Группа образована в 1978 году в США.
Первый альбом этой группы стал одним из самых впечатляющих коммерческих дебютов в
рок-истории: пластинка, записанная за 11 дней, обошедшаяся музыкантам в 18 тысяч долларов, - сумму более чем скромную, через 13 дней после выхода была уже «золотой», через семь недель - «платиновой», а к концу 1979 года ее тираж превысил пять миллионов. Так приняли альбом слушатели, однако критики усмотрели в музыке The Knack прямые заимствования из The Beatles и окрестили группу «музыкальной фальшивкой». Однако коммерческий успех породил последователей (в музыке The Knack также значительное место занимали элементы «новой волны» и панк-рока с весьма смелыми текстами), но одновременно в прессе началась кампания, направленная против группы, поскольку музыканты категорически отказывались встречаться с журналистами и давать интервью. Несмотря на то, что пресса пыталась представить The Knack как «группу без прошлого», основные композиторы группы Фиджер и Аверр еще в 1971 году входили в состав группы Sky, с которой записали два альбома. К середине 70-х они уже познакомились с будущими коллегами, и все четверо работали в качестве сейшнменов. Успех первого альбома и сопровождавшая его шумиха заразили музыкантов банальной «звездной болезнью» - они принялись менять менеджеров и продюсеров, записали еще два менее успешных диска, «провалили» турне 1982 года и, в конце концов, распались. Аверр, Гари и Найлз собрали группу Game, а Фиджер организовал собственный коллектив под названием Doug Fieger's Taking Chances.
Однако их первый альбом - особенно сингл с него «My Sharona» - продолжал пользоваться популярностью, и через десять лет после распада The Knack собрались вновь (но без Гари), записали альбом и снова забились в нору. Время от времени они выступали с концертами, в которых участвовал и Гари, а потом записали диск «Zoom». После чего место Гари за ударной установкой окончательно занял Терри Боззио (экс-Missing Persons, Frank Zappa's Band). В 2001 году The Knack выпустили свой очередной диск.
Дуг Фиджер - гитара, вокал
Бертон Аверр - гитара
Прескотт Найлз - бас-гитара
Брюс Гари – ударные
Дискография:
Get The Knack (Capitol) - 1979
... But The Little Girls Understand (Capitol) - 1980
Round Trip (Capitol) - 1982
Serious Fun (Charisma) - 1991
The Retrospective: The Best Of The Knack (Capitol)-1992
My Sharona (СЕМА)-1992
Banding (Foundation) - 1996
Zoom (Rhino) - 1998
Very Best Of The Knack (Rhino) - 1998
Best Of The Knack (EMI-Capitol) - 1999
Premium Gold Collection (EMI) - 2001
Normal As The Next Guy (Image) - 2001
Live From The Rock 'N' Roll Funhouse (Zen) – 2002
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
There have been several bands with this name:
1. The Knack was a Los Angeles-based new wave/power pop band from Detroit, Michigan. They rose to fame with their first single, "My Sharona", which was an international hit in 1979. The power pop of "My Sharona", coupled with the band's retro 60s look, earned the band comparisons to The Beatles (though the band members themselves viewed the 'New Beatles' label as tongue-in-cheek). Many music critics hated disco, which dominated the music industry at the time, and were, at best, coolly receptive to other developing trends like punk, electronica, and heavy metal.
The Knack's hard rock influences earned them some critical credibility and massive commercial success with their debut album, 1979's 'Get The Knack'. The band had formed in May 1978, known at first as '20/20', and, after shopping their demo tape to various record labels without success, they began playing the local club circuit. Quickly gaining a following as musicians such as Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen praised them, they finally signed with Capitol Records in January 1979. Reaching #1 on the Billboard 200 chart, 'Get The Knack' has earned praise for decades, with Kurt Cobain in particular claiming it as one of his top fifty albums of all time.
While fans praised their new wave and power pop fueled sound, many critics still found issues with the group's in-your-face image in their lyrics, with accusations of misogyny popping up. After subsequent releases, the social backlash against the Knack (similar to that of The Monkees a generation earlier) was strong. Dave Marsh of 'Rolling Stone' in particular wrote, "In Fieger's lyrics, women are literally commodities whose chief purpose is to be brutalized." A 'Knuke the Knack' campaign emerged based on that as well as the perceived corporate-based over-hype. With their second album, '...But the Little Girls Understand', getting less commercial success (doing well, but not up to expectations), the band broke up mid-tour on New Year’s Day 1982. Besides the turmoil around the group, they also faced near total burnout among themselves, particularly given Fieger's drugs-heavy lifestyle, and the band members reportedly hadn't the energy to do much of anything after their third album, 'Round Trip', came out.
They re-united sporadically several years later and released a new album on January 16, 1991, titled 'Serious Fun'. A comeback accompanied by a public reunion and tour, it failed to reach either commercial or critical success but resulted in the hit single "Rocket O' Love", which reached #9 in Billboard's Mainstream Rock Chart. They continued playing through the 90s and into the new millennium, with 2003's 'Re-Zoom' (or 'Zoom') being their last studio album. Commercial airplay mostly eluded the group over the 90s, but a generation of new fans who loved 80s-era new wave music provided a devoted cult following. Lead singer and main songwriter Doug Fieger was diagnosed with cancer in 2005. Fieger battled the disease until his death on Valentine's Day 2010.
Fieger, a native of Detroit, Michigan, had previously played in a country rock band called Sky. Of the three other original members of the Knack (Berton Averre - Guitar, Prescott Niles - Bass, and Bruce Gary - Drums), Averre and Niles remained with the group as it ended. Gary died of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2006. Several drummers had played for the group over the years, including Billy Ward (Serious Fun album), Terry Bozzio (Zoom album), and David Henderson as 'Holmes Jones' (Normal as the Next Guy and Live at the Rock N Roll Funhouse albums). Pat Torpey (Mr. Big) played the drums for the group right before they ended.
2. The Knack was a short-lived 1960s psych/garage band from Los Angeles, CA., United States. They recorded for Capitol Records. Formed in 1965, the band comprising Mike Chain (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Dink Kaplan (lead guitar, backing vocals), Larry Gould (bass, backing vocals) and Pug Baker (drums), formally débuted at The Ice House in October 1966 and released four singles in total, of which Time Waits For No One was the best-seller. They toured throughout the U.S. but worked most frequently in Hollywood.
3. The Knack were originally known as The Londoners, a moniker they adopted whilst paying their beat group dues in the clubs of Germany in the early 60s. Upon returning to the UK in 1965 and changing their name to the rather hipper The Knack (after the recently released Richard Lester film), they recorded half a dozen singles for Decca and Piccadilly including the mod R&B ravers "She Ain't No Good", "Time Time Time" and "Stop!". Their final single, "(Man From The) Marriage Guidance And Advice Bureau", featured a more mature acoustic sound, which nodded towards both The Kinks and the impending psychedelic explosion. They broke up in 1967 and leader Paul Gurvitz formed the band The Gun. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.