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Pat McCurdy

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Occupation(s)
  
Singer-songwriter

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Pat McCurdy

Years active
  
1977–present

Instruments
  
Vocals, guitar


Pat McCurdy wwwpatmccurdycomimageshomeheaderpic2png

Associated acts
  
Yipes! The Men About Town Mankind The Confidentials

Albums
  
Pat In Person, Songs For Young People

Similar
  
Hidden Hospitals, Cheeseheads With Attitude, University of Wisconsi, Willy Porter, BoDeans

Profiles

we love the green and gold official hd music video pat mccurdy


Pat McCurdy is a singer-songwriter from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Contents

Sex and beer by pat mccurdy official music video


Biography

McCurdy was influenced at an early age by the first appearance of The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show. After teaching himself guitar and participating in several high school bands, he went on to front Yipes! in the late 1970s, formed with fellow University of Wisconsin students. Often described as a power pop or new wave band, Yipes! enjoyed some moderate success after being signed to RCA/Millennium in 1978. However, the label dropped the band after only a few years.

Career

McCurdy spent most of the 1980s fronting several bands. The Men About Town (which included several members of Yipes!), Mankind, and The Confidentials all enjoyed minor success touring the Midwest. It was not until late in the eighties, when McCurdy decided to take tentative steps into performing solo, that he managed to find his real niche.

Performing initially for sparse audiences in small bars, he honed his act to what could be described as "interactive goofiness". For example, one of his most popular segments are his tributes to the 1980s and 1990s. These medleys, consisting largely of one-hit wonders from those respective decades, invoke a sort of call-and-response with the crowd, where McCurdy sings a line or two from each song, cueing the audience to continue that bit. This style quickly attracted a devoted cult following of fans, many of whom would (and still do) attend his shows on a weekly basis. McCurdy's act has also brought increased involvement of his sound and light man, Jim "Pipe Jim" Schafelburger, an entertaining aspect in its own right. Over time, the audiences became less sparse and the bars became less small, thanks mainly to word-of-mouth marketing.

He regularly tours the upper midwestern part of the United States with regular stops in Milwaukee, Madison, Chicago, Green Bay, and Minneapolis. His shows usually consist of just him and his guitar and include improvised interaction with the audience. While the majority of his audience is made up of a college-age crowd, McCurdy appeals to a large number of people of all ages. Performing well over 300 shows a year, his large catalog of original songs (over 600 and growing) covers a variety of topics such as lost loves, politics, family vacations, hair styles, the joys of Asian cuisine, the sex organs of long-dead French Emperors, how the world cannot live without Sex & Beer, and wishing to have a Monkey Paw. He even successfully makes humorous the mundane daily cycle of waking up, going to work, getting drunk, and going to sleep.

In 2008, he was asked by the Green Bay Packers to write a song to play in their stadium. Originally objecting because he did not like sports songs, he went on to write "I Love the Green and Gold," eventually making it into a music video starring himself and featuring Larry the Cable Guy. After the Packers won Super Bowl XLV, he wrote a follow-up song entitled "The Trophy Song."

Discography

with Yipes!
  • Yipes! (1979)
  • A Bit Irrational (1980)
  • with The Confidentials
  • How To Love And Be Loved (1985)
  • The Good Life! (1988)
  • Solo albums
  • Memorial Day (1989)
  • The Sound of Music (1991)
  • Pat in Person (1992)
  • Show Tunes (1995)
  • The Big Bright Beautiful World of Pat McCurdy (1997)
  • Pat in Person Volume 2 (1998)
  • Fainting With Happiness (2000)
  • My World of Love (2003)
  • 15 Favorites (2007)
  • Love is a Beautiful Thing (2012)
  • Pat McCurdy Now! (2014)
  • Souvenirs (2017)
  • References

    Pat McCurdy Wikipedia