Schatzi | |
---|---|
Origin | Austin, Texas, U.S. |
Genres |
Alternative rock Power pop |
Years active | 1996–2004 |
Labels | Humongous Fungus Records (1998–2000) Mammoth Records (2001–2002) Doghouse Records (2003) Quadraphonic Records (current) |
Members | Christian Kyle Montez Williams V. Marc Fort Kyle Schneider Davey McEathron |
Past members | Jason Westbrook(1996–98) Robt Ptak (1998) Jayson Altman(1996–00) Erick Sanger (1999–01) Nik Snell (2000–01) Tripp Wiggins (2000–01) Kyle Schneider (2000–02, 2013–present) Ed Davis (2003) Davey McEathron (2003–04, 2013–present) |
Schatzi is an American band from Oklahoma, based in Austin, Texas, formed in 1996 by Montez Williams, Christian Kyle, Jason Westbrook and Jason Altman.
Montez Williams, Christian Kyle, and Jason Westbrook met each other in Oklahoma, and played together in Brave New World. They moved on to start their own band, Blunderwheel that recorded one album, Roly Poly, and promptly moved to Austin, TX. The album was released in 1993 in Austin by Humongous Fungus Records. The band added drummer Jayson Altman and eventually changed the name to Schatzi in 1996. This lineup recorded their first album, Joanie Loves Schatzi, also released by Humongous Fungus in 1998. Only 1000 copies of the album were made. In 1998 the former Size 14 Bassist Robt Ptak played some shows with the band, during this time lead singer Christian Kyle was helping Ptak with songs for Ptaks solo project Artificial Joy
In 2000, with funding from the members of fellow Austin band Dynamite Hack, they recorded the Death Of The Alphabet EP with drummer Kyle Schneider and bassist Erick Sanger releasing it locally under Woppitzer Records. Their song "Death Of The Alphabet", that included back-up vocals by Adrianne Verhoeven of The Anniversary, received heavy airplay on Austin's KROX-FM. This allowed them to get a spot in the KROX Christmas concert. The band and its EP became the subject of major-label bidding in 2001, and they were ultimately signed by Mammoth Records, who re-released their EP (produced by Ed Rose) nationally. V. Marc Fort and Mark Ford joined on bass and drums, respectively, between the release of the two versions.
Four songs from Death Of The Alphabet made it onto their 2002 full-length album, Fifty Reasons To Explode. Released by Mammoth, Fifty Reasons to Explode reached #1 on the "Radio 200 Adds" chart of CMJ New Music Report in March 2002 and appeared on the magazine's "Radio 200" list for 11 weeks during that year, peaking at #20.CMJ New Music Monthly called the album "well produced pop punk that has just as much in common with NOFX and Lagwagon as it does with Jimmy Eat World and Braid."The Post and Courier's reviewer cited the record's "power pop gems and compared the band to Foo Fighters, Superdrag, The Ramones, and The Posies.