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The Dead Milkmen

The Dead Milkmen is an American punk rock band formed in 1983 in Philadelphia. Their original lineup consisted of vocalist and keyboardist Rodney Linderman ("Rodney Anonymous"), guitarist and vocalist Joe Genaro ("Joe Jack Talcum"), bassist Dave Schulthise ("Dave Blood") and drummer Dean Sabatino ("Dean Clean").

The Dead Milkmen
Live at Underground Arts in Philadelphia, 2024
Background information
OriginPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Genres
Years active1983–1995, 2004, 2008–present
LabelsRestless Records, Enigma Records, Hollywood Records
MembersJoe Genaro
Rodney Linderman
Dean Sabatino
Dan Stevens
Past membersDave Schulthise
Websitewww.deadmilkmen.com

The band distinguished itself in the hardcore punk scene of the early 1980s through its jangly punk sound and sardonic humor delivered with thick Philadelphia accents. They attracted college radio attention with their 1985 debut album, Big Lizard in My Backyard, and the song "Bitchin' Camaro". Extensive touring and further releases helped the band garner an underground following.

The band enjoyed international success on the strength of "Punk Rock Girl", a single from their 1988 Beelzebubba album which entered into MTV rotation.[1] After an ill-fated stint with major record label Hollywood Records, health problems and industry frustrations in the wake of their success led to the group's 1995 breakup.

The group reunited in 2008, with Dan Stevens replacing the deceased Schulthise. In 2011, they released The King in Yellow, their first studio album in 16 years. The band remained active thereafter, touring sporadically and releasing further records.

History edit

Formative period (1979–83) edit

Conceptually, the group began in 1979 as Genaro's home-recording project. Then based in Chester County, Pennsylvania, Genaro and his high school friend Garth created an imaginary band called The Dead Milkmen with a mythological back-story, recording homemade cassettes in keeping with their fictional characters.[2] According to Genaro, the band's moniker came from a character named "Milkman Dead" in Toni Morrison's novel Song of Solomon.[3] Linderman, who attended high school with Genaro, later participated in this embryonic stage of the group. The project became inactive when Garth departed to join the United States Air Force and Genaro relocated to the dormitories of Philadelphia's Temple University.[2]

While in Philadelphia, Genaro met Schulthise and Sabatino through mutual friends. The three began loosely rehearsing together in 1981, taking their name from Genaro's home-recording project. Sabatino was the only member with experience in rock groups, having played previously in the two-piece new wave band Narthex. Linderman collaborated sporadically with the three during this period. He completed the lineup as lead vocalist in 1983, in time for their first public performance which took place July 23, 1983 at Harleysville Youth Center in Pennsylvania.

Early career and albums (1983–87) edit

The band played frequently in Philadelphia's punk rock circuit and eventually began touring nationally. After several self-released cassettes, their debut LP, Big Lizard in My Backyard, was issued in 1985 on Restless Records, a subsidiary of Enigma Records. The album received college radio play, with the track "Bitchin' Camaro" becoming especially popular. Because of its improvised dialogue intro, the song remained a favorite at live shows.

Eat Your Paisley, their second album, was released the following year. "The Thing That Only Eats Hippies" became the band's first proper single and music video, and was a hit in Australia in addition to receiving domestic attention. Bucky Fellini followed in 1987, yielding the single "Instant Club Hit (You'll Dance to Anything)", a genre spoof of electronic dance music.

Commercial success (1987–91) edit

 
Zipperhead, the iconic punk clothing shop in Philadelphia's South Street district referred to in the single "Punk Rock Girl"

As the band toured extensively behind their records, they began to accrue increasing attention, which often came through unconventional routes. In 1987, Major League Baseball player Jim Walewander, a Detroit Tigers rookie, became a vocal fan of the band; this was noted on his baseball card (1988 Score, #571), which described the group as "an obscure punk-rock band".[4] Walewander invited the band to Tiger Stadium to see a game in which he hit his first and only major league home run.

