The Stray Cats
The Stray Cats formed in Massapequa,
Long Island, New
York, in 1979 in the midst of the punk/new wave scene, playing
retro-rockabilly style.
Heavily influenced both musically
and visually by Eddie Cochran, Gene
Vincent and Bill
Haley & His Comets, the trio quickly developed a
large following in New York playing at CBGBs,
Max's Kansas City as well as venues on Long
Island.
When the band heard there was a
revival of the 1950s Teddy Boy youth subculture in England, the
band moved to the UK where they caught on quickly. Their original
songs and some top-notch production by Dave
Edmunds quickly moved them into the UK
charts.
Their self-titled debut album was
released in England in 1981 on Arista Records and they had three
hits that year with Rock This Town, Stray
Cat Strut and Runaway Boys.
The UK follow-up album, Gonna Ball, was not so well-received, but the combined sales
of the first two albums was enough to convince EMI America to
compile the best tracks from the two UK albums and issue an
American album (titled Built for Speed) in
1982. The LP went on to sell double platinum in the US and Canada
and was the Number Two album on the Billboard album charts for 26 weeks.
The
band returned to the US just in time to mine the early mother lode
of MTV video-land, and enjoyed a number of further hit
singles, including (She's) Sexy And 17 and My One
Desire.
Musical and personal
conflicts began to emerge as Slim Jim Phantom married actress
Britt Ekland and Brian Setzer made guest appearances with stars
like Bob Dylan, and became the concert guitarist for Robert Plant's Honeydrippers project.
In late 1984 the band
added guitarist and fellow-Long Island native Tommy Byrnes on
second guitar and harmony vocals, but called it a day after a
European and US tour.
After various - mostly
unsuccessful - solo projects the original trio regrouped in the
1990s with their style relatively unchanged. The group still
reunite periodically for live
tours.
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