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Formed during the members’ time in high school, Simple Plan is comprised of lead vocalist Pierre Bouvier, lead guitarist Jeff Stinco, rhythm guitarist and backing vocalist Sébastien Lefebvre, bassist and backing vocalist David Desrosiers, and drummer Chuck Comeau. Prior to the band’s earliest incarnation, Bouvier and Comeau had played in the relatively successful Canadian band Reset, who are known for touring alongside MxPx, Ten Foot Pole, and Face to Face. Rocking a pure punk-pop sound, Simple Plan performed at the 2001 Van Warped Tour, before heading to the studio to record their debut. With vocal assistance from Good Charlotte’s Joel Madden and Blink-182’s Mark Hoppus, the resulting album “No Pads, No Helmets… Just Balls” was released in March 2002. Aided by the singles “I’m Just a Kid”, “I’d Do Anything”, “Addicted”, and “Perfect”, the album peaked at No. 35 on the Billboard 200, later being certified double platinum. The album was supported by an extensive tour of over 300 worldwide shows, including a headline show at the 2003 Vans Warped Tour, and opening for Avril Lavigne.
The band’s 2004 follow-up, entitled “Still Not Getting Any…” was produced by Bob Rock and represented a more mature, less teenage angst approach to songwriting. Charting at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, the album earned strong reviews from critics and spawned the singles “Welcome to My Life”, “Shut Up”, and “How Could This Happen to Me”. The band embarked on a tour of the world in support of the album until February 2006, before returning to the studio.
Recorded in Los Angeles, U.S., Montréal, and Miami, Simple Plan’s eponymously-titled third full-length album was released in February 2008. Featuring a more romantic aesthetic than its predecessor the album peaked at No. 2 on the Canadian Album Chart, and No. 14 on the U.S. Billboard 200. The record was produced by Dave Fortman, known for his work with Justin Timberlake and Timbaland, and spawned the singles “When I’m Gone”, “Your Love Is a Lie”, and “Save You”. The band’s subsequent tour saw the band travel to Tel Aviv, Dubai, Estonia, and Poland all for the first time, as well as dates across the U.S., Canada, and the UK.
Simple Plan’s fourth full-length album “Get Your Heart On!” was released in June 2011. Featuring Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo, Natasha Beddingfield, and Alex Gaskarth of All Time Low, the album equaled their highest-charting Canadian release, debuting at No. 2.
The seeds of what would blossom into the band Bowling for Soup were sewn when lead singer and principal songwriter Jaret Reddick met guitarist Chris Burney in their small town high school. The two friends grew up in the 80s listening to glam ridden metal acts like Quiet Riot, Mötley Crüe, and Ratt; however the two also reserved a certain respect for straightforward punk groups like the Ramones and Greenday.
Before forming Bowling for Soup, Burney operated a local coffee shop called the Refuge that housed a concert stage on which his band The Persecuted would often play. Future bandmates of Bowling For Soup, bassist Erik Chandler and drummer Gary Wiseman frequented the Refuge and eventually formed a friendship with Burney and Reddick. All the members where in different bands at the time such as the Folkadots, Gary & the Wiseman, Slaw, Terminal Seasons, and coolfork!.
It was not until the formation of Rubberneck that the initial stages of Bowling for Soup would really take form. Rubberneck consisted of Reddick, Burney, Chandler, and Lance Morrill. In 1994 the quartet changed their name to Bowling for Soup (a reference to a Steve Martin comedy sketch) and released their debut self-titled album on their personal record label Que-So Records. The band kept busy producing material, releasing a split album with the V.I.M.S. in 1996, a 2nd studio album “Rock on Honorable Ones” in 1997 and the E.P. “Tell Me When to Whoa” in 1998. The same year the band’s drummer Lance Morrill left the band on amicable terms and was replaced by a mutual friend of the band Gary Wiseman. 1998 was also the year in which the band moved from Wichita Falls to Denton, Texas.
The band’s career really started picking up in the early 2000s when they joined major record label Jive. On 16 May 2000 they released their album “Let’s Do It for Johnny!” (a reference to Francis Ford Coppola’s movie the Outsiders) and caught a glimpse of fame with their hit “The Bitch Song”. The band was on an upward slope to success after this release and with the output of their 5th studio album “Drunk Enough to Dance” they saw two of their singles become hit records “Emily” and “Girl All the Bad Guys Want”. The latter song was also a critical success and was nominated in the 2003 Grammy Awards for “Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal”. The band’s cover of Flock of Seagulls “I Ran (So Far Away)” was adopted as the theme song for the Japanese anime “Saint Seiya: Knights of the Zodiac”.
The band went back to the studios in Atlanta with acclaimed producer Butch Walker to record their follow up album “A Hangover You Deserve”. This album went on to be the most successful release for Bowling for Soup generating three singles “Almost”, “Ohio (Come Back to Texas)” and “1985”. “1985” is considered to be the band’s greatest achievement. It was played incessantly on the radio, charting to No. 5 on Billboard’s Adult 40 chart and was nominated for a Grammy.
The band released “Bowling For Soup Goes to the Movies” the following year, which consisted of an assortment of originals and cover songs that were featured in movies such as “Sky High” and “Cursed”. Bowling for Soup further intertwined themselves in the media by recording the song “Greatest Day” for the movie “Max Keeble’s Big Move” and the theme song for “Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius”.
