The Oc Supertones I Want Be Born Again Lyrics

American ska band

The O.C. Supertones

Also known equally The Orange County Supertones, The Supertones, The 'Tones
Origin California, U.s.
Genres Christian ska, ska punk, third wave ska[1]
Years active 1995–2005, 2010–2017
Labels Molar & Nail, BEC
Website www.ocsupertones.com
Past members Matt "Mojo" Morginsky
Jason Carson
Tony Terusa
Darren Mettler
Nathan Spencer
Jesse Craig
Josh Auer
Daniel Spencer
Ethan Luck
Bret Barker
Chris Beaty
John Wilson
Dave Chevalier
Adam Ferry
Brian Johnson
Kevin "Slim" Chen
Hashemite kingdom of jordan Stroup
Jason Joel Lautenschleger
Tom Kieft
Gerben Postma

The Orange County Supertones (a.k.a. The O.C. Supertones, or simply The Supertones) were a Christian ska band from Orange County, California. The band was signed to Tooth & Nail Records and its imprint, BEC Recordings, before becoming an contained ring. The band temporarily disbanded in 2005, though reunited in 2010 to resume touring and recording earlier permanently disbanding in 2017. The OC Supertones were one of the first widely successful Christian ska bands.

History [edit]

The ring began in the early 1990s as Saved.[1] Originally formed by Matt Morginsky, Jason Carson and Tony Terusa while in inferior high school,[2] the band played a mix of many styles including punk, rap, metallic, disco, and funk.[3] In 1995 they formed as The Orangish County Supertones and settled on a ska based sound, similar to Functioning Ivy or Mike Park'southward Skankin' Pickle.[2] Although drummer Jason Carson had known Tooth & Nail founder Brandon Ebel for years, the characterization was reluctant to sign them. As characterized by Ebel: "The Supertones were good, simply Saved was not skilful. I had years of Saved in my head."[4]

The Supertones' debut release, Adventures of the O.C. Supertones, received a 1997 Pigeon nomination for the "Alternate / Modernistic Rock" category.[five] Their second album, 1997'south release Supertones Strike Back, was a surprise blast hit, peaking on both Billboard's Heatseekers and Elevation Christian Albums charts at No. 3 and No. 2 respectively. In the fall of 1997 the Supertones headlined a tour with Ghoti Hook and Stavesacre, and the next spring opened for Audio Adrenaline,[6] with whom they recorded "Blitz" with on the Audio Adrenaline album Some Kind of Zombie, also in 1997.

In belatedly 1998 they embarked on the all-Christian-ska "Skamania 98" tour with The Insyderz and Five Atomic number 26 Frenzy.[seven] In 1999 the Supertones played for the papal visit to St. Louis by Pope John Paul Ii.[viii]

Start with a more traditional ska audio, The Supertones moved next to a harder rock sound, which eventually changed again with more of a pop-stone influence. The band explained the musical evolution to CCM: "pop culture has the attending span of a flea... ska's time in the white-hot spotlight has come up and gone."[nine] When saxophonist Dave Chevalier joined The Dingees in 1998, the band made the determination not to supersede his position. Rap and R&B influences also became more than prevalent in their sound, which remained "nigh 40 percent reminiscent of the older stuff."[7] Their next 2 albums, 1999'south Chase the Lord's day and 2000's Loud and Clear, each charted on the Billboard 200 chart.[ten]

"The Supertones' main message is Christ and Him crucified. Nosotros want to assistance people understand certain doctrinal truths."

—Matt Morginsky in 1997.[11]

Lyrically, they were known as having a straightforward approach to songwriting, with a minimal use of metaphor.[12] However, their songs were cited as existence idea-provoking and containing deep theology.[2] One of the major focuses for the band was evangelism;[thirteen] they included segments of preaching in each operation.[vi] [fourteen] Originally these were fronted by drummer Jason Carson, who had been active in youth ministry before the Supertones found their break.[7] In 2000 when he went dorsum into ministry total-time the ring split the responsibilities among remaining members.[15] Adam Ferry, formerly of Plankeye, took Carson's spot on drums.