In 1988, they issued Beelzebubba, a comparatively polished record that yielded their most successful single, "Punk Rock Girl". Featuring Genaro on lead vocals, the track saw extensive rotation on MTV and propelled the album to number 101 on Billboard's Top 200.[5] They later released the Smokin' Banana Peels EP and music video from this album. The 1990 followup, Metaphysical Graffiti, did not yield a hit, but also charted[5] and helped solidify the group's presence in the independent rock scene.

Stint with Hollywood Records; breakup (1991–95) edit

In 1991, the band left Restless and signed with The Walt Disney Company-owned Hollywood Records. Soul Rotation, their Hollywood debut released the following year, was focused more heavily on Genaro's singing and songwriting, with Linderman used predominantly as a keyboardist. The resulting record was much more pop-oriented than the group's previous efforts, but failed to produce a hit single. Not Richard, But Dick was issued in 1993, and did not fare any better than its predecessor. Relations between the band and label quickly soured, and the two albums went out of print shortly after their initial releases. The band was later unable to feature any of the songs from either of the Hollywood albums on retrospective or compilation CDs, although the group did smuggle an unlisted version of Soul Rotation's "If I Had a Gun" onto their 1994 live album Chaos Rules: Live at the Trocadero.

Later in 1994, The Dead Milkmen announced their decision to break up following a final tour and album. This was due in part to the tendinitis Schulthise began to suffer in his hands, which made performing intensely painful, as well as the band's increasing frustration with commercial and industry struggles. Restless Records released what was planned to be their final studio album in 1995, Stoney's Extra Stout (Pig). Several compilations of both hits and rarities were later released.

Post-breakup (1995–2008) edit

 
Genaro played with numerous other groups and embarked upon a solo career while the Dead Milkmen were inactive.

The band then took a 13-year hiatus. During this time, Linderman performed with the gothic, Celtic punk band Burn Witch Burn and worked in journalism and blogging, including writing for the Philadelphia Weekly. Sabatino played with the Big Mess Orchestra and The Hunger Artists, two sporadically active projects, as well as Genaro's post-Milkmen group Butterfly Joe. Genaro remained the most musically active member of the band during its split, consistently recording and performing with groups such as Butterfly Joe, Touch Me Zoo, the Town Managers and The Low Budgets, while also maintaining a low-key solo career.

Schulthise attended Indiana University to study Serbo-Croatian language, literature, history, and culture. In 1998 he moved to Novi Sad, Serbia, where he taught English. His writing was published several times in Svetigora, the magazine of the Serbian Orthodox Church.[6] He hoped to contribute to the country’s regrowth and development,[6] but fled in April 1999 when NATO bombed the country.

In 2003, the band issued Now We Are 20, a repackaging of their self-released Now We Are 10 retrospective CD from 1993. They also collected their music video output and released it on the Philadelphia In Love DVD. Talks of reunion shows briefly emerged, but ended when Schulthise died by suicide on March 10, 2004. His death was reported in The New York Times and Rolling Stone.

The surviving members reunited for two consecutive shows in November 2004 at the Trocadero Theatre in Philadelphia, with Dan Stevens of The Low Budgets playing bass. The shows were intended to pay tribute to Schulthise, and proceeds were donated to a variety of mental health organizations and to Studenica, a Serbian monastery that he supported.

Reunion (2008–present) edit

In late 2008, the band reunited to play their first performances since the Schulthise memorial shows, with Stevens again on bass. After two back-to-back warm-up shows in Philadelphia, including one billed under the pseudonym Les Enfants Du Prague, they played the Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin, Texas. Following these concerts, they decided to continue as an active group.

They spent the following two years composing new material before entering the recording studio late in 2010. On March 19, 2011, a new album, The King in Yellow,[7] was released in digital form on the band's website, with a self-released CD following shortly thereafter.

In late 2012, they released "Dark Clouds Gather Over Middlemarch" and "Big Words Make the Baby Jesus Cry", the first two installments in a series of limited-run singles. This was also the year they appeared on nerdcore rapper MC Lars' EP, Edgar Allan Poe EP, for a new recording of Lars' song, "Mr. Raven", which was originally released on his 2006 album, The Graduate. "The Great Boston Molasses Flood", the third release in their singles series, was released on March 15, 2013; the fourth, "Welcome to Undertown", followed on June 21.

