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The Knack

The Knack was an American rock band based in Los Angeles that rose to fame with its first single, "My Sharona", an international number-one hit in 1979.

The Knack
The Knack in 1978. From left to right: Gary, Fieger, Niles, Averre
Background information
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active
  • 1978–1982
  • 1986–1992
  • 1994
  • 1996–2010
Labels
Past members
Websitetheknack.com

The Knack was founded in 1978 with the original and classic lineup of Doug Fieger (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Berton Averre (lead guitar, backing vocals), Prescott Niles (bass) and Bruce Gary (drums). It was this lineup that recorded the group's first three albums. Spearheaded by the success of the "My Sharona" single, their first album, Get the Knack (1979), reached number-one on the charts of several countries. However, their next two albums, ...But The Little Girls Understand (1980) and Round Trip (1981), were significantly less successful. Faced with diminishing success, the group disbanded in 1982.

The band reunited in 1986, and released their fourth album Serious Fun in 1991, before breaking up again the following year. After a brief reunion in 1994, the Knack reunited again in 1996, recording two more albums, Zoom (1998) and Normal as the Next Guy (2001). Following Fieger's death in 2010, the Knack permanently disbanded. A final album, Rock & Roll Is Good for You: The Fieger/Averre Demos was released in 2012.

History edit

Founding (1977–1978) edit

Singer Doug Fieger was a native of Oak Park, Michigan, a northern suburb of Detroit, Michigan, and grew up in the 9 Mile/Greenfield area. The brother of attorney Geoffrey Fieger (later known for representing Jack Kevorkian in a series of assisted suicide cases) Fieger had previously played in an eclectic rock band called Sky as well as the Sunset Bombers. Although Sky had received a modest amount of acclaim, including being produced by Rolling Stones producer Jimmy Miller, the band broke up without having any chart success. As a result, Fieger made the decision to move to Los Angeles and start another band.

Shortly after arriving in L.A., Fieger met Berton Averre (lead guitar, backing vocals and keyboards), and the two started a songwriting partnership. Fieger had also known Bruce Gary (drums) for years before forming the Knack in 1978 with Prescott Niles (bass). Niles was the last to join, a week before the band's first show in June 1978.[5] In the meantime, Fieger had been doubling on bass on a series of demos that the group had shopped to several record labels, all of which were rejected. Some of these songs later made up the band's debut album Get the Knack, and included "Good Girls Don't".

Get the Knack edit

Within months of their live debut, popular club gigs on the Sunset Strip, as well as guest jams with musicians such as Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty and Ray Manzarek, led to the band being the subject of a record label bidding war. The band was pursued by ten record labels, but decided on Capitol Records; at the time, the Knack was given the largest signing sum in the label's history.[6] A&R executives Bruce Garfield and Bruce Ravid are credited with signing the band.[citation needed]

The band's debut album, Get the Knack, was one of the year's best-selling albums, holding the number one spot on Billboard magazine's album chart for five consecutive weeks and selling two million copies in the United States. The lead single, "My Sharona", was a No. 1 hit in the US, and became the number-one song of 1979. The follow-up single "Good Girls Don't" peaked at No. 11 in the US, and reached No. 1 in Canada.

However, the band's rise to the top of the charts also precipitated a backlash. Capitol's packaging of Get the Knack included a perceived cover likeness to Meet the Beatles![1] with the record's center label being the same design and style as the Beatles' early 1960s LPs. Coupled with the band's "retro" 1960s look and pop/rock sound, the company's stylings led detractors to accuse them of being Beatles rip-offs,[1] which the band and their record company denied. Fieger acknowledged the band's likeness to the Beatles, claiming that it was their intention to present the Knack as a replica of the British Invasion. He went on to mention how fans of the Knack had not been able to experience the times of the 1960s, and that it was wrong to deny them the privilege of experiencing something similar.[6] Critics fought back, claiming the band was imposing inadequate memories of the 1960s on those who didn't know better. Soon, as Get the Knack became more popular, the band was met with hostility from other artists who felt the intense marketing of the band was invalidating their own efforts of invoking the 1960 sound.[6] This perception, and the perception that the object of some of the Knack's songs were teenaged girls (subsequently acknowledged when the band was years older), quickly led to a "Knuke the Knack" campaign led by San Francisco artist Hugh Brown.[7]

