Brian James Fox

Brian James Fox is a drummer known for his work on the two glam metal albums by White Tiger and as a member of Silent Rage.[1]

White Tiger

Fox was recruited by lead guitarist and band leader Mark St. John, a former member of Kiss after being recommended to him by his guitar technician and White Tiger bassist Michael Norton.

Silent Rage

After the original White Tiger broke up, Brian joined the band Silent Rage who themselves had a Kiss connection as the band's second album was signed to Gene Simmons's Simmons Records. Also, as previously stated, Mark indeed retired from the music business. However, after 9/11, marked rejoined his Silent Rage for a special one-time-only performance when Silent Rage was asked to reunite to play at The Salvation Army Benefit Concert in November 2001 at the Galaxy Theater in Santa Ana, California. This special benefit was organized and put on by Steve Brownlee who had signed Silent Rage for their debut album "Shattered Hearts." Also on the bill were Joshua Perahia, Jeff Fenholt, Neil Grusky (Takara), Paul Shortino, Don Dokken, Barry Sparks, and SQS.

Discography

With White Tiger

  • White Tiger
  • Raw

With Silent Rage

  • [2] Don't Touch Me There (1989)
  • [3] Still Alive (2001)
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gollark: It would be neat if they were cryptographically signed too, but it turns out I have no idea what actual algorithm the potatOS ECC library is implementing, oops.
gollark: So, progress on the potatoupdates™ system, I now have a script generating manifest files which are deterministically generated from the exact contents of a PotatOS version™.
gollark: > multiprocessing.pool objects have internal resources that need to be properly managed (like any other resource) by using the pool as a context manager or by calling close() and terminate() manually. Failure to do this can lead to the process hanging on finalization.> Note that is not correct to rely on the garbage colletor to destroy the pool as CPython does not assure that the finalizer of the pool will be called (see object.__del__() for more information).Great abstraction there, Python. Really great.
gollark: No, I mean I was reading from underneath the line it highlighted, which was the POST documentation.

References


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