Fear Featuring Lee Ving and Agent Orange: Punk Legends
The Canyon (28912 Roadside Drive Agoura Hills, CA 91301)
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- $20.50
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- $11.50*
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The last date listed for Fear Featuring Lee Ving and Agent Orange was Friday September 16, 2011 / 7:30pm (Doors Open at 6:00pm).
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Tribute Band Country Nation Plays the Genre's Top Hits at The Canyon
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A seven-piece band full of veteran L.A. musicians, Country Nation brings its tribute to popular and contemporary country music to The Canyon. With Lisa Marina and Mason Heller providing dual female/male vocals and a pitch-perfect band backing them up, a Country Nation show includes favorites from Miranda Lambert and Brad Paisley to Blake Shelton, Sara Evans, the Band Perry and more. The group's sets include some of country's more classic hits, too, from the likes of George Strait, Garth Brooks, Randy Travis, Faith Hill and Shania Twain. Put on your dancin' boots! Learn More
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Description
Along with Black Flag and the Circle Jerks, Fear helped define the sound and style of L.A. hardcore. Although they actually formed during the first wave of punk back in 1977, Fear didn't release an album until five years later, by which time they'd honed a blistering, thrashy attack that, for all its fury, was surprisingly tight and sometimes even intricate. Which is to say that, musically, the band wasn't as crude as frontman Lee Ving's outrageous, humorously offensive lyrics, which were geared to piss off anyone within earshot, particularly women and homosexuals; his vulgarity was equalled only by his sincere love of beer. Fear's original incarnation fell apart after just two albums, but Ving began touring with new lineups again in the '90s.
Fear was formed in Los Angeles by vocalist Lee Ving (whose past is shrouded in mystery, though he's rumored to be a Vietnam veteran), with the rest of the original lineup including lead guitarist Philo Cramer, bassist Derf Scratch, and drummer Johnny Backbeat. Rhythm guitarist Burt Good became a member for a short time in 1978, but became unnecessary when Ving decided to take up the instrument. The same year, Backbeat was replaced by Spit Stix. Fear issued its debut single, "I Love Livin' in the City," at the beginning of 1978 on Criminal Records. They were in no rush to record an album, however, and spent the next few years without a record deal; instead, they mostly played punk clubs around the Los Angeles area, cultivating a volatile, confrontational stage presence. Fear's explosive appearance in director Penelope Spheeris' punk chronicle The Decline of Western Civilization cemented their legend, and they found a devoted fan in comedian John Belushi, who talked Saturday Night Live into having the band on as a musical guest for the Halloween episode in 1981. Not a band to behave in a public forum, Fear invited a pack of skinhead slam-dancers on-stage for their performance, resulting in costly studio damage and a bit of on-mic profanity.
Now notorious on a national level, Fear finally landed a record contract with Slash in 1982, and released their debut album, The Record, which most critics still agree was their best and funniest outing. Scratch left the band later on in the year, and was replaced first by Eric "Kitabu" Feldman (who appeared on the late-1982 single Fuck Christmas), then the Red Hot Chili Peppers' Flea; in 1984, Flea was in turn replaced by the Dickies' Lorenzo Buhne. 1983 found Fear taking some time off for side projects; Stix went to Europe and joined Nina Hagen's band, Cramer formed a band called M'Butu Ngawa, and Ving pursued a successful acting career, playing assorted tough guys in films like Flashdance (the strip club owner) and Streets of Fire, among others. In 1985, Fear released its second album, More Beer, but soon drifted apart into other projects; they disbanded in 1987.
In 1991, most of Fear's prime lineup — Ving, Cramer, and Stix, plus new bassist Will "Sluggo" McGregor — reunited and began playing concerts again. Live... For the Record was released later that year. Cramer and Stix both quit in 1993, ending the reunion; Ving began touring with another group, Lee Ving's Army, which included guitarist Sean Cruse, former Frank Zappa bassist Scott Thunes, and drummer Andrew Jaimez. This group eventually became the new Fear lineup, and entered the studio in 1995 to record the band's first album of new material in a decade, Have Another Beer With Fear, which was released by Sector 2. Over the next few years, Thunes was replaced by Mondo Lopez, and Cruse by Richard Presley; in 2000, the revamped Fear returned on the Hall of Records label with American Beer, another all-new album.
Agent Orange is a punk rock band from Fullerton, California. They were a surf-punk band from the 1980s and first gained attention with their song 'Bloodstains,' which they wrote for a local Orange County compilation album. After the compilation album, the group's then managers (two twin female dwarves) presented KROQ radio D.J. Rodney Bingenheimer with a demo tape, which soon became one of his show's biggest hits.
Besides having Mike Palm and Scott Miller as original members, Steve Soto was the power trio’s first bass player, the one who played on the first “Bloodstains”. This song later appeared on Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4. He later left the band to form The Adolescents. With new member James Levesque on bass, the best known bass player and writer of such hits as "Everything Turns Grey" and "Living in Darkness," the group found their way to the famous Living In Darkness sessions at Brian Elliot's recording studio (Elliot is most known for having composed Madonna’s hit Papa Don’t Preach). The result of these sessions was their first long player, Living In Darkness (originally released by Posh Boy in November 1981), as well as a single and one or two bonus tracks that later surfaced on some E.P.s.
Agent Orange has had an enormous influence on the punk and hardcore scene, even though band members stated on Living in Darkness that "We don't feel a part of that scene at all." Agent Orange was one of the first bands to pioneer what would later be known as the skate-punk or skate-core scene. They developed a following in Fullerton along with The Adolescents. The band is still together today with few member changes. Their most recent album was in 2003 with Sonic Snake Session.
