Records, entitled Last Stop: Crappy Town, followed by a brief tour of the United States.[41]
Reunion (2008–2009)
In late August and September 2008, while Dewees was touring with Reggie and the Full Effect, reports began to surface that he was hinting at a Get Up Kids reunion tour to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the band's second album Something to Write Home About.[42] According to reports, Dewees also confirmed that the band would be re-releasing the album.[43]
In the meantime, Dewees continued to fuel speculation when he stated in an interview that he would be working on the reunion of a "band from the 90's and early 2000's".[44] The reunion was finally confirmed by a post on the official music blog of The Kansas City Star, confirming rumors that the band would be playing a surprise reunion show at The Record Bar in Kansas City on November 16, 2008.[45][46] According to the article, the band had made the decision over the summer and had Dewees intentionally leak the information to fuel speculation.[47]
The reunion show was officially announced on Friday, November 14, along with the official confirmation of the album re-release and a 2009 national tour.[48][49] The tenth anniversary edition of the album includes a code to download bonus demo tracks from the original recording of Something To Write Home About from the Vagrant Records website, and a DVD containing a band retrospective and other content, including archive footage, and their live performance from March 13, 2009 at Liberty Hall in Lawrence.[50] The show took place Sunday, November 16, 2008 at the record bar in Kansas City.[51] The band played their album Something To Write Home About from beginning to end, as well as a six song encore.[52]
Simple Science & There Are Rules (2009–present)
In the summer of 2009, the band posted photos on their Twitter page showing the group in a recording studio, incurring speculation as to whether or not they were recording a new album.[53] After embarking on the European leg of their reunion tour, the band confirmed that they were writing new material and would be playing at least one of the songs, entitled "Keith Case," on the tour.[54] On April 13, 2010 the band released the EP Simple Science, their first studio release in six years. The 4-song EP was released on 12" colored vinyl and CD on Flyover Records.
On October 29, 2010, The Get Up Kids announced their fifth full-length studio album, There Are Rules. They also confirmed that the album would not be released on Vagrant Records, who had released their previous three albums, but on their own Quality Hill Records.[55] The album was produced by longtime collaborator Ed Rose and mixed by Bob Weston, who produced the band's debut album. Several of the tracks were recorded during the same session as Simple Science, the track "Keith Case" appearing on both releases. There Are Rules was released on January 25, 2011, and was supported by a co-headlining tour with Saves The Day.
Influence
There should be a How To Be a Pop-Punk Kid starter kit with bands like Get Up Kids, so kids would know whose shoulders bands like us are standing on. Fall Out Boy would not be a band if it were not for The Get Up Kids.
— Pete Wentz, Alternative Press
The Get Up Kids have had a lasting impact on the music scene, having been cited as inspirations to several prominent bands and artists. Blink-182 bassist and singer Mark Hoppus is a vocal fan, having proposed to his wife to The Get Up Kids song "I'll Catch You."[56] They were also a major influence on the rest of the band, even at their peak popularity around the release of Take Off Your Pants and Jacket.[57] The members of Fall Out Boy cite The Get Up Kids' influence, particularly their album Four Minute Mile. In a 2005 interview with Alternative Press, Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz stated that the band had a huge influence on him and the other members of Fall Out Boy. "There should be a How To Be a Pop-Punk Kid starter kit with bands like Get Up Kids, so kids would know whose shoulders bands like us are standing on. Fall Out Boy would not be a band if it were not for The Get Up Kids."[13]
New Jersey based act Midtown has stated in interviews that they were heavily influenced by The Get Up Kids, among other groups.[58] The Early November band members were all fans, and influenced by, The Get Up Kids. The Early November song "Baby Blue" includes the line "I don't want you to love me anymore", a direct reference to the Get Up Kids song "No Love" both lyrically and melodically.[59] The band Hellogoodbye have been vocal fans of the band and while on tour with Reggie and the Full Effect in 2007, two years after the breakup of The Get Up Kids, Hellogoodbye invited James Dewees and Matt Pryor onstage with them, and proceeded to back them in a cover of The Get Up Kids' song "Action & Action".[60] The Canadian Post-Hardcore band Silverstein has cited the Get Up Kids as a major influence, and covered their song Coming Clean for a split 7" with August Burns Red in 2013.
Despite their lasting influence on modern music, the band has attempted to disassociate themselves with many of the bands they inspired. Following the band's reformation, guitarist Jim Suptic undertook an interview with website Drowned in Sound, in which he said, "The punk scene we came out of and the punk scene now are completely different. It's like glam rock now. We played the Bamboozle fests this year and we felt really out of place... If this is the world we helped create, then I apologise." He went onto say they were grateful for the acknowledgements they have received, though explaining "the problem is most of [the bands they inspired] aren't very good."[9]
Band members
- Current
- Matt Pryor – lead vocals, rhythm guitars
- Jim Suptic – lead guitars, backing vocals
- Rob Pope – bass
- Ryan Pope – drums, percussion (since 1996)
- James Dewees – keyboards, backing vocals (since 1999)
- Former
- Thomas Becker – drums, percussion (1995)
- Nathan Shay – drums, percussion (1996)
- Touring
- Nate Harold - bass (2010)
- Dustin Kinsey - keyboards (2011)
Discography
- Four Minute Mile (1997)
- Something to Write Home About (1999)
- On a Wire (2002)
- Guilt Show (2004)
- There Are Rules (2011)
References
- ^ [m.exclaim.ca/News/get_up_kids_prep_vinyl_reissues_of_eudora_on_wire The Get Up Kids Prep Vinyl Reissues of 'Eudora' and 'On a Wire']
- ^ After Break, Bassist Matt Pryor Back to Songwriting - Baltimore Sun
- ^ {{cite web |url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2009-09-24/music/the-get-up-kids-really-were-worth-writing-home-about/full/ |title=The Get Up Kids Really Were Worth Writing Home About |publisher=[[Phoenix New Times |date=September 24th 2009}}
- ^ McMahan, Tim (2002-12-11), The Get Up Kids, The Omaha Weekly, retrieved 2008-03-02
{{citation}}
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(help) - ^ a b Edwards, Gavin (2002-08-05), The Get Up Kids Get Up, Rolling Stone, archived from the original on December 30, 2007, retrieved 2008-03-02
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Schild, Matt (1999-09-06), Get Up, Stand Up, Aversion.com, retrieved 2008-03-02
{{citation}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Pareles, Jon (1999-11-05), POP AND JAZZ GUIDE, New York Times, retrieved 2008-03-02
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(help) - ^ Conoley, Ben (2007-08-01), Vinyl File: Sex Pistols, the Draft, F*cked Up, Coliseum and a Get Up Kids spotlight, Punknews.org
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(help) - ^ Reid, Sean (2009-08-17), An Essential Guide To: The Get Up Kids, Alter the Press, retrieved 2009-08-20
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(help) - ^ Matt Pryor: Why He "Quit" The Get Up Kids, Lawrence.com, 2005-03-15, retrieved 2008-12-09
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(help) - ^ kira (11). "Interviews: James Dewees (Reggie and the Full Effect, The Get Up Kids, Coalesce)". Punknews.org. Punknews.org. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
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(help)
Further reading
- Grubbs, Eric (2008). POST: A Look at the Influence of Post-Hardcore-1985-2007. iUniverse, Inc. ISBN 0-595-51835-4
External links