The band released Pretty Music for Pretty People, their tenth studio album, on October 7, 2014. The following year, SRA Records issued their split 7-inch with the 1980s Philadelphia hardcore band Flag of Democracy (also known as F.O.D.)

In July 2017, The Dead Milkmen joined with philanthropic record label the Giving Groove.[8]

On June 9, 2023, The Dead Milkmen released the LP Quaker City Quiet Pills.

Members edit

Current members
  • Joseph Genaro – guitar, vocals, keyboards (1983–1995, 2004, 2008–present)
  • Rodney Linderman – vocals, keyboards, tin whistle (1983–1995, 2004, 2008–present)
  • Dean Sabatino – drums, percussion, vocals (1983–1995, 2004, 2008–present)
  • Dan Stevens – bass guitar (2004, 2008–present)
Former members

Discography edit

Studio albums
Live albums
Compilations
Singles and EPs
  • The Thing that Only Eats Hippies (1987)
  • Instant Club Hit EP (1987)
  • Punk Rock Girl (1988, 1989)
  • Smokin' Banana Peels EP (1988, 1989)
  • If I Had a Gun EP (1992)
  • Dark Clouds Gather Over Middlemarch (2012)
  • Big Words Make the Baby Jesus Cry (2012)
  • The Great Boston Molasses Flood (2013)
  • Welcome to Undertown (2013)
  • Split 7-inch with Flag of Democracy (2015)
  • Prisoner's Cinema (2015)
  • Welcome to the End of the World EP (2017)
  • (We Don't Need This) Fascist Groove Thang EP (2020)
  • Grandpa's Not a Racist (He Just Voted For One) (2023)[9]
Self-released cassettes
  • So Long Seventies (1979)
  • Folk Songs for the 80s (1980)
  • Sour Milk (1980)
  • Music for the Mindless (1980)
  • For Die Hard Fans Only (1980)
  • Doctor Talcum's Studio of Fear (1981)
  • Cows and Gals (1981)
  • Raging Cow (1981)
  • Paradise Lagoon (1981)
  • The Salamander Sessions (1981)
  • Living Death in the Cellar of Sin (1981)
  • Nine New Sins (1982)
  • Purgatory Beat (1982)
  • Wisconsin (1983)
  • A Date with The Dead Milkmen (1983)
  • Millersville Delivery (1983)
  • Funky Farm (1983)
  • Death Rides a Pale Cow (1984)
  • The Dead Milkmen Take the Airwaves (1984)
  • Someone Shot Sunshine (1984)

References edit

  1. ^ "Dave Blood obituary at". Billboard.com. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  2. ^ a b . Deadmilkmen.com. Archived from the original on 2011-09-29. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  3. ^ . Deadmilkmen.com. 2004-03-09. Archived from the original on 2005-07-21. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  4. ^ "The Dead Milkmen/Detroit Tigers connection". Chinmusic.net. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  5. ^ a b "The Dead Milkmen Album & Song Chart History". Billboard.com. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  6. ^ a b . Deadmilkmen.com. Archived from the original on 2011-11-17. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  7. ^ . Philebrity.com. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
  8. ^ "Philanthropic Label The Giving Groove Signs the Dead Milkmen". www.musicconnection.com. 21 July 2017. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  9. ^ "The Dead Milkmen announce new LP, share "Grandpa's Not a Racist (He Just Voted for One)"". 12 April 2023.

