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The Judybats

The Judybats (sometimes stylized as merely Judybats or JudyBats) were an American alternative rock band from Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, active primarily in the late 1980s and early to mid 1990s.[1] The band released three successful singles that charted on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart: "Native Son", "Saturday" and "Being Simple", the latter of which peaked at No. 7.[2]

The Judybats
OriginKnoxville, Tennessee, United States
GenresAlternative rock, folk rock
Years active1988 (1988)–1995 (1995), 2000 (2000), 2016 (2016)
LabelsSire Records
Past members
  • Jeff Heiskell
  • Johnny Sughrue
  • Ed Winters
  • Peggy Hambright
  • Tim Stutz
  • Terry Casper
  • Kevin Jarvis
  • Paul Noe
  • Dave Jenkins
  • Doug Hairrell
  • Reed Pendleton
  • Rob Bell
  • Mike Hairrell

Background edit

The band was formed in 1988 in Knoxville, Tennessee.[1] Frontman Jeff Heiskell and guitarist Ed Winters were neighbors and had been composing folk songs together.[3] The duo later met bassist Tim Stutz at a local bar called Hawkeye's Corner. Stutz, guitarist Johnny Sughrue and drummer Terry Casper had known each other since high school and had been playing music together as a trio. Peggy Hambright, who was Stutz's and Sughrue's roommate at the time, joined the band, contributing keyboards, violin and vocals.[4] The Judybats played locally to large audiences before signing to Sire Records in 1990.[1] The band took their name from a song written by a friend of theirs, which contained the line, "punch me with a judybat", a punning allusion to Punch and Judy shows.[1] The official form of the band's name was never entirely clear; although the band was credited as "The Judybats" on the cover of their 1991 debut album, Native Son, all of their subsequent albums listed the band's name as just "Judybats" or sometimes "JudyBats", although several CD singles from the later albums retained the word "The".[1]

Sire Records era edit

The Judybats' first major release was a cover of the 13th Floor Elevators' "She Lives (In a Time of Her Own)", which appeared on Sire's Roky Erickson tribute album, Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye, in 1990. The song also appeared on the band's debut album, Native Son, released the following year. The album's titular track was issued as a single and peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[2] On May 9, 1991, the band opened for alternative rock act John Wesley Harding—who were joined by R.E.M.'s Peter Buck on guitar—at the Georgia Theatre in Athens, Georgia.[5]

Casper subsequently left the band and was temporarily replaced by session drummer Kevin Jarvis on their second album, Down in the Shacks Where the Satellite Dishes Grow, in 1992.[1] This album spawned the hit "Saturday", which reached No. 21 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[2]

Following that album, Hambright and Stutz both left the band and were replaced by Paul Noe on bass and David Jenkins on drums.[1] The revised lineup released the band's most commercially successful album, Pain Makes You Beautiful, in 1993, and had successful singles on college radio and adult album alternative stations, including "Being Simple", "All Day Afternoon" and "Incredible Bittersweet".[1] "Being Simple" was the band's most successful single, rising to No. 7 on Modern Rock Tracks.[2]

The lineup remained stable for the band's fourth album, 1994's Full-Empty. Heiskell had intended for the album to be produced by Mitchell Froom and even sent him a demo tape of new songs, but was told by the Judybats' manager that attempts to reach Froom had been fruitless. Instead, the band opted to work with producer Paul Mahern, both because "he was cheap" and "was also supposed to have some kind of indie cachet at that time."[6] While recording Full-Empty, Heiskell eventually received a phone call from Froom, who said he liked the songs and expressed interest in working with the band, only to be told they were already working with Mahern.[6]

The band promoted the album by appearing on Late Night With Conan O'Brien on October 4, 1994, performing "Sorry Counts".[7][8] In an interview with The Advocate the following month, Heiskell acknowledged that he was gay,[9] but otherwise rarely discussed his sexuality with the press, choosing to write about it only indirectly in his songs until his solo career.[10] Looking back in 2023, Heiskell said, "It wasn't talked about in the open all that much back then, but more nuanced. Even so, some people expected me to come out and shout 'I'm A Gay Man!' to sell records. ... I wasn't willing to do that."[3] Full-Empty fared poorly on the charts and the band broke up soon afterward.[1]

