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Band
| Dallan
| Gary | John
| Tim
John
Colby grew up in Dublin, OH with dreams of being
a pro baseball player. His formative years in
the midwest were mostly devoted to his goal of
becoming the first basemen for the Cincinatti
Reds (Dan Dreissen being his idol, and 22 being
his favorite number). Although sports were his
first love, mistress music would soon gain his
affections.
John's
first musical memories were a mish mash instilled
by the diverse interests of his older sister
and his parents. While his sister was turning
him onto Cheap Trick, The Cars and AC/DC, his
hip Mother was gracious enough to buy him Fleetwood
Mac's "Rumours", The Beatles' "Let
It Be", Led Zeppelin's "In Through
The Out Door", The Commodors' "Midnight
Magic" and the soundtrack to the animated
movie Heavy Metal. His Father, Lewis Colby,
however, was marching to the beat of a very
different drummer. As a member of folk icons
The Leedsmen, John's Father was playing acoustic
guitar and banjo throughout the midwest and
southern United States from a very early age.
By the time John was a young lad, his Father
was only playing weekends, but his enthusiasm
for traditional string music had far from waned.
He fed John a healthy dose of Kinston Trio,
Jim Croce, John Denver and James Taylor. John's
Dad continues to play three shows a week to
this day, although traditional Irish folk music
is now his forte.
The
musical seeds were in place, but it took moving
to a seemingly unfertile landscape to make them
grow. Before long, John would relocate to the
desert, but he'll always remain a Midwestern
boy at heart. His Ohio years had a lasting influence,
as evidenced by his continuing devotion to the
Browns and his faithful canine companion named
Cleveland.
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After
relocating to Tempe, AZ, John's interest in
sports continued but music started to play a
bigger and bigger role. MTV's constant barrage
of colorful rock videos started to take it's
toll and convinced him that his paper route
money would be best spent on a cheap Hondo electric
guitar. What's more, his high school was one
of the few in the area that actually offered
a classical guitar class as an elective. The
explosive arrival of bands like Def Leppard
mixed with Mr. Diaz's fun, effective tutelage
led to John forming his very first band, Zero
Discipline. After getting more serious and actually
applying some discipline, Zero Discipline soon
became The Trend, a pop band in the vein of
The Producers and Duran Duran, which played
many gigs over the next two years. It is very
interesting to note that four of the five members
of The Trend became professional musicians and
all continue to make their musical livings here
in the Phoenix area. What's more, three of them,
John Colby, Stephanie Fox and Gary Sanchez,
still play together to this day (Rock
Lobster, anyone?).
After
moving out of his Dad's house (John sites musical
differences as the reason for the break up),
John's new room mate, Tim Teal, would also became
his new lead singer. A fateful offer to play
a frat party led to the hasty formation of Method
U, an original band with Gary Sanchez again
on drums. Influenced by The Smiths, The Chameleons
and Caterwaul (hometown heroes signed to I.R.S.
records) they quickly moved on to playing hip
venues such as The Sun Club, Max's 919 and Edcel's
Attic and gaining a very decent following on
the local scene.
They
recorded their first 8 songs at a local studio
in 1987. High school friend, Pete Deluca was
working for Channel 10 and had access to equipment
that most bands did not. With a college project
as an excuse, Pete's favorite Method U song,
"Footsteps Race" became a high quality
video that went on to get local play on Friday
Night Videos. A second track, "1800",
was picked up by an underground skateboarding
video with national distribution.
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Inevitable
personnel changes continued to evolve the band.
The first line-up change resulted in an album's
worth of tracks ("Mundane Through Friday")
that found John taking over lead vocals as well
as his usual guitar duties. Though still a four
piece in the studio, John's brother Drew was
recruited to play keys for the live shows. Then,
after their bassist left, Method U called it
quits and everyone went their separate ways.
Oddly, after five years as a band and several
recording sessions, Method U never officially
released a record. Even so, who knows how many
young skate punks around the country were inspired
to start their own bands after purchasing "Licsence
To Skate."
