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Quiet Riot's
roots go way back to 1975 when
they were formed by vocalist Kevin
DuBrow and guitarist Randy Rhoads.
They took their name from a
suggestion by Status Quo's Rick
Parfitt and had their "five
minutes of fame" with a remake of
Slade's "Cum on Feel the Noize" in
1983. Their first two albums,
released in 1978 and 1979, were
recorded specifically for the
Japanese teen market and remain
collector's items to this day.
Their third album, "Metal Health",
however, reached number one on the
US charts and sold in excess of
five million copies in the US
alone, the first metal album to
reach that position.
Unfortunately, though, they were
unable to maintain that momentum,
with subsequent albums not doing
nearly as well. Rhoads left to
join Ozzy Osbourne's band and was
replaced by Carlos Cavazo. The
other members at the time of the
chart busting "Metal Health" album
were drummer Frankie Banali and
bassist Rudy Sarzo. They split in
the late eighties with the various
members moving on to Little Women,
Bad Boys, WASP and Faster
Pussycat. They reformed in 1993
with a more "mature" sound and
released the excellent "Terrified"
album that year. This album was
equally as good, but it's not
known if it made any waves on the
charts. 1999 saw them release a
very good live album called "Alive
and Well", and they are, truly
alive, well and sounding great.
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Biography by Eduardo Rivadavia
For a very brief moment, Quiet
Riot was a rock & roll
phenomenon. Famously described
as the first heavy metal band to
top the pop chart (a claim that
greatly depends on one's exact
definition of heavy metal), the
Los Angeles quartet became an
overnight sensation thanks to
their monster 1983 smash album
Metal Health. But Quiet Riot's
road to success had in fact been
long and arduous, and when their
star power subsequently began
too fade, their fall from grace
was ironically accelerated by
the man who was most responsible
for taking them to the top:
singer Kevin DuBrow. Unable to
suppress his infamous motor
mouth from assaulting many of
Quiet Riot's peers, DuBrow
gradually alienated his fans and
fellow musicians, and in the
face of plummeting record sales,
faced the iniquity of being
fired from his own band. The
dust eventually settled and
DuBrow was able to resurrect
Quiet Riot in the 1990s, but
despite their best efforts, the
once chart-topping band would
remain forever exiled to the
fringes of pop conscience, and
what might once have been a full
chapter in rock history has
instead become little more than
a footnote.The story of Quiet
Riot begins with vocalist Kevin
DuBrow and guitarist Randy
Rhoads, who started the band in
1975 after disbanding an earlier
project named Violet Fox, and
completed their first lineup
with bassist Kelli Garni and
drummer Drew Forsyth. Along with
local scene contemporaries like
Van Halen, Xciter, and London,
the band thrilled audiences
packing the L.A. nightclubs, but
found it difficult to land a
record deal during the
disco-dominated late '70s.
Eventually securing a contract
with Columbia Records in Japan,
they recorded two moderately
successful albums — a 1978
eponymous debut and 1979's Quiet
Riot II, featuring new bassist
Rudy Sarzo — before losing
Rhoads (and later Sarzo) to Ozzy
Osbourne's band (and later a
tragic plane accident, rock &
roll martyrdom, immortality,
etc.). Quiet Riot disbanded and
DuBrow formed a new band under
his own name, working with
several musicians over the next
few years before signing with
independent Pasha Records,
reverting to the Quiet Riot
moniker, and entering the studio
with new guitarist Carlos Cavazo
and bassist Chuck Wright to
start work on a new album. The
year was 1982 and, following
Randy Rhoads' well-documented
demise, former henchman Sarzo
quit Ozzy, pushed Wright out of
the way, and brought friend and
drummer Frankie Banali into the
fold to complete the lineup and
sessions for what would become
1983's Metal Health. Driven by
the irresistible double whammy
