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12 Bizarre True Stories Behind Famous Band Names

By Robotman May 28, 2009 580,835 views
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Picking a band name has got to be a pretty hard thing to do. Once set, it will label you and all your actions for the rest of your career. If you get tired of it you won't be able to simply toss it out the window on a dusty desert highway--at least not without repercussions. Music critics agree that this is one way in which a band name is a lot like a sack of kittens.

Today, in honor of our article's sponsor 311 (whose name came from a naked encounter with Omaha police) we examine how some of the most famous bands in the world got their names. We'd have opened it up to less famous bands, but it turns out most of those are named after semen (and after about five hours of wading through that, the research department got kind of prickly).

#12.
Pearl Jam

pearl_jam

The boys in Pearl Jam have floated a couple suggestions for the origination of their band name. It was either based on the famous peyote jam made by Eddie Vedder's great grandmother, Pearl. Alternately, it may have derived from the nickname of NBA star Mookie Blaylock. Or they picked Pearl because it sounded cool, and added Jam on the end, like musicians do when they're playing around musically.

Another version, as explained by Vedder himself, stems from how pearls are created. "The name is in reference to the pearl itself ... and the natural process from which a pearl comes from. Basically, taking excrement or waste and turning it into something beautiful." Aside from probably being a retcon, this represents a pretty fundamental misunderstanding of how pearl's are made, in that they don't shit in their mouths. Still, nice try Eddie.

Notable by its absence in any of these official explanations is how Pearl Jam is a euphemism for man marmalade, which is itself a euphemism for something else. We tend to believe Vedder's repeated denials of this explanation for the name's origins, if only because we think it's hilarious to think he accidentally named his band after spunk.

#11.
Depeche Mode

depeche_mode

Depeche Mode is an English electronic band formed in the 1980s. Hugely popular around the world, they've had only modest success in the states, primarily because American's have generally been resistant to electronic genres, preferring simpler songs about being hot for teacher.

The name Depeche Mode translates to "Fashion Dispatch" in French, which is unsurprising, seeing as the band stole the name from a French fashion magazine. That sounds like another pretty good way to limit your appeal to the American audience, given how despised the French, fashion and reading are over here. However, after researching this a bit and examining what the French magazine industry actually has to offer, we've changed our mind: French magazines are awesome.

frenchmacmag
Awesome

#10.
KISS

kiss_destroyer

If you're not familiar with KISS, they are the rock band with the painted faces--sort of like a loud and unsettling circus.

Famously, rumors have circulated that KISS stands for "Knights In Satan's Service." The band has consistently denied this however, rightly pointing out that the band isn't comprised of agents of evil so much as ridiculous, ridiculous men. The true story, according to Paul Stanley, is that they chose the name KISS because it "just sounded dangerous and sexy at the same time." Kissing is generally considered one of the least dangerous activities ever invented (it's right after hand washing) so we're going to question Paul Stanley's explanation here. Kissing people ain't dangerous dude. Unless they're unwilling and either a cop or a karate instructor.

#9.
Chumbawamba

chumbawamba

Chumbawamba are a post-punk anarcho-chipotle-barely-legal-electro-something-or-other band who've been around for decades. But they never bothered anyone until 1997 when they were responsible for a song that was incredibly popular but no one anywhere will admit to liking. Statisticians are still trying to figure it out.

The official explanation for the band name is that it's a meaningless word, a combination of syllables that sort of rhyme. However, in an early interview, band member Danbert Nobacon outlined a slightly more specific origination. In a dream, while needing to take a piss, Nobacon didn't know which door to use in a public toilet because the signs said "Chumba" and "Wamba" instead of "Men" and "Women."

Huh. Gender confusion is kind of an odd thing to base your band name on, or even admit to publicly. This is basically the band name equivalent of one of those noisy conversations at a bar where you're drunkenly confiding something to a friend when the music suddenly stops playing, and the room goes quiet, and you're there yelling "I SIT DOWN WHEN I PEE." And then the stares start.

#8.
Savage Garden

An Australian pop band, Savage Garden had a brief spell of success in the late 90s when the world's appetite for "weeny, gutless music" was reaching its zenith. While researching this we were surprised to read they managed to sell 25 million records in their time. Really? Twenty-five million Savage Garden albums? You people know they're reusable right?

The name itself is a quote from an Anne Rice novel--Anne Rice being famous for her novels about vampires that were popular with guys that listen to Savage Garden. Taking a name from a literary work is a fine tradition (wait till you see our winner) but an Anne Rice novel? That's a little less rock and roll than calling yourself Goosebumps or The Babysitters Club.

#7.
Duran Duran

duranduran

Duran Duran are an English rock band who've made a billion songs in the last 25 years, none more important than the title song to View to a Kill, the most hilarious James Bond ever (it's the one with Christopher Walken attacking things in a blimp).

Duran Duran have acknowledged that they're named after a character in the Jane Fonda movie, Barbarella. For those of you that aren't huge perverts, Barbarella is an erotic science fiction adventure from the 1960s, assuming you'll allow us to use pretty loose definitions of "erotic" and "adventure."