The follow-up albums (1980–1981) edit

The Knack quickly recorded a follow-up album ...But the Little Girls Understand, which was released in early 1980. Though the album went gold in the US and Japan, and platinum in Canada,[5] it didn't meet with the same level of commercial success as their debut. Fieger claimed in later interviews that all of the tracks for Get the Knack and ...But the Little Girls Understand were written before the first LP was recorded and were intended to be put out as a double album. Additionally, the lead single "Baby Talks Dirty" only briefly made the US Top 40, stalling at No. 38 (but reaching No. 13 in Canada); follow-up single "Can't Put a Price on Love" missed the top 40 altogether, peaking at No. 62.

After nearly a year of touring in the US, Canada, Europe, New Zealand, Australia, and Japan, starting in April 1980 the band took a year off because of exhaustion and "internal dissent".[5] They reconvened in the summer of 1981 to record their third album, Round Trip. However, the record (released in October 1981) was a commercial disappointment, only reaching No. 93 on the Billboard chart, selling 150,000 copies. As well, the lead single "Pay the Devil (Ooo, Baby, Ooo)" peaked at No. 67 on the Billboard Hot 100. The group made several concert appearances during 1981 to promote Round Trip. Keyboardist Phil Jost was brought into the lineup at this time to enable the band to duplicate the more heavily layered sound of their new release.

With the Knack experiencing rapidly diminishing chart success, and mounting critical backlash against them[8] Fieger left amidst internal squabbles on December 31, 1981, just months after the release of Round Trip. Averre, Niles, and Gary briefly continued with former Roadmaster vocalist Stephen 'Mac' McNally as "The Game" after the Knack's initial break up. By mid-1982, the Knack had split up while Fieger formed a new band, "Doug Fieger's Taking Chances".

Return of the Knack and final album (1986–2010) edit

The Knack reunited in November 1986, to play a benefit for Michele Myers, who had been the first person to book the band for a show in 1978.[5] They continued to play club gigs for the next several years. In July 1989, Billy Ward replaced Bruce Gary as the band's drummer (after a brief interim by Pat Torpey of Mr. Big).[5] In 1990, the Knack signed with Charisma Records and recorded the album Serious Fun which was released in February 1991.[5] Lead single "Rocket O' Love" was a top 10 hit on US AOR stations (and a top 30 hit in Canada). To promote the song, they released a music video loaded with visual innuendo thematic to the song. Charisma collapsed after the death of the label's founder, Tony Stratton Smith, and the group broke up again in 1992.

In 1994, with Ward back on drums, the band reunited to make some concert appearances to capitalize on the new popularity of "My Sharona" after its appearance in the movie Reality Bites. During that time, they appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and performed "My Sharona" for the first time ever on network television.

In 1996, all four original band members, including Bruce Gary, reunited in the studio one last time to record a track for a multi-artist compilation album, saluting the British band Badfinger (where the band covered Badfinger's hit "No Matter What"[9]).

The Knack continued as a touring and recording act through the late 1990s and into the 2000s. Duane Leinan joined The Knack in the studio and on the road, playing bass guitar from 2008 to 2010. Terry Bozzio replaced Ward as drummer for 1998's Zoom, and David Henderson (as "Holmes Jones") took over on drums for 2001's Normal as the Next Guy and Live at the Rock N Roll Funhouse albums. Pat Torpey then returned to take over for Henderson and played with the group until Fieger's death in 2010.

In 2005, the Knack made an appearance on the TV program Hit Me, Baby, One More Time, performing "My Sharona" and Jet's "Are You Gonna Be My Girl".

