2 Skinnee J's

2 Skinnee J's

2 Skinnee J's, 1998
Background information
Origin Brooklyn, New York, US
Genres Nerdcore hip hop
Rap rock
Alternative rock
Years active 1991–2003, 2008–present
Labels Capricorn
Volcano
Dolphins vs. Unicorns
Website 2sj.com
Members Special J (Joel E. Johnson)
J Guevara (Noah David Julian Green)
Andy Action (Andrew E. Markham)
Eddie Eyeball (Edward M. Cisneros)
Lance Rockworthy (Lance M. Fanguy)
Stevie Spice (Stephen Sumners Light)
A.J. "Stumpy" Johnson (Adam Johnson)
Past members Rabbi J-Slim (Jason Milligan)
Joey Viturbo (Joseph A. Schwartz)
J. Jonah Jameson (Alan Diggs)
A. Mays (John M. Moraski)
Mikey B (Mike Boyko)
King Vitamin (Sammy James, Jr.)
DJ Casper (Mitch Wells)
Capital R (Rob Wofford)
D. Summerz

2 Skinnee J's is the name of a musical band characterized as nerdcore hip hop. The band was founded in 1991 by Special J (vocals), Rabbi J-Slim (vocals), Joey Viturbo (guitar), Sammy B (bass guitar), DJ Casper (keyboards), and Andy Action (drums). With numerous line-up changes, the band was active through the 1990s until 2003, when they officially disbanded. The group recorded several demos, 2 EPs, and 3 studio albums; SuperMercado! on Capricorn Records, Volumizer on Volcano Records, and Sexy Karate on Dolphins vs. Unicorns. The band went through several key membership changes before its breaking up in 2003, although they briefly reunited for reunion tours in 2005, 2008, 2010 and 2012.

History

2 Skinnee J's formed in 1991 at Columbia University in New York City. The original line-up was Special J and Rabbi J-Slim (vocals), Joey Viturbo (guitar), Sammy B (bass), DJ Casper (keyboards), and Andy Action (drums).[1] Their first independent release was on cassette, titled 6 Songs for 5 Bucks.[1] They attracted a fan following through heavy touring in their early years. A second cassette release entitled American Heroes, was released in 1994 with the band titled "Too Skinnee J's". Several personnel changes saw original rapper J-Slim bass player Sammy B and guitarist Joey Viturbo part with the band; whilst J Guevara (formerly of the band Me, Mom, & Morgentaler) and Stevie Spice were recruited. King Vitamin (aka original bassist, Sammy B) rejoined in 1995, now playing guitar.[1]

They started to break through into the mainstream in 1998 after signing with Capricorn and releasing SuperMercado!, which found airplay on modern-rock radio stations.[2] 2 Skinnee J's performed at Woodstock '99 and later criticized the event.[2] Relations soured with Capricorn and the label delayed release of the second album on 2 Skinnee J's two-album contract, Volumizer, produced by Mickey Petralia,[3] for two years after it was recorded.[4] The label folded and the band's contract was bought by Volcano Records.[5] When the album was officially released in 2002, many critics refused to review it again as they had reviewed a pre-release version years earlier. Rockworthy says the delay and its fallout, which left the band without a label, were a major problem and contributed to their decision to break up in 2003.[6] Sexy Karate was released on indie label Dolphins vs Unicorn that year,[1] before their farewell tour in 2003. They returned for a "Five Nights of Fury" tour in 2005 and another five-show reunion tour in 2008.[7]

In 2009 the band website announced the premier in September 2009 of Get In The Van a film shot during the 2008 reunion tour.[8]

Special J, Eddie Eyeball, Lance Rockworthy and Andy Action got together for the band's next reunion tour, billed as "acoustically-charged, tell-all brawls," of which there were seven dates between Feb. 12 and April 16, 2010. These shows were a unique way for fans to connect personally with the band, as they were held at small, intimate venues, and featured heavy audience participation, through Q&As and singalongs. In between acoustic versions of selections from their entire catalog of songs, each band member told stories about how songs were written, life on the road and the evolution of the band. J Guevara was scheduled to join the band for two of the April shows, and several hints were dropped about plans for a "full-on electric" tour to follow in summer 2010.

Members

Timeline

(Former) 2 Skinnee champions

Discography

Albums

EPs

Live and compilations

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Jeffries, David. "2 Skinnee J's > Biography". www.allmusic.com. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
  2. 1 2 DeRogatis, Jim (1999-09-10). "The happy rappers - 2 Skinnee J's restate rock's great message". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 5 (Weekend Plus section). Archived from the original on 2009-05-14. Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  3. Basham, David (2 August 2000). "2 Skinnee J's Turn Up "Volumizer" With Beck Personnel". MTV News. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
  4. McKinney, Doug (20 November 2002). "2 Skinnee J's: All "Grown Up" Now". Whim Internet Magazine. Archived from the original on 2009-06-10. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
  5. Moss, Corey (25 March 2002). "2 Skinnee J's Finally Get Volumizer Out". MTV News. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
  6. Cronick, Scott (6 June 2003). "2 Skinne J's Go Out with Bang". The Press of Atlantic City. p. 27.
  7. Condran, Ed (1 August 2008). "2 Skinnee J's come back around". The News & Observer. p. W10. Archived from the original on 2009-05-29. Retrieved 2009-05-27.
  8. "2 Skinnee J's The Saga Continues...". www.2sj.com. Archived from the original on 2009-06-10. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
  9. "2 Skinnee J's Timeline". www.2sj.com. Retrieved 2010-04-13.

External links

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