* En anglais uniquement
Arriving in the late '90s during the dying days of dour post-grunge and the rise of aggro nu-metal,
Buckcherry proudly kept the torch of hard rock sleaze burning. The band styled themselves as deliberate throwbacks to the glory days of the '80s Sunset Strip, acting as if their peers were
Mötley Crüe instead of
Limp Bizkit. For a while, this defiance of contemporary rock norms was wildly successful for the band. Their eponymous 1999 debut generated the number one mainstream rock hit "Lit Up," which was enough to keep the band afloat until they had an unexpected hit in 2006 with their third album,
15. Boasting the sordid rocker "Crazy Bitch" and "Sorry" (a power ballad that cracked the Top Ten), the album was certified platinum, a success that buoyed the band for two decades and numerous lineup changes, always anchored by singer
Josh Todd.
Buckcherry formed in mid-1995, when
Todd and guitarist
Keith Nelson were introduced through a mutual tattoo artist. After cutting several demos, the duo recruited a rhythm section (bassist Jonathan "J.B." Brightman plus drummer
Devon Glenn) and began performing live, quickly earning a local fan base for their swaggering, grunge-flavored music. Following the subsequent addition of second guitarist
Yogi Lonich,
Buckcherry signed with DreamWorks Records and issued their self-titled debut LP in 1999. Singles such as "Check Your Head" and "For the Movies" were modern rock hits, raising
Buckcherry's profile by the summer of 2000.
The following year,
Buckcherry released their second album,
Time Bomb. Although it wasn't widely noticed by critics,
AC/DC recruited the band as an opening act for a series of shows, and
Buckcherry's audience grew accordingly. In July 2002, founding member
Joshua Todd unexpectedly quit the group, and
Buckcherry took a multi-year hiatus to recoup. They eventually regrouped in 2005 with original members
Todd and
Nelson, as well as newcomers
Xavier Muriel (drums), bassist
Jimmy Ashhurst, and guitarist
Stevie D. The revised lineup hit the studio later that year to record
15, which was released in early 2006 and yielded the band's first Top Ten pop single, "Sorry."
15 went platinum on the strength of its crossover appeal, and
Buckcherry quickly returned in 2008 with a fourth album,
Black Butterfly. The concert album
Live & Loud 2009 was released the following year, as the band prepared to hit the road as
Kiss' opening act.
The band released its fifth full-length album,
All Night Long, in August 2010. Despite debuting at number ten on the Billboard Top 200, the album failed to generate a major hit single. Soon,
Buckcherry parted ways with Atlantic and signed to Century Media, which released the heavy, melodic
Confessions in February 2013. As part of their promotion for
Confessions, the band assembled several short films to accompany it. A year later, the band released the
Fuck EP, a six-track record where every song contained the F-word in its title. That EP was a stopgap prior to the full-length
Rock N Roll, which came out in August 2015; it debuted at 93 on the Billboard Top 200.
Founding guitarist
Keith Nelson and
Xavier Muriel announced their departure over musical differences in May of 2017.
Todd hired guitarist
Kevin Roentgen and drummer
Sean Winchester as their replacements, but first turned his attention to
Year of the Tiger, the debut album from
Josh Todd & the Conflict, which also featured
Buckcherry guitarist
Stevie D. Todd unveiled his new lineup of
Buckcherry with the 2019 album
Warpaint, which featured a cover of
Nine Inch Nails' "Head like a Hole" as its lead single. As it turned out, this lineup would only last for one album, as
Winchester left shortly after its release, and
Roentgen a year later; they were replaced by Francis Ruiz and
Billy Rowe, respectively. The new members appeared on the band's ninth album, 2021's
Hellbound. Written and recorded during 2020's pandemic lockdown, it was produced by
Marti Frederiksen (
Aerosmith,
Def Leppard), with whom
Buckcherry had previously worked on
Black Butterfly. ~ Jason Ankeny