External links edit

  • Official Dead Milkmen website
  • JackTalcum.com
  • Rodney Anonymous website
  • Dead Alive: Interview w/The Dead Milkmen (11/08/08) on MonsterFresh.com
  • The Dead Milkmen at Curlie
  • The Dead Milkmen at AllMusic
  • The Dead Milkmen discography at Discogs
  • The Dead Milkmen discography at MusicBrainz

dead, milkmen, 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, september, 2. 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 Dead Milkmen news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Dead Milkmen is an American punk rock band formed in 1983 in Philadelphia Their original lineup consisted of vocalist and keyboardist Rodney Linderman Rodney Anonymous guitarist and vocalist Joe Genaro Joe Jack Talcum bassist Dave Schulthise Dave Blood and drummer Dean Sabatino Dean Clean The Dead MilkmenLive at Underground Arts in Philadelphia 2024Background informationOriginPhiladelphia Pennsylvania U S GenresPunk rockindie rockcowpunkcomedy rockYears active1983 1995 2004 2008 presentLabelsRestless Records Enigma Records Hollywood RecordsMembersJoe GenaroRodney LindermanDean SabatinoDan StevensPast membersDave SchulthiseWebsitewww deadmilkmen com The band distinguished itself in the hardcore punk scene of the early 1980s through its jangly punk sound and sardonic humor delivered with thick Philadelphia accents They attracted college radio attention with their 1985 debut album Big Lizard in My Backyard and the song Bitchin Camaro Extensive touring and further releases helped the band garner an underground following The band enjoyed international success on the strength of Punk Rock Girl a single from their 1988 Beelzebubba album which entered into MTV rotation 1 After an ill fated stint with major record label Hollywood Records health problems and industry frustrations in the wake of their success led to the group s 1995 breakup The group reunited in 2008 with Dan Stevens replacing the deceased Schulthise In 2011 they released The King in Yellow their first studio album in 16 years The band remained active thereafter touring sporadically and releasing further records Contents 1 History 1 1 Formative period 1979 83 1 2 Early career and albums 1983 87 1 3 Commercial success 1987 91 1 4 Stint with Hollywood Records breakup 1991 95 1 5 Post breakup 1995 2008 1 6 Reunion 2008 present 2 Members 3 Discography 4 References 5 External linksHistory editFormative period 1979 83 edit Conceptually the group began in 1979 as Genaro s home recording project Then based in Chester County Pennsylvania Genaro and his high school friend Garth created an imaginary band called The Dead Milkmen with a mythological back story recording homemade cassettes in keeping with their fictional characters 2 According to Genaro the band s moniker came from a character named Milkman Dead in Toni Morrison s novel Song of Solomon 3 Linderman who attended high school with Genaro later participated in this embryonic stage of the group The project became inactive when Garth departed to join the United States Air Force and Genaro relocated to the dormitories of Philadelphia s Temple University 2 While in Philadelphia Genaro met Schulthise and Sabatino through mutual friends The three began loosely rehearsing together in 1981 taking their name from Genaro s home recording project Sabatino was the only member with experience in rock groups having played previously in the two piece new wave band Narthex Linderman collaborated sporadically with the three during this period He completed the lineup as lead vocalist in 1983 in time for their first public performance which took place July 23 1983 at Harleysville Youth Center in Pennsylvania Early career and albums 1983 87 edit The band played frequently in Philadelphia s punk rock circuit and eventually began touring nationally After several self released cassettes their debut LP Big Lizard in My Backyard was issued in 1985 on Restless Records a subsidiary of Enigma Records The album received college radio play with the track Bitchin Camaro becoming especially popular Because of its improvised dialogue intro the song remained a favorite at live shows Eat Your Paisley their second album was released the following year The Thing That Only Eats Hippies became the band s first proper single and music video and was a hit in Australia in addition to receiving domestic attention Bucky Fellini followed in 1987 yielding the single Instant Club Hit You ll Dance to Anything a genre spoof of electronic dance music Commercial success 1987 91 edit nbsp Zipperhead the iconic punk clothing shop in Philadelphia s South Street district referred to in the