The Pagans | |
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Origin | Cleveland, Ohio, United States |
Genres | Punk rock |
Years active | 1977-1979, 1982-1983, 1986-1989, 2014-present |
Labels | Neck Records, Drome, Crypt Records, Terminal Records, Treehouse Records, Glitterhouse Records, Smog Veil Records, Ruin Discos |
Associated acts | The Mad Staggers, Defnics, Broncs, the Clocks, Radio Alarm Clocks, Les Raving Sounds, the Cramps, the Kingpins, Jules Baptiste/Red Decade, Chris Bond Band, the Ashley Alexander Big Band, Backbønes, the Droogs, Cheetah Chrome and the Ghetto Dogs, GG Allin, the Murder Junkies, the Highrollers, the Styrenes, Cobra Verde, Einstein's Secret Orchestra, Motherfucker 666, Lurid, Chelsea Hotel |
Members | Mike Hudson John Dzubak Eric Schrader Justin Lack |
Past members | Brian Hudson Tim Allee Robert Conn (Bill Digiddio) Mike "Tommy Gunn" Metoff Bob Richey Chas Smith David Scott Liston Loren Molinare Mike D'Amico Tony Matteucci Ben Reagan |
The Pagans are an American punk rock band from Cleveland, Ohio, that was originally active from 1977 to 1979. They reformed several times, from 1982-1983, from 1986-1989 and again in 2014. Along with fellow Cleveland band The Dead Boys, the Pagans were part of the first wave of American punk music, and were also part of the second wave of Cleveland proto-punk and post-punk bands such as Pere Ubu.
Known for their single "Street Where Nobody Lives" and dynamic live performances, the Pagans were an influential band that was overlooked during their first two tenures. Since then, reappraisals of second-wave punk groups have resulted in acclaim from critics.
Another Pagans song, "What's This Shit Called Love?", was covered by the Meatmen on their 1985 album War of the Superbikes.
The precursor to the Pagans was basement garage rock band the Mad Staggers, formed in 1974 by brothers Mike Hudson (guitar) and Brian Hudson (drums), and bassist Tim Allee. They formed the Pagans in 1977, adding singer Robert Conn (née Bill Digiddio) and issuing a debut single that year, "Six and Change". By 1978, Conn had left (joining Defnics), with Mike Hudson switching to vocals and the addition of guitarist Mike "Tommy Gunn" Metoff. The Pagans released three additional singles: ""Street Where Nobody Lives" (1978), "Dead End America" (1979) and "Not Now No Way" (1979). After failed album sessions, the band broke up in November 1979.
Metoff subsequently formed the Clocks, later known as Radio Alarm Clocks, while Allee played in Broncs.
In 1982, Mike Hudson and Metoff joined forces again in new band Les Raving Sounds, which transformed into a new lineup of the Pagans, also featuring Conn on bass, Bob Richey on drums and Chas Smith on keyboards. This lineup toured and released The Pagans LP (later reissued as The Pink Album) before splitting again in 1983. Metoff then joined the Cramps from 1983-1984.
In 1986, Treehouse Records issued Buried Alive, a vinyl LP compilation of their recordings, sparking another Pagans reunion and resulting in the release of The Godlike Power of the Pagans Live (1987). This lineup (Mike Hudson, Metoff, Allee, Richey and additional drummer David Scott Liston) ended in 1989, although recordings from 1988-1989 were later issued on the 1990 German album Family Fare and live release The Blue Album (2008).