In 2006, Doug Fieger and Berton Averre filed a lawsuit against the hip hop music group Run–D.M.C. for copyright infringement. The lawsuit alleges that the defining guitar riff from "My Sharona" was used without permission in the Run-D.M.C. track "It's Tricky" from their 1986 album Raising Hell.[10]

In 2006, during a performance in Las Vegas, Fieger became disoriented, developing a dull headache, and grasping for the words to the songs that he had written and performed for years.[11] Diagnosed with two brain tumors, Fieger underwent surgery and radiosurgery and returned to performing. However, he still continued to battle brain and lung cancer until his death on February 14, 2010, in Woodland Hills, California, at the age of 57, effectively bringing the band to an end.

Outside the Knack edit

In the interim between the Knack's break-up and 1986 reunion, Doug Fieger worked as a guest vocalist on a few tracks by Was (Not Was). (Fieger had grown up with band member Don Was; Was later produced the Knack's album Serious Fun.[5]) Fieger also recorded a solo album in 2000, and appeared as a solo artist in the Countdown Spectacular 2 concert series in Australia between late-August and early-September 2007. He sang the Knack favorite "My Sharona" only. In 1985, Averre, Niles, and Gary formed The Front with actor Steven Bauer as lead vocalist.[12]

Bruce Gary became a producer (archive recordings of Jimi Hendrix and new recordings of The Ventures) and a sideman performing live and on studio sessions with a wide range of artists. Gary died from lymphoma on August 22, 2006, at the age of 55.

Members edit

  • Berton Averre - backing vocals, lead guitar, keyboards (1978-1982, 1986-1992, 1994, 1996-2010)
  • Doug Fieger - lead vocals, rhythm guitar (1978-1981, 1986-1992, 1994, 1996-2010; died 2010)
  • Bruce Gary - drums (1978-1982, 1986-1989, 1996; died 2006)
  • Prescott Niles - bass (1978-1982, 1986-1992, 1994, 1996-2008)
  • Phil Jost - keyboards (1981)
  • Stephen 'Mac' McNally - lead vocals (1982)
  • Pat Torpey - drums (1989, 2001-2010)
  • Billy Ward - drums (1986-1992, 1994, 1996-1998)
  • Terry Bozzio - drums (1998-2001)
  • David Henderson ("Holmes Jones") - drums (2001)
  • Duane Leinan - bass (2008-2010)

Discography edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Robbins, Ira; Sandlin, Michael. "Knack". Trouser Press. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
  2. ^ Borack, John M. (2007). Shake Some Action: The Ultimate Power Pop Guide. Not Lame Recordings. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-9797714-0-8.
  3. ^ "Pop/Rock » Punk/New Wave » Power Pop". AllMusic. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  4. ^ "Knack Rides Charts with $18,000 Album". Billboard. Vol. 91, no. 31. August 4, 1979. p. 62. ISSN 0006-2510.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Fieger, Doug (1992). Liner notes to Retrospective (Media notes). Capitol Records.
  6. ^ a b c Cateforis, Theo (2011). Are We Not New Wave?: Modern Pop at the Turn of the 1980s. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-472-11555-6.
  7. ^ Hilburn, Robert (July 29, 1979). "A Knack on the Door for L.A. Rock". Los Angeles Times. p. L1.
  8. ^ . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on July 7, 2009.
  9. ^ Rabid, Jack. "Various Artists – Come and Get It: A Tribute to Badfinger". AllMusic. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  10. ^ . MusicRooms.com. 2006. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.
  11. ^ "Radiosurgery Allows Doug Fieger of the Knack to Perform While Battling Brain Tumors". Medical News Today. May 16, 2007. Retrieved May 16, 2007.
  12. ^ Fricke, David (September 11, 1986). "The Knack: Where are they now?". Rolling Stone. Retrieved January 23, 2019.