In a 2008 interview with Popdose, Heiskell claimed that his dissolution of the band was attributable to several factors, with the last tour being "a nightmare of panic attacks and depression." Heiskell had been writing a screenplay about his experiences as a teenager that rendered him "an emotional wreck for nearly two years." Moreover, Heiskell alleged that band members Paul Noe and David Jenkins had attempted to convince him to break up the Judybats and form a new band with them. Heiskell explained, "By the time the tour ended I weighed 157 pounds – I'm nearly six feet tall – and could scarcely go out during the day for fear of having a bout of serious anxiety." Additionally, Warner Bros. decided to cull their roster of artists, which saw the Judybats losing their contract. "The idea of running about playing shows for schmucks in an attempt to get signed again made me break out in a sweat just thinking about it. And I was convinced that my life had become nothing more than trying to write the next college radio jingle of the week."[6]

Post-Sire era edit

Heiskell, Noe and Jenkins, along with guitarist Reed Pendleton, pursued a new musical direction under the name Doubters Club, an informal reconfiguration of the Judybats.[11] They released the album Fleur de Lisa independently in 1996, after being dropped from a development deal with Sire.[12] Heiskell later claimed that, following the release of the album, "Dave and Paul moved off to Nashville, hiding from me the fact that they had started another band on the side, taking all of the equipment with them."[10]

After the Doubters Club dissolved, Heiskell seriously considered quitting the music industry, while Pendleton encouraged him to stay the course, with the pair eventually creating a string of new songs, including "Break My Heart", "Shine", "You're Too Much", "Full Forward Angel", "Always", "Love Will Out" and "California". Moving forward, Heiskell and Pendleton formed the band Shoho, Jeff's nickname for local "scenesters" that often attended the band's shows. The lineup consisted of Heiskell on vocals and Pendleton on guitar, joined by local bassist Rob Bell and a set of twin brothers: guitarist/fiddle player Doug Hairrell and drummer Mike Hairrell. Early band sessions were held in a remote log cabin south of Knoxville, where the new lineup developed a guitar-heavy sound with Britpop influences. Upon the insistence of new manager SuperFrank, the band settled on resurrecting the name Judybats for the project. This incarnation of the band issued one album, Judybats '00, in 2000,[13] and released a cover of Paul McCartney's "Love in Song" for the 2001 McCartney tribute album Listen to What the Man Said.[14] "Break My Heart" was also included in Oxford American's annual Southern Music issue.[15]

In 2005, another configuration of Judybats performed at the Northalsted Market Days festival in Chicago.[16][17][18][19][20]

In 2011, the Judybats '00 track "California" appeared on the compilation album Kat Vox: Celebrating 20 Years of Timmi-Kat Records.[21]

Post-Judybats edit

In 1992, former keyboardist Peggy Hambright founded Magpies Bakery in Knoxville, Tennessee, and was the owner until 2018, when she passed the business on to her niece, Elizabeth.[22][23]

Jeff Heiskell has since released five solo albums, under the name Heiskell: Soundtrack for an Aneurism (2007), Clip-On Nose Ring (2008), Arriving (2015), Emotional Terrorism (2017) and Songs in the Key of H (2019).[24][25] Emotional Terrorism was accompanied by two videos, for the songs "Still Life With Broken Heart" and "I Want More Life". Conceived by Heiskell himself, both were guided by videographer Douglas Stuart McDaniel,[10] with intern Tyler Juárez Dippel shooting the footage for "Still Life With Broken Heart". "I did not feel comfortable carrying on the Judybats name with my being the only member", Heiskell explained in 2008. "I didn't really feel that comfortable with it when the '00 record was released, either. A millionaire control freak backed that project financially, so I felt that I had to follow his lead. I follow no one's lead now."[10]

In the fall of 2015, former bassist Tim Stutz released music via Bandcamp, under the name Because of Robots (stylized as "because of robots").[26]

In 2016, Heiskell performed several Judybats songs at Waynestock, a benefit concert for Girls Rock Camp Knoxville.[27][28][29]