of the title track's muscular
bassline (reputedly played by
Wright before his dismissal) and
a raucous rendition of the old
Slade chestnut "Cum on Feel the
Noize," the album stormed up the
U.S. charts, duly reaching the
number one spot and going
platinum five times over in the
process. Their unexpected
success shocked everyone, not
least of which the bandmembers,
who found it pretty hard to cope
with sudden stardom and the
pitfalls that came with
it.Pressured to capitalize on
their hot streak, Quiet Riot was
rushed back into the studio to
whip together 1984's Condition
Critical, but unsurprisingly,
the album was little more than a
weak carbon copy of Metal Health
— even sinking so low as to
include another chart-ready
Slade cover in "Mama Weer All
Crazee Now." Fans were
unimpressed, and panic set in as
the band watched the record
quickly sliding off the charts
to make way for fresher,
up-and-coming L.A. glam metal
contenders like Mötley Crüe and
Ratt. An incensed DuBrow went on
a rampage, incessantly slagging
fellow metal bands, members of
the press, and his own record
company, in the process quite
literally burning most every
bridge he'd worked so hard to
build. The abusive behavior also
began wearing on his band mates,
and by the time they re-grouped
to launch a comeback with 1986's
QR III, Sarzo was long gone
(later joining Whitesnake) and
had been replaced by former
bassist Chuck Wright, most
recently working with Giuffria.
A failed experiment in
ultra-glossy '80s metal, QR III
was a third-rate Hysteria
possessing none of its
predecessor's blue-collar grit
and became an even bigger flop,
sending Quiet Riot into an
irreversible tailspin. Mounting
tension resulted in an all-out
band mutiny at tour's end, with
DuBrow finding himself abandoned
at the hotel in Hawaii, while
the remaining musicians and crew
left on an earlier flight back
to L.A. Furious, he watched in
disbelief from the sidelines as
Rough Cutt vocalist Paul
Shortino stepped into his shoes
and recorded 1988's simply named
Quiet Riot with Cavazo, Banali,
and new bassist Sean McNabb. The
album's absolutely abysmal sales
offered little consolation, and
DuBrow finally gave up on
diplomacy and filed an
injunction against his former
colleagues (apparently he still
owned rights to the name),
successfully bringing Quiet Riot
to a stuttering halt. Frankie
Banali said "good riddance" and
jumped ship to join L.A.
shock-metal kings W.A.S.P.,
while the remaining bandmembers
went to ground.Then, come 1991,
DuBrow and Cavazo began working
together once again in a band
called Heat. In time, they began
using the Quiet Riot name once
again, eventually recording
1993's Terrified with bassist
Kenny Hillery and a returning
Banali. Down to the Bone
followed two years later, and in
1997, a one-off performance at a
party hosted by industrial shock
rocker Marilyn Manson lured
bassist Rudy Sarzo back to the
fold. With their classic lineup
intact once again, a
re-energized Quiet Riot hit the
road playing clubs across
America. Public response was
less than enthusiastic, however,
and the band usually couldn't
get arrested — except for
DuBrow, who spent a night in
jail after a tour stop in
Charlotte, NC, where an irate
fan had sued him for injuries
sustained at a previous show.
This and other roadside
misadventures were captured on
1999's optimistically named
Alive and Well live album, and
2001 saw the release of Guilty
Pleasures, the first recording
by the band's classic lineup in
17 years. Unfortunately, but
unsurprisingly, said album
wasn't able to capture lightning
in a bottle for a second time,
and Quiet Riot quietly broke up
shortly thereafter.

Frankie Banali
Carlos Cavazo
Kevin DuBrow
Drew Forsyth
Kelly Garni
Kenny Hillery
Randy Rhoads
Bob Rondinelli
Rudy Sarzo
Paul Shortino
Sean McNabb
Chuck Wright

Scorpions
Ozzy Osbourne
Judas Priest
Kick Axe
Killer Dwarfs
Hanoi Rocks
Mötley Crüe
Whitesnake
Ratt
Bon Jovi
Kiss
Sammy Hagar
Twisted Sister
Iron Maiden
Dokken

If you
have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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