They continued to release albums until 2005, when they appear plans to break upward. The band released Unite, a greatest hits compilation, and played their concluding show at Biola University in La Mirada, California on Oct 7, 2005. Sometime members Jason Carson, Darren Mettler and Tony Terusa re-joined the band on stage for iii songs. Kevin "Slim" Chen was on paw merely did not play with the band. The Supertones played for 2 12 hours at their terminal show, playing close to 30 songs.

Hiatus [edit]

On March 11, 2008 BEC Recordings, Inc. released "The Ultimate Collection," a sort of greatest hits album with select songs from each of the band's studio albums, with the exception of "Revenge of the O.C. Supertones," which has no tracks represented.

On February 12, 2008, quondam Supertones guitarist Ethan Luck became the newest fellow member playing drums for the Christian pop-punk band, Relient K.

Former front human Matt Morginsky released his debut solo album, "Doctorate in Cold Rockin' It" under the moniker Mojo & the Info via iTunes and MySpace on Apr 20, 2008. He also released a CD entitled "Everything Will Be Made Right" with the band Oct Lite, as Mojo and Oct Light.

Former guitarist Kevin "Slim" Chen now plays in the rock/popular punk band New Liars Lodge with former members of Gameface and the rock band Follow Your Failure.

Original drummer Jason Carson is founder and senior pastor of Encounter Church in Orange County, California.

Reunion and second disbandment [edit]

In 2010, The Supertones announced that most of the original members would be reuniting for a handful of dates that year then going back into retirement. The ensuing bout had fifteen shows, including Joshua Fest in Quincy, CA, Soulfest in New Hampshire and Spirit West Coast in Del Mar, CA.[16] Reunite, another greatest hits album, was released during this time also. At the cease of 2010, the band appear that they would continue to play ten or so shows a year going forrad.

On March iii, 2012, original members Matt Morginsky, Tony Terusa, Jason Carson and Darren Mettler along with new band members[17] announced progress on the full-length album, For the Celebrity funded via Kickstarter. "On the Downbeat" was released in advance of the album on March 9, 2012, as a teaser.[xviii] The album released on November six, 2012.

On March 11, 2017, the ring appear plans for a concert on Facebook Live in which they would exist performing Supertones Strike Dorsum in its entirety recognizing the album's 20th anniversary, as well equally serving every bit their last performance as a band. Held at Shoreline Church in San Clemente, California, the bear witness was recorded for a live album and DVD release.[19]

Ring members [edit]

Final lineup

  • Matt Morginsky - lead vocals (1995–2005, 2010–2017)
  • Jason Carson - drums (1995–2001, 2010–2017) formerly of Unashamed
  • Tony "Toneman" Terusa - bass guitar (1995–2003, 2010–2017)
  • Darren "Chief" Mettler - trumpet (1995–2004, 2010–2017)
  • Nathan Spencer - trombone (2010–2017)
  • Jesse Craig - guitar (2010–2017)
  • Josh Auer - guitar (2011–2017)

Past members

  • Daniel Spencer - trombone (1995–2005)
  • Ethan Luck - guitar (2000–2005) formerly of Demon Hunter and other bands
  • John Wilson - drums (2001–2005)
  • Chris Beaty - bass guitar (2003–2005)
  • Bret Barker - trumpet (2004–2005)
  • Kevin "Slim" Chen - guitar (1995–1997) formerly of Mortality[20]
  • Jason Joel Lautenschleger - saxophone (1996–1997)
  • Dave Chevalier - saxophone (1996–1998)
  • Brian "Bronson" Johnson - guitar (1999)
  • Adam Ferry - drums (2001)
  • Bram Roberts - trumpet (mid-2002)
  • Jung Park - guitar
  • Tom Kieft - guitar (1998–1999)
  • Jordan Stroup - saxophone (1998–1999)

Timeline

Discography [edit]

Studio albums

  • Adventures of the O.C. Supertones (1996)
  • Supertones Strike Back (1997)
  • Chase the Sun (1999)
  • Loud and Articulate (2000)
  • Hi-Fi Revival (2002)
  • Revenge of the O.C. Supertones (2004)
  • Faith of a Child (2005)
  • For the Glory (2012)

Live albums

  • Live! Volume One (2002)
  • Live! Vol 2 (2017)