In 2019, Heiskell became a full-time real estate agent for Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace Realtors in Knoxville, Tennessee, while continuing to release original music under the name Heiskell.[30]

In 2023, former guitarist Reed Pendleton's new band the Velvet Air released the single "Save Us", via Bandcamp.[31]

Discography edit

Albums edit

Selected compilation appearances edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Mason, Stewart. "The Judybats Biography, Songs & Albums". AllMusic.
  2. ^ a b c d "The Judybats Songs ••• Top Songs / Chart Singles Discography ••• Music VF, US & UK hits charts". Music VF.
  3. ^ a b Edelstein, Marc (January 16, 2023). "Jeff Heiskell Discusses the Judybats' Exquisite 'Pain Makes You Beautiful' at 30". PopMatters. Retrieved April 28, 2023.
  4. ^ Jack Renfro, ed. (2003). Cumberland Avenue Revisited: Four Decades of Music From Knoxville. Cardinal Publishing. ISBN 0966432967.
  5. ^ White, Darryl; Hartstonge, Chris. "R.E.M. Timeline - 1990/91 Concert Chronology". The R.E.M. Timeline. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Harris, Will (May 26, 2008). "Hooks 'N' You: Judybats, "Judybats '00"". Popdose. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  7. ^ "The Judybats Setlist at Late Night With Conan O'Brien, New York". Setlist.fm. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  8. ^ "The Judybats - "Sorry Counts"". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  9. ^ Walters, Barry (November 15, 1994). "'Bats Man: Jeff Heiskell, lead singer of the Judybats, comes out from behind his lyrics". The Advocate. No. 668.
  10. ^ a b c d . Spinner. June 27, 2008. Archived from the original on March 17, 2012. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  11. ^ "Former Judybats singer Jeff Heiskell no longer in the dark on new album". Knoxville News Sentinel. Archived from the original on March 1, 2014. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
  12. ^ Gibson, Mike (July 25, 1996). "No Doubt: Rising from the pretty pop ashes of the Judybats, the Doubters Club is ready to flex some musical muscle". Metro Pulse.
  13. ^ The Judybats (2000). Judybats '00 (Media notes). Self-released.
  14. ^ Various artists (2001). Listen to What the Man Said (Popular Artists Pay Tribute to the Music of Paul McCartney) (Media notes). Oglio Records. OGL89125-2.
  15. ^ Various artists (2000). "Oxford American: Southern Sampler 2000". Oxford American. No. 4.
  16. ^ "Judybats- Chicago '05". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  17. ^ "judybats- daylight". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  18. ^ "Judybats- don't drop the baby". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  19. ^ "Judybats- geography live". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  20. ^ "Judybats- geography live". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  21. ^ Various artists (2011). Kat Vox: Celebrating 20 Years of Timmi-Kat Records (Media notes). Timmi-Kat Records. tk013.
  22. ^ "About Us – Magpies Bakery". Magpies Bakery. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  23. ^ "Magpies, Knoxville's Sweetest Bakery". Knoxify. October 13, 2014. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  24. ^ "HEISKELL". Jeff Heiskell. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  25. ^ "Heiskell No. 124; CD Baby Music Store". CD Baby store. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  26. ^ "because of robots". Bandcamp. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  27. ^ . Buzz 935. Archived from the original on May 7, 2019. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  28. ^ "Heiskell: Arriving". Buzz 935. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  29. ^ "(A Very Special) Early Bird Special: Waynestock 2016 — Knoxville Music Warehouse". Knoxville Music Warehouse. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  30. ^ . Coldwell Banker Wallace. September 5, 2019. Archived from the original on February 6, 2023. Retrieved November 13, 2023.
  31. ^ The Velvet Air (April 11, 2023). "Save Us - The Velvet Air". Bandcamp. Retrieved April 27, 2023.

