Remembering Rick Froberg, the proper punk vocalist : NPR


Rick Froberg performs in Drive Like Jehu at Coachella competition in Indio, Calif., in April 2015. Froberg died on Friday.

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Rick Froberg performs in Drive Like Jehu at Coachella competition in Indio, Calif., in April 2015. Froberg died on Friday.

Matt Cowan/Getty Photos

Rick Froberg’s voice was the best mixture of snarl and shrill.

Amongst male punk vocalists, some had the back-of-the-throat resonance of a Joey Ramone or the guttural depth of quite a few hardcore bands.

However Froberg’s voice was unmistakable — not attempting to sound powerful on function, it simply ended up that method. The voice that someway all the time gave the impression of a thin previous man who smoked too many cigarettes and drank an excessive amount of whiskey.

Froberg died on Friday of pure causes, in accordance with John Reis, his musical collaborator of greater than three a long time. He was reportedly 55.

His first collaboration with Reis was the late ’80s San Diego post-hardcore band Pitchfork.

But it surely was a number of years later, with the ’90s band Drive Like Jehu, when Rick Froberg’s voice arguably first got here into full kind. The screams had been there. So had been the occasional melodic choruses. “Atom Jack,” on the band’s self-titled first album, showcased the disparity. On the band’s second album, Yank Crime, the 9-minute-plus dissonant epic “Luau” noticed Froberg shout in opposition to imperialism whereas breaking the discord with “Aloha, aloha. Swimsuit up. Luau, luau. Luau, luau.”

From left, John Reis, Mark Trombino and Rick Froberg of Drive Like Jehu carry out through the Coachella competition in Indio, Calif., in April 2015.

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From left, John Reis, Mark Trombino and Rick Froberg of Drive Like Jehu carry out through the Coachella competition in Indio, Calif., in April 2015.

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It was in Scorching Snakes, nonetheless, the place Froberg’s vocals reached their zenith. It was Froberg and Reis’ third main collaboration.

Gone had been Reis’ lengthy, winding, guitar leads from Drive Like Jehu — songs had been shorter, sped up, extra garage-rock influenced, straight to the purpose. It was aggressive punk however smarter. Time signatures opted for the occasional skipped or further beat. The guitars interplayed with abrupt staccato leads and rhythms.

Froberg’s vocals — now harsher with a better pitch — had discovered the music to match.

It was evident on “If Credit score’s What Issues I will Take Credit score,” the opener on Scorching Snakes’ first album, 2000’s Automated Midnight.


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Scorching Snakes launched two extra studio albums of their authentic run within the early 2000s, a mellower Suicide Bill adopted by an up-tempo Audit in Progress.

The band re-formed to launch their first album in about 14 years in 2018. NPR described Froberg’s voice as “excessive and serrated.” When it got here to his lyrics, reviewer Andrew Flanagan put it on the time: “Froberg’s lyrics aren’t understandable more often than not; they function as a sort of expressionist splatter of spittle, a fragmentary philosophical rage, throughout the band’s relentless, bubbling-hot canvas.”

Except for his bands with Reis, Froberg’s most notable music got here with Obits, a extra bluesy tackle punkish storage rock. His “vocals pressure with bitterness,” NPR mentioned, even because the music took on a extra subdued hue. The band launched three studio albums between 2009 and 2013.

A poster that includes Rick Froberg’s artwork for Scorching Snakes’ 2018 tour.

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A poster that includes Rick Froberg’s artwork for Scorching Snakes’ 2018 tour.

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He performed guitar, too, in most of his bands. However that by no means gave the impression to be Froberg’s main focus. “I’ve information for the world, I am not guitar participant,” he mentioned in a latest interview.

Froberg was additionally a profitable artist, having created artwork for a lot of album covers and posters.

In remembering Froberg, Reis mentioned: “His artwork made life higher. The one factor he liked greater than artwork and rock n roll was his pals. He’ll endlessly be remembered for his creativity, imaginative and prescient and his skill to carry magnificence into this world.”



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