The band launched their next studio album “The Great Burrito Extortion Case” with the uptempo single “High School Never Ends” and took 3 years before releasing their follow up “Sorry for Partyin’”. This marked the band’s longest gap of time between releasing studio albums; however, during this time frame they released a live album and capped of the year with a Christmas album. The band went on to release their second Christmas album “Merry Flippin’ Christmas, Vol.2” the same year as the completion of their “Fishin’ for Woos” album.
Not long after this release the band decided to take a break from touring Europe citing personal and financial strains as reasons. The group announced a 2013 Farewell UK Tour that consisted of 14 dates and put out their 12th studio album “Lunch. Drunk. Love” that year.
The duo is made up of Sean Foreman and Nathaniel Motte, who met while they were both studying at the University of Colorado Boulder. Both of them were already making their first attempts at creating electronic music at the time, so after they became friends, they decided to team up and see what they could create. They found that they had an abundance of creative chemistry together and decided to form a band together, and since both of them were native to Boulder, Colorado, they took their collective postcode, 303, as the name of the band. With a few alterations, obviously. In 2007 they self-released their self-titled debut album and made their live debut around Boulder, both proved so sucecsful that the band signed to Photo Finish Records, a division of Atlantic, within a few months of the record's release, and immediately started work on its follow up.
“Want”, the band's second was released in July the following year, and while the album itself was a reasonable hit, reaching the top 50 of the Billboard Hot 100, nobody could have predicted the success of its lead single. After over 20 weeks on the chart, “Don't Trust Me” began a steady climb into the upper reaches of the Hot 100, powered by near-constant radio play, the song's popularity on YouTube and live performances of the track on network television. It would peak at number seven on the Billboard charts and for summer 2008, their were fewer pop acts in the world that were hotter than 3OH!3. Ever since then, the band have remained one of the ultimate guilty pleasure acts of today, with no other act in the world quite as adept at a ridiculously catchy hook and a chorus as crass as it is utterly genius.
The band have released a further two albums to date, and have collaborated with everyone from Katy Perry to Wiz Khalifa as well, and for remaining as dedicated to partying as they every were, 3OH!3 come highly recommended.
Simple Plan are a far more influential band than they’re ever given credit for. Maybe it’s because the bands that owe an existential debt to the Montreal quintet aren’t the coolest but why should that matter? The fact remains that when it comes to the likes of All Time Low, We The Kings, We Are The In Crowd and Tonight Alive, it’s not quite that they would be nowhere without Simple Plan but their careers would definitely be in a very different place for damn sure. Still the fact remains that all of those bands and a lot more that I haven’t mentioned could still learn a lot from them in the live arena if nothing else. Simple Plan eschews the choreographed head banging, jumping and hairstyles of their predecessors and focus on a more honest connection with their audience. Lead singer Pierre Bouvier’s easy-going yet sincere banter with the audience shows their connection with them nearly as much as their precision tooled set lists, which consistently contain their biggest hits of the day with the deepest cuts from their back catalogue. This is all to say nothing of the whole bands natural chemistry; and truly in an age where pop-punk is making as stirring a comeback as it is, it would be a crime to miss out on one of the bands that truly perfected the art and influenced a generation of wide eyed fans to go out there and take on the world with nothing but a distorted power chord and a catchy hook.
Bowling for Soup starts the show by joking about the song “Stacy's Mom” by Fountains of Wayne. “People always think we did it” Jarret jokes before saying they have recorded their own version and will be covering it for our pleasure.
Laughing and joking their way through the cover, then switching to “Girl all the Bad Guys want” the laughing continues as more outdated references are brought forward.
They are having so much fun performing and it's hard not to be drawn into their fun. Leading into another cover “Circle” from their newest album the boys rock the club with an intensity completely modern yet a sound from the 90's.
The convergence of the modern and historical makes for a strange atmosphere and the gear on stage almost appears cluttered. Much like the music it's a controlled chaos helping to ensnare the senses and further endear the band to me. Jarret slows the set and jokes with the audience while proclaiming his love for all the fans and reminding us that their last album has been completely fan funded. With this he leads us into song insisting that everyone sing along to “High School Never Ends.”
As he says, Bowling for soup will never end. In this moment I believe him and hope that is true.
3OH!3 has hit the music scene in the form of catchy beats and provocative lyrics that you just can't get out of your head. Since their first alblum dropped in 2007, songs such as "Starstrukk", "Don't Trust Me", and "Double Vision" have been played on the radio and at every party ever since.
So what is it about 3OH!3 that has people shaking their rump to the beat? With lyrics like "Tell your boyfriend if he says hes got beef,that I'm a vegetarian and I ain't *** scared of him", it's hard to not enjoy 3OH!3's songs. 3OH!3's songs bring the lyrical genius to all their songs and match it with "impossible not to dance to" music (actual quote from one of my best friends). 3OH!3 takes ordinary dance music and amps it up, which has made their presence mandatory at every social gathering: from house parties to weddings, to the every day car play list to listen to on the commute to school or work.
3OH!3 has paved the way for break through artists in the House music genre and has made their musical prowess known to every music lover in the world.