Pictures from Google Image Search

Voodoo Glow Skulls

Contemporary Musicians | 2003 | | Copyright 2003 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Voodoo Glow Skulls

Ska group

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Third-wave ska barely describes the unconventional musical genre of the unique Latino punk group the Voodoo Glow Skulls (VGS). Despite humble beginnings in a small bedroom practice areaeven garage bands have better facilitiesthese Southern California musicians refused to be confined by four walls. With the addition of a brass section, VGS evolved into a septet during the 1990s. They opened a record store to sell their wares and in 2000 established their own independent label. Over the course of the 1990s the Glow Skulls settled into a routine of back-to-back touring and concert schedules, maintaining a dauntless pace that has kept them in the public eye and at the forefront of rock music into the twenty-first century. According to John Bush in All Music Guide, Voodoo Glow Skulls are One of the most interesting ska-punk bands on the West Coast. Among both punk and ska puristsneither of which take credit for the Glow Skulls unusual combination of guitars, drums, and horn instrumentationthe bands unique sound is known also as ska-core.

So-called rock en espanol was not recognized as a distinct musical genre until the late 1990s, but bilingual Latino groups like the Voodoo Glow Skulls were defining the movement much earlier. The origin of this rock style in fact can be traced back to the tunes of early rockers Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens. For VGS, the music began in a closet-sized bedroom at the Casillas residence, the home of band members Eddie, Frank, and Jorge. With Eddie on guitar, lyricist Frank on vocals, and Jorge on bass, the three brothers were joined by drummer friend Jerry ONeill. The four bilingual pochos (second-generation American Latinos) practiced exclusively for two years before taking their show public. By 1990 VGS felt prepared to give performances; they began slowly, with local gigs, and released a seven-inch vinyl recording almost immediately. One year later the sound identity of VGS gained more definition with the addition of Joey Hernandez on saxophone and Joe McNally on trumpet.

With a new sound in place, terms like garage band and rock band no longer fit as descriptors for VGS. Regardless, it was with relative ease that the group found favor among fans. VGS members established a retail outlet in Riverside, called Cheap Guy Records, to sell theirs and others recordings; the store opened its doors in 1992 and remained in operation for five years. Also in 1992 they signed with Dr. Strange Records, an independent label that produced and released a VGS debut album, a compact disc called Who Is? This Is? The recording features covers of Here Comes the Sun, and Charlie Brown, from the Beatles and the Coasters, respectively, and registered 200,000 units in worldwide sales by 2002, making it the most popular release ever from the Dr. Strange label.

When 1993 came along, it was a landmark year for the Glow Skulls; the group embarked on tour with the Mighty Mighty Bosstones, signed with Epitaph Records, and added trombonist Brodie Johnson to the musical mix. Thus the band by 1995 had evolved into a solid septet, and in a headline appearance at the Hollywood Palace, VGS played to a sold-out audience. Also in 1995 VGS released Firme on Epitaph Records. Originally an English-language recording, the release was produced by Garth Richardson of Red Hot Chili Peppers fame. Epitaph undertook a massive promotion for the Glow Skulls with the release of Firme, including the distribution of free limited-edition posters. The band appeared on the cover of a popular rock en espanol fanzine, La banda elastica, in April of 1996-, and Epitaph Records sponsored a contest with a dozen low-rider bikes as first prize. The initial shipments of Firme exceeded 100,000 copies, and a completely revised Spanish-language version of the album followed almost immediately.

In 1997, having made a substantial impression on tour in France and Germany, the band released an upbeat follow-up album on Epitaph called Baile de los locos. Among the album tracks is a cover of Jose Felicianos Feliz Navidad. A fourth Glow Skulls album, Band Geek Mafia, appeared in 1998 and features a cover of Stranded in the Jungle by the Cadets. Band Geek Mafia, produced by rock bassist John Avila, was hailed as a new iteration of ska-punk called third-wave ska, according to the Glow Skulls. With Joey Hernandez on saxophone, Brodie Johnson on trombone, and a unique selection of new horn arrangementssome devised personally by Avilathe album and its unleashed

For the Record

Members include Eddie Casillas, guitar; Frank Casillas, vocals; Jorge Casillas, bass; Joey Hernandez (joined group, 1991), saxophone; Brodie Johnson (joined group, 1993), trombone; Joe McNally (group member, 1991-99), trumpet; Jerry ONeill, drums.

