Home » Jazz Musicians » Kingface

Kingface

Kingface was a band based out of Washington, DC that for a brief period strived to raise the music scene in the area out of its post "Revolution Summer" haze of 1985. Although they did make inroads in the late 80's music world nationally, most of today's music fans have not been fully aware of the ferocity and power Kingface brought with their unique take on punk rock. But for a few years, the sun certainly shined hard on this band. The band formed in 1985 and quickly made a name for itself on the local club scene. The band consisted of Mark Sullivan on vocals, Patrick Bobst on guitar, Andrew Rapoport on bass and Larry Colbert on drums. The band members all had roots in the local hardcore scene. Mark Sullivan had played in a band called The Slinkees in high school. This band featured two members who would go on to start Minor Threat and Dischord Records: Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson. Kingface quickly made a name for themselves for 2 reasons. First the band's lyrics were of a more personal versus political nature. Second, the band rocked-hard. While several older veterans on the scene wanted to keep it a secret that the listened to Ted Nugent back in the day; Pat Bobst did not keep it quiet that Eddie Van Halen was his guitar idol. The band went into Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, VA to cut some tracks with Ian MacKaye producing. Two sessions occurred. April 1986 the band recorded 4 songs: "Tired", "Lick The Moon", "My Favorite Movie Is Life", and "Dirty Wings." Only "Dirty Wings" would come out within the band's existence-it was on the State Of the Union compilation on Dischord Records. In December of the same year the band went into the studio and came out with 5 songs: "Crawl Into Tomorrow", "I Don't Want To Be Anything", "Lull-A-Bye" "Anyone" and "Like A King." These songs would come out on their first record, a 12" released in 1987 by the band itself and called King Face. Kingface continued to get wider recognition for their blazing rock sound. Gigs both local and out of town followed. Towards the end of 1987 my first exposure to the band live happened. November 11, 1987 I was lucky enough to catch the band opening for The Replacements at Lisner Auditorium in DC. It was a school night, and I had to tell a little white lie that I was working late on the school paper that night.

Read more

Tags

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.

Install All About Jazz

iOS Instructions:

To install this app, follow these steps:

All About Jazz would like to send you notifications

Notifications include timely alerts to content of interest, such as articles, reviews, new features, and more. These can be configured in Settings.