Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Nervous Eaters

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Active from
  
1974

Genres
  
Punk, Rock

Members
  
Steve Cataldo

Nervous Eaters Nervous Eaters Eaterville Vol 1 Rollo amp Grady Los Angeles

Albums
  
Eaterville #1, Hot Steel and Acid

Record labels
  
Penniman Records, New Rose

Similar
  
The Real Kids, Willie Alexander, Lyres, Unnatural Axe, The Neighborhoods

Nervous eaters degenerate steve cataldo


The Nervous Eaters, one of Boston's first punk/new wave bands, debuted in early 1977 with Steve Cataldo on vocals and guitar, Robb Skeen on bass, and Jeff Wilkinson on drums. They had used the name some years earlier, but had not performed live under it. As the Rhythm Assholes, they had backed local rock legend Willie Alexander on his single "Kerouac" and in concert. After a name change, they made their debut at the hub of the city's alternative music scene, the Rathskeller—known as the Rat—in January 1977. Their first single, "Loretta", appeared that year on the club's Rat label. Early on, the band experienced problems holding on to a second guitarist, but Alan Hebditch, a childhood friend of Cataldo's, became a regular fixture in early 1978. Along with DMZ and The Real Kids, they were considered among the scene's "punkier" bands. Centered on Cataldo's "great rock & roll voice" and "jangly guitar", in the description of Allmusic's Joe Viglione, they were the "Rolling Stones of Boston...hard-rocking, riff-blasting, tongue-in-cheek". By 1978, they were one of the most popular acts in the city. Their second Rat single, the new wave–style "Just Head", appeared in 1979.

Contents

Nervous Eaters Nervous Eaters Loretta 1976 YouTube

After the release of "Just Head", the band brought on a new second guitarist, Jonathan Paley. Ric Ocasek of scenemates The Cars produced a ten-song demo for the band that attracted major-label attention. Their self-titled debut album, produced by Harry Maslin, was released by Elektra Records in 1980. Trouser Press's Ira Robbins retrospectively panned it: "This Boston quartet had long been a local critics' choice; after this major-label record brought them a national hearing, it's hard to understand why. Nervous Eaters is an awfully tame set of J. Geils–like R&B and Hall and Oates–style soul." Belying the "R-rated and lovingly sexist" lyrics of "Loretta" and other album tracks such as "Get Stuffed" and "Girl Next Door", Viglione writes that the album's sound falls "somewhere between the Ronettes and the Four Seasons". Nonetheless, in his view, "The disc works despite being a slight misrepresentation of the artist." It met with little commercial success, and the Nervous Eaters disbanded in 1981. The band briefly reunited in 1986, with Cataldo, Wilkinson, Hebditch, and Paley. They recorded a six-song EP, Hot Steel and Acid, for the French-based New Rose label; it was subsequently issued as well by Boston's Ace of Hearts Records. In early June 2013, the band is on the road again, supporting The Stranglers at Brighton Music Hall, though at least one member has moved to California.

Nervous Eaters Steve Cataldo of the Nervous Eaters speaks to Ross Fisher of the

Nervous eaters girl next door steve cataldo


Nervous Eaters mmoneorgwpcontentuploadsnervous6jpg

Nervous Eaters Nervous Eaters Discography at Discogs

Songs

Just Head1979
I'm a Degenerate2009
You Smell Like Fish2009

References

Nervous Eaters Wikipedia