Back in the 50s, band names weren't that crazy. Many bands were named after animals (The Spaniels, The Penguins), birds (The Crows), insects (The Crickets), or cars (The Impalas, The Fleetwoods), and that's about as nutty as it got. There were a couple of glimmers of zaniness (Huey "Piano" Smith and the Clowns, The Dell-Vikings), but most record company execs came from the Big Band era and favored "smooth" over "creative".
The 60s saw rock and roll proving itself to be no flash in the pan but the music of a new generation. The Powers that Be recognized this new medium for its potential, and there was a rush to sign bands with slightly stranger monikers that reflected a fun-loving, youthful spirit: The Hollywood Argyles, The Zodiacs, The Tokens, The Marcels, The Jive Five, Little Caesar and the Romans, Shep and the Limelites, The Essex, The Surfaris, The Jaynetts, The Exciters, The Chantays, The Shondelles, The Ronettes.
In the late 60s and the 70s, the "youth counter-culture" and the drug experimentation that went with it ushered in the Psychedelic Era. Acid-fueled band names like Iron Butterfly, Vanilla Fudge and Strawberry Alarm Clock began to push the envelope of band-name wackiness, but it was not until the 80s, during which the music video phenomenon, spearheaded by MTV, that the trend for crazy band names blew up, as the kids say.
The visual medium of music television, combined with the amazing range of sounds that could be produced by the recently-developed synthesizers and electronic drum kits, served to make the 80s a veritable explosion of music nuttiness, and of course crazy band names went right along for the ride: Haysi Fantayzee, Echo and the Bunnymen, The The, Icicle Works, Living in a Box, Tones on Tail, Wall of Voodoo, Kajagoogoo, EBN-OZN, The Blow Monkeys, Rubber Rodeo, 10,000 Maniacs, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, A Flock of Seagulls, Sigue Sigue Sputnik, Total Coelo, Psychedelic Furs, Strawberry Switchblade, Bananarama, Beastie Boys, Haircut 100, Porno for Pyros, Bizarre, Inc., Romeo Void, Oingo Boingo, Violent Femmes and Throwing Muses all enjoyed their debuts, and some of them even had more than one hit song.
Even the grunge movement of the 90s, which arrived as a backlash to the slick, ultra-packaged bands of the prior decade, could not stem the tide of crazy band names once the floodgates of wackiness had been opened. Despite the flannel and brooding lyrics, we still were treated to the likes of Stone Temple Pilots, Soul Coughing, Blind Melon, Crash Test Dummies, Echobelly, and Meat Puppets. Pop groups were getting less creative, strangely enough, with NSync and Ace of Base about as weird as it got (which is to say, not very), but the 90s also saw a great rise in indie rock fueled by college radio, and totally bazoo band names kind of went with the territory: They Might be Giants, Coyote Shivers, Monster Magnet, Butthole Surfers, Gigolo Aunts, The Trash Can Sinatras, An Emotional Fish, The Soup Dragons, Concrete Blonde, Sunny Day Real Estate, The Flaming Lips, Dishwalla, Mary's Danish, Furslide, The Lightning Seeds, Smoking Popes, Supergrass and Ethyl Meatplow were just a few of the more creative ones. Even the urban community started to get into the crazy-name bandwagon: Sporty Thievz, Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E., Bomb the Bass, Naughty by Nature, Insane Clown Posse, and Me Phi Me were all some of the weirdly creative ensemble names to come from the era of grande mocha lattes and floral dresses with combat boots.
