Slim Jim Phantom helped introduce a generation to rockabilly as the drummer with
the Stray Cats, and after the group's breakup he went on to a long career with various rockabilly and roots rock acts. He also won attention for his unusual performing style; he generally played standing up, with a tiny kit that often consisted of just a snare drum, a kick drum, and a cymbal.
Slim Jim Phantom was born James McDonnell in Brooklyn, New York on March 21, 1961. Growing up in Massapequa, New York,
Phantom absorbed his first musical influences from his father's collection of vintage jazz sides, and at the age of 10, he began playing the drums. In his late teens, he was playing drums in bands with his friend Leon Drucker, a friend from school who played the bass and would adopt the stage name
Lee Rocker. Another of
Phantom's friends from school,
Brian Setzer, was a guitarist who was playing rockabilly covers with a group called the Tom Cats; after the band broke up,
Setzer recruited
Phantom and
Rocker to form a new combo called
the Stray Cats, who made their debut in 1979. The trio soon discovered that Massapequa was not a hotbed of rockabilly supporters, and in 1980 they relocated to England, where the sound still had loyal followers. After a rough start in the U.K.,
the Stray Cats found a valuable supporter in musician and producer
Dave Edmunds; he helped the band land a deal with the U.K. branch of Arista Records, and their self-titled debut album, produced by
Edmunds and released in 1981, was a modest success in England and Europe. A second LP, Gonna Ball, appeared later the same year, and was a commercial disappointment. However, in 1982 the group signed an American record deal with
EMI, and they promptly released
Built for Speed, a collection of material from the two British albums.
Built for Speed became a multi-platinum success in the United States, and spawned two Top 10 singles. The follow-up, 1983's
Rant N Rave with the Stray Cats, was another international hit, but with success came personal and musical differences, and by the end of 1984,
the Stray Cats had broken up.
Phantom wasted no time launching a new project; he and
Lee Rocker teamed with guitarist
Earl Slick to form the more rock-oriented Phantom, Rocker & Slick. They released two albums, 1985's Phantom, Rocker & Slick and 1986's Cover Girl, but the group broke up by the end of 1986 when
Phantom and
Rocker reunited with
Setzer to record a new
Stray Cats album,
Rock Therapy. Throughout the late '80s and early '90s,
the Stray Cats periodically regrouped for album projects and recording sessions, but after 1993's all-covers set Original Cool, they once again called it a day. In 1988,
Phantom took a brief stab at acting, playing
Charlie Parker's drummer in
Clint Eastwood's jazz biopic Bird. It proved to be his only major film role, though he and
Rocker performed on the soundtrack of the 1997 film Inventing the Abbotts. As the '90s wore on,
Phantom became involved in a variety of musical projects. With
Rocker and guitarist
Danny B. Harvey, he founded
the Swing Cats, who played retro-rock with a swinging feel, releasing four albums between 1999 and 2001. One of the guests on the second
Swing Cats album, 2000's
A Special Tribute to Elvis, was
Lemmy Kilmister of
Motörhead, a longtime rockabilly fan. An informal jam in the studio led to
Kilmister joining forces with
Phantom and
Harvey to cut an album of rockabilly classics. Originally released under the title
Lemmy, Slim Jim & Danny B in 2000, the trio would record and tour under the name
the Head Cat. The debut album would be reissued in 2006 as
Fool's Paradise, and a second long player, Walk the Walk…Talk the Talk, arrived in 2011.
Phantom and
Harvey also worked together in another meeting of rockabilly stalwarts, 13 Cats, which featured former members of the
the Polecats and the Rockats. The combo released albums between 1996 and 2006. Two performances
Phantom and
Harvey recorded with
Johnny Ramone appeared on a 2007 EP,
Ramones Solo Performances.
Phantom launched yet another group in 2007,
the Katmen, in which he was joined by
Imelda May guitarist
Darrel Higham and bassist
Al Gare; onetime
Guns N' Roses guitarist
Gilby Clarke was also involved with the group, who issued two albums,
Katmen in 2006 and
The Katmen Cometh in 2013.
Phantom and
Clarke had previously worked together in the short-lived band Col. Parker, who released an album, Rock N Roll Music, in 2001.
Phantom also records and tours with the supergroup
Dead Men Walking, which includes
Captain Sensible from
the Damned and
Mike Peters from
the Alarm; their debut album, Additional Parts Inside, came out in 1999, and the band reconvened in the studio for 2015's
Easy Piracy. In 2016,
Phantom published an autobiography, A Stray Cat Struts: My Life as a Rockabilly Rebel. When not busy with his other projects,
Phantom frequently performs with his solo combo, Slim Jim's Phantom Trio. ~ Mark Deming