Johnny Rioux

Johnny Rioux is a musician primarily known for playing in and working with many punk rock bands. He was initially based in Boston but is now based in Texas, and currently plays bass guitar with the Street Dogs,[1] celtic rock band Murder the Stout (along with former Street Dogs guitarist Marcus Hollar) and Street Dogs' americana side project FM359. He has previously played with Roger Miret and the Disasters,[2] The Bruisers[3] and The Kickovers.[4] He has also worked with bands in non-musician roles including as a guitar technician for The Mighty Mighty Bosstones[5] and tour manager for Dropkick Murphys. He has recently started producing, and has so far produced for Flatfoot 56,[6] the Street Dogs and Roger Miret and the Disasters.

Johnny Rioux
Born (1974-05-09) May 9, 1974
OriginNew Hampshire, US
GenresPunk rock
Occupation(s)Musician, record producer, guitar technician, band manager, roadie
InstrumentsBass guitar, guitar
Associated actsStreet Dogs, Roger Miret and the Disasters, The Bruisers, The Kickovers

Discography

Performer

Producer

  • Street Dogs Street Dogs (2010)
  • Flatfoot 56 Black Thorn (2010)
  • Roger Miret and the Disasters Gotta Get Up Now (2011)
  • Flatfoot 56 Toil (2012)
  • Street Dogs "Crooked Drunken Sons" 7" (2013)
  • Street Dogs "Rust Belt Nation" 7" (2013)
  • Johnny Rioux Cowboi! (2013)
  • FM359 Truth, Love & Liberty (2014)
  • Street Dogs Stand For Something Or Die For Nothing (2018)

Technical

  • Street Dogs Street Dogs (2010)
  • Flatfoot 56 Black Thorn (2010)
  • Street Dogs "Crooked Drunken Sons" 7" (2013)
  • Street Dogs "Rust Belt Nation" 7" (2013)
  • Bricktop Murder at 45rpm (2013)
  • FM359 Truth, Love & Liberty (2014)
  • Street Dogs Street Dogs / Noi!se (2014)
gollark: Also, everyone far enough in the past was probably horrible in some way.
gollark: What "parody of Job"?
gollark: Idea: deploy apiotemporohazards to wipe out everyone in the past who had now-distasteful political/ethical/sociological views.
gollark: Was he significantly more racist/etc. than *other* people at the time? I'd assume so somewhat.
gollark: In Spanish, it's the word for "black",even, IIRC.

References

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