In 1994,
in the aftermath of Method U, John met and became
good friends with Ben Montoya, another local
guitarist with some song ideas of his own, and
they talked about putting a band together. Drummer
Gary Sanchez had just returned home from a European
tour with Talk of the Town and was ready for
a new project as well. They formed a three-piece
called The Cells. There was only one problem.
With Ben playing guitar, John's edge-inspired
lead playing was no longer needed. What was
needed was a bass player. John made the switch
to bass guitar and it has been his primary instrument
ever since. Unfortunately, where the bass stuck,
The Cells did not. After one album and only
one lonely show, Ben moved to California.
During
an extended stint in college, John was brought
on board for Pop Culture. With Gary Sanchez
again behind the kit, John took over guitar,
bass and vocal duties. Pop Culture only lasted
about a year, but was significant in that it
was John's first cover band.
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After
an almost two year hiatus from performing, during
which, school and full time work as a bartender
were his focus, John came back to music with
recharged batteries and a renewed sense of what
he wanted in a band. 1995 saw the formation
of a band that would take the Scottsdale music
scene by storm and have continued success for
over a decade. The band was initially intended
to include Stephanie Fox, John's ex-bandmate
(and ex-girlfriend) from The Trend on co-lead
vocals and feature great male and female cover
songs. However, initial band plans moved forward
so quickly, that before he even had a chance
to contact her, the line-up was set. John knew
singer Scott McDonald from back when Scott was
performing in a heavily sequenced cover band
at the same time Method U was playing out, and
Gary had met guitar ace Allan Chadwick from
doing session work. The first gig was booked
before the band even had a name. When the local
paper called to find out what moniker to include
in the advertisement, they had to think quickly.
Nothing abstract came to mind so they turned
to the last names of the band members themselves
for inspiration. The Colby's was immediately
rejected as it smacked of a certain prime-time
soap opera gracing television screens in the
mid-80's called "Dallas". The McDonald's
and The Sanchez's just didn't seem to roll off
the tongue. For lack of something truly snappy
and time running out, The Chadwicks would have
to do.
The
band floundered a bit at first with the usual
growing pains. Scott's sequencing influence
filled out the sound of the band quite nicely,
but he wasn't quite working out. John and Gary
decided to reunite with Method U alumnus Tim
Teal. Tim had been enjoying success with August
Red until they had recently split up and left
him looking for a new project. He had been interested
in joining The Chadwicks from the very beginning
and now he had his chance. John, Gary and Tim
were back together again for the first time
in 5 years (and 10 years later, they still are).
Within
a year or so, The Chadwicks were already highly
in demand, playing three or four nights a week
around Tempe and Scottsdale. It was at this
point, while the band was being stretched fairly
thin, that a club owner suggested that a second,
offshoot band might be advantageous for everyone
involved. The Martini Ranch's owners, drunk
from the money they were making off of The Chadwicks
consistent crowd pull, were looking for a way
to capitalize even further. John heeded the
call and quickly put together an 80's pop cover
band that played all the stuff that the Chadwicks
didn't, including "chick songs". John
now had a new reason to call Stephanie Fox.
With Stephanie and guitarist Glen Pudick in
place, Princess Leah and The Dukes of Hazard
was born on New Year's Eve 1996. After only
one gig the name was changed and within 3 months,
Rock Lobster was playing every Saturday night...to
this day. Subsequently, Chameleon
Entertainment L.L.C. was formed as an umbrella
for both bands.
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Most recently, John launched
his newest project, Metalhead, an 80's hair
metal band which includes guitarist John Bronson
and ex-Lynch Mob singer Robert Mason. Through
the benefit of enormous experience culled over
the years, Metalhead was launched with all of
it's ducks in a row and was playing three nights
a week before it was even 9 months old. There
seems to be no end in sight as Metalhead continues
to gain momentum.
In addition to playing
bass in three successful area bands (with a
fourth on the way), John Colby is also the primary
acting manager and booking agent for all of
the Chameleon Entertainment projects. Fielding
phone calls and taking meetings during the day
can be a full-time job in and of itself. "How
does he have time to fit it all in?", you
wonder.
No one knows .
. .
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