External links edit

    knack, other, uses, knack, disambiguation, american, rock, band, based, angeles, that, rose, fame, with, first, single, sharona, international, number, 1979, 1978, from, left, right, gary, fieger, niles, averrebackground, informationoriginlos, angeles, califor. For other uses see Knack disambiguation The Knack was an American rock band based in Los Angeles that rose to fame with its first single My Sharona an international number one hit in 1979 The KnackThe Knack in 1978 From left to right Gary Fieger Niles AverreBackground informationOriginLos Angeles California U S GenresPower pop 1 2 3 new wave 1 4 Years active1978 19821986 199219941996 2010LabelsCapitolCharismaPast membersBerton AverreDoug FiegerBruce GaryPrescott NilesPat TorpeyBilly WardTerry BozzioDavid HendersonDuane LeinanStephen Mac McNallyPhil JostWebsitetheknack wbr comThe Knack was founded in 1978 with the original and classic lineup of Doug Fieger lead vocals rhythm guitar Berton Averre lead guitar backing vocals Prescott Niles bass and Bruce Gary drums It was this lineup that recorded the group s first three albums Spearheaded by the success of the My Sharona single their first album Get the Knack 1979 reached number one on the charts of several countries However their next two albums But The Little Girls Understand 1980 and Round Trip 1981 were significantly less successful Faced with diminishing success the group disbanded in 1982 The band reunited in 1986 and released their fourth album Serious Fun in 1991 before breaking up again the following year After a brief reunion in 1994 the Knack reunited again in 1996 recording two more albums Zoom 1998 and Normal as the Next Guy 2001 Following Fieger s death in 2010 the Knack permanently disbanded A final album Rock amp Roll Is Good for You The Fieger Averre Demos was released in 2012 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1977 1978 1 2 Get the Knack 1 3 The follow up albums 1980 1981 1 4 Return of the Knack and final album 1986 2010 2 Outside the Knack 3 Members 4 Discography 5 References 6 External linksHistory editFounding 1977 1978 edit Singer Doug Fieger was a native of Oak Park Michigan a northern suburb of Detroit Michigan and grew up in the 9 Mile Greenfield area The brother of attorney Geoffrey Fieger later known for representing Jack Kevorkian in a series of assisted suicide cases Fieger had previously played in an eclectic rock band called Sky as well as the Sunset Bombers Although Sky had received a modest amount of acclaim including being produced by Rolling Stones producer Jimmy Miller the band broke up without having any chart success As a result Fieger made the decision to move to Los Angeles and start another band Shortly after arriving in L A Fieger met Berton Averre lead guitar backing vocals and keyboards and the two started a songwriting partnership Fieger had also known Bruce Gary drums for years before forming the Knack in 1978 with Prescott Niles bass Niles was the last to join a week before the band s first show in June 1978 5 In the meantime Fieger had been doubling on bass on a series of demos that the group had shopped to several record labels all of which were rejected Some of these songs later made up the band s debut album Get the Knack and included Good Girls Don t Get the Knack edit Within months of their live debut popular club gigs on the Sunset Strip as well as guest jams with musicians such as Bruce Springsteen Tom Petty and Ray Manzarek led to the band being the subject of a record label bidding war The band was pursued by ten record labels but decided on Capitol Records at the time the Knack was given the largest signing sum in the label s history 6 A amp R executives Bruce Garfield and Bruce Ravid are credited with signing the band citation needed The band s debut album Get the Knack was one of the year s best selling albums holding the number one spot on Billboard magazine s album chart for five consecutive weeks and selling two million copies in the United States The lead single My Sharona was a No 1 hit in the US and became the number one song of 1979 The follow up single Good Girls Don t peaked at No 11 in the US and reached No 1 in Canada However the band s rise to the top of the charts also precipitated a backlash Capitol s packaging of Get the Knack included a perceived cover likeness to Meet the Beatles 1 with