Neha Patil (Editor)

The Toll

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Active until
  
2011

Record label
  
Geffen Records

Active from
  
1984

The Toll httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Members
  
Brad Circone, Greg Bartram, Brett Mayo, Rick Silk

Albums
  
The Price of Progression, Sticks and Stones and Broken Bones

Similar
  
Earwig, Howlin Maggie, Willie Phoenix

The Toll was a rock band from Columbus, Ohio active from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s. It consisted of vocalist Brad Circone, guitarist Rick Silk, bassist Greg Bartram, and Brett Mayo on drums. Unusually, many of their songs incorporated spoken narratives. They had earned a reputation for their live performances and were signed to Geffen on the strength of a single show, although they had previously recorded a demo for Chrysalis.

Contents

The Toll's first album was titled The Price of Progression, and "Jonathan Toledo," which included one of the band's trademark narratives and clocked in at more than ten minutes, was the first single. It received rotation on MTV (including "120 Minutes") and for some time held the record as the longest non-Michael Jackson video ever played on the station. However, "Jonathan Toledo" failed to break the band, and the second single, "Soldier's Room," also went nowhere.

Their second collection of songs, the concept album The Parable of Pariah, was rejected by Geffen, although several songs from it were included on their second release, Sticks and Stones and Broken Bones. This record received almost no promotion from the label and did not do well, and Geffen dropped the band, which broke up soon afterward.

Album discography

  • The Price of Progression, 1988
  • Sticks and Stones and Broken Bones, 1991
  • Songs

    Jonathan ToledoThe Price of Progression · 1988
    Stand in WinterThe Price of Progression · 1988
    Soldier's RoomThe Price of Progression · 1988

    References

    The Toll Wikipedia