single Punk Rock Girl As the band toured extensively behind their records they began to accrue increasing attention which often came through unconventional routes In 1987 Major League Baseball player Jim Walewander a Detroit Tigers rookie became a vocal fan of the band this was noted on his baseball card 1988 Score 571 which described the group as an obscure punk rock band 4 Walewander invited the band to Tiger Stadium to see a game in which he hit his first and only major league home run In 1988 they issued Beelzebubba a comparatively polished record that yielded their most successful single Punk Rock Girl Featuring Genaro on lead vocals the track saw extensive rotation on MTV and propelled the album to number 101 on Billboard s Top 200 5 They later released the Smokin Banana Peels EP and music video from this album The 1990 followup Metaphysical Graffiti did not yield a hit but also charted 5 and helped solidify the group s presence in the independent rock scene Stint with Hollywood Records breakup 1991 95 edit In 1991 the band left Restless and signed with The Walt Disney Company owned Hollywood Records Soul Rotation their Hollywood debut released the following year was focused more heavily on Genaro s singing and songwriting with Linderman used predominantly as a keyboardist The resulting record was much more pop oriented than the group s previous efforts but failed to produce a hit single Not Richard But Dick was issued in 1993 and did not fare any better than its predecessor Relations between the band and label quickly soured and the two albums went out of print shortly after their initial releases The band was later unable to feature any of the songs from either of the Hollywood albums on retrospective or compilation CDs although the group did smuggle an unlisted version of Soul Rotation s If I Had a Gun onto their 1994 live album Chaos Rules Live at the Trocadero Later in 1994 The Dead Milkmen announced their decision to break up following a final tour and album This was due in part to the tendinitis Schulthise began to suffer in his hands which made performing intensely painful as well as the band s increasing frustration with commercial and industry struggles Restless Records released what was planned to be their final studio album in 1995 Stoney s Extra Stout Pig Several compilations of both hits and rarities were later released Post breakup 1995 2008 edit nbsp Genaro played with numerous other groups and embarked upon a solo career while the Dead Milkmen were inactive The band then took a 13 year hiatus During this time Linderman performed with the gothic Celtic punk band Burn Witch Burn and worked in journalism and blogging including writing for the Philadelphia Weekly Sabatino played with the Big Mess Orchestra and The Hunger Artists two sporadically active projects as well as Genaro s post Milkmen group Butterfly Joe Genaro remained the most musically active member of the band during its split consistently recording and performing with groups such as Butterfly Joe Touch Me Zoo the Town Managers and The Low Budgets while also maintaining a low key solo career Schulthise attended Indiana University to study Serbo Croatian language literature history and culture In 1998 he moved to Novi Sad Serbia where he taught English His writing was published several times in Svetigora the magazine of the Serbian Orthodox Church 6 He hoped to contribute to the country s regrowth and development 6 but fled in April 1999 when NATO bombed the country In 2003 the band issued Now We Are 20 a repackaging of their self released Now We Are 10 retrospective CD from 1993 They also collected their music video output and released it on the Philadelphia In Love DVD Talks of reunion shows briefly emerged but ended when Schulthise died by suicide on March 10 2004 His death was reported in The New York Times and Rolling Stone The surviving members reunited for two consecutive shows in November 2004 at the Trocadero Theatre in Philadelphia with Dan Stevens of The Low Budgets playing bass The shows were intended to pay tribute to Schulthise and proceeds were donated to a variety of mental health organizations and to Studenica a Serbian monastery that he supported Reunion 2008 present edit In late 2008 the band reunited to play their first performances since the Schulthise memorial shows with Stevens again on bass After two back to back warm up shows in Philadelphia including one billed under the pseudonym Les Enfants Du Prague they played the Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin Texas Following these concerts they decided to continue as an active group They spent the following