External links edit

  • Joe's JudyBats Page
  • Hooks 'N' You: Judybats, "Judybats '00"
  • HEISKELL
  • Red Veil Syndicate on Instagram
  • Jeff Heiskell Discusses the Judybats' Exquisite 'Pain Makes You Beautiful' at 30

judybats, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2019, learn, when. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Judybats news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message The Judybats sometimes stylized as merely Judybats or JudyBats were an American alternative rock band from Knoxville Tennessee United States active primarily in the late 1980s and early to mid 1990s 1 The band released three successful singles that charted on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart Native Son Saturday and Being Simple the latter of which peaked at No 7 2 The JudybatsOriginKnoxville Tennessee United StatesGenresAlternative rock folk rockYears active1988 1988 1995 1995 2000 2000 2016 2016 LabelsSire RecordsPast membersJeff Heiskell Johnny Sughrue Ed Winters Peggy Hambright Tim Stutz Terry Casper Kevin Jarvis Paul Noe Dave Jenkins Doug Hairrell Reed Pendleton Rob Bell Mike Hairrell Contents 1 Background 2 Sire Records era 3 Post Sire era 4 Post Judybats 5 Discography 5 1 Albums 5 2 Selected compilation appearances 6 References 7 External linksBackground editThe band was formed in 1988 in Knoxville Tennessee 1 Frontman Jeff Heiskell and guitarist Ed Winters were neighbors and had been composing folk songs together 3 The duo later met bassist Tim Stutz at a local bar called Hawkeye s Corner Stutz guitarist Johnny Sughrue and drummer Terry Casper had known each other since high school and had been playing music together as a trio Peggy Hambright who was Stutz s and Sughrue s roommate at the time joined the band contributing keyboards violin and vocals 4 The Judybats played locally to large audiences before signing to Sire Records in 1990 1 The band took their name from a song written by a friend of theirs which contained the line punch me with a judybat a punning allusion to Punch and Judy shows 1 The official form of the band s name was never entirely clear although the band was credited as The Judybats on the cover of their 1991 debut album Native Son all of their subsequent albums listed the band s name as just Judybats or sometimes JudyBats although several CD singles from the later albums retained the word The 1 Sire Records era editThe Judybats first major release was a cover of the 13th Floor Elevators She Lives In a Time of Her Own which appeared on Sire s Roky Erickson tribute album Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye in 1990 The song also appeared on the band s debut album Native Son released the following year The album s titular track was issued as a single and peaked at No 9 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart 2 On May 9 1991 the band opened for alternative rock act John Wesley Harding who were joined by R E M s Peter Buck on guitar at the Georgia Theatre in Athens Georgia 5 Casper subsequently left the band and was temporarily replaced by session drummer Kevin Jarvis on their second album Down in the Shacks Where the Satellite Dishes Grow in 1992 1 This album spawned the hit Saturday which reached No 21 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart 2 Following that album Hambright and Stutz both left the band and were replaced by Paul Noe on bass and David Jenkins on drums 1 The revised lineup released the band s most commercially successful album Pain Makes You Beautiful in 1993 and had successful singles on college radio and adult album alternative stations including Being Simple All Day Afternoon and Incredible Bittersweet 1 Being Simple was the band s most successful single rising to No 7 on Modern Rock Tracks 2 The lineup remained stable for the band s fourth album 1994 s Full Empty Heiskell had intended for the album to be produced by Mitchell Froom and even sent him a demo tape of new songs but was told by the Judybats manager that attempts to reach Froom had been fruitless Instead the band opted to work with producer Paul Mahern both because he was cheap and was also supposed to have some kind of indie cachet at that time 6 While recording Full Empty Heiskell eventually received a phone call from Froom who said he liked the songs and expressed interest in working with the band only to be told they were already working with Mahern 6 The band promoted the album by appearing on Late Night With Conan O Brien on October 4 1994 performing Sorry Counts 7 8 In an interview with The Advocate the following month Heiskell acknowledged that he was gay 9 but otherwise rarely discussed his sexuality with the press choosing to