Name John Spence Instruments Vocal Role Musician | Years active 1986–1987 Associated acts No Doubt | |
Similar People | ||
Music group No Doubt (1986 – 1987) Died December 21, 1987 (aged 18), Anaheim, California, United States |
John spence medley of covers
John Francis Spence (February 3, 1969 – December 21, 1987) was a founding member of the Ska band No Doubt, along with Eric Stefani and Eric's younger sister Gwen.
Contents
- John spence medley of covers
- No Doubt live at Mod Expo 1987 Baggy Trousers
- No Doubt
- Death
- Aftermath
- References
No Doubt live at Mod Expo 1987 ("Baggy Trousers")
No Doubt
The three came up with the idea while working together at Dairy Queen. Spence, who named the band after his favorite expression, took on the role of lead vocalist, with the Madness-inspired Eric playing keyboard. Spence was known as an energetic frontman, doing backflips and wild screams on the stage.
Death
On December 21, 1987, at the age of 18, Spence committed suicide by shooting himself with a gun in a deserted parking lot located in Anaheim, California. The band found out about his death a few days before they were set to play a show at The Roxy Theatre in Hollywood. A two-page suicide note was found.
Aftermath
After the Roxy show, the remaining members of the band announced their breakup. Several days later they decided to continue playing instead, and some time later Gwen became the new lead singer. The band briefly replaced Spence after his death with a member of their horn section, Alan Meade, but Meade left the band shortly thereafter. During his short time as lead singer, Meade wrote the song "Dear John" about Spence. This recording is very rare, and was featured fifth of five songs on a demo tape the band recorded in 1988 and sold at their performances.
In the booklet for No Doubt's 1992 self-titled release, the dedication page states that the album is dedicated to Spence, and includes a cartoon of him performing his signature flip and scream. The song "Move On" refers to his death with the line "5 reached the side/One step below zen".