Dashboard
Prophets began as a band called F.U.K. in 1991 one day
Chris dye (singer/guitarist) walked into a club called
the Coconut Teaser and saw a band by the name of Lodestone,
he immediately was impressed by the rhythm section( Leo
Boci on drums & Greg Evanski on bass). Chris was looking
to start a band and through a friend got a hold of them.
Greg and Leo walked into the rehearsal room tattooed from
head to toe and obviously committed to there rock &
roll. As soon as they hit the first note they realized
this was the beginning of something special. They played
around Los Angeles for a while under the name F.U.K. but
felt like there was something missing? They needed to
find a guitar player. The search was on.
Chris had a friend named Timothy La rue who filled in
for a while but left eventually to form his own band.
After numerous attempts finally one day Daniel Meyer walked
into a rehearsal. There was immediate chemistry in the
room. They had found their man. Daniel was playing in
a band called Don Knotts Overdrive at the time which could
only be described as some sort of art rock/new wave band.
Daniel was looking for a rock band he could let loose
in and he had found it. They continued to play under the
name F.U.K. until one day a new idea for a name came to
them, Dashboard Prophets. This seem to fit with the explosive
style of rock they were playing and also illuded to the
utter commercialism of society, prophets reduced to pieces
of plastic you stick on your dashboard.
The Dashboard Prophets hit the Los Angeles scene hard
and became known as the band to see. Steve Ross who was
working for no name recordings at the time was really
impressed by the Prophets and this eventually landed them
a deal on No Name Recordings owned by Steve Richards.
No Name had signed another band called Fluorescence and
was looking for a rock band. They had found the one they
were looking for. The band went into the studio with GGGGarth
Richardson who had just done a couple of other L.A. bands
by the name of Rage Against the Machine and L7. They recorded
Burning Out The Inside in a couple of weeks. When it came
time to finish the art work Chris wanted to use pictures
to illustrate the meanings of songs instead of including
lyrics Greg, Leo and Daniel agreed.
The record was released in 1996. the band began numerous
tours to support "Burning Out The Inside", but
the label was not doing well and eventually closed its
doors. this whole experience left a bad taste in the mouth
of the Prophets. they had struggled against all the odds
to put out a record just to see their hopes and dreams
taken from them, really before they ever got started.
They played around for a while but the weight of all they
had been through eventually got to them. The band decided
to call it quits in 1997. Chris continued on and released
a solo record called "11 Strings 4 Tracks and The
Truth" in late 1997.
The band got back together for a benefit in 2002 but has
never actually gotten back together. They all remain friends
and you never know, Dashboard Prophets may one day rise
again.
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