write about it only indirectly in his songs until his solo career 10 Looking back in 2023 Heiskell said It wasn t talked about in the open all that much back then but more nuanced Even so some people expected me to come out and shout I m A Gay Man to sell records I wasn t willing to do that 3 Full Empty fared poorly on the charts and the band broke up soon afterward 1 In a 2008 interview with Popdose Heiskell claimed that his dissolution of the band was attributable to several factors with the last tour being a nightmare of panic attacks and depression Heiskell had been writing a screenplay about his experiences as a teenager that rendered him an emotional wreck for nearly two years Moreover Heiskell alleged that band members Paul Noe and David Jenkins had attempted to convince him to break up the Judybats and form a new band with them Heiskell explained By the time the tour ended I weighed 157 pounds I m nearly six feet tall and could scarcely go out during the day for fear of having a bout of serious anxiety Additionally Warner Bros decided to cull their roster of artists which saw the Judybats losing their contract The idea of running about playing shows for schmucks in an attempt to get signed again made me break out in a sweat just thinking about it And I was convinced that my life had become nothing more than trying to write the next college radio jingle of the week 6 Post Sire era editHeiskell Noe and Jenkins along with guitarist Reed Pendleton pursued a new musical direction under the name Doubters Club an informal reconfiguration of the Judybats 11 They released the album Fleur de Lisa independently in 1996 after being dropped from a development deal with Sire 12 Heiskell later claimed that following the release of the album Dave and Paul moved off to Nashville hiding from me the fact that they had started another band on the side taking all of the equipment with them 10 After the Doubters Club dissolved Heiskell seriously considered quitting the music industry while Pendleton encouraged him to stay the course with the pair eventually creating a string of new songs including Break My Heart Shine You re Too Much Full Forward Angel Always Love Will Out and California Moving forward Heiskell and Pendleton formed the band Shoho Jeff s nickname for local scenesters that often attended the band s shows The lineup consisted of Heiskell on vocals and Pendleton on guitar joined by local bassist Rob Bell and a set of twin brothers guitarist fiddle player Doug Hairrell and drummer Mike Hairrell Early band sessions were held in a remote log cabin south of Knoxville where the new lineup developed a guitar heavy sound with Britpop influences Upon the insistence of new manager SuperFrank the band settled on resurrecting the name Judybats for the project This incarnation of the band issued one album Judybats 00 in 2000 13 and released a cover of Paul McCartney s Love in Song for the 2001 McCartney tribute album Listen to What the Man Said 14 Break My Heart was also included in Oxford American s annual Southern Music issue 15 In 2005 another configuration of Judybats performed at the Northalsted Market Days festival in Chicago 16 17 18 19 20 In 2011 the Judybats 00 track California appeared on the compilation album Kat Vox Celebrating 20 Years of Timmi Kat Records 21 Post Judybats editIn 1992 former keyboardist Peggy Hambright founded Magpies Bakery in Knoxville Tennessee and was the owner until 2018 when she passed the business on to her niece Elizabeth 22 23 Jeff Heiskell has since released five solo albums under the name Heiskell Soundtrack for an Aneurism 2007 Clip On Nose Ring 2008 Arriving 2015 Emotional Terrorism 2017 and Songs in the Key of H 2019 24 25 Emotional Terrorism was accompanied by two videos for the songs Still Life With Broken Heart and I Want More Life Conceived by Heiskell himself both were guided by videographer Douglas Stuart McDaniel 10 with intern Tyler Juarez Dippel shooting the footage for Still Life With Broken Heart I did not feel comfortable carrying on the Judybats name with my being the only member Heiskell explained in 2008 I didn t really feel that comfortable with it when the 00 record was released either A millionaire control freak backed that project financially so I felt that I had to follow his lead I follow no one s lead now 10 In the fall of 2015 former bassist Tim Stutz released music via Bandcamp under the name Because of Robots stylized as because of robots 26 In 2016 Heiskell performed several Judybats songs at Waynestock a benefit concert for Girls Rock Camp Knoxville 27 28 29 In 2019 Heiskell became a full time real estate agent for Coldwell Banker Wallace amp Wallace Realtors in Knoxville