Compilations

  • Absolute Favorite Christmas
  • Whatever Given Day
  • Veggie Rocks!
  • Tooth and Boom quaternary ceremony Box Gear up
  • Tooth and Nail 10th anniversary Box Set
  • Art Core Vol.2
  • Cheapskates Vol. ii
  • Cheapskates Vol. 3
  • Cheapskates Vol. 4
  • X 2003
  • Moms Like Us Too Vol. 1
  • Happy Christmas Vol. i
  • Happy Christmas Vol. 2
  • Seltzer Vol. 1
  • Seltzer Vol. iii
  • WOW 1999
  • WOW 2000
  • Boss in 98
  • Steady Sounds From The Undercover
  • BEC Sampler Vol. 1
  • Songs from the penalty box Vol. two
  • Unite (2005)
  • No Lies
  • The O.C. Supertones: The Ultimate Collection (2008)

Charts [edit]

Billboard (Due north America)[10]

Year Album US Hot 200 The states Heatseekers Tiptop Contemporary Christian
1996 The Adventures of the O.C. Supertones - - 36
1997 The Adventures of the O.C. Supertones - - 35
1997 Supertones Strike Dorsum 117 3 2
1999 Hunt the Sunday 95 - 2
2000 Loud and Articulate 168 9 10
2002 Hullo-Fi Revival - - 28
2002 Live! Vol. i - - 20
2004 Revenge of the O.C. Supertones - - 17

Video compilations [edit]

  • Supertones at the Movies
  • Hi-Fi Revival DVD
  • Encounter Spot Stone

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "The O.C. Supertones | Biography & History". AllMusic . Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c Powell, Mark Allan (2002). Encyclopedia of Gimmicky Christian Music (Beginning printing ed.). Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers. pp. 902–904. ISBN1-56563-679-1.
  3. ^ "Profile - The Supertones". October 1999. Retrieved Feb 15, 2007.
  4. ^ Bonham, Republic of chad (May–June 1998). "Tooth & Smash". 7ball (18): 22–25. ISSN 1082-3980.
  5. ^ Todd, Darleen (Winter 1998). "A Ska Primer". True Tunes News: 12–14.
  6. ^ a b Urbanski, David (July 1997). "I Crazy Summer". CCM Magazine. twenty (i): 24–32. ISSN 1524-7848.
  7. ^ a b c Carlozo, Lou (February 1999). "Super Tone Deaf". CCM Magazine. 21 (8). ISSN 1524-7848. Quote by Brandon Ebel.
  8. ^ Newcomb, Brian Quincy (April 1999). "Pope Visits St. Louis". CCM Mag. 21 (10): 12–thirteen. ISSN 1524-7848.
  9. ^ Carlozo, Lou (November 2000). "A Twelvemonth of Kryptonite". CCM Magazine. 23 (5): 56–58. ISSN 1524-7848.
  10. ^ a b "( The O.C. Supertones > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums )". Allmusic. Retrieved February 15, 2007.
  11. ^ Brown, Bruce A. (July–Baronial 1997). "super tones". 7ball (13): 12–14. ISSN 1082-3980.
  12. ^ Hill, Don (1996). "Reviews / Adventures of the O.C. Supertones". Cornerstone. 25 (109): 58. ISSN 0275-2743.
  13. ^ "Life in the Fast Lane". CCM Magazine. 20 (4): xiii. October 1997. ISSN 1524-7848.
  14. ^ Hendrickson, Lucas W. (June 1996). "On Tour: The Supertones / Switchfoot / Relient K, 328 Performance Hall, Nashville, TN". CCM Mag. 23 (12): 47. ISSN 1524-7848.
  15. ^ "Hard News'". HM Mag (87): 12. January–Feb 2001. ISSN 1066-6923.
  16. ^ annal of Supertones Official Web Site originally Supertones Official Spider web Site
  17. ^ "For The Glory by The O.C. Supertones". becrecordings.com. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013. Retrieved January 5, 2013.
  18. ^ "OC Supertones New Album!!! by OC Supertones » Comments — Kickstarter". Kickstarter.com. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
  19. ^ "The O.C. Supertones". The O.C. Supertones <via Facebook. March 11, 2017. Retrieved March 12, 2017.
  20. ^ "Solid State Records | Artist | Mortality". Archived from the original on Apr 26, 2015. Retrieved April 26, 2015.

External links [edit]

  • Official website

mcleoduntowent50.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_O.C._Supertones

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