King's X
is an American hard rock band noted by music critics and fans for their sophisticated sound that combines progressive metal, funk and soul with vocal arrangements influenced by gospel, blues, and British Invasion pop groups. The band's lyrics are largely based on the members' struggles with religion and self-acceptance.
Since being signed to Megaforce Records in 1987, King's X has released twelve studio albums, one official live album, and several independent releases. The band is currently recording for the InsideOut Music label, and continues to tour with each new release. Early in their major label career, they had many opening slots on arena tours, but lately the band, for the most part, headline their own shows playing mostly clubs and smaller venues.
Each member of the group has recorded solo albums and has made numerous guest appearances on other artists' albums and compilation projects. Doug Pinnick and Ty Tabor also have albums released with side bands that they participate in.
Despite the band members having varying degrees of Christian beliefs through the years and the group having had early dealings in the Contemporary Christian market, the members of King's X have never considered themselves a "Christian" band. However, some of their early lyrical themes (especially the first three albums) have led to some people labeling the group as such, which all three members strongly oppose.
King's X was ranked #83 on VH1's 100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock
.
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KING'S X TICKETS
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History
Early years (1980 - 1984)
The group traces its beginnings to 1979 in
Springfield, MO. when bassist
Doug Pinnick and drummer
Jerry Gaskill were brought together to take part in a musical project coordinated by
Greg X. Volz of Christian rock band
Petra. Within a month of Pinnick's arrival from Illinois, the project folded and he and Gaskill were left without a band. They soon landed a job as rhythm section for guitarist
Phil Keaggy's live band. The two toured the country for several months in support of Keaggy's album
Ph'lip Side.
During the group's show in Springfield, Gaskill was approached by
Ty Tabor who was a member of the opening band that night. The drummer for Tabor's band had quit the night before the show and Tabor had volunteered to take over on drums for the gig. However, seeing as he had no drums, he was forced to ask Gaskill if he could borrow his kit for the show. Gaskill obliged and the show went on.
When the tour ended, Pinnick and Gaskill returned to Springfield and set about looking for more work. Gaskill landed a job doing demo work for the Tracy Zinn Band that happened to include Ty Tabor on guitar. The two became friends and were involved off and on together in different musical projects.
In the spring of 1980, Pinnick attended a music show at
Evangel College and watched a set by another of Tabor's bands. Pinnick was impressed with Tabor's skills and the two soon began collaborating musically.
[1]
Eventually Gaskill, Pinnick, and Tabor decided to pool their talents into a single outlet. Calling themselves
The Edge
, they initially were a four piece with the inclusion of Dan McCollam on rhythm guitar. McCollam quit after only a brief time and was replaced by Kirk Henderson, who was a friend of Tabor's from
Jackson,
Mississippi. The group performed extensively on the
Springfield bar and club circuit specializing in
classic rock and Top 40 covers of the time.
By 1983, Henderson had quit the band and Pinnick, Tabor, and Gaskill decided to continue on as a trio. They also decided to change the name of the band, and settled on calling themselves
Sneak Preview
.
The group had been writing and recording many original songs up to this point. They chose ten of these songs to record for an independently released
self-titled LP in 1983. After the album's release, the band continued to tour and hone their songwriting skills.
Move to Houston (1985 - 1987)
By 1985, the group had made connections at
Star Song Records based in
Houston,
Texas and were encouraged to move the band there. The first order of business for the three was to become part of a touring band for CCM artist
Morgan Cryar. Tabor and Pinnick are also credited for co-writing several songs on Cryar's second album
Fuel on the Fire
in 1986. Tabor also performed some guitar parts on the album and both he and Pinnick are credited with
background vocals.
However, when it came to signing
Sneak Preview
to a
recording contract with Star Song, negotiations had broken down and the deal came to a halt.
While in
Houston, the group met Sam Taylor, then vice president of
ZZ Top's
production company. Taylor quickly became interested in the trio and convinced them to change their name to
King's X
. He also supported and nurtured the group's transition from radio friendly,
pop-rock originals to a more experimental and complex songwriting style. Taylor would soon become the group's manager, producer, mentor, and according to some, the fourth member of the group. He was instrumental in helping the group secure a contract with
Megaforce Records in 1987.
King's X begins (1988 - 1989)
The group released its first album as King's X, entitled
Out of the Silent Planet
, in 1988. Despite being hailed by music critics, the album did not fare well commercially, peaking at #144 on the Billboard album charts. The songs "King" and "Shot of Love" were released as singles but failed to garner much attention. The album shares its name with a
C. S. Lewis novel,
Out of the Silent Planet
.
In 1989, the band released
Gretchen Goes to Nebraska
. What many fans consider to be their landmark album and most creative period, it fared only slightly better from a commercial standpoint than
Out of the Silent Planet
. The album contains many fan favorites such as "
Summerland", "Mission", and "The Burning Down". The song "Pleiades" is credited by Ty Tabor as being the genesis of the King's X sound when he presented the demo to the other band members a few years earlier. Significantly, the song "
Over My Head" received moderate airplay on
MTV and radio. The increase in exposure would prove beneficial when the band released their third album,
Faith, Hope, Love
, in the fall of 1990.