Began as a garage band in Riverside, CA, 1988; performed locally, released self-produced seven-inch vinyl album, 1990; added saxophone and trumpet, embarked on U.S. tour, 1991; released debut Who Is? This Is?, 1992; signed with Epitaph Records, 1993; established El Pocho Loco Records, released The Potty Training Years, 2000; signed with Victory Records, released Steady as She Goes, 2002.

Addresses: Record company c/o Victory Records, Inc., 346 North Justine, Suite 504, Chicago, IL 60607. Management-c/o Local Punks, P.O. Box 890355, Temecula, CA 92589. Website Voodoo Glow Skulls Official Website: http://www.voodooglowskulls.com.

sound proved definitive in the VGS quest for identity. Donnell Cameron of Westbeach Recorders also contributed to Band Geek Mafia, which was produced essentially by Avila in his own home studio. It was to be the last album with McNally, who left the band for a day job in 1999.

Despite the loss of McNally and his trumpet, by 2000 the bands career performance record had topped 2,000 shows in ten years. VGS spent most of the year in the recording studio, and produced a fourth and final album on the Epitaph label, The release, Symbolic, was the fifth album overall for VGS. In late summer the band embarked on another extensive North American tour. Fraser Middleton later reported on the Glow Skulls and the groups breakneck touring pace in the Glasgow, Scotland Evening Times, calling the VGS style a Musical frenzy, with, blood, sweat and tears etched on dressing room walls across the globe.

By the end of 2000 VGS had realigned under their own independent label, called El Pocho Loco Records, in the process enticing a number of Epitaph artists to join the new label as well. The only Glow Skulls recording to appear on El Pocho Loco was also released that year; it was a compilation called The Potty Training Years.

In the fast lane, VGS seems incapable of reversing acceleration. The group appeared in a series of performances in the Riverside area early in August of 2001, just prior to their departure for Europe where they toured the summer music festivals on the continent. Safely back in the United States by early 2002, the Glow Skulls signed with Victory Recordsalso an independent labelin Chicago and began recording almost immediately. The first VGS release on the Victory labelSteady as She Goes was scheduled for release in the summer of 2002. A hectic summer tour was also organized that year, to celebrate the VGS Victory debut. The ambitious agenda opened with a concert on June 21 in Los Angeles, California, and was scheduled to take the band throughout California, from Los Angeles to San Diego, Bakersfield, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, Sacramento, and Fresno within the first eight days, before moving eastward from Nevada, Utah, and Colorado, into New England and south along the Atlantic seaboard, into Florida and through Louisiana, with the bands arrival in Houston, Texas, scheduled in time for a concert on July 26.

Selected discography

Who Is? This Is?, Dr. Strange, 1992.

Firme (English and Spanish-language versions), Epitaph, 1995.

Bails de los locos, Epitaph, 1997.

Band Geek Mafia, Epitaph, 1998.

Exitos al Cabron (compilation), Grita!, 1999.

Symbolic, Epitaph, 2000.

The Potty Training Years (compilation), El Pocho Loco, 2000.

Steady as She Goes, Victory, 2002.

Sources

Periodicals

Albuquerque Journal, November 16, 2001.

Evening Times (Glasgow, Scotland), May 7, 2001.

Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA), July 27, 2001.

Rolling Stone, March 23, 1995.

Online

Epitaph Records, http://www.epitaph.com/bands/index.html?ld=86535 (April 3, 2002).

Voodoo Glow Skulls, All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (April 3, 2002).

Gloria Cooksey

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Cooksey, Gloria. "Voodoo Glow Skulls." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Cooksey, Gloria. "Voodoo Glow Skulls." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3495600078.html

Cooksey, Gloria. "Voodoo Glow Skulls." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 2003. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3495600078.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

