The Bottle Rockets

  • Festus, MO
    hometown
  • Rock
    genre
  • 1992
    started
  • Bio
    full story
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About The Bottle Rockets


Festus, Missouri's Bottle Rockets ranked as one of the leading lights of the 1990s roots rock revival, thanks to a sound that bypassed the punk heritage proudly upheld by most of the band's contemporaries in favor of a redneck fusion of Southern boogie, country-folk, and crunching rock & roll. The group was fronted by singer/guitarist Brian Henneman, a Missouri native who formed his first band, Waylon Van Halen & the Ernest Tubbadours, in 1977 with friends Tom and Bob Parr. After a succession of names and a steady rise in musical competence, the threesome began landing club dates both locally and in Illinois, where they became friends with the young Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy, who would later start Uncle Tupelo.

In 1985, the trio was playing straight-ahead honky tonk under the guise Chicken Truck (so named in honor of the John Anderson song) with a new drummer, Mark Ortmann. Instead of giving in to local crowds who wanted to hear covers rather than originals, the bandmembers focused solely on performing their own material, which they began roughing up with a Crazy Horse-like edge. Shortly after frequent tour mates Uncle Tupelo signed a 1990 record deal, however, internal problems led Chicken Truck to disband; while the Parrs returned to civilian jobs, Ortmann moved to Nashville to become a session player, and Henneman became a roadie with Uncle Tupelo, even playing on their March 16-20, 1992 album.

During his roadie days, Henneman recorded a demo tape of new material, which Tupelo manager Tony Margherita began discreetly shopping around. After cutting a solo single backed by Farrar and Tweedy, he re-formed his old band with Ortmann on drums, Tom Ray on guitar, and Robert Kearns on bass, renaming the outfit the Bottle Rockets. After a 1993 self-titled effort, a year later the band issued its second independent LP, The Brooklyn Side, named after a bowling term. A portrait of life in rural blue-collar America, The Brooklyn Side was the subject of lavish critical praise, and the positive notices led to the band signing with a major label, Atlantic, which promptly reissued the album.

Shakeups at the label led to delays in the release of their next album, 1997's 24 Hours a Day, and when the album sold poorly, the Bottle Rockets were dropped. In 1998 they signed with the small Doolittle label and released an odds-and-ends EP, Leftovers; by the time they completed their next album, 1999's Brand New Year, the label had gained major-label distribution, but that deal proved to be short-lived, and in 2000 the Bottle Rockets were once again without a label. In 2001 they signed a deal with alt-country trailblazers Bloodshot Records; their first album for the label, a tribute to Doug Sahm, was released early the following year. Tom Ray left the Bottle Rockets in 2002, and the band moved ahead as a three-piece, signing yet another new record deal -- this time with Sanctuary -- in 2003, and releasing a new album, Blue Sky, in the fall of that year. Zoysia arrived on Bloodshot Records in 2006, followed by Lean Forward in 2009. In 2011 the band released Not So Loud: An Acoustic Evening, which was recorded in an old schoolhouse and featured material drawn from all eras of the band's history. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi

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  • The Bottle Rockets

Tour Dates

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  • May 30 Thursday
    Buffalo, NY, US The Sportsmen's Tavern
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  • May 31 Friday
    Cleveland, OH, US Beachland Ballroom and Tavern
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  • Jun 2 Sunday
    Grand Rapids, MI, US Tip Top Deluxe Bar & Grill
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  • Jun 3 Monday
    Milwaukee, WI, US Shank Hall
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Discography

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Next Page
  • Not So Loud: An Acoustic Evening (2011)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Not So Loud: An Acoustic Evening (2011)
    Bloodshot
  • Lean Forward (2009)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Lean Forward (2009)
    Blue Rose
  • Zoysia (2006)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Zoysia (2006)
    Evangeline (UK)
  • Blue Sky (2003)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Blue Sky (2003)
    Sanctuary
  • Songs of Sahm (2001)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Songs of Sahm (2001)
    Bloodshot
  • Brand New Year (1999)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Brand New Year (1999)
    New West Records, Inc.
  • Leftovers (1998)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Leftovers (1998)
    New West Records, Inc.
  • 24 Hours a Day (1997)
    The Bottle Rockets
    24 Hours a Day (1997)
    Atlantic
  • The Brooklyn Side (1995)
    The Bottle Rockets
    The Brooklyn Side (1995)
    ESD (East Side Digital)
  • Bottle Rockets (1993)
    The Bottle Rockets
    Bottle Rockets (1993)
    ESD (East Side Digital)
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