The Furys are a veteran Los Angeles rock band that started as icons of the early New Wave and Punk Scene in Orange County and Los Angeles—releasing their recordings independently on Double R Records and Beat Records label, they were mainstays of the early scene, and still active today.
The Furys | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Los Angeles, California |
Genres | Rock, punk rock, new wave, power pop |
Years active | 1977–present |
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Members |
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Past members |
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Website | https://thefurysband.com |
Formation 1976-1977
editThe band began in 1976 when Orange County schoolmates Jeff Wolfe and Gregg Embrey decided to take matters into their own hands and start a band that rocked back to their roots of rockabilly, British mods, and California surf music. Jeff and Gregg started writing their material and produced their first recordings and single.
Since there were few indie music outlets, they started their label Double R Records with manager Michael Compton (aka Jett) and blazed a trail with an indie release of their first single, Hey Ma, backed by Jim Stark Dark, released in 1977.[1]
The band lineups on the single were for “Hey Ma” with Gregg Embrey, piano, vocal; Gary Embrey, drums; Harold Hayes, bass; Wayne Harter, guitar, and on “Jim Stark Dark” the lineup was Gregg Embrey, piano, vocal; Gary Embrey, drums; Chaz Maley, guitar; Doug Martin, bass.
In 1977, The Furys’ “Jim Stark Dark” lineup started taking gigs wherever possible and with a rocking punk style, starting with their debut at the Surf Theater in Huntington Beach.
1978
edit1978 saw more success as they released their second single, Say Goodbye to the Black Sheep, backed by Suburbia, Suburbia, self-released on Double R Records. This record took off with substantial airplay on the burgeoning college/underground radio market. KROQ and their DJs, like Rodney Bingenheimer, championed and played “Black Sheep” extensively.
The lineup of Jeff Wolfe-vocals, Gregg Embrey, bass; Gary Embrey, drums; Chaz Maley, guitar; Joe Conti, keyboards built on their growing following and saw them play extensively in a growing network of New Wave and Scene Clubs, playing in Los Angeles, Orange County, Riverside, Long Beach, and San Diego.
This year also saw The Furys’ first performance at Whisky a Go Go, appearing with The Last” and “The Tremors”.
The Furys were at the forefront of this live music renaissance, not only playing established venues such as the Whisky, Troubadour, Starwood, and other Hollywood locales, but they also started playing underground (quasi-legal) events at the Skeleton Club, Lawn Rehearsal Studio, and other “pop up” gigs packed with The Furys fans.
In October ’78, The Furys were asked by local promoter Paul Greenstein if the band would play at a new venue he was launching, a restaurant in the heart of Los Angeles’ Chinatown. The band agreed to the gig and thus was the first rock n roll band to play the legendary Madame Wong's. That first night was a rousing success, thus ensuring a decade-long entertainment empire for Wong’s. During this year, The Furys appeared with many other famous local bands: The Weirdos, The Zeros, The Last, The Alleycats, The Know, and many more. Popular rock act The Plimsouls saw their first gigs as an opening act for The Furys.
During this time, the band also performed as an opening act for major touring acts, including British bands such as Magazine, 999, and Ultravox, along with dates with New York Dolls singer David Johansen, Iggy Pop, and many more.
1979
edit1979 saw The Furys release a third single, released by Beat Records, Moving Target/We Talk We Dance. During this time, the band continued its busy gigging schedule, making numerous appearances at the Cuckoo's Nest in Orange County, the Nugget a Go Go in Long Beach, and Hollywood venues such as Gazzarris and the Whisky. Packed houses became de rigueur. Press coverage—both mainstream and underground—continued to grow.
1983
editWith a growing fanbase centered north of their Orange County origins, the band needed to change its home base and move up to Los Angeles. The move led to a lineup change of switching in Marty Korth, bass; Bob Beland, guitar, with Gregg Embrey moving to guitar and Jeff Wolfe continuing vocals; the drum seat was in rotation at this time as they continued to grow as a live act and critical part of the New Wave and Punk scene.
1985-1987
editAs they continued gigging across southern California, the lineups underwent some changes; in 1985, The Furys consisted of Jeff Wolfe, vocal; Gregg Embrey, guitar; Michael Dempsey, bass; Bob Beland, guitar; and MB Gordy, drums. In 1986, they switched in Richard D'Andrea, bass, and Francis White, drums, later Marty Korth rotate in on bass and vocals.
In 1986 The Furys recorded their mini-LP Indoor/Outdoor at EMI-America Studio in Hollywood. Radio play on the record expanded outside the California home base and was far-reaching. The growing college/indie radio networks had picked up on The Furys.
In 1987, the lineup made one last change for the century, adding Glen Laughlin, bass, and Francis White, drums. In 1987, the band decided they had run their current course and hung it until 2012, when they reformed.
2012-2015
editInterest in The Furys began anew in 2012 when radio play and fan interaction began to surface. Jeff Wolfe reformed the group, and they began to gig and play southern California dates. The band during this time consisted of Jeff Wolfe, Glen Laughlin, guitar, Bobby Lane, bass, and Francis White, drums. In 2014, the lineup shifted with Chris Silagyi on guitar and Kelly Fair on drums.
2022-2024
edit2022 saw the fruit of the Wolfe/Lewty writing partnership, and they recorded and released an album of new material, The Furys Again, with Dave playing all of the instruments on the tracks. With the sales, streaming, and radio response to the album, Jeff and Dave have set about putting together a live band and plans for a new recording.
The current lineup in 2023 is Jeff and Dave, Cliff Roman (Weirdos), Jeff Jourard (Motels), and Ray Herron (Sloths). The group produces a massive sound. The Furys New Wave Hit Parade was released in August 2023, chronicling the group’s three vinyl singles in the 70s, the “Indoor/Outdoor” mini album from 1986, and a bonus track, The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore, recorded with Brian Wilson's string section in 2016.
October 4, 2024, The Furys released a new single "Everybody's New / "Without You" on Arcane Alley Records with a new album soon to follow.
Discography
editAlbum
edit- New Wave Hit Parade (Arcane Alley Records/2023)
- Again (self-released/2021)
- The Sound of the Furys (self-released/2016)
EP
edit- Indoor/Outdoor 12" 45 (King Coitus/1986)
Singles
edit- "Hey Ma" / "Jim Stark Dark" (Double R/1977)
- "Say Goodbye To The Blacksheep" / "Suburbia Suburbia" (Double R/1978)
- "Moving Target" / "We Walk, We Dance" (Beat/1979)
- "Everybody's New / "Without You" (Arcane Alley Records/2024)
Compilation appearances
edit- L.A. In: A Collection Of Los Angeles Rock And New wave Bands (Rhino/1979) - "Say Goodbye To The Blacksheep"
- We're Desperate: The L.A. Scene (1967-79) (Rhino/1979) - "Say Goodbye To The Blacksheep"
- Metrojet: Volume Two (Red Rubber Ball/2002) - "Moving Target"
References
edit- ^ Option - Page 104 1987 "The Furys: Indoor/Outdoor One of the forerunners of late 70s LA. power pop, the Furys make a return bid here and succeed admirably. Vocalist Jeff Wolfe and group mainstay Gregg Embrey sound as fresh and sparkling as day one "What's Done is Oone" .."