Keel (band)
Keel | |
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Origin | Los Angeles, California, United States |
Genres | Heavy metal, Glam metal, Hard rock |
Years active | 1984–1989, 1998, 2008–present |
Labels | Shrapnel, Gold Mountain/A&M, Gold Castle, MCA, Frontiers |
Associated acts | Black Sabbath, Steeler, Badlands, King Kobra, W.A.S.P., Pantera, Medicine Wheel, IronHorse |
Website | keelband.com |
Members |
Ron Keel Marc Ferrari Brian Jay Dwain Miller Geno Arce |
Past members |
Kenny Chaisson Bobby Marks David Michael Phillips Steven Riley Scott Warren Tony Palamucci |
Keel is an American heavy metal band founded in 1984 in Los Angeles, California. They are known for their rock anthem "The Right to Rock." The band was active until 1989, with a brief reunion in 1998. Keel reunited again in 2008 and toured in 2009 for their 25th anniversary.[1]
History
Keel was formed by former Steeler vocalist Ron Keel. The original members were Ron Keel on vocals, David Michael Phillips on guitar, Marc Ferrari on lead & rhythm guitars, Bobby Marks on drums and Kenny Chaisson on bass guitar. Within months, Phillips left to join King Kobra and was replaced by Brian Jay. This was the lineup for their 1984 debut album Lay Down the Law. [2] After the album's release, Marks left and was replaced by Steven Riley, who subsequently left early in the recording of the band's second album to join W.A.S.P., and was in turn replaced by Dwain Miller, forming a lineup which would remain stable for almost 4 years. Their debut album caught the eye of KISS' Gene Simmons, resulting in his production of their second album, The Right To Rock, released on March 26, 1985. Their next and also Simmons-produced third album The Final Frontier was released on April 30, 1986. It included the single "Because the Night", a song that was co-written by Patti Smith and Bruce Springsteen and had been a hit for Smith in 1978.
In 1986, Keel actually won the Best Band of the Year award in the 2nd annual Metal Edge magazine reader's poll, beating such noted bands as Iron Maiden and Judas Priest.
In 1987, the song "Rock & Roll Outlaw" (a cover from the 1978 self titled debut of Australian hard rock band Rose Tattoo) appeared on the soundtrack of the movie Dudes. Their fourth album, Keel, was released on June 21, 1987, recorded with producer Michael Wagener. An unreleased track from the album, Ferrari's "Proud To Be Loud", would eventually wind up on Pantera's Power Metal album, which Ferrari produced early in 1988.
Ferrari & Jay both left in 1988, after touring in support of the Keel album. They were replaced by keyboardist Scott Warren & guitarist Tony Palamucci.
Their fifth album, Larger Than Live, was released in 1989 with six new studio recordings, including a cover of the 1980 Humble Pie song "Fool for a Pretty Face". Also on the album were six live tracks recorded in March 1989. Following the shooting of the music video for the song "Dreams Are Not Enough" on that same year, Ron Keel announced the disbandment of Keel.
Post-disbandment and first reunion
In the 1990s, Ferrari wrote a gear column for Metal Edge magazine entitled "Power Sources", and went on to form Cold Sweat, who would release the album Break Out in 1990. After the demise of that group, Ferrari appeared in both Wayne's World movies (as the guitarist for Tia Carrere's band "Crucial Taunt") and formed the band Medicine Wheel, which released three CDs. In addition, he released two solo CDs and started a music publishing company called MasterSource, employing Ron Keel to write material for the library. Ferrari also recently wrote a book titled Rock Star 101.
In 1998, members of Keel got together to release their sixth album Keel VI: Back in Action. It mainly consisted of unreleased material from their previous albums, including the aforementioned "Proud To Be Loud".
The band's song "Speed Demon" (from The Right to Rock) is briefly heard on the 2002 movie Men in Black II, and appears on Mike Varney's U.S. Metal Vol. IV compilation.
Ron Keel has pursued numerous musical projects since Keel's disbandment. In the mid-1990s, he played Country music under the name "Ronnie Lee Keel" before forming the country metal band IronHorse in 2001. In 2006, Ron left IronHorse and formed K2 Featuring Ron Keel a year later.
25th anniversary reunion
On November 2008, Keel reunited in time to celebrate the band's 25th anniversary. All the members from The Right to Rock era have rejoined except for Chaisson. The new bassist is Ron Keel's longtime friend, Geno Arce. Their first reunion show was held in Hollywood, CA, on January 24, 2009.[3] In addition, the band played at the third annual Rocklahoma festival on July 2009.[4]
A reunion album, Streets Of Rock N’ Roll was released in 2010, as well as a 25th anniversary edition of The Right To Rock featuring a brand new re-recorded version of the title song as a bonus track.[5]
Members
- Current members
- Ron Keel - lead vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, keyboards, keytar (1984–1989, 1998, 2008–present)
- Marc Ferrari - guitar, backing vocals (1984–1988, 1998, 2008–present)
- Bryan Jay - guitar, backing vocals (1984–1988, 1998, 2008–present)
- Dwain Miller - drums, backing vocals (1985–1989, 1998, 2008–present)
- Geno Arce - bass, backing vocals (2008–present)
- Former members
- Kenny Chaisson - bass, backing vocals (1984–1989, 1998)
- Bobby Marks - drums, backing vocals (1984)
- David Michael Phillips - guitar, backing vocals (1984)
- Steven Riley - drums, backing vocals (1985)
- Scott Warren - keyboards, piano, backing vocals (1989)
- Tony Palamucci - guitar, backing vocals (1989)
Discography
Year | Album | US | certification | Label |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Lay Down the Law | - | - | Shrapnel |
1985 | The Right to Rock | 99 | - | Vertigo |
1986 | The Final Frontier | 53 | - | Vertigo |
1987 | Keel | 79 | - | MCA |
1989 | Larger Than Live | - | - | Gold Castle |
1998 | Keel VI: Back in Action | - | - | DeRock |
2010 | Streets of Rock & Roll | - | - | Frontiers Records |
References
External links
- Keel Official Site
- Keel's channel on YouTube
- Ron Keel Official Site
- Brian Jay Official Site
- Historical Interview with Ron Keel
- Historical Interview with Marc Ferrari
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