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a biography
Reviewer:
Iluvthe80s
Ratt's
brash, melodic heavy metal made the Los Angeles quintet one of
the most popular rock acts of the mid-'80s. The group had its
origins in the '70s group Mickey Ratt, which had evolved into
Ratt by 1983; at that time the band featured vocalist Stephen
Pearcy, guitarist Robbin Crosby, guitarist Warren DeMartini, bassist
Juan Croucier, and drummer Bobby Blotzer. The band released their
self-titled first album independently in 1983, which led to a
major label contract with Atlantic Records. Their first album
under this deal, 1984's Out of the Cellar, was a major success,
reaching the American Top Ten and selling over three million copies.
"Round and Round," the first single drawn from the album, hit
number 12, proving the band had pop crossover potential. While
their second album, 1985's Invasion of Your Privacy, didn't match
the multi-platinum figures of Out of the Cellar, it also reached
the Top Ten and sold over a million copies. By that time, the
band could sell-out concerts across the country and were a staple
on MTV and AOR radio. Both Dancin' Undercover (1986) and Reach
for the Sky (1988) continued the band's platinum streak and their
audience, had only slipped slightly by the time of their final
album, 1990's Detonator.
In
1992, Pearcy left Ratt to form his own band, Arcade, issuing a
pair of releases — 1993's self-titled debut and 1994's A/2, before
forming another new band, Vertex (issuing a lone self-titled release
in 1996). With their brand of glam metal out of step with the
then-burgeoning alt-rock movement, Ratt decided to sit out much
of the '90s — during which time DeMartini issued a solo album,
Crazy Enough to Sing to You. But by the late '90s, the public's
interest in '80s rock began to perk up, leading to Ratt reuniting
in time for 1997's Collage. Two years later, Ratt's second self-titled
release of their recording career was issued, following the same
formula as its predecessor.
Shortly
thereafter, Pearcy left the group once again, as he soon began
fronting two bands, the more modern-sounding outfit Vicious Delite
(a self-titled debut appeared in 2000) and Nitronic. Pearcy also
formed his own record label (Top Fuel Records), and released several
collections of archival material — Arcade's A/3: Live & Unreleased,
Mickey Ratt's The Garage Tape Dayz 78-81, and under his own name,
the demo collection Before and Laughter. 2001 saw the release
of Pearcy's first true solo album, Social Intercourse. Despite
Pearcy's exit of the band, Ratt continued to carry on with new
members Jizzy Pearl (former Love/Hate) on vocals, John Corabi
(former Mötley Crüe) on guitar, and bassist Robbie Crane joining
original members DeMartini and Blotzer. In the summer of 2001,
long M.I.A. Ratt guitarist Robbin Crosby disclosed to the public
that he was battling AIDS, as Croucier soon began organizing a
benefit album for his former bandmate. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine
& Greg Prato.
*Courtesy
AMG
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