TKO (band)

For the pop group led by Katie White, see Katie White#TKO.
TKO
Origin Seattle, Washington
Genres hard rock, heavy metal
Years active 1977–2001
Associated acts American Standard, Angels Of Dresden, The Bang Gang, Adam Bomb, The Blues Feedback, Culprit, The McClellans, Mojo Hand, Nightshade, Q5, Suicide Squad, War Babies, Water Closet, Ze Whiz Kidz
Members Brad Sinsel
Kjartan Kristoffersen
Scott Earl
Ken Mary
Michael Alexich
Adam 'Bomb' Brenner
Gary Thompson
Evan Sheeley
Bill Durham
Tony Bortko
Rick Pierce
Mark Seidenverg
Darryl Siguenza

TKO was a hard rock and heavy metal band from Seattle, Washington, which was active between 1977 and 2001. The group's lead vocalist and only consistent member was Brad Sinsel.

Biography

Sinsel, a native of Yakima, Washington, got his start in rock in the early 1970s in Ze Whiz Kidz, a flamboyant, influential glam rock band that opened a Seattle show by the New York Dolls in 1974.[1] Eventually, he joined a reformed version of the band Mojo Hand which featured co-founding members Mark Seidenverg (bass) and Darryl Siguenza (drums), along with former Whiz Kidz guitarist Rick Pierce. With the addition of Sinsel and Tony Bortko (guitar, keyboards) the band became TKO. Represented by managers who also worked with platinum sellers Heart, the band signed a major label recording contract in 1977, though it would be more than a year before the first album would appear.

The group released their Mike Flicker produced debut Let It Roll on the Infinity Records division of MCA Records in early 1979; it went on to sell roughly 150,000 copies. During this time the group had a type of glam rock image and fans compared their music favorably with The Who. TKO toured the U.S. extensively, including shows with the Kinks, Cheap Trick, AC/DC, Van Halen as well as Heart and made their way to Japan where they appeared at Japan Jam in 1979, with new rhythm section Evan Sheeley (bass) and Bill Durham (drums), both formerly with Yakima act Water Closet,[2] in tow. TKO was unable to deliver a follow-up album when Infinity went out of business and was absorbed by MCA in the spring of 1980.

By 1980, the line-up consisted of Sinsel, Sheeley, new drummer Gary Thompson and 17-year-old hot shot guitar player Adam Brenner, brought into the fold by Tony Bortko, who left shortly thereafter.[3] Thompson and Brenner came from a local cover band named Tyrant which also featured future Queensryche vocalist Geoff Tate and bassist Scott Earl.[4] Brenner quickly became a driving force and co-wrote most of the new material with Sinsel. Boasting a much grittier, more heavy metal oriented sound, the band would record their sophomore album, In Your Face, in 1981 with producer Rick Keefer at Sea West Studios in Oahu, HI but could not get signed to a record label. Brenner left in 1982 in order to pursue a solo career, surfacing as Adam Bomb and signed to Geffen Records for his 1984 debut Fatal Attraction. Pierce, Sheeley, and Thompson all left to join guitarist Floyd Rose and vocalist Scott Palmerton, aka Jonathan K., in Q5, releasing the much lauded Steel The Light album in 1984.

After a period of inactivity, Sinsel put together a new TKO line-up consisting of former Culprit members, guitarist Kjartan Kristoffersen and bassist Scott Earl, and drummer Ken Mary from the band Strike. They began to play out around Seattle and with the help of Rick Keefer signed a record deal with Combat Records who would finally release In Your Face in 1984.[5] The song "End of the Line", whose intro is taken from the classical piece "Toccata and Fugue in D minor", was also included on the 1984 Shrapnel Records compilation US Metal Vol. IV. TKO found a secure new fan base with the growing heavy metal audience and was part of a vibrant Seattle metal scene which included Metal Church, Queensrÿche, Rail and Culprit, among many others.

Sinsel would also contribute lead vocals to Burning at the Speed of Light (1985) by Thrasher, an all-star project initiated by Combat Records and led by the songwriting team of guitarist Andy 'Duck' MacDonald of Bible Black and drummer Carl Canedy of The Rods. Sinsel appeared on "Hot and Heavy" with MacDonald, Canedy and bassist Kenny Aaronson (Dust, Derringer, HSAS) and "Widowmaker", featuring Billy Sheehan (Talas, David Lee Roth, Mr. Big) on bass.

TKO toured the U.S. with the likes of Foreigner, Ted Nugent, Robin Trower and Dio to promote In Your Face before heading back in the studio with Rick Keefer for their third album. Released in 1986 on the Roadrunner label, Below the Belt[6] was not as well received as its predecessor and featured Sinsel, Kristoffersen, Earl and Mary who soon left to join Alice Cooper. He was briefly replaced by Michael Alexich, an old friend of Sinsel's; TKO would play their last show in 1986 at the Paramount Theater in Seattle.[7]

Post-TKO activities

Following the demise of TKO, Kristoffersen and Earl joined forces in L.A. glam rockers The Bang Gang who released the Love Sells album in 1990, which contained the video/single "Young & the Restless", while Sinsel re-teamed with one-time TKO guitarist Rick Pierce to form Suicide Squad, aided by former The Fastbacks drummer Richard Stuverud, also former TKO drummer Ken Mary's replacement in Fifth Angel. Sinsel and Pierce shared bass duties in the studio and combined their first names to make up credited phantom bassist Rick Bradley. The short-lived project issued the Jack Endino engineered Live It While You Can EP on the Music For Nations label in 1988.[8]

Pierce would form Nightshade with former Q5 band mate Jonathan K. and sign with Music For Nations for the release of their 1991 Dead of Night album, while Sinsel ended up joining Stuverud's new band War Babies, which briefly featured a pre-Pearl Jam Jeff Ament on bass after the demise of Mother Love Bone. The group's self-titled album was released on Columbia Records in 1992 and contained the video singles "Hang Me Up" and "Blue Tomorrow".