Tennessee while continuing to release original music under the name Heiskell 30 In 2023 former guitarist Reed Pendleton s new band the Velvet Air released the single Save Us via Bandcamp 31 Discography editAlbums edit Native Son 1991 Down in the Shacks Where the Satellite Dishes Grow 1992 Pain Makes You Beautiful 1993 Full Empty 1994 Judybats 00 2000 Selected compilation appearances edit Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye A Tribute to Roky Erickson 1990 She Lives In a Time of Her Own Just Say Yes Volume V Just Say Anything 1991 Don t Drop the Baby Meanwhile Somewhere in the Nineties A Knoxville Band Compilation 1992 Wafflehead previously unreleased Just Say Yes Volume VII Just Say Roe 1994 What We Lose Everybody Needs Somebody promo sampler 1994 Just Like Life non album track Out Loud For the Human Rights of Lesbians and Gays 1995 My Dead Friend Listen to What the Man Said Popular Artists Pay Tribute to the Music of Paul McCartney 2001 Love in Song Kat Vox Celebrating 20 Years of Timmi Kat Records 2011 California References edit a b c d e f g h i Mason Stewart The Judybats Biography Songs amp Albums AllMusic a b c d The Judybats Songs Top Songs Chart Singles Discography Music VF US amp UK hits charts Music VF a b Edelstein Marc January 16 2023 Jeff Heiskell Discusses the Judybats Exquisite Pain Makes You Beautiful at 30 PopMatters Retrieved April 28 2023 Jack Renfro ed 2003 Cumberland Avenue Revisited Four Decades of Music From Knoxville Cardinal Publishing ISBN 0966432967 White Darryl Hartstonge Chris R E M Timeline 1990 91 Concert Chronology The R E M Timeline Retrieved January 23 2020 a b c Harris Will May 26 2008 Hooks N You Judybats Judybats 00 Popdose Retrieved January 23 2020 The Judybats Setlist at Late Night With Conan O Brien New York Setlist fm Retrieved January 23 2020 The Judybats Sorry Counts YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved January 23 2020 Walters Barry November 15 1994 Bats Man Jeff Heiskell lead singer of the Judybats comes out from behind his lyrics The Advocate No 668 a b c d Rockin Out Interview The Judybats Jeff Heiskell Spinner June 27 2008 Archived from the original on March 17 2012 Retrieved November 12 2022 Former Judybats singer Jeff Heiskell no longer in the dark on new album Knoxville News Sentinel Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved February 3 2022 Gibson Mike July 25 1996 No Doubt Rising from the pretty pop ashes of the Judybats the Doubters Club is ready to flex some musical muscle Metro Pulse The Judybats 2000 Judybats 00 Media notes Self released Various artists 2001 Listen to What the Man Said Popular Artists Pay Tribute to the Music of Paul McCartney Media notes Oglio Records OGL89125 2 Various artists 2000 Oxford American Southern Sampler 2000 Oxford American No 4 Judybats Chicago 05 YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved January 23 2020 judybats daylight YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved January 23 2020 Judybats don t drop the baby YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved January 23 2020 Judybats geography live YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved January 23 2020 Judybats geography live YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved January 23 2020 Various artists 2011 Kat Vox Celebrating 20 Years of Timmi Kat Records Media notes Timmi Kat Records tk013 About Us Magpies Bakery Magpies Bakery Retrieved January 23 2020 Magpies Knoxville s Sweetest Bakery Knoxify October 13 2014 Retrieved January 23 2020 HEISKELL Jeff Heiskell Retrieved January 23 2020 Heiskell No 124 CD Baby Music Store CD Baby store Retrieved January 23 2020 because of robots Bandcamp Retrieved January 23 2020 The Buzz 93 5 Native Son by Heiskell at Waynestock 2016 the Buzz 93 5 Buzz 935 Archived from the original on May 7 2019 Retrieved January 13 2022 Heiskell Arriving Buzz 935 Retrieved January 23 2020 A Very Special Early Bird Special Waynestock 2016 Knoxville Music Warehouse Knoxville Music Warehouse Retrieved January 23 2020 Jeff Heiskell joins Coldwell Banker Wallace amp Wallace REALTORS Coldwell Banker Wallace September 5 2019 Archived from the original on February 6 2023 Retrieved November 13 2023 The Velvet Air April 11 2023 Save Us The Velvet Air Bandcamp Retrieved April 27 2023 External links editJudybats on MySpace Joe s JudyBats Page Hooks N You Judybats Judybats 00 HEISKELL Red Veil Syndicate on Instagram Jeff Heiskell Discusses the Judybats Exquisite Pain Makes You Beautiful at 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Judybats amp oldid 1187610978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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