How Lord Elgin lost his marbles; JULIAN CHAMPKIN tells the tragic story of Lord Elgin's obsession with the controversial Greek masterpieces - and how it eventually ruined him.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 6/25/2004; 700+ words ; ...trudge around the small town of Elgin in the north of Scotland...long journey there to see the Elgin marbles. They are disappointed...has been for nothing. The Elgin marbles, of course, are in the British...displayed - a collection of marble sculptures that formed a frieze...
Do Elgin's letters solve the marble fight?; Bribes and debts cloud the issue, finds Joan Gralla.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 5/2/2000; 700+ words ; ...workmen had removed one of marbles from a wall since he...firman. Rudenstine said Elgin was excited that it gave...mould and dig around the marble temple dedicated to Athena...peace and cities. Elgin's letter made no mention of taking marbles off the Parthenon wall...work team wrote back to ...
BUILDING A LIBRARY ; The Elgin Marbles
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 3/11/2007; ; 654 words ; ...British Museum, the beauty of the Elgin marbles has moved me to tears and inspired...should include the 400-page Lord Elgin and the Marbles: the controversial...When you know the complex history of Elgin and the marbles, it's clear it...
COLUMN: Returning the Elgin Marbles
News Wire article from: University Wire; 12/7/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...on the fate of the Elgin Marbles, a group of 17 figures...the room where the marbles were displayed...recognition that Elgin may have more or...the presence of the marbles. With the Olympics...The presence of the Elgin Marbles in London...
Bribes may cost Elgin his marbles
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 11/30/1999; ; 700+ words ; LORD ELGIN paid huge bribes to Turkish...officials to enable him to remove marble statues and friezes from...Evidence of the bribery in Elgin family papers proves that...collection, now known as the Elgin Marbles, were obtained illegally...
The Elgin Marbles, romanticism & the waning of 'ideal beauty'.
Magazine article from: Daedalus; 9/22/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...purchase a collection of ancient Greek marbles from Thomas Bruce, the seventh Earl of Elgin. A former ambassador to Turkey, Elgin had convinced the local authorities...questioning that took place at the Elgin Marbles hearing: "Does the Apollo Belvedere...
They want to take their marbles and go home; Now that Greece has a museum for Elgin's booty the question must be asked Who owns the past?(Insight)
Newspaper article from: The Toronto Star (Toronto, Ontario); 6/20/2009; 700+ words ; ...Inside, the sculpted marble frieze that once covered...originals of which, the Elgin marbles, have resided in the...argument - if it had the Elgin marbles, more than 85 per cent...untrue. Half the outer marble panels, a third of...European museums.) Elgin later wrote that it...
Would you swap an Elgin marble for a planespotter in an anorak?
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 5/4/2002; ; 700+ words ; SHARED OPINION British liberals tend to think that we should return the Elgin marbles to Greece. Let us hope that Greek liberals are demanding of the Greek minister of culture that the British planespotters be returned...
Casts & connoisseurs: the early reception of the Elgin Marbles: this month is the 200th anniversary of the Elgin Marbles going on public view in London. The response they received was at first mixed, yet, for reasons that Marc Fehlmann explains, by the 1830s they had become integral to western art history and students everywhere were copying casts of them.
Magazine article from: Apollo; 6/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...controversy as the Elgin Marbles; no other artefacts...the export of the marbles and other antiquities...Initially, Lord Elgin did not intend to...townhouse to display the marbles. Hunt, who was...to Mary, Countess Elgin. (18) Meanwhile...
GIVE BACK THE ELGIN MARBLES.
Newspaper article from: The Evening Standard (London, England); 1/13/2004; 700+ words ; ...ROBIN COOK TOMORROW Marbles Reunited is launched...000 years until Lord Elgin pulled them down. The...freedom, denounced Elgin as a plunderer and a...that could be said for Elgin is that he removed the Marbles from what was then a...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Elgin Marbles
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists Elgin Marbles A collection of Greek sculpture and architectural...British diplomat Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin (1766–1841), in 1801...x2018;You have lost your labour, my Lord Elgin. Your marbles are overrated: they are...
Elgin marbles
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History Elgin marbles. These were part of the frieze and pediment...bc, sent to England by the 7th earl of Elgin. While British ambassador in Constantinople...purchase by the government. Finally in 1816 Elgin received £35,000, much less...
marble
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art marble (Greek: marmaros...hard and dense. Marbles are widely distributed...Pentelicon in Attica. The Elgin Marbles are carved in Pentelic...translucent white marbles from the Aegean islands...and Naxos. Parian marble was used for the...
8th Earl of Elgin
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography 8th Earl of Elgin James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin (1811-1863), was the governor general of Canada...autonomous nations. The son of the 7th Earl of Elgin, who collected the Elgin Marbles for the British Museum, James Bruce was born in...
Elgin, Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of
Book article from: A Dictionary of World History Elgin, Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of (1766–1841) British...under Turkish control). The British government vindicated Elgin's actions and purchased the ‘Elgin Marbles’ from him in 1816 for £35,000 to exhibit...