John Joseph O'Neill | |
---|---|
Birth name | John Joseph O'Neill |
Born |
Derry, Northern Ireland |
26 August 1957
Genres | Punk rock, pop punk, new wave |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Rhythm guitar |
Years active | 1976–1994, 1999–present |
Labels |
Sire Records Ardeck Records Virgin Records |
Associated acts | The Undertones, That Petrol Emotion |
John Joseph O'Neill (born 26 August 1957) is the rhythm guitarist and principal songwriter of the punk rock/new wave band The Undertones. O'Neill, along with his younger brother Vincent and friends Feargal Sharkey, Michael Bradley and Billy Doherty, founded The Undertones in 1975, although Vincent O'Neill was replaced the following year with his younger brother Damian O'Neill, who became the band's lead guitarist.
John O'Neill wrote the majority of the band's singles and a number of album tracks (occasionally collaborating with his brother Damian or Michael Bradley). Undertones songs written by John O'Neill include the singles "Teenage Kicks", "Jimmy Jimmy", "Here Comes The Summer" and "You've Got My Number", and such notable album tracks as "When Saturday Comes" and "You're Welcome".
After releasing four albums and thirteen singles, The Undertones disbanded in 1983; they reformed in November 1999. Since then, the band (who have a new lead singer, fellow Derry native Paul McLoone who also serves as a radio presenter for the Irish national and independent radio station Today FM) have released two further albums and performed a number of gigs in both the UK, Ireland, Europe and North America.
In 1985 the O'Neill brothers formed That Petrol Emotion, an acclaimed rock act who disbanded in 1994.