Although the personal computer, invented in the 80s and made widespread in the 90s, affected the culture greatly in those decades, it is the internet explosion of the current decade, coupled with the widespread use of digital music devices like the iPod, that has enabled the music of thousands of talented performers with a dream and a MySpace page to reach potential listeners all over the globe in the current decade. With no record executives to put the kibosh on unmarketable-sounding names and no limit on how many bands may be competing to be heard, a particularly crazy name may help a band stand out enough to get noticed among the unsigned hordes. So, in the 2000s, we get wonderfully crazy stuff like Rocket from the Crypt, Panic! at the Disco, The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus, Further Seems Forever, Matchbook Romance, Death Cab for Cutie, Modest Mouse, Bedouin Soundclash, The Dandy Warhols, Dashboard Prophets, Funky Green Dogs, Throbbing Gristle, Thievery Corporation, Scapegoat Wax, Skunk Anansie, Bowling for Soup, Fountains of Wayne, Toothpaste 2000, Groove Armada, Gym Class Heroes, Titsofrenix, Dem Franchise Boyz, Frenzal Rhomb, Hoobastank, and many more that make my Spell Check threaten to explode.
So, what does the future hold? Since the trend has been toward diversification and multiplicity of choice, I don't see any reason for that not to continue. There are likely to be occasional retro moments yielding names in kind, such as the swing boom in the 90s that gave us such bands as The Mighty Mighty Bosstones and The Cherry-Poppin' Daddies, but in general I forecast more of the same, which is to say more of the really, really different.
Published by Ali Canary
Trying to inform, but not trying to be too formal. View profile
The Real Names of Movie StarsNo matter what it says on the Hollywood walk of fame, many times an actor is never known by their real name. Here is a list of many of the most famous actors and actresses, list...- 10 Worst Band NamesPicking a band name is the most important step in your music career. Well, maybe not the most important step...but you should at least pick something that looks cool on a t-shirt, ha, ha.
- Looking for a Name for Your Band? Consider One from This List of Potential Band N...Sometimes it is hard coming up with a name for a new band. Here is a list of of possible choices for those new groups who just can't seem to come up with a name for their music group.
- Best Band Names Taken from Literary FiguresSome excellent band names have been taken from literary figures. Sometimes the band is better than the book, and vise versa. Occasionally, though, both the band and the book are worthy of one another.
- My Top 10 Band Names of All TimeEverybody in the world has their own list of the greatest band names of all time. And, really, it is an impossible task since nobody has really ever heard of every band that has ever even put out an album, much less e...
- Unique Baby Names from Soap Operas
- The Top 10 Celebrity Baby Names of All Time
- Shining On: The Life and Times of Pink Floyd
- My Battle with Bipolar, Alcoholism & Life in the Psychiatric Ward
- The Mountain View Band Exclusive
- 5 Great Ideas for Band Names
- The Magic's in the Music: The Strawbs





13 Comments
Post a CommentOne of my favorites is Better Than Ezra because nobody knows what it really means, and the band won't ssy.
Funny stuff.
My favorite is a Johnny Cash tribute band that goes by The Folsom Prison Gang.
The thing is, at some point surely it will be impossible to get a unique unused band name. Then they'll have to just append letter/number combinations.
Brings back memories.. :-)
Interesting angle! What a fun read!
I have always said though, that if I had formed a band and could use any name out there, as if they didn't exist, I would choose the name Pink Floyd. What a great name for a band.
I will NOT delete the comments, they're hilarious!!!
I don't think All. is allowed to say that. Where on earth did you find out about all these names? Amazing.
It surprises me how many I have actually heard. The inception of MTV was huge in our house. Two teen boys then, & 3 more grew up w/ it. Josh (25 now) has had his own band for several yrs, & I won't even reveal the full name here! Starts as Otis and the.... But they've played w/ local bands like, "Tremendous Fucking" (sorry, but it's true). That band uses a code name like "Cute Fuzzy Bunnies" on the signs at the venues. Everyone knows who it is. My son swears that Stone Temple Pilots started as "Shirley Temple's Pussy" until they got radio coverage & had to change it. I guess that's recorded somewhere if it's true. And who wouldn't be proud of their kid being in "Hole"?! I'm nearly shock-proof by now, but I still shake my head a lot... and laugh, too. Thanks for a great article, BC!
Happy Sopwith Camel humming here "x".