The Untouchables (Los Angeles band)

This article is about the Los Angeles mod/soul band. For the Washington, D.C., punk band, see Untouchables (punk band). For other uses, see Untouchable.
The Untouchables
Also known as The UTs
Origin Los Angeles, California, United States
Genres Soul, ska,[1] mod revival
Years active 1981–present
Members Jerry Miller
George Hughes
Danny Moynahan
Timothy Moynahan
Mark London Sims
Doug Sanborn
Kevin T Williams
Dave Cassell
Past members Anthony Brewster
Clyde Grimes
Dave Ramsey
Josh Harris
Derek Breakfield
Chuck Askerneese
Herman Askerneese
Kevin Long
Rob Lampron
Glen Symmonds
Caine Carruthers
Terry Ellsworth
David White
Will Donato
Moises Casillas
Jeff Kashua
Matt Fronke
Dave Blazer
Brian Wayy
James Debrose

The Untouchables are a soul/mod revival band from the Silver Lake, Los Angeles, California area. Described by original lead singer Kevin Long as "mods who played ska music," The Untouchables are credited with being America's first ska band.[2]

They formed in 1981 as part of the embryonic L.A. mod revival, after being inspired by the ska revival/punk rock band The Boxboys. Since some couldn't play instruments, they either hastily learned, or became vocalists. The original lineup included: Kevin Long (vocals), Chuck Askerneese (vocals), Terry Ellsworth (rhythm guitar), Clyde Grimes (guitar), Rob Lampron (drums), Herman Askerneese (bass) and Jerry Miller (vocals, timbales).

After a shaky start playing at parties, the integrated septet were eventually booked at the O.N. Klub (known as the On to regulars). The band had guaranteed the club that they would pack the venue, and they did not disappoint. In middle of that year, they released their first (ska-styled) 7" single, copies of which were snapped up by local mods. Late in 1982, the band began a stint as the house band at the Roxy Theatre. Terry Ellsworth left the band in the summer of 1983, at the height of the California mod revival. Josh Harris was added on keyboards, Timothy Moynahan on trombone and Will Donato (who became a successful smooth jazz artist) started on sax.

Their second single, "The General," became a minor local hit, despite poor distribution. The band performed "The General" in the 1984 comedy The Party Animal, and they appeared as a scooter gang in the movie Repo Man. In early 1984, they were signed to Stiff Records. Concerts with The B-52's, Black Uhuru, Bow Wow Wow, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Fishbone, No Doubt and X all over California gave the group a disparate following of whites, blacks, mods, punks, surfers and rockabilly fans, with the local performances drawing up to 1,500 people. The band also appeared in the 1984 film Surf II, performing "Dance Beat", and 1987's No Man's Land, performing "What's Gone Wrong".

Vocalist Kevin Long (who had named the band) left in 1984. Guitarist Clyde Grimes took on more vocal leads, and in 1984 the band recorded "Free Yourself", which became very popular, especially in the United Kingdom where it was a #26 hit in April 1985. The band has gone through many lineup changes since then, and as of 2006, only vocalist Jerry Miller remains from the original lineup.

Discography

Singles

Albums

References

  1. Diehl, Matt (2007). My so-called punk: Green Day, Fall Out Boy, the Distillers, Bad Religion : how neo-punk stage-dived into the mainstream. Macmillan Publishers. p. 45. ISBN 0312337817.
  2. Wasserman, Marc. "Exclusive: Interview with Kevin Long of Los Angeles Mod/Ska band The Untouchables". Marco on the Bass. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 The untouchables at Chart Stats
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