This is a list of musicians who played in the Canadian punk rock group SNFU.[1][2] The band formed in 1981 in Edmonton, relocated to Vancouver a decade later, and became inactive in 2018. Thirty-one musicians played in the various lineups of SNFU, counting four guest members, with only singer Ken Chinn (credited as 'Mr. Chi Pig') remaining constant. Chinn died in 2020,[3] ending the group. Among twenty-seven official members, these lineups included one singer, six guitarists, ten bassists (twice counting Ken Fleming, who served at different times as the band's bassist and guitarist), and eleven drummers. The lineups also included one guest bassist and three guest drummers.
After Chinn, founding guitarists Marc and Brent Belke served the longest tenures, at 22 and 15 years respectively (discounting the band's inactive time). Bassist Rob Johnson played with the group for nine years, while Fleming and bassist Dave Bacon each spread two stints in the group over nearly eight years. The longest-standing consistent lineup lasted from late 1992 to early 1998 and featured Chinn, both Belkes, Johnson, and drummer Dave Rees.
Chinn twice revamped the group's entire lineup, once each in 2007 and 2014. Six members left the group and later returned, with Bacon's 27-year hiatus between 1987 and 2014 the longest. Only Chinn and drummer Jon Card played in all three eras of the band's career, divided by their 1989 and 2005 breakups. (Bassist Curtis Creager also had been slated to do so in a 2014 tour, but the tour was canceled.)
Member history
Vocalist Ken Chinn co-founded the band in Edmonton with Brent and Marc Belke, guitar-playing twin brothers who served as members of the group until 1998 and 2005 respectively.[1] The period between their formation and first breakup, spanning from 1981 to 1989, included membership from four bassists and three drummers. Bassist Warren Bidlock and drummer Evan C. Jones completed their initial lineup. After Bidlock's 1982 departure, Scott Juskiw filled in for the band's demo recording before Jimmy Schmitz joined. This incarnation continued into 1985, when Dave Bacon and Jon Card replaced Schmitz and Jones, respectively. Ted Simm spelled Card in 1986, while Bacon was replaced by Curtis Creager the following year.
For their 1991 reunion tour, Chinn and the Belke brothers reenlisted Creager and Card. When they returned to full-time activity in their new home of Vancouver several months later, Ken Fleming replaced Creager, while Dave Rees replaced Card shortly thereafter. Rob Johnson began a nine-year tenure as the band's bassist late in 1992, which completed their classic, best-selling,[2] and most prolific lineup.[1]
Brent Belke and Rees both departed early in 1998, and with drummer Sean Stubbs, SNFU became a four-piece band. Chris Thompson replaced Stubbs the following year, while Johnson was replaced by Matt Warhurst in 2001. The band went on hiatus shortly thereafter, however, with Thompson then departing.[2] Chinn, Marc Belke, and Warhurst employed studio drummer Trevor MacGregor and finished recordings for a new record in 2003, and returned to activity later that year with new drummer Shane Smith. This era of the group ended in 2005, when they again disbanded.
Two years later, Chinn and Fleming (now playing guitar) began a new incarnation that would eventually involve three bassists, three drummers, and one second guitarist. The new lineup was completed by bassist Bryan McCallum and drummer Chad Mareels, although McCallum was soon replaced by Denis Nowoselski. Smith returned as the group's drummer late in 2008, and was replaced two years later by Card. In mid-2010, rhythm guitarist Sean Colig joined, completing the group's first five-member lineup in 12 years. Kerry Cyr replaced Nowoselski in 2012, and Junior Kittlitz spelled Card for touring in late 2013.[1][4]
In February 2014, the band announced an entirely new lineup based around Chinn, the returning Bacon, guitarists Kurt Robertson and Randy Steffes, and drummer Adrian White. Jamie Oliver replaced White in July (and guest drummer Txutxo Krueger filled in for three shows in August). Although the band planned to tour with Creager and Simm returning to the lineup in November, the tour was canceled, and Bacon and Oliver remained with the group. Basque drummer Batikão Est joined in 2016. The band announced a hiatus in March 2018, and Chinn died on July 16, 2020.
Timeline
Note: lighter colors denote periods of inactivity in which the band was not officially disbanded.
Lineups
Period | Members | Releases |
---|---|---|
Late 1981–November 1982[1][2] |
| |
November 1982
(Demo recording only) |
with:
|
|
Late 1982–May 1985[5] |
|
|
May 1985–June 1986[6] |
|
|
July 1986–March 1987 |
|
|
March 1987–September 1989[7] |
|
|
Group disbanded October 1989–September 1991 | ||
September 1991–January 1992[2]
(Wrong Trip Down Memory Lane reunion tour) |
|
|
February–June 1992
Band on hiatus |
| |
July–September 1992 |
| |
October–December 1992 |
| |
December 1992–March 1998[8][9][10] |
|
|
March 1998–August 1999 |
| |
August 1999–June 2001[upper-alpha 1] |
with:
|
|
June 2001 |
|
|
June 2001–mid-2003
Band on hiatus |
|
|
Mid–late 2003
(Studio sessions only) |
with:
|
|
December 2003–September 2005 |
| |
Group disbanded September 2005–July 2007 | ||
July 2007–March 2008 |
| |
March–December 2008 |
| |
December 2008–March 2010 |
| |
March–June 2010[11] |
| |
June 2010–June 2012 |
| |
June 2012–June 2013 |
|
|
June–November 2013 |
with:
| |
November 2013–February 2014
Band on hiatus |
|
|
February–July 2014 |
| |
July 2014–April 2016[upper-alpha 2] |
with:
| |
April 2016–March 2018 |
with:
| |
March 2018–July 2020
Band on hiatus |
| |
Death of Ken Chinn, 16 July 2020 | ||
- 1 2 3 Trevor MacGregor joined as guest studio drummer for sessions in 2000, including the two tracks on A Blessing but with It a Curse (2021) and tracks later included on In the Meantime and In-Between Time (2004) with Matt Warhurst replacing Johnson on bass.
- ↑ Touring was announced with the returning Curtis Creager (bass) and Ted Simm (drums) in late 2014, but this lineup did not appear.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Walter, Chris. ...What No One Else Wanted to Say, first edition. Vancouver: GFY Press, 2012
- 1 2 3 4 5 Open Your Mouth and Say...Mr. Chi Pig, Film, Dir: Sean Patrick Shaul, 2010.
- ↑ Ryan Garner (July 17, 2020). "Edmonton-born SNFU frontman Ken Chinn (aka Mr. Chi Pig) dead at 57". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
- ↑ "SNFU's comeback tour blows through Shibuya". Tokyo Weekender. September 30, 2013. Retrieved October 18, 2013.
- ↑ Allmusic - ...And No One Else Wanted to Play
- ↑ Allmusic - If You Swear, You'll Catch No Fish
- ↑ Allmusic - Better Than A Stick In The Eye
- ↑ Allmusic - Something Green and Leafy This Way Comes
- ↑ Allmusic - The One Voted Most Likely to Succeed
- ↑ Allmusic - FYULABA
- ↑ "SNFU is back and ready to record". Whistler Question. May 19, 2010. Archived from the original on May 25, 2010. Retrieved April 19, 2012.