Gorilla Biscuits

Gorilla Biscuits
Background information
Origin New York City, U.S.
Genres Hardcore punk,[1] melodic hardcore
Years active 1987–1991, 1997, 2005–present
Labels Revelation Records
Associated acts Quicksand, CIV, Youth of Today, Judge, Rival Schools, Warzone
Members Anthony Civarelli
Walter Schreifels
Arthur Meow Smilios
Alex Brown
Luke Abbey
Past members Sammy Siegler
Mark Hayworth
John Porcelly

Gorilla Biscuits is a New York-based hardcore punk band originally formed in 1987. The band currently consists of Anthony Civarelli, Walter Schreifels, Arthur Smilios, Alex Brown and Luke Abbey, and is signed to Revelation Records.

History

Early career

Gorilla Biscuits were formed when Arthur Smilios and Nick Drysdale met Anthony "Civ" Civarelli while they were both attending the same high school on Long Island. All three were fans of the band Agnostic Front, and started going to hardcore shows at CBGB on weekends. There they met people like Ray Cappo and John Porcelly of the band Youth of Today.

Arthur sought to form a hardcore band and asked Civ to act as vocalist. However Civ was not interested in singing, and had to face the floor or wall during early gigs due to nerves. Members of the band Token Entry arranged a gig for the still unnamed band (Gorilla Biscuits used Token Entry's drummer, Ernie Parada for that first show), but needed a name to give it to the promoter. A popular drug in the area at that time was quaaludes, which people called "ape shit," or "gorilla biscuits" due to the pill's large size.[2] Eventually the name evolved into Gorilla Biscuits, and though it was initially only meant to be temporary, they have continued to use it.

The band made a number of low-fi demo tapes which were sold at a dollar store. Their first official T-shirts were blue with an image of a gorilla riding a skateboard and were made using black magic markers and an ink blotter.

Popularity

Revelation Records featured the early Gorilla Biscuits song "Better Than You" on one of their compilations, and later released the eponymously titled Gorilla Biscuits 7-inch EP in 1988, which later became a hardcore hit. The band toured the United States and Europe twice. In 1989, the band released their first full-length album, Start Today, which became the biggest selling ever for Revelation Records, and was also the first album that was issued on CD, alongside its vinyl and cassette versions, as part of the routine production. The band started writing material for a second LP (an unreleased song, "Distance", can be seen played by the band during a performance in the 1991 documentary Live In New York) which they never recorded, and eventually disbanded around the year 1992. Some of the members went on to play in a follow-up band, CIV. Besides singing for CIV, Civ now owns a tattoo studio on Long Island. Walter went on to form the post-hardcore band Quicksand. He then wrote the songs for and helped produce CIV's first album.

Re-unions and the future of Gorilla Biscuits

Gorilla Biscuits re-united for one show in October 1997 at CBGB to benefit the family of then recently deceased Warzone singer Raybeez, and played another show at CBGB on August 14, 2005 as a benefit towards the club's legal costs, and again on September 3, 2006.

In 2006, Revelation Records re-issued their seminal recording Start Today. The album is re-mastered and features in-depth liner notes by Walter Schreifels. The band held a month-long re-union tour during the summer of 2006, and featured both exclusive 7-inches and exclusive Paul Frank T-shirts only available on tour stops.

In September 2007, Gorilla Biscuits performed a month-long tour across Europe, including stops in Germany, Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands and England. In celebration of the European Tour, Paul Frank collaborated with Gorilla Biscuits again to produce an exclusive run of Gorilla Biscuits wallets. Only one was sold at each Paul Frank store worldwide.

On May 28, 2011, Gorilla Biscuits headlined the Black N Blue Bowl at Webster Hall (formerly the Ritz) in New York City.

On June 8, 9 and 10th of 2012, Gorilla Biscuits played the Epic Revelation Records 25 Year Anniversary shows at The Glasshouse in Pomona, CA. Also on the bills were Youth of Today, Sick Of It All, Shai Hulud, Bold, No For An Answer, Statue and Underdog.

On August 6, 2016, during Gorilla Biscuits' set at Philadelphia's This Is Hardcore festival, Civorelli, took a break to introduce the song Degradation, that rails against nazis in the 1980s punk scene. He also commented on the Black Lives Matter movement, saying

In 2016 people still have to wear shirts that say 'Black Lives Matter'. No shit. Brown, white, yellow, black, we all fucking matter. Everybody here matters. Do not let the media, schools, institutions, influence you. We are one family, one people.[3]

The statement did not sit well with many attendees at the festival and was followed two days later by a song introduction from 108's frontman Rob Fish, who attempted to affirm the Black Lives Matter movement.[4]

Members

Current

Former

Discography

Title Release date Notes Label
Original 1987 Tape Demo Gorilla Biscuits 1988 Bootleg, can also be found on Walter Sings The Hits. 99 Records
Gorilla Biscuits 1988 First 7″ LP Revelation
Start Today 1989 Their second and final record before disbanding. Revelation
Having A Great Time... Wish You Were Here 1991 Last live show, soundboard recording from Germany in 1991. 99 records
Walter Sings the Hits 199? Bootleg, contains a full version of Start Today 12" (w/ Walter on vocals instead of Civ), Moondog 7", Live In Germany 7", Live At The Safari Club 7", Demo '87 7" and Demo '86 7". (made in Germany) No Label
A Puzzle of 38 Pieces 199? Bootleg ?
Live At CBGB =8/14/05 2005 Bootleg ?
2 Song 7-inch 2006 Sold during the 2006 re-union tour. Only 20 copies were sold at each stop. It featured two brand new songs by the original line-up. Self-released

Compilations

References

  1. http://www.satyamag.com/may05/wyse.html
  2. Justin T. Gass, Ph.D. (2008). Drugs the Straight Facts - Quaaludes. New York, NY: Chelsea House Publishers. p. 26.
  3. . exclaim.ca (August 8, 2016).
  4. . youtube.com (August 7, 2016).

External links

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