Buck Brothers

For the English engravers and printmakers of the 18th century who were commonly known as the Buck Brothers, see Samuel and Nathaniel Buck
Buck Brothers
Background information
Origin London, England/ Jersey, Channel Islands
Genres Pop punk, alternative rock
Years active 2005–2011
Associated acts Top Buzzer, Renton, Carter USM, Sneak Read-Out (often referred to as just "SR-O"), John Magic Skulls, Roarfield, Push To Fire
Website www.buckbrothers.net
www.topbuzzer.co.uk
Members Andy Duke
Craig Welsh
Dom "Becksi" Beckford

Buck Brothers were a British three piece rock band. The band's sound is a mixture of pop and punk.

History

Buck Brothers formed early in 2005 via a chance meeting at the unlikely location of a Buddhist Disco in a North London.

None of the members are actually called Buck or are Brothers. The band claim to be named after an adult film company that guitarist Dom used to work for before joining the band.

The trio gained international media attention for successfully breaking a world record for the "highest number of gigs performed in a 12 hour period" on March 5, 2007 to mark the release of the band's debut album Me in the UK and North America on Cargo Records and Scratch Records respectively. The band performed 28 gigs in 10.5 hours, beating the previous world record (held by Hamburg band Kansas) by two shows. (Buck Brothers' successful Guinness Book of World Records claim number is 185503).

On July 7, 2007, Buck Brothers supported Primal Scream at Столпотворени Music Festival in Moscow.

The band's debut album Me entered the CMJ Top 200 Music Chart in the USA in October 2007 with "Girls, Skirts, Boots, Bikes" also making an impact on commercial radio placing at number seven in the national commercial specialty radio chart two months later.[1]

The band toured North America in March 2008 including three performances at SXSW (South By South West) in Austin, Texas including an unlikely support slot for UK rapper Dizzee Rascal. Rodney Bingenheimer, legendary DJ from KROQ-FM and big supporter of the band, introduced the trio at the first date on this tour in Los Angeles. This is the first time he had introduced a band in over three years.

In May 2008, the band made their USA live television debut on Fearless Music, a New York City based television show airing on the Fox 5 network in New York and syndicated on other networks throughout the states.

In August 2008, the trio supported US pop punkers Goldfinger on their UK tour.

The band have performed at NXNE Festival in Toronto, Canada twice (2006 and 2007), In the City Festival in Manchester, UK twice (2006 and 2007) and made their debut at SXSW Festival in Austin, Texas in March 2008. January–February 2009 saw Buck Brothers tour Italy for the first time following the release of "Me" on the Red Pony label there. In May of that year, Buck Brothers made two appearances at International Pop Overthrow Festival in Liverpool, England including a show at the legendary Cavern Club. Following incessant touring in the UK, the trio were invited in August to appear on the main stage at Booch Festival in the Netherlands. In August 2010, they headlined Worcester Music Festival in England. In that same month, Detroit label Static Records signed the band stateside.

2010 saw the release of their long-awaited second album "We Are Merely Filters" gaining a new fan along the way in the name of Marky Ramone after playing the band's track "All I Want To Do" on his national (USA) Sirius FM radio show "Punk Rock Blitzkrieg".

Due to conflicts with companies in the US regarding the band's name and numerous line up changes over the years, 2011 saw the group change their title to Top Buzzer.[2]

Members

Former Touring Members

Former members

Trivia

Back2Forward Records

Due to the band's DIY ethos, they set up their own record label "Back2Forward Records" so they could release all their material when and where they wanted. Back2Forward also released an album by Canadian band Broomfiller.

Discography

Albums

Singles

Awards

Press coverage

Industry coverage

Television appearances

References

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