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Sugar Ray will perform for the 5th
Anniversary of DeciBel at the Zen
night club on SATURDAY MAY 7, 2005
along with newly formed local sensation Kes.
There will also be a Meet and Greet session at MovieTowne for radio call in winners from 2 p.m. to 3
p.m. on this day with Mark McGrath and members of the
band.
Sugar Ray Concert Tickets (limited advance)
for Saturday May 7th will be made available strictly
through committee members or can be purchased
directly from the Zen box office.
Belying
their origins as a raucous funk metal band, Sugar
Ray turned out several of the most breezily
infectious summer singles of the late '90s, hitting
on an appealing combination of sunny pop, lightly
funky hip-hop grooves, and reggae lilt. Pegged as
likely one-hit wonders after their 1997 breakthrough
smash "Fly," Sugar Ray managed to maintain their
career momentum far longer than many observers
expected, helped in no small part by the teen-mag
pinup looks of lead singer Mark McGrath. Of course,
it also helped that the band was able to duplicate
the carefree vibe and effortless catchiness of "Fly"
on its subsequent singles. Not everything Sugar Ray
recorded bore the sonic stamp of "Fly," but that was
certainly the sound that made them radio staples.
Sugar Ray were formed
in Orange County, the heavily suburban area south of
Los Angeles, in 1992. Guitarist Rodney Sheppard,
bassist Murphy Karges, and drummer Stan Frazier had
been playing parties together in a hard rock/heavy
metal cover band, Shrinky Dinx, since the late '80s.
Karges served as the touring bassist of L.A. punk
veterans the Weirdos in 1990, although a story that
Sheppard had once been a cast member on Land of the
Lost was patently false. Friend Mark McGrath became
the lead singer of Shrinky Dinx after jumping up
on-stage to perform one night, and they soon began
collaborating on original material. The band played
around the L.A./San Diego area, building up a
following, and got one of its friends to finance a
music video for one of its original tunes; it wound
up getting them a deal with Atlantic in 1994, albeit
owing more to their look and potential. The threat
of legal action by Milton Bradley, which owned the
rights to the original Shrinky Dinks toy, forced the
band to change its name to Sugar Ray (after boxer
Sugar Ray Leonard). Around the same time, they began
augmenting their live shows with the turntables of
Craig Bullock, aka DJ Homicide, who later became an
official member of the group.
Sugar
Ray released their debut album, Lemonade and
Brownies, in the spring of 1995. Dominated by
aggressive funk metal, with touches of punk and
alternative rock, the record's typically roaring
guitars and smart-ass humor seemed to position the
band as a potential keg-party favorite.
Commercially, however, the album stiffed. Atlantic
decided to try again, based on the enthusiasm Sugar
Ray generated on their lengthy supporting tour, and
sent them into the studio with producer David Kahne
(who, among many other credits, had recently
masterminded Sublime's commercial breakthrough). The
result, Floored, became double-platinum hit thanks
to "Fly," a laid-back groove tailor-made for
summertime. With help from reggae toaster Super Cat,
"Fly" set new airplay records at modern-rock radio,
and reigned as perhaps the most ubiquitous hit of
the summer. The song didn't sound much like anything
else in Sugar Ray's repertoire, seeming to come out
of nowhere, and when Floored failed to produce a
significant follow-up hit, many assumed that "Fly"
was a fluke the band would never be able to repeat.
Again with Kahne in the
producer's chair, Sugar Ray delivered their third
album at the beginning of 1999. The title, 14:59,
was a wry reference to Andy Warhol's "15 minutes of
fame" dictum, but as it turned out, the group's time
wasn't up by a long shot. 14:59 wound up outselling
its predecessor, eventually going triple platinum.
The first single, the "Fly"-like "Every Morning,"
shot to number three on the pop charts and became
the group's second number
one at modern-rock
radio. Their follow-up singles were successful this
time around as well, as the hits "Someday" and
"Falls Apart" consolidated the group's growing
reputation for summery, radio-friendly alternative
pop; plus, the album boasted a guest appearance from
hip-hop legend KRS-One. The band played Woodstock
'99 that summer, and also made a guest appearance on
Run-D.M.C.'s Crown Royal album. In the spring of
2000, McGrath made his acting debut portraying a
doctor on an episode of the acclaimed drama ER.
Sugar Ray returned in the summer of 2001 with their
self-titled fourth album, which entered the charts
at number six and gave the band its first-ever Top
Ten album; meanwhile, the first single, "When It's
Over," was another substantial hit in the familiar
Sugar Ray mold. But in spite of reviews claiming
that the band sounded more like a band than ever
before, Sugar Ray's sales were ultimately
disappointing; perhaps hurt by the relatively
lackluster performance of follow-up singles "Answer
the Phone" and "Ours," the record failed to go
platinum within a year's time. ~ Steve Huey, All
Music Guide
For more information on
Sugar Ray visit their offical website at:
www.sugarray.com |