Filthy Thieving Bastards

The Filthy Thieving Bastards is an American folk/punk rock group formed in 2000 in San Francisco, California. The band was originally a side project put together by Johnny Bonnel and Darius Koski of the Swingin' Utters. Spike Slawson (also from Swingin' Utters) later joined the band, along with recording engineer Randy Burk. Greg Lisher from Camper Van Beethoven guested on guitar for several songs on their second release. Their music is influenced by folk rock, Celtic rock, country music, 60's pop, and punk rock, with an acknowledged and oft-noted debt to the music of The Pogues.

Filthy Thieving Bastards
OriginOakland, California, United States
GenresPunk rock, celtic rock, folk rock
Years active2000–present
LabelsBYO Records, TKO Records
Associated actsSwingin' Utters, Camper Van Beethoven
MembersJohnny Bonnel
Darius Koski
Spike Slawson
Randy Burk
Past membersGreg Lisher

The project's first (short) album, Our Fathers Sent Us, was released by TKO Records in 2000. In 2001, the band released A Melody of Retreads and Broken Quills on BYO Records.

The next album My Pappy Was a Pistol was released in 2005. In March 2007 Filthy Thieving Bastards released their next album ... and I'm A Son of a Gun on BYO Records, featuring an appearance by Spider Stacey of the Pogues. The naming of the last two albums was a nod to American Singer/Songwriter Roger Miller.

The song "Drug Lords of the Avenues" is featured on the in-game soundtrack for Skate.

Discography

  • Our Fathers Sent Us (E.P.) - 2000
  • A Melody of Retreads and Broken Quills - 2001
  • My Pappy Was a Pistol - 2005
  • I'm A Son of a Gun - 2007

Reviews

gollark: YeS
gollark: SOLD IN CHORUS CITY AT REASONABLE PRICES™tm™
gollark: I have maybe 256.
gollark: And the numbers are generated pretty inefficiently, so increasing it much would make the uninstaller slow.
gollark: Interestingly enough, you see, the CPU time required to factor a number like that is roughly proportional to the *square root* of it.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.