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Reddick and guitarist Chris Burney knew each other in high school (they met in 1986) and as students in the 1980s, they grew up on the commercially successful heavy metal music of bands such as Quiet Riot, RATT, and Mötley Crüe, but were also influenced by the faster punk rock of the Ramones and later Green Day. Burney's family owned a ...
Chris Burney (vocals, guitar) Sam Brown (drums) Bryan Arendt (guitar) Brad Forsblom (bass, backing vocals) Brad Caulkins (keyboard, guitar, backing vocals) References
Rock On Honorable Ones!! is the second studio album by American rock band Bowling for Soup. [2] The title is a reference to the slogan of S.H. Rider High School in Wichita Falls, Texas, where Bowling for Soup hails from.
Pop Drunk Snot Bread is the eleventh studio album by the American rock band Bowling for Soup, [2] released on April 22, 2022, by Brando/Que-so Records. [3] It is their first studio album since 2016's Drunk Dynasty, as well as the first to feature Rob Felicetti on bass and backing vocals, following former bassist Erik Chandler's departure from the band in 2019. [4]
After the departure of guitarist Chris Burney in 2025, Reddick is the only remaining original member. His primary guitar is a Music Man Axis that has a Miller Lite design on it; his former primary guitar until 2018 was similarly a Music Man Axis with a flag of Texas design on it.
Finally, guitarist Chris Burney has a flashback of him being slipped a laxative by a cheerleader and manages to get his own back by consuming a massive sub sandwich, a chili removed from his pants, a white mouse, gasoline, and a goldfish. After jiggling around, he then confronts the popular girl and projectile vomits the contents of his stomach ...
Chris Burney – guitar, vocals; Gary Wiseman – drums (tracks 1–3, 5–11, 13, and 14) Lance Morrill – drums (tracks 4 and 12) Production.
AllMusic senior editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine said that the record was "still proudly goofy, poppy punk, stuff that's fun without quite being memorable", but found the band's humor outdated with its '80s pop culture references, saying their "pandering a little bit, trying to deliver what they believe today's teens want," concluding that "even when they're coming across like Gen-X cranks, they ...