Geoff Kresge
Geoff Kresge | |
---|---|
Genres | Street punk, hardcore punk, punk rock, psychobilly |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter, record producer |
Instruments | Guitar, bass, upright bass |
Years active | 1992–present |
Labels | Key Lime Pie, Dead Body |
Associated acts | AFI, Influence 13, Blanks 77, Horrorpops, The Forbidden Dimension, Tiger Army, Viva Hate |
Geoff Kresge is a songwriter, guitarist, bassist, and record producer. He played with the punk rock/horror punk band AFI for most of their early career,[1] from 1992 through 1997, and co-wrote the majority of their early material alongside frontman Davey Havok. During an AFI hiatus in 1993, he briefly moved to New York to join street punk band Blanks 77. He later went on to play with Canadian horror rock group The Forbidden Dimension and also a high-energy rock band, The Daggers, before subsequently joining the psychobilly band Tiger Army.[2] Though he played an electric bass in his previous bands, for Tiger Army he chose an upright bass.
Career
Kresge joined Tiger Army in 1999 just as the band became a full-time touring band, hitting the road in support of their debut album. He appeared as standup bassist on the band's next two full-length albums, Tiger Army II: Power of Moonlite and Tiger Army III: Ghost Tigers Rise, and in each of the videos from those records. In September 2004 he announced his departure from Tiger Army. He cofounded the band Viva Hate with longtime friend Matt "Wedge" Wedgley (formerly of The Force) and joined the HorrorPops on guitar,[3] not long afterward. He cowrote and played guitar on the band's second album, Bring It On!.
In July 2007, Kresge announced that he had left HorrorPops and disbanded Dead Body Records, stating that he wished to dedicate full attention to Viva Hate, which was followed by an American tour in support of Sick of it All and Madball.
Tiger Army's official website announced Kresge's return to the band in January 2008.
Discography
With AFI
- Dork 7" EP (1993, Key Lime Pie Records)
- Behind the Times 7" EP (1993, Key Lime Pie Records)
- Eddie Picnic's All Wet live 7" EP (1994, Key Lime Pie Records)
- This Is Berkeley, Not West Bay 7" EP (1994, Zafio Records)
- Fly in the Ointment 7" (1995, Wedge Records)
- Bombing the Bay split 7" with Swingin' Utters (1995, Sessions Records)
- featuring AFI's cover of "Values Here," by Dag Nasty
- AFI/Heckle split with Heckle (late 1995, Wingnut Records)
- Answer That and Stay Fashionable (1995, Wingnut Records; re-released in 1997 on Nitro Records)
- Very Proud of Ya (1996, Nitro Records)
- Sing the Sorrow (background vocals) (2003, DreamWorks Records)
With The Daggers
- She Told Me She Said 7" vinyl on Sloth Records
- Right Between the Eyes on Sloth Records
With Tiger Army
- Temptation EP (Featured as producer) (1997, Chapter Eleven Records)
- Tiger Army II: Power of Moonlite (2001, Hellcat Records)
- Early Years EP (Background vocals) (2002, Hellcat Records)
- Tiger Army III: Ghost Tigers Rise (2004, Hellcat Records)
- Music from Regions Beyond(Background vocals) (2007, Hellcat Records)
Compilation appearances
- Give 'Em the Boot III (2002, Hellcat Records)
- Track 13 – "Power of Moonlite"
- Give 'Em the Boot IV (2004, Hellcat Records)
- Track 03 – "Atomic"
- Give 'Em the Boot V (2006, Hellcat Records)
- Track 04 – "Swift Silent Deadly"
With HorrorPops
- Bring It On! (2005, Hellcat Records)
With Viva Hate
- Hateful and Hollow Demo CD (2007, self-released)
- Save Me 7" EP (2008, Black Cat Records)
- Goodnight My Love (EP)" 7" EP (2010, Black Cat Records)
Other
- Nekromantix – Brought Back to Life Again (Digital Editing) (2005)
- 12 Step Rebels – Go Go Graveyard Rockin' with 12 Step Rebels (Featured as producer) Dead Body Records
- Graveyard Shift – Rest Without Peace (Featured as producer) Dead Body Records
- Mr. Cliff Greenwood – Musical Heritage (Digital Editing) Dead Body Records
References
- ↑ Huey, Steve. "AFI". Allmusic. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ↑ Wilson, MacKenzie. "Tiger Army". Allmusic. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ↑ Monger, James Christopher. "HorrorPops". Allmusic. Retrieved August 19, 2011.