Semi-Commercial success (1990 - 1997)
Faith Hope Love
was the group's first album to crack the US Top 100, with the help of the successful single "
It's Love". Another track, the funk-rock "We Were Born to Be Loved," has enjoyed a long life on
Late Night with David Letterman
as a
commercial bumper instrumental favorite of
Paul Shaffer's
CBS Orchestra.
The band landed the opening slot for
AC/DC in the
U.S. and
Europe for the first half of 1991. They also toured with
Living Colour, themselves near the peak of their popularity. That summer, their song "Junior's Gone Wild" appeared on the soundtrack to the movie
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey
.
[2]
The band was signed to major label
Atlantic Records for the release of their fourth album,
King's X
, in the Spring of 1992. But rising tensions with Taylor led the band to eschew the upbeat approach of previous albums and turn out a darker, more introspective effort. Unfortunately, their new style did not translate well among the record-buying public, thus garnering fewer sales than
Faith, Hope, Love
. "Black Flag," the album's lone single, received only moderate airplay on
MTV and radio. Not long after the release of
King's X
, the band parted ways with Taylor. The details of the split have not been made public, but it was believed to be rather bitter. In the aftermath, King's X took over a year off to consider their collective future together. The band members followed other, non-musical pursuits - most notably, guitarist Ty Tabor took up semi-professionally racing motocross motorcycles.
With
grunge music at the peak of its popularity, and Pearl Jam's bassist
Jeff Ament declaring that "King's X invented grunge"
[3] (despite the group's trademark sound being very different from that of the commercially successful grunge acts), the band went looking for a new sound upon their return. They enlisted veteran producer
Brendan O'Brien, who had recently produced albums for
Stone Temple Pilots and
Pearl Jam, and the resulting album, 1994's
Dogman
, showcased a much more muscular and heavy sound from the group, along with less abstract and spiritual lyrics. The record received a heavier promotional push from Atlantic and the band enjoyed a very successful tour, capped by an appearance at the
Woodstock 94 festival in August. But despite a return to the Top 100 for the group, the album failed to sell as well as Atlantic had hoped, and the label's support for the group quickly faded.
The band's third release under Atlantic, 1996's
Ear Candy
, would also be their last for the label (not including a subsequent "
Best Of" compilation). Although it sold to the band's sizeable core following, it lacked the relative mainstream success of previous efforts. The record was soon out of print, and it seemed that the group's chance for commercial success had come and gone.
Metal Blade era (1998 - 2004)
The group moved to
Metal Blade Records in
1998. Their first album under the label,
Tape Head
, signaled a new era for the band. They modified their creative methods by writing and recording the album together in the studio, rather than coming together to record songs that the individual members had written separately. They also elected not to hire an outside producer and recorded the album at Pinnicks
Hound Pound
and Tabor's
Alien Beans Studios, thus cutting production costs. Their next two albums,
Please Come Home... Mr. Bulbous
(2000) and
Manic Moonlight
(2001), were more or less created in this same way.
Manic Moonlight
featured the band experimenting with electronic drum loops and other sounds for the first time on a record. The new direction, along with the relatively short length of the album, was generally not well received by long time fans, but did get some positive critical reviews.
For their next album, 2003's
Black Like Sunday
, the group arranged and recorded an album of original songs that the band had regularly performed during
The Edge
and
Sneak Preview
days of the early 80's. The cover art for this album was selected from artwork submitted by fans in an online contest.
The double-disc set
Live All Over The Place
(2004) was the band's final album for
Metal Blade Records, and their first official live release.
InsideOut era (2005 - present)
In 2005, King's X signed to
InsideOut Music, the label that had previously released some of Tabor's side projects. The album
Ogre Tones
was released in September
2005 and was described by many as a return to a more "classic" King's X sound. It was produced by famed rock producer
Michael Wagener (
Dokken,
Extreme,
Stryper,
White Lion,
Skid Row) and recorded at Wageners Wire-World Studios in
Nashville, TN. The tour for
Ogre Tones featured the band playing every song from the album during shows.
King's X again worked with Michael Wagener on its second album for
InsideOut titled
XV
, released in May 2008. They spent the summer of 2008 touring with the band
Extreme
as part of a travelling version of the
Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp. Live dates in the U.S. in December '08 were followed by the band's first European tour in several years in early 2009.
Molken Music
, an independent label started by Wally Farkas (ex-
Galactic Cowboys) in 2005, has released several titles by King's X and its members.
Live & Live Some More
, a live concert recorded during the
Dogman
tour, is available there as well as demo compilations, rehearsal tapes, and other items. The label released the band's first live DVD,
Gretchen Goes to London
in November 2008. It is a live concert filmed in London in 1990.
[4]
On 22 January 2009 their concert at the
Electric Ballroom in Camden, London was filmed and is to be released as a live DVD.
