DA! (band)

DA! was a Chicago-based post-punk band of the early 1980s, known for their songs "Dark Rooms" and "Time Will Be Kind".[1][2] Their sound was influenced by artists such as the Cure, Gang of Four, Bauhaus and Siouxsie and the Banshees.[3]

DA!
L-R: Gaylene Goudreau, David Thomas, Dawn Fisher, Lorna Donley
Background information
OriginChicago, IL, United States
GenresPost-punk
Years active1978–1982
2010
LabelsAutumn Records, Factory 25 Records
Associated actsLois Layne, the Singapores, Cool Jerk, Strike Under
Past membersLorna Donley
Evelyn Marquis
Dawn Fisher
Gaylene Goudreau
David Thomas
Bob Furem
Jason Batchko

History

DA! was formed in 1977 by a 17-year-old singer and bass guitarist, Lorna Donley, along with the guitarist and keyboard player Evelyn Marquis and the drummer Dawn Fisher. This line-up performed only once, and the guitarist Gaylene Goudreau (who had previously played with the all-girl punk band Lois Layne) was added in late 1979.

By early 1980, DA! had replaced Marquis with the guitarist David Thomas (who had previously played in St. Louis punk bands, The Singapores and Cool Jerk). By that summer, the band had become a fixture on Chicago's early punk music scene, performing regularly at area clubs like Exit, Oz,[1] O'Banion's, Tuts, Waves and Space Place and opening for visiting groups including the Fall, DNA, Bauhaus and Mission of Burma.[4]

DA!'s manager, Terry Nelson, a local punk radio DJ, formed Autumn Records with the producer George Kapoulas. DA! began to record demos in late summer 1980 with Timothy Powell and Metro Mobile. The first single, "Dark Rooms"/"White Castles",[2] was produced at Acme Studios by Kapoulas and Mike Rasfeld. With the spring 1981 release of the single, DA! attracted attention from outside Chicago, and performed in Milwaukee with the Ama-Dots, in Minneapolis with Hüsker Dü, and in Madison with X. Kapoulas, an engineer at WGN-TV, produced a music video for the single and "Dark Rooms" went into heavy rotation on "Rock America", a pre-MTV video cable service available in music clubs. "Dark Rooms" was the "music video of the day" at Chicagoist on March 22, 2013.[5]

DA! appeared on the next Autumn Records release, a 1981 compilation LP titled Busted at Oz.[2] Recorded over three nights, it had live recordings by DA! and other Chicago punk bands including Strike Under, Naked Raygun, Silver Abuse, The Subverts and The Effigies.

Following the release of the Busted at Oz LP, Fisher was briefly replaced by the Strike Under drummer, Bob Furem. DA! recorded the Time Will Be Kind EP with Powell at Sound Impressions in late 1981,[2] but by the time of its 1982 release, the group had disbanded.

DA! and Donley appeared in You Weren’t There, a 2007 film about the Chicago punk scene from 1977 to 1984.[4] In 2010, Factory 25 Records released Exclamation Point, a vinyl LP compiling the band's previously released and unreleased material. DA! played two Chicago shows in 2010 to support the LP, the first with Furem on drums, the second with a new drummer, Jason Batchko. Their reunion concert at the Abbey Pub was documented in Robert Beshara's DA! Concert Film (2012), which was screened at the Chicago International Movies and Music Festival.[6]

Donley, later a librarian in the Chicago Public Library system, died on December 1, 2013, due to a ruptured aorta.[1][3]

The music historian Joel Whitburn once speculated that the band had recorded "Ready 'N Steady", a lost song credited to D.A. that appeared on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart for three weeks in 1979.[7] The band insisted that they had not recorded it, and Whitburn has withdrawn his speculation regarding DA!'s involvement with the song. The song was found in 2016, at which point the D.A. who recorded that song was revealed to be the amateur singer/songwriter Dennis A. Lucchesi of California.[8]

Discography

Singles/EPs

  • "Dark Rooms/"White Castles" 7" single (1981, Autumn Records)[9]
  • Time Will Be Kind 12" EP (1982, Autumn Records)[10]

Compilation albums

  • Exclamation Point LP (2010, Factory 25 Records)[11]

Compilation appearances

  • "Fish Shit" and "The Killer" on Busted at Oz LP (1981, Autumn Records; reissued 2011, Permanent Records)[12]
  • You Weren’t There: A History of Chicago Punk, 1977-1984 DVD[13]
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gollark: I've never seen it there.
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gollark: The `*` represents a correction, i.e. "this is wrong so substitute this in where the incorrect bit is".

References

  1. "Lorna Donley Obituary". Chicago Tribune. December 8, 2013. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  2. Appelstein, Mike (December 3, 2013). "Time Will Be Kind: R.I.P. Lorna Donley, DA! Lead Singer". The Riverfront Times. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  3. Preski, Kenneth (December 10, 2013). "In Memoriam: Lorna Donley of DA!, 1960-2013". Newcity. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  4. O'Donnell, Maureen (December 15, 2013). "Lorna Donley, founder of post-punk band DA! who became librarian, dies at 53". Chicago Sun-Times. Alt URL
  5. Abernethy, Samantha (March 22, 2013). "Music Video Of The Day: DA! 'Dark Rooms'". Chicagoist. Archived from the original on March 25, 2013. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  6. Beshara, Robert. "Aesthetics". Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  7. "DA - Ready 'N' Steady (1979)". Popbomb. December 2, 2013. Archived from the original on November 11, 2014.
  8. Haney, Paul (July 8, 2013). "Paul Haney presents a world premiere of D.A.'s Ready 'N' Steady from 1979!". Crap From The Past. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  9. "Dark Rooms" at Discogs
  10. "Time Will Be Kind" at Discogs
  11. Exclamation Point at Discogs
  12. Busted at Oz at Discogs (list of releases)
  13. You Weren't There: A History of Chicago Punk 1977 to 1984 on IMDb
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