However, if the band had dug a little deeper into the movie, they would have found a character eight billion times better to name themselves after: Dildano.

dildano
"Helllllllllllllo"

Definitely gotta second or third or whatever the few comments about Motörhead... you guys really missed the good stuff on that one. Motörhead is indeed a euphemism for "speed freak", but the band was named after the last song Lemmy wrote for his previous band, the British Space-Rock band Hawkwind. The song is about a speed-freak biker (hence, motorhead) who also seems to have a taste for violent sexual encounters while on a five-day speed bender. Coincidentally, however, Lemmy was fired from Hawkwind after he was caught trying to smuggle speed into Canada (however, he was released without charges because the Canadian police thought it was cocaine -- hooray for loopholes!) So, so much for the "rumors" about using speed; Lemmy was definitely a motorhead at one time, if not still.

12/2/2009 1:51:44 PM
revjoe

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11/25/2009 9:02:04 PM
Roflolmao

Wierd stories. But You forgot KoRn. Their name originated from two gay guys performing a sexual act on each other that I'm not even going to explain but it's kinda gross, and to me it trumps Steely Dan. Jonathan Davis Explains it all here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CBvfLU1pqEk.

11/23/2009 4:47:15 PM
KrackHead4Alla

Is that guy from Savage Garden in GLEE now? Also, my son is in college now, and he and his friends have discovered and really appreciate the Steely Dan catalog. If you play an instrument or engineer or arrange, chances are you are in awe of those guys.

11/22/2009 6:35:54 AM
everysandwich

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11/15/2009 8:47:31 PM
Roflolmao

Stuck in the middle with you is stealers wheel, not steely dan.....dope

11/15/2009 10:37:28 AM
JohnnyWatts

Well to be fair, dextroamphetamine is mostly stimulant. The only time you feel the need to puke or start hallucinating is when you've been up for the last 36 hours on the stuff.

11/8/2009 12:32:28 PM
Alceister

Steely Dan..."Stuck in The Middle With You"...Reservoir Dogs...anyone? Im not saying there any good but no one seems to know who they are. Also, That movie kicks ass.

10/23/2009 3:44:14 AM
BrokenEndophine

wow!I really enjoyed a lot.
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10/21/2009 6:23:00 AM
mahuya

I love cheap trick. How ironic cause its from a fortune teller. Kinda like SHAMwow!

10/13/2009 12:24:12 PM
RyoSanada

Great article. I found one interesting related to this one: 15 Bizarre Band Names - http://www.weirdworm.com/15-bizarre-band-names/

Hope you'll love it too!

10/5/2009 5:11:14 PM
euphoriajoca

Dont get me wrong, steely dan s^cks a$$ but isnt another word for a pact or friendship a dan. So a steely dan would be a friendship that couldnt be broken. Just sayin'

9/14/2009 5:28:11 PM
nana

I once took a dump in a potted plant outside the law offices of Steinberg and Harris.

9/13/2009 11:02:34 AM
TheDirtball

The irony of Robotman making fun of stupid Americans and their inability to spell while using the possessive incorrectly all through the article (zeppelin's, American's, pearl's), is DELICIOUS.

Cracked, if you need a hot girl editor, I'm here for you.

9/13/2009 8:40:18 AM
Toriatama

'Mookie Blaylock' was actually Pearl Jam's original name, and has nothing to do with the meaning of the latter.

8/28/2009 3:31:56 PM
knockturne

You had a hard time remembering who CHEAP TRICK were?

Dude, I'm 17, and even I know that Cheap Trick is one of the best classic rock bands around, and "Dream Police" doesn't even begin to cover it.

8/28/2009 3:18:36 PM
kat!

now I feel like an old f**k as I realize this site is run by self professed "snot-nosed punks" who are ignorant to the power of a Sunday morning, totally frikkin hung over from the night before, just waked and baked with a fat doobie playing of a Steely Dan album such as Aja.

and yet you somehow know of "Dream Police"????? (Don't get me wrong, "Dream Police" is a very cool song its just that if ya' know "Dream Police" you should, at the very least know "Black Cow" or "Josie" or "Rikki Don't Lose That Number" or "Kid Charlemagne" or "Bodhisattva" or etc etc etc etc.)

8/26/2009 8:00:28 AM
cwn

from the beginning of the article...i've heard another reason for 311's name is that 3:11 is the minute after the high school that a few of the band members went to gets out.

8/25/2009 11:35:32 PM
oaknights6

for a while i thought that dexy's midnight runners got their name from the uncontrollable shits you get from doing large amounts of dextromethophan cough syrup.

8/16/2009 3:22:06 PM
sevenlies

Motorhead were going to be called Bastard untill the record company said no so they were named after the last song lemmy wrote for hawkwind. source white line fever, lemmys autobiography. great book. read it!

8/5/2009 1:35:11 AM
General_Lee
Cracked stuff on