Solo and Side projects
The members of King's X have been musically prolific since the separation from Atlantic in 1997, releasing a number of solo albums and participating in side bands.
Doug Pinnick recorded two solo albums under the name of
Poundhound
(
Massive Grooves from the Electric Church
and
Pineappleskunk
), while the subsequent releases
Emotional Animal
(2005) and
Strum Sum Up
(2007) were credited as
dUg Pinnick
.
Ty Tabor has released five solo albums:
Naomi's Solar Pumpkin
(1997),
Moonflower Lane
(1998),
Safety
(2002),
Rock Garden
(2006) and
Balance
(2008).
Jerry Gaskill released a solo album in 2004 titled
Come Somewhere
.
Tabor has additionally played with several bands other than King's X, releasing two albums with
Platypus, one album with
Jughead, and two albums with
The Jelly Jam. He also has an
electronica style project with Wally Farkas called
Xenuphobe
with two albums released through Molken Music.
Doug Pinnick released one album with
Trouble guitarist
Bruce Franklin called
Supershine
in 2000 as well as one album with
The Mob featuring
Reb Beach and Kelly Keaggy in 2005.
Pinnick has recorded several cover songs for various tribute albums including the
Jimi Hendrix tribute "In From The Storm" performing lead vocals on the song "Burning Of The Midnight Lamp" as well as tributes to
Van Halen,
Pink Floyd, Metallica and others. There is a demo recording of Doug with
Dimebag Darrell of
Pantera performing a cover of Cream's "Born Under A Bad Sign".
Pinnick stood in for lead singer
Corey Glover on
Living Colour's August 2006 European tour.
All three members of King's X have numerous guest appearances on other artist's albums as well.
(See each band members individual entry for complete listings)
Band's name
In an interview on the UK late-night television show
Raw Power
around the time of the release of
Gretchen Goes to Nebraska
, the band's explanation of its name was that the X relates to the mark on the
wax seal used by royalty to seal correspondence. If the seal on a letter sent by the King, the King's X, was broken, it meant death for the messenger.
In an interview published in a guitarist magazine in the mid-1990s, Tabor revealed the true origin of the name, claiming that "King's X" is a safety zone in the game of
Tag in Texas: a player could "Call King's X" to avoid being tagged. Sam Taylor's brother was in a band called Kings X some years earlier and he suggested it to the band. After much thought and with no better names forthcoming, members of the band said, "Are we gonna be called King's X or what?" The band agreed on it and King's X stuck .
Christian rock
Whether the band's name was intended as a Christian reference or not, the band members themselves have resisted being identified as a
Christian metal or
Christian rock band.
[5] Although many of their early lyrics have a clear spiritual influence, generally this came from the individual faith of the members rather than an explicit attempt to tap into the contemporary
Christian music market in the way groups such as
Petra did.
While members would speak openly about their faith, and the
Faith Hope Love
CD insert contained an entire chapter of the Bible, the band rejected the association as a Christian band.
While some of their albums were marketed through Christian book stores, most removed their albums from sale after Pinnick's announcement in 1998 of his homosexuality.
[6] [7]
Band members
Current members
- Doug Pinnick
–bass, lead & backing vocals (1980–present)
- Ty Tabor
–lead guitar, backing & lead vocals (1980–present)
- Jerry Gaskill
–drums, percussion, backing & lead vocals (1980–present)
Former members
- Dan McCollam
–rhythm guitar, backing vocals (1980)
- Kirk Henderson
–rhythm guitar, backing vocals (1980–1983)
Discography
Sneak Preview Album
King's X Albums/CDs
Year
| Album
| US
| US Christian
| US Indie
| UK
| Certification
|
1988
| Out of the Silent Planet
| 144
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
1989
| Gretchen Goes to Nebraska
| 123
| -
| -
| 52
| -
|
1990
| Faith Hope Love
| 85
| 31
| -
| 70
| -
|
1992
| King's X''
| 138
| -
| -
| 46
| -
|
1994
| Dogman
| 88
| -
| -
| 49
| -
|
1996
| Ear Candy
| 105
| 4
| -
| -
| -
|
1997
| Best of King's X
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
1998
| Tape Head
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2000
| Please Come Home... Mr. Bulbous
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2001
| Manic Moonlight
| -
| -
| 19
| -
| -
|
2003
| Black Like Sunday
| -
| -
| 13
| -
| -
|
2004
| Ear Candy
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2005
| Dogman Demos
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2005
| Rehearsal CD Vol. 1
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2005
| Ogre Tones
| -
| -
| 30
| -
| -
|
2007
| Live & Live Some More
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2008
| XV
| 145
| 167
| 12
| -
| -
|
Singles
Its Love(1990)- US Main. Rock:6
Black Flag (1992)- US Main. Rock:17
Dogman (1994)- US Main. Rock:20
King's X DVD
- Gretchen Goes To London
(2008 Molken Music)
See also
- Platypus
- The Jelly Jam
- Jughead
- The Mob
- Poundhound