Cheap Trick
Formed in Rockford, Illinois, USA in 1972 by main songwriter Rick
Nielsen and Tom Petersson, originally as The Grim Reapers, then
Fuse and Sick Man Of Europe before settling on the moniker of
Cheap Trick.

The original incarnation of Cheap Trick contained vocalist
Randy "Xeno" Hogan, but after two years of steady
touring he was replaced by Robin Zander. With the classic line-up
now in place, the band secured a deal with Epic, releasing their
eponymous debut album early in 1977.
Coming at a time of musical turbulence (punk/new wave had just
arrived) the album failed to excite the interest of either critics
or fans. More marketable was the band\'s highly original image
with Zander and Petersson the good looking ones, while Bun E
Carlos was the joker in the pack with his Tweedle-Dee/Tweedle-Dum
attire (baseball cap, bowtie and all-round eccentricity).
Tours supporting KISS and Queen helped promote the band's
off-the-wall appeal to a wider audience, and their follow-up LP, In
Color (also in 1977) gained healthy sales and a US Top 75
placing. The album featured the excellent single I Want You To
Want Me, which was a flop the first time around although a
live version subsequently made the US Top 10 in 1979.
Following
the success of their third studio album Heaven Tonight
(1978), their harder edged live set At The Budokan turned
their popularity in Japan into even greater commercial popularity
in America.
The record struck platinum, hitting the Top 5 in the process
and making them virtual overnight international stars over the
following decade. Another Top 10 track, Dream Police
(1979) consolidated their new-found fame, although this was nearly
wrecked when Cheap Trick worked with the legendary George Martin
on the album All Shook Up.
Petersson felt the strain and bailed out before their next
album One On One (1982) which had seen Jon Brandt come in
as a replacement for the temporary Pete Comita. In 1983 they
employed the services of Todd Rundgren on their album Next
Position Please, which was a relative flop compared to the
lofty chart heights of its predecessors.
After a near return to form with the 1985 album Standing On
The Edge, they trawled a creative and commercial trough with The
Doctor. Drastic measures were needed.
Tom Petersson returned and the group drafted in outside writers
to make 1988's Lap Of Luxury their most successful album
of that decade. This was due in no small part to their first
singles chart topper, The Flame.
Their AOR formula was utilised once more on their 1990 Busted,
although this was to be their last taste of major chart action.
The 1994 Warner Brothers set, Woke Up With A Monster
saw the band attempting to recapture their 70\'s sound. Three
years later after a one-off single for the cult independent label
Sub Pop, Cheap Trick released an eponymous set which dented the US
Top 100.
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