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    FA-Q

     
    FAQ was the reason I drove 20 miles to Kalamazoo every weekend, and to many, the jet fuel that drove the Kazoo music scene in the late 80’s, early 90’s. With crowd-drawing liveshows and truly infectious punk/pop songs, everybody knew FAQ was going to be the first big band out of Kalamazoo.
    Robert Lewis – fashionbuddha.com

    BIO

    A collection of colleges percolating in paper mill waste and the human overflow from one of the winter-water-wonderland’s largest mental institutions, Kalamazoo, Michigan ain’t exactly the rock and roll center of the universe. Nonetheless in the summer of 1986, a small group of friends formed a small punk rock band and dubbed themselves FA-Q.

    They found a guy named Brent who was more of a screamer than singer that fit well with their high angst – high-energy music. At the time the burgeoning scene was bubbling with activity and FA-Q became the eminent punk band in town. They spent 2 years garnering a large following all over Michigan with their “We’ll play anywhere” attitude. However times and styles were as they say, “a changing”.

    In early 1989 the band parted with lead singer Brent and joined with Geoff adding not only a different voice but also a second guitar. Their music was becoming less 3-chord speed-fests and more well crafted songs. They kept their heaviness and punk ethics, and slowly evolved in to what would eventually be classified as “Grunge”.

    The next 5 years had Fa-Q changing their name to just FAQ and reluctantly deciding that the 3 letters should stand for “Foolish American Quartet”. The guys worked doing self-promotion, booking their own tours, and producing their records. Along the way they kept gathering legions of loyal fans across the Midwest and kept showing up in the media and on local college radio playlists. By this time they had put out 5 records, were selling out large theaters and toured along with and opened for many of today’s contemporaries like, Afghan Whigs, L7, Faith No More, Nirvana, Green Day and Danzig. It wasn’t long before the music industry took notice.

    And here is where it gets a little fuzzy. On the eve of signing a deal with Polygram records the band broke up. Some say it was because of drugs, or a girl, or even musical differences. These days I’m not even sure myself. Could have been all of them. All I remember is the good times. The people and cities. The bands and music. The smell of a tour van after day 20 of a 40-day tour. I wouldn’t do it again, but it was a blast nonetheles.

    MUSIC

    2 Sides Blind
    Aerobics in Japan
    All in One
    Another Political Song
    Certainteed
    Dustball
    Euthanasia Wishes
    Exit
    Fly
    Gerry
    Hafast Prose
    Hard Driving
    Little Brown Guy
    Liverbox
    My Dream
    P-Food Revisited
    Paper Food
    Quit While I Wasn’t Ahead
    Rednecks From Outer Space
    Right Now
    Rules We Bend
    She
    Sily Dreams
    Stuff
    Sweater
    Tiny Bubbles
    Twinkie
    What Will You Do
    Yup





    VIDEOS

    PICTURES

         

    THE WIDR INTERVIEW

    This interview was conducted in the early FAQ years. References to Geoff’s first show and Brents leaving the band are made putting it somewhere in 1988. The interviewer was Dave Zwart and was done for a weekly talk/music show called “sound waves’ on Western Michigan University’s campus radio station WIDR. Notable callers include chonks future wife Christy (Gerry Curl) and Monica from Baltimore who not only became a Kalamazoo resident but shot all the album photography for the Liverbox E.P. and the inside photos on the Exot/Silly Dreams 7″

    Listen Here

    PRESS

    Click here for various press clippings

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