The Mutants (San Francisco band)
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (September 2020) |
Mutants | |
---|---|
Origin | San Francisco, California, United States |
Genres | Punk rock, art punk, new wave |
Years active | 1977–1986 2004–present |
Labels | 415, MSI, White Noise |
Members | Brendan Earley, Fritz Fox, John Gullak, Dave Carothers, Peter Conheim, Connie Champagne, Mia Simmans, Sue White |
Past members | Paul Fleming, Charley Hagan, Zippy Pinhead, Ken Kearney, Jim Hrabetin, Albert Reda, Marc Weinstein, Sally Webster |
Website | www |
The Mutants are an American band, notable in the history of
History
The Mutants joined together to perform at the San Francisco Poetry Festival in 1977. They quickly became regular performers in the San Francisco punk rock scene, headlining at the
Their first extended play single was on 415 Records and included "Insect Lounge", "New Drug" and "The New Dark Ages". Many compilations, such as Wave Goodbye, Can You Hear Me: Live From the Deaf Club and 415 Music included both live and studio recordings of The Mutants. In 1982, The Mutants' only album, Fun Terminal, was produced with the help of Snakefinger after the first producer, Paul Wexler, who produced their e. p., left the project and was released on MSI Quality Records.
In 1983 the Mutants appeared in Rick Schmidt's independent film, Emerald Cities. Footage of a live performance was interspersed throughout the film, showcasing four songs: New Dark Ages; We Need A New Drug; War Against Girls; Sofa Song.[3]
Following the release of Fun Terminal, The Mutants embarked on another successful national tour, headlining at major punk venues such as
In 1989 The Mutants had a reunion show at the
Members
Current lineup
- Fritz Fox (aka Freddy Mutant) —vocals
- Brendan Earley — lead guitar
- Connie Champagne — vocals
- Mia Simmans — vocals
- John Gullak — guitar
- Peter Conheim — bass
- Dave Carothers — drums
- Sue White — vocals
Discography
- New Dark Ages / New Drug / Insect Lounge 7" (415 Records, 1980)
- 415 Music (415 Records (compilation), 1980)
- Can You Hear Me? Live From the Deaf Club (compilation) (Walking Dead, 1980)
- The Mutants / Half-Japanese flexi-disc (Take It! Magazine, 1981)
- Savoy Sound — Wave Goodbye (compilation) (Go! Records, 1981)
- Live at the Savoy, 1981 (compilation) (CD Presents - BOOTLEG RELEASE, 2010?)
- Fun Terminal LP (Mutiny Shadow, 1981)
- The Mutants / Impatient Youth 7" (Shredder Records, 1988)
- Fun Terminal CD (White Noise, 2004)
Films
- The Mutants at Napa State (dir. Joe Target Rees, 1978)[6]
- We Were There to Be There (dir. Mike Plante and Jason Willis, 2021)[6]
- The Cramps and the Mutants: The Napa State Tapes (2023)[7]
- Mutants: Opposite World (2023)[7]
References
Footnotes
- ^ Lefebvre, Sam (September 29, 2023). "How San Francisco Punk Reacted to Dianne Feinstein in the 1970s | KQED". www.kqed.org. Archived from the original on September 30, 2023. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
- Blogspot. 2 December 2012.
- ^ "Emerald Cities (1983)". IMDb.com. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
- ^ Mark Deming (2011). "Review of Forensic Report, DVD". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 20, 2011.
- Amazon.
- ^ a b "The Cramps & The Mutants: The Napa State Tapes". Roxie Theater. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ a b "The Cramps and the Mutants: The Napa State Tapes". Grasshopper Films. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
Works cited
- Howie Klein (July–August 1978). "Cramps / Mutants, Napa State Hospital". New York Rocker. SF Mutants.com.
- Connie Chung (September 1979). "Moo Moo Mutants". New York Rocker. SF Mutants.com.
- Suzanne Stefanac (December 15, 1982). "Courting Chaos with The Mutants". BAM. SF Mutants.com.
- "John Gullak interview". UnSound (5). O-Art.org. 1984.
External links
- The Mutants photos at Eclypso.com.