* En anglais uniquement
Few hard rock bands are as widely respected yet criminally overlooked as
King's X. The trio (bassist/vocalist
Doug Pinnick, guitarist/vocalist
Ty Tabor, and drummer/vocalist
Jerry Gaskill) seemed destined for the big time with their irresistible blend of melodic
Beatlesque harmonies, metallic riffing, and prog rock detours, yet for reasons unknown, never truly broke through to a mainstream audience.
Pinnick (b. September 3, 1950) first met
Gaskill (b. December 27, 1957) when the duo was touring with the Christian rock outfit
Petra, and soon after, met up-and-coming guitarist
Tabor (b. September 17, 1961). The trio joined forces in 1980 with the Top 40 cover band the Edge and thoroughly played the Missouri bar scene. By 1983, the band had changed its name to Sneak Preview and was now completely focusing on original compositions -- resulting in an obscure and very hard to find self-titled debut album released around this time.
Sneak Preview were offered a recording contract in 1985 if they relocated to Houston, TX, which they did, but the deal failed to materialize. Undeterred, the trio continued on and perfected its sound and songwriting further, catching a break when
ZZ Top video producer
Sam Taylor took the group under his wing, helping it secure a recording contract with New York's Megaforce label in 1987, and suggesting that the band change its name to
King's X (the name of a local outfit that
Taylor was an admirer of back in his high-school days).
In 1988,
King's X released their debut album,
Out of the Silent Planet. Despite praise among critics, the public didn't know exactly what to make of the group's original and multiple genre-encompassing style, and the album sank without a trace. But with the band's sophomore release, 1989's classic
Gretchen Goes to Nebraska, a buzz began to develop around
King's X in the metal community, as members of
Anthrax and
Living Colour praised them in the press, and MTV granted a few airings of their anthemic track "Over My Head." The stage was set for the group's big breakthrough, and things appeared to be going according to plan when the band's third release,
Faith Hope Love, surfaced in late 1990.
The album just missed the U.S. Top 30 and nearly reached gold certification, due to landing a lengthy spot opening on
AC/DC's sold-out arena tour in both the States and Europe, while the
Beatlesque "It's Love" received major air time on MTV. What should have been an exciting time for the group quickly turned sour, however, as the bandmembers began to experience trouble with manager
Taylor.
King's X's self-titled release from 1992 (and first to appear on Atlantic Records without the Megaforce imprint) proved not to be as focused as their previous pair of albums, resulting in the album disappearing quickly from sight after release (and their ensuing tour halted), as they ended their relationship with
Taylor.
But it appeared as though the change had refueled the group's musical desire once again, as evidenced by the
Brendan O'Brien-produced stellar 1994 release,
Dogman, which performed respectfully on the charts. This success resulted in the band opening shows for
Pearl Jam and a show-stopping performance on the opening night of the mammoth Woodstock '94 festival. Atlantic Records began putting pressure on the trio to deliver a breakthrough hit but when
Ear Candy failed to live up to expectations,
King's X left the label (Atlantic would issue one more release from the band a year later,
The Best Of, which featured 13 fan favorites, as well as three unreleased compositions and a live track).
In 1998 the group signed to the Metal Blade label, as both
Pinnick and
Tabor issued their first solo albums (
Tabor with Moonflower Lane and
Pinnick with
Massive Grooves, the latter issued under the alias
Poundhound), followed by the group's seventh studio release overall,
Tape Head. Now free to issue albums at their own pace, the group issued two more albums only a year apart -- 2000s
Please Come Home...Mr. Bulbous and 2001's
Manic Moonlight.
Pinnick continued his solo career in conjunction with
King's X, issuing
Poundhound's second release,
Pineappleskunk, the same year (as well as forming a side project with former members of
Trouble, dubbed
Supershine), while
Tabor issued two albums with the prog metal supergroup
Platypus -- 1998's When Pus Comes to Shove and 2000s Ice Cycles. Around the same time,
King's X received a pleasant accolade from their peers when they were voted as one of the "100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock" on a VH1 TV special. In 2003, they released
Black Like Sunday, a collection of re-recorded songs from early in their career that had previously only existed as demos or bootlegs. Their first concert album,
Live All Over the Place, arrived the following year, followed by their 11th studio recording,
Ogre Tones, in 2005.
King's X released
XV on the InsideOut label in 2008. ~ Greg Prato