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Foghat was an English rock band that had its greatest success in the mid- to
late-1970s. Their music was straight-ahead blues-rock, dominated by electric
& electric slide guitar, and the band achieved five gold records. The group
remained popular during the disco era, but after the emergence of punk rock,
the band no longer had a substantial audience, and they stopped performing
live in 1980 but continued recording for some time after.
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The band featured Dave Peverett ("Lonesome Dave") on guitar and vocal, Tony
Stevens on bass, and Roger Earl on drums. They added Rod Price on
guitar/slide guitar and formed Foghat upon leaving Savoy Brown in the early
1970s. Their 1972 album Foghat had a hit with a cover of Willie Dixon's "I
Just Want to Make Love to You". The second album was also called Foghat (known
as "rock and roll" for the cover photo of a rock and a roll), and it went
gold. Energized came out in 1974, followed by Rock and Roll Outlaws and Fool
for the City in 1975, the year that Stevens left the band. Stevens was
replaced by Nick Jameson (the first in a string of musicians to play bass
for the band), and the group produced Night Shift in 1976, a live album in
1977, and Stone Blue in 1978, each reaching gold record sales. Fool for the
City was possibly the band's high water mark, as it spawned two hit singles,
"Fool for the City" and "Slow Ride" (which reached number 20 on the US
charts), but the highest sales figures were for Foghat Live, which sold over
2,000,000 copies. After 1978, Foghat record sales were far lower, and their
last album, Zig-Zag Walk in 1983, only touched at the charts.
The band broke up in 1983, but they have reunited sporadically since and
released a studio album entitled Return of the Boogie Men in 1994 and a live
album entitled Road Cases in 1998.
Founding member Dave Peverett passed away in February of 2000 from cancer.
Original Foghat guitarist and founding member Rod Price passed away March
22, 2005 from injuries sustained in an accidental stairway fall.
After the death of founder Dave Peverett, the band re-formed with two of the
founding members (drummer Roger Earl, and bass player Tony Stevens) and two
new members (Bryan Bassett guitarist from Molly Hatchet, and Charlie Hunh,
vocalist from Ted Nugent's band) and released the studio album Family Joules
in 2003 – the first without the late "Lonesome Dave" Peverett. Tony Stevens
has since been replaced by Craig MacGregor who has played with the band in
the past.
The band has said (in Spinal Tap Goes to 20, a film documentary on This is
Spinal Tap) that the plot, and many of the incidents, in This Is Spinal Tap
were taken from their own career. Foghat had a series of bass players who
came in and left the band, much like the drummers for Spinal Tap. However,
Judas Priest had actually gone through seven drummers, and may have been the
basis for Spinal Tap's plot device.
Foghat was a notoriously "anti-disco" band. Starting in the late 1970s, when
disco was at its peak of popularity. As an antidote, bands like Foghat and
disc jockeys including Steve Dahl were adamant in denying income to people
like Harry Wayne Casey of KC and the Sunshine Band.
The TV show Still Standing has a character that plays in a Foghat tribute
band. |
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FOGHAT PICTURES |
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