the record s center label being the same design and style as the Beatles early 1960s LPs Coupled with the band s retro 1960s look and pop rock sound the company s stylings led detractors to accuse them of being Beatles rip offs 1 which the band and their record company denied Fieger acknowledged the band s likeness to the Beatles claiming that it was their intention to present the Knack as a replica of the British Invasion He went on to mention how fans of the Knack had not been able to experience the times of the 1960s and that it was wrong to deny them the privilege of experiencing something similar 6 Critics fought back claiming the band was imposing inadequate memories of the 1960s on those who didn t know better Soon as Get the Knack became more popular the band was met with hostility from other artists who felt the intense marketing of the band was invalidating their own efforts of invoking the 1960 sound 6 This perception and the perception that the object of some of the Knack s songs were teenaged girls subsequently acknowledged when the band was years older quickly led to a Knuke the Knack campaign led by San Francisco artist Hugh Brown 7 The follow up albums 1980 1981 edit The Knack quickly recorded a follow up album But the Little Girls Understand which was released in early 1980 Though the album went gold in the US and Japan and platinum in Canada 5 it didn t meet with the same level of commercial success as their debut Fieger claimed in later interviews that all of the tracks for Get the Knack and But the Little Girls Understand were written before the first LP was recorded and were intended to be put out as a double album Additionally the lead single Baby Talks Dirty only briefly made the US Top 40 stalling at No 38 but reaching No 13 in Canada follow up single Can t Put a Price on Love missed the top 40 altogether peaking at No 62 After nearly a year of touring in the US Canada Europe New Zealand Australia and Japan starting in April 1980 the band took a year off because of exhaustion and internal dissent 5 They reconvened in the summer of 1981 to record their third album Round Trip However the record released in October 1981 was a commercial disappointment only reaching No 93 on the Billboard chart selling 150 000 copies As well the lead single Pay the Devil Ooo Baby Ooo peaked at No 67 on the Billboard Hot 100 The group made several concert appearances during 1981 to promote Round Trip Keyboardist Phil Jost was brought into the lineup at this time to enable the band to duplicate the more heavily layered sound of their new release With the Knack experiencing rapidly diminishing chart success and mounting critical backlash against them 8 Fieger left amidst internal squabbles on December 31 1981 just months after the release of Round Trip Averre Niles and Gary briefly continued with former Roadmaster vocalist Stephen Mac McNally as The Game after the Knack s initial break up By mid 1982 the Knack had split up while Fieger formed a new band Doug Fieger s Taking Chances Return of the Knack and final album 1986 2010 edit The Knack reunited in November 1986 to play a benefit for Michele Myers who had been the first person to book the band for a show in 1978 5 They continued to play club gigs for the next several years In July 1989 Billy Ward replaced Bruce Gary as the band s drummer after a brief interim by Pat Torpey of Mr Big 5 In 1990 the Knack signed with Charisma Records and recorded the album Serious Fun which was released in February 1991 5 Lead single Rocket O Love was a top 10 hit on US AOR stations and a top 30 hit in Canada To promote the song they released a music video loaded with visual innuendo thematic to the song Charisma collapsed after the death of the label s founder Tony Stratton Smith and the group broke up again in 1992 In 1994 with Ward back on drums the band reunited to make some concert appearances to capitalize on the new popularity of My Sharona after its appearance in the movie Reality Bites During that time they appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and performed My Sharona for the first time ever on network television In 1996 all four original band members including Bruce Gary reunited in the studio one last time to record a track for a multi artist compilation album saluting the British band Badfinger where the band covered Badfinger s hit No Matter