The Yuppie Pricks

The Yuppie Pricks
Origin Austin, Texas, United States
Genres Punk
Comedy
Years active 1999present
Labels Alternative Tentacles
Chicken Ranch
Website http://www.yuppiepricks.com
Members Trevor Middleton
Deuce Hollingsworth
Preston Hetherington III
Nigel Smythen-Wesson
Ricky Snifschitz
Past members Darin Murano
Ken Dannelly
Trey Robles

The Yuppie Pricks are a five-piece punk rock band from Austin, Texas. They "deal in reverse psychology punk by ironically celebrating the materialist excesses of the upwardly mobile in songs like 'Greed Is Good', 'Fraternity Days', and 'Fuck You, I’m Rich', which are tinged with old school UK punk, Black Flag and Dead Kennedys touches."[1]

Alternately described as "raucous, straight-ahead punk"[2] and "American Psycho hardcore with a wicked sense of humor"[3] the Yuppie Pricks are frequently lauded for their live performances, where they've been known to "wear John McEnroe-era tennis gear and denounce the 'service industry scum' who come to their shows."[4][5]

And "while their music has much in common with the Buzzcocks and the Sex Pistols, their backgrounds and lyrics do not... they see their shows as punk PowerPoint presentations, though few sales meetings are as raunchy and cruel as YP shows, where the wretched losers who come to see them are peppered with abuse, lectured on the wonders of laissez-faire capitalism and showered with dollar bills."[6]

Notably, director John Waters cited the Yuppie Pricks song 'Coke Party' in a Variety interview as one of "five songs that mean a lot to me."[7]

History

Formed in 1999 by self-styled "pharmaceutical business magnate" Trevor Middleton and "third-generation divorce lawyer" Deuce Hollingsworth, the band then recorded their self-produced, self-released debut, Initial Public Offering.

Trevor Middleton with YP fan.

Following numerous local gigs and an appearance at SXSW in 2003, drummer Darin Murano exited the band, due to a case of aggravated tendinitis. Murano was temporarily replaced by Ken Dannelley (ex-Stretford, Hamicks) - but it wasn't until British expatriate Nigel Smythen-Wesson arrived that a permanent replacement was found.

Trevor Middleton on stage with champagne bucket.

A return performance at SXSW 2004 followed, during which the band was courted by former Dead Kennedys frontman, Jello Biafra, and subsequently signed on with his Alternative Tentacles imprint, who released 2005's Brokers Banquet. Recorded at Bubble Studios by Chris 'Frenchie' Smith (ex-Sixteen Deluxe, Young Heart Attack), and mixed by Mark Hutchins (Rockland Eagles), Brokers Banquet, which parodied the Rolling Stones' Beggars Banquet cover art, featured a more hard-edged 'rock' influence, combined with the tongue-in-cheek lyrics and punk-fueled aggression of the first album.

Along with the more aggressive sound came a transition from a four-piece to a five-piece line-up, with bassist Preston Hetherington switching over to second guitar, and the band recruiting Ricky the Intern from the 'Zero Skills Employment Agency' (according to their bio) on bass. With last-minute addition Trey Robles (ex-Hard Feelings) on drums, the band toured the East Coast in Spring of 2005, hitting renowned punk-rock enclave, CBGB in New York City, as well as recording a live broadcast for XM Satellite Radio, at the invitation of Lou Brutus of the station's Fungus 53 channel. Fungus 53 later named Broker's Banquet one of the top 25 punk albums of 2005, and John Peel kicked-off his BBC broadcast during SXSW 2005 with the Yuppie Pricks song, 'Cherry Red'.[8]

Following an extended hiatus, the Yuppie Pricks released their third full-length disc in 2008, Balls,[5] on Chicken Ranch Records, an album where "the irony drips like bacon fat,"[9] "to negate everything you ever thought about punk,"[10] and which "recontextualizes classics from punk’s ever-growing classic history (Buzzcocks, Big Boys! etc.) and creates new oil guzzling and FOX news approved republican punk anthems."[11] Once again, the Yuppie Pricks dipped into their decidedly un-punk past to parody the Black Crowes' infamous Amorica album, featuring their own male-enhanced take on the 70's-era Hustler-inspired cover art,[12] and landing them in the October 2008 issue of Blender Magazine.[13]

Additionally, selected tracks from Balls, including 'Donkey Show' and 'Fuck You, I'm Rich', were put in heavy rotation on XM Satellite Radio's Fungus 53 punk channel.[14]

Discography

Albums

Singles

See also

References

  1. "The Yuppie Pricks Give It The Old College Try". BANANASPAM!. 2008-08-26. Retrieved 2008-09-22.
  2. Hash, Tommy (2005). "Alt.Culture.Guide CD Playlist: The Yuppie Pricks". Archived from the original on 2006-11-17.
  3. i-D Magazine, Apr. 2003, The Individual Issue No. 230, p. 214
  4. Pollack, N: "That Sucking Sound", Gentlemen's Quarterly, Feb. 2003, p. 91
  5. 1 2 http://radioexile.com/2008/09/03/yuppie-pricks-kick-ass/
  6. John Nova Lomax (2004-02-19). "Ronald Reagan's Army In your heart, you know the Yuppie Prick$ are right". Houston Press. p. 65. The Yuppie Prick$ could very well be the most punk band on earth
  7. John Waters (2005-12-15). "Pushy Questions For...". Variety WeekEnd.
  8. "John Peel Presents: SXSW 2005". Archived from the original on 2006-10-01.
  9. "Left of the Dial Online Music Magazine". 2008-09-14.
  10. "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's...". The Devil Has The Best Tuna. 2008-09-04.
  11. http://partyends.com/peblog/2008/09/free_gamblersyuppie_pricks_tix.html
  12. "10 Commandments". YuppiePunk. 2008-09-10.
  13. Blender Magazine, Oct. 2008, p. 80
  14. "XMFan.com". Retrieved 2008-09-20.
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