Joel O'Keeffe

Joel O'Keeffe

Joel O'Keeffe live with Airbourne in Elbriot 2014.
Background information
Born (1985-05-25) 25 May 1985
Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia
Genres Hard rock
Occupation(s) Musician, singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, Lead guitar
Years active 2003-present
Labels EMI, Capitol, Roadrunner, Spinefarm
Associated acts Airbourne

Joel O'Keeffe (born 6 September 1982 in Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia) is an Australian musician. He is the vocalist, lead guitarist and one of the founding members of the Australian hard rock band Airbourne, together with his brother, Ryan. During concerts, he opens beer cans by repeatedly hitting them with his head and is known for climbing the structure of the stage to play the guitar at the highest possible height.

Early life

He was born on 25th of May 1985 in Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia and has one brother called Ryan, born in 1986. He started playing guitar when he has 11 years old, the same age when Ryan started playing the drums.

Career

Airbourne

Signature.

In 2003, after meeting David Roads (Joel was working in the Criterion Hotel, where David was also working at the time) and Adam Jacobson, the O'Keeffe brothers founded Airbourne. In 2004, the band released their first EP, called Ready to Rock. Shortly afterwards, Adam left the band and Justin Street replaced him as a bass guitarist. In 2007, the band released their first studio album, Runnin' Wild, in collaboration with Lemmy Kilmister, who starred in the music video for the album-titled track. In 2010, the band released their second studio album, called No Guts. No Glory. In 2013, they released their third studio album, called Black Dog Barking. Since 2014, the band has been working on their fourth studio album.

Discography

Equipment

He generally plays a white Gibson Explorer guitar. He uses different Gibson SG guitars as secondary guitars, among which a black 61' issue limited edition with golden fittings. He also uses the JCM800 Kerry King with the beast section disabled, JCM2000 and JMPs models of Marshall amplificators.

References


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