Federation X

Federation X or "FED X" is an American rock band, originally formed in Bellingham, Washington, though it now shares members between Bellingham, Seattle, and New York, New York. Founded by Ben Wildenhaus (guitar), Bill Badgley (guitar, vocals), and Beau Boyd (drums) in 1998. The band has toured the US, and has had two European tours.[1]

Federation X
OriginBellingham, Washington, United States
Years activeEarly 1998present
LabelsMolasses Manifesto, Estrus Records, Wantage USA, Tapes Records
Associated actsZorbatron, GTR LKR, Ben von Wildenhaus, Juanita Family and Friends, The Teamsters, Brainhole, 1776, PART WOLF, Two Dark Birds
Websitewww.fedx.biz//
MembersBen Wildenhaus
Bill Badgley
Beau Boyd
Past membersJosh Holland

Career

In 1999, the band released a self-titled LP on its own Molasses Manifesto Records, then followed it in 2001 with American Folk Horror, recorded by Tim Green at Louder Studios in San Francisco and released by Bellingham's Estrus Records. In 2003, Estrus released X Patriot, recorded by Steve Albini at Electrical Audio in Chicago. In 2005, Estrus released Rally Day, recorded by Ryan Anderson at MARS Studio in Bellingham. Wantage USA released Rally Day on vinyl.[2] In March 2013, Federation X recorded its fifth studio album with Deaf Nephews (Dale Crover (Melvins) and Toshi Kasai) recording and producing at Entourage Studios in Los Angeles. Entitled We Do What We Must, it was expected to be released this year on Recess Records and the band's own Molasses Manifesto.[3]

The band has been compared to such heavy acts as Melvins, Karp, and Black Sabbath. In 2006, Josh Holland of Dog Shredder joined the band for a West Coast tour and at a recording session at MARS Studio, which produced the songs "Only Fool" and "Chinese Food and Vietnam," released as a 7-inch on Recess Records in 2012.

All three members have their own solo projects: Wildenhaus has 'Ben von Wildenhaus',[4] Boyd has 'Zorbatron',[5] while Badgley owns and operates Molasses Manifesto, a company that produces films, books, music, and art and is responsible for the film Kill All Redneck Pricks: A Documentary Film about a Band Called KARP.[6] Badgley also owns and operates The Documentary Center [7] in Bellingham, Washington, and performs with the electronic band Part Wolf.[8]

Discography

Albums

  • Fighting Words, Cassette-Only, Molasses Manifesto
  • Federation X, LP-Only, Molasses Manifesto Records
  • American Folk Horror, CD/LP, Estrus Records, 2001
  • Z Montany +2, Tour-Only CD, Self-Released with Irritant Records
  • X Patriot, CD/LP, Estrus Records
  • Rally Day, CD/LP, Estrus Records, Wantage USA, 2005
  • We Do What We Must, LP, Recess Records/Molasses Manifesto Records via Carrot Top Distribution, 2013

Singles

  • Federation X/ROX split, Molasses Manifesto Records
  • Federation X/Fleshies split, Molasses Manifesto Records
  • "Nighttrain", Tapes Records, 2001
  • "Nude Disintegrating Parachutist Woman", Wantage USA
  • "Only Fool" / "Chinese Food and Vietnam", Recess Records

Compilations

  • Fear of the Nothing CD (non-album version of The Hatchetman)
  • Double Dynomite Sampler CD (Mooseblood and .38 Special), Estrus Records
  • Wäntage USA's 21st Release Hits Omnibus CD (Southern Comfort [live]), Wantage USA
  • The Estrus Kamikaze Ass Chomp n' Stomp CD, Estrus Records
gollark: The protocol is basically JSON/msgpack over websocket so it could run on some microcontrollers.
gollark: Future versions are planned to be able to run task specific code for embedded-systemsy purposes I think.
gollark: And lets them be recategorised and renamed for purposes.
gollark: The protocol also allows them to declare arbitrary buttons/text/inputs to the web interface.
gollark: How recently?

References

  1. Williams, Bradley. "Greetings From Landalu". Razorcake. Archived from the original on 22 May 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  2. Neddal, Ayad. "Blabbing With Federation X". Dead Angel #60. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  3. Nokes, Emily. "Federation X Are Back In The Northwest". The Stranger. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  4. Archived March 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  5. "Zorbatron". Totallyzorbatron.com. Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  6. "Kill All Redneck Pricks: A Documentary Film about a Band Called KARP". Karplives.com. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  7. www.thedocumentarycenter.org
  8. Tonry, Andrew. "Band of Brothers". Portland Mercury. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.