two years composing new material before entering the recording studio late in 2010 On March 19 2011 a new album The King in Yellow 7 was released in digital form on the band s website with a self released CD following shortly thereafter In late 2012 they released Dark Clouds Gather Over Middlemarch and Big Words Make the Baby Jesus Cry the first two installments in a series of limited run singles This was also the year they appeared on nerdcore rapper MC Lars EP Edgar Allan Poe EP for a new recording of Lars song Mr Raven which was originally released on his 2006 album The Graduate The Great Boston Molasses Flood the third release in their singles series was released on March 15 2013 the fourth Welcome to Undertown followed on June 21 The band released Pretty Music for Pretty People their tenth studio album on October 7 2014 The following year SRA Records issued their split 7 inch with the 1980s Philadelphia hardcore band Flag of Democracy also known as F O D In July 2017 The Dead Milkmen joined with philanthropic record label the Giving Groove 8 On June 9 2023 The Dead Milkmen released the LP Quaker City Quiet Pills Members editCurrent members Joseph Genaro guitar vocals keyboards 1983 1995 2004 2008 present Rodney Linderman vocals keyboards tin whistle 1983 1995 2004 2008 present Dean Sabatino drums percussion vocals 1983 1995 2004 2008 present Dan Stevens bass guitar 2004 2008 present Former members Dave Schulthise bass guitar vocals 1983 1995 died 2004 Discography editStudio albums Big Lizard in My Backyard 1985 Eat Your Paisley 1986 Bucky Fellini 1987 Beelzebubba 1988 Metaphysical Graffiti 1990 Soul Rotation 1992 Not Richard But Dick 1993 Stoney s Extra Stout Pig 1995 The King in Yellow 2011 Pretty Music for Pretty People 2014 Quaker City Quiet Pills 2023 Live albums Chaos Rules Live at the Trocadero 1994 Compilations Now We Are 10 1993 Death Rides a Pale Cow The Ultimate Collection 1997 Cream of the Crop 1998 Now We Are 20 2003 The Dead Milkmen Present Philadelphia in Love DVD 2003 Depends On the Horse 2020 Singles and EPs The Thing that Only Eats Hippies 1987 Instant Club Hit EP 1987 Punk Rock Girl 1988 1989 Smokin Banana Peels EP 1988 1989 If I Had a Gun EP 1992 Dark Clouds Gather Over Middlemarch 2012 Big Words Make the Baby Jesus Cry 2012 The Great Boston Molasses Flood 2013 Welcome to Undertown 2013 Split 7 inch with Flag of Democracy 2015 Prisoner s Cinema 2015 Welcome to the End of the World EP 2017 We Don t Need This Fascist Groove Thang EP 2020 Grandpa s Not a Racist He Just Voted For One 2023 9 Self released cassettes So Long Seventies 1979 Folk Songs for the 80s 1980 Sour Milk 1980 Music for the Mindless 1980 For Die Hard Fans Only 1980 Doctor Talcum s Studio of Fear 1981 Cows and Gals 1981 Raging Cow 1981 Paradise Lagoon 1981 The Salamander Sessions 1981 Living Death in the Cellar of Sin 1981 Nine New Sins 1982 Purgatory Beat 1982 Wisconsin 1983 A Date with The Dead Milkmen 1983 Millersville Delivery 1983 Funky Farm 1983 Death Rides a Pale Cow 1984 The Dead Milkmen Take the Airwaves 1984 Someone Shot Sunshine 1984 References edit Dave Blood obituary at Billboard com Retrieved 2011 11 17 a b A History Lesson Deadmilkmen com Archived from the original on 2011 09 29 Retrieved 2011 11 17 The Official Dead Milkmen Website Milkmen FAQ Deadmilkmen com 2004 03 09 Archived from the original on 2005 07 21 Retrieved 2011 11 17 The Dead Milkmen Detroit Tigers connection Chinmusic net Retrieved 2011 11 17 a b The Dead Milkmen Album amp Song Chart History Billboard com Retrieved 2011 11 17 a b The Official Dead Milkmen Website Dave Blood Deadmilkmen com Archived from the original on 2011 11 17 Retrieved 2011 11 17 Say Hi To The King In Yellow The First Album Of New Material By The Dead Milkmen In Over 15 Years Philebrity com Archived from the original on March 30 2012 Retrieved March 10 2012 Philanthropic Label The Giving Groove Signs the Dead Milkmen www musicconnection com 21 July 2017 Retrieved 2017 11 10 The Dead Milkmen announce new LP share Grandpa s Not a Racist He Just Voted for One 12 April 2023 External links edit nbsp Philadelphia portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Dead Milkmen Official Dead Milkmen website JackTalcum com Rodney Anonymous website Dead Alive Interview w The Dead Milkmen 11 08 08 on MonsterFresh com The Dead Milkmen at Curlie The Dead Milkmen at AllMusic The Dead Milkmen discography at Discogs The Dead Milkmen discography at MusicBrainz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Dead Milkmen amp oldid 1210955418, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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