What 9 The Knack continued as a touring and recording act through the late 1990s and into the 2000s Duane Leinan joined The Knack in the studio and on the road playing bass guitar from 2008 to 2010 Terry Bozzio replaced Ward as drummer for 1998 s Zoom and David Henderson as Holmes Jones took over on drums for 2001 s Normal as the Next Guy and Live at the Rock N Roll Funhouse albums Pat Torpey then returned to take over for Henderson and played with the group until Fieger s death in 2010 In 2005 the Knack made an appearance on the TV program Hit Me Baby One More Time performing My Sharona and Jet s Are You Gonna Be My Girl In 2006 Doug Fieger and Berton Averre filed a lawsuit against the hip hop music group Run D M C for copyright infringement The lawsuit alleges that the defining guitar riff from My Sharona was used without permission in the Run D M C track It s Tricky from their 1986 album Raising Hell 10 In 2006 during a performance in Las Vegas Fieger became disoriented developing a dull headache and grasping for the words to the songs that he had written and performed for years 11 Diagnosed with two brain tumors Fieger underwent surgery and radiosurgery and returned to performing However he still continued to battle brain and lung cancer until his death on February 14 2010 in Woodland Hills California at the age of 57 effectively bringing the band to an end Outside the Knack editIn the interim between the Knack s break up and 1986 reunion Doug Fieger worked as a guest vocalist on a few tracks by Was Not Was Fieger had grown up with band member Don Was Was later produced the Knack s album Serious Fun 5 Fieger also recorded a solo album in 2000 and appeared as a solo artist in the Countdown Spectacular 2 concert series in Australia between late August and early September 2007 He sang the Knack favorite My Sharona only In 1985 Averre Niles and Gary formed The Front with actor Steven Bauer as lead vocalist 12 Bruce Gary became a producer archive recordings of Jimi Hendrix and new recordings of The Ventures and a sideman performing live and on studio sessions with a wide range of artists Gary died from lymphoma on August 22 2006 at the age of 55 Members editBerton Averre backing vocals lead guitar keyboards 1978 1982 1986 1992 1994 1996 2010 Doug Fieger lead vocals rhythm guitar 1978 1981 1986 1992 1994 1996 2010 died 2010 Bruce Gary drums 1978 1982 1986 1989 1996 died 2006 Prescott Niles bass 1978 1982 1986 1992 1994 1996 2008 Phil Jost keyboards 1981 Stephen Mac McNally lead vocals 1982 Pat Torpey drums 1989 2001 2010 Billy Ward drums 1986 1992 1994 1996 1998 Terry Bozzio drums 1998 2001 David Henderson Holmes Jones drums 2001 Duane Leinan bass 2008 2010 Discography editMain article The Knack discography Get the Knack 1979 But the Little Girls Understand 1980 Round Trip 1981 Serious Fun 1991 Zoom 1998 Normal as the Next Guy 2001 Rock amp Roll Is Good for You The Fieger Averre Demos 2012 References edit a b c d Robbins Ira Sandlin Michael Knack Trouser Press Retrieved July 18 2011 Borack John M 2007 Shake Some Action The Ultimate Power Pop Guide Not Lame Recordings p 27 ISBN 978 0 9797714 0 8 Pop Rock Punk New Wave Power Pop AllMusic Retrieved August 14 2014 Knack Rides Charts with 18 000 Album Billboard Vol 91 no 31 August 4 1979 p 62 ISSN 0006 2510 a b c d e f g Fieger Doug 1992 Liner notes toRetrospective Media notes Capitol Records a b c Cateforis Theo 2011 Are We Not New Wave Modern Pop at the Turn of the 1980s Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press p 126 ISBN 978 0 472 11555 6 Hilburn Robert July 29 1979 A Knack on the Door for L A Rock Los Angeles Times p L1 The Knack Biography Rolling Stone Archived from the original on July 7 2009 Rabid Jack Various Artists Come and Get It A Tribute to Badfinger AllMusic Retrieved February 20 2010 Run DMC Sued by the Knack MusicRooms com 2006 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Radiosurgery Allows Doug Fieger of the Knack to Perform While Battling Brain Tumors Medical News Today May 16 2007 Retrieved May 16 2007 Fricke David September 11 1986 The Knack Where are they now Rolling Stone Retrieved January 23 2019 External links editThe Knack official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Knack amp oldid 1211737979, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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