In 1997, TKO played a reunion show with a line-up consisting of Sinsel, Pierce, Sheeley and Scott Graham on drums. An expanded version of TKO, starring Sinsel, guitarists Rick Pierce and Kjartan Kristoffersen, drummer Gary Thompson, and bassists Scott Earl and Evan Sheeley, performed at the opening ceremonies for the Experience Music Project in Seattle on September 28, 2001.[9] Sinsel was also a member of the band 10 North at that time and had been writing with guitarist Brynn Arens of the band Flipp[10] for a project later dubbed American Standard.[11]

In 2009, American Standard issued the "Send Me An Angel" b/w "My Only Friend" 7" single on Rock Steady Records and digitally. Recording sessions had also involved TKO alumni Evan Sheeley and Michael Alex(ich) on bass and drums, respectively.[12] Sinsel next turned up fronting The McClellans, a folk/Americana group celebrating "100 Years of Great American Songs" such as "You Are My Sunshine". Sinsel was seen tracking at Litho Studios in Seattle in 2011 with guitarist Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, former Screaming Trees drummer Mark Pickeral, bassist Keith Lowe, pianist Bart Roderick, and Jim Brunner on guitar, mandolin and dobro. The McClennans appeared at the Yakima Folklife Festival in 2012 and 2013. In addition, Sinsel would also gig with the Randy Oxford Band, an eclectic six-piece blues band.[13]

In 2014, Sinsel emerged with a new rock project, Angels Of Dresden; a digital single, "Doomday", was released via Suna Sounds in May of that year and features a guest appearance by Mike McCready. McCready also joined Sinsel and Rick Pierce for a performance of TKO's "Kill the Pain" during a benefit show at The Showbox in Seattle on May 16, 2014.[14]

In 2013, original TKO rhythm section Mark Seidenverg and Darryl Siguenza reunited with their late 1960s rock/blues band The Blues Feedback celebrating their 45th anniversary.

Former TKO guitarist/keyboardist Tony Bortko died on December 4, 2006, from complications due to AIDS.

CD re-issues

In 2000, East Coast based label Metal Mayhem Music, in conjunction with Adam 'Bomb' Brenner, issued "the unwatered down studio version of TKO's In Your Face" and packaged it with a 1981 live recording as In Your Face & Up Your Ass; the same company also issued Below The Belt on disc in 2001. Let It Roll and In Your Face were finally re-issued on CD in 2008 via North Carolina's Divebomb Records with the full participation of Brad Sinsel.[15] Both releases feature bonus tracks and liner notes written by noted Canadian writer Martin Popoff, editor-in-chief for Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. The master tapes for Let It Roll were not available and both albums were re-mastered from a cleaned up LP. Bonus tracks on Let It Roll are taken from a tape of an in-studio live performance that was broadcast August 10, 1978 on Seattle rock radio station KZOK-FM. The bonus tracks on In Your Face consist of a 2001 remix by producer Rick Keefer of the original 1984 album.

Discography

Compilations:

CD re-issues:

References

  1. Greg Prato. Grunge Is Dead: The Oral History of Seattle Rock Music. ECW Press.
  2. "When Yakima, Washington’s Velvet Illusions And Tokyo, Japan’s Flowers Came Together". It's Psychedelic Baby Magazine. August 4, 2014.
  3. Kelv Hellrazor. "Interview with Adam Bomb". Glitzine.net.
  4. Dirk Ballerstedt (June 9, 2011). "Adam Bomb Interview". SleazeRoxx.com.
  5. "TKO - 'In Your Face' LP". A Reasonable Guide To Horrible Noise. April 27, 2009.
  6. "TKO - 'Below The Belt' LP". A Reasonable Guide To Horrible Noise. November 20, 2011.
  7. Frank Stöver (2001). "Interview with Scott Earl". Take It 'zine.
  8. "Interview with Brad Sinsel". FullInBloomMusic.com. Apr 18, 2008.
  9. "Reunited TKO to perform at EMP's Sky Church, Friday, September 28th". Metal Mayhem Music.
  10. Gene Stout (September 27, 2001). "Rock 'em, sock 'em TKO is back in the ring for another swing". Seattle Post Intelligencer.
  11. Kaj Roth (October 16, 2008). "Brad Sinsel interview". Melodic.net.
  12. S.K. Wallace (October 2007). "Bass Northwest’s Evan Sheeley" (PDF). Mel Bay’s Bass Sessions.
  13. Scott Mayes (April 12, 2012). "Scene and Heard - Randy Oxford Band featuring Brad Sinsel". Yakima Herald-Republic.
  14. Christine Mitchell (May 20, 2014). "Flight to Mars 2014: Still crazy after all these years". Seattle Music Insider.
  15. "TKO – Killer Reissues Ready For Shipping". BraveWords.com. June 5, 2008.

External links

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