Ho-Ag

Rock band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ho-Ag was an experimental noise rock band based in Boston, Massachusetts.

OriginUnited States Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Years active2001 present
MembersMatt Parish
Tyler Derryberry
Alaskan Ryan Brown
Eric Meyer[1]
Quick facts Origin, Genres ...
Ho-Ag
OriginUnited States Boston, Massachusetts, United States
GenresNoise rock
Years active2001 present
MembersMatt Parish
Tyler Derryberry
Alaskan Ryan Brown
Eric Meyer[1]
Past membersKristina Johnson
Patrick Kim
Dave Dines
Jonathan Ruhe
Nicholas ("Nkls") Ward
Websiteho-agband.com
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History

Ho-Ag was formed in 2001 by guitarists Matt Parish and Patrick Kim, along with bassist Dave Dines and drummer Jon Ruhe. Their debut EP, People Coming Back in Time, was self-released in October 2002. Their first album was later released in 2003 on Mister Records. The group then replaced Ruhe with Eric Meyer and Tyler Derryberry joined the group as a keyboardist. Their EP Pray for the Worms in was released in February 2005. Nicholas Wardreplaced Dines on bass during a tour. Their next album, The Word from Pluto, was recorded after the tour and released on Hello Sir Records in September 2006. The group followed up with a self-released EP titled Elektro in 2007. Doctor Cowboy, Ho-Ag's third album, was released by Hello Sir in May 2008, by which time the lineup consisted of Parish, Derryberry, Meyer, guitarist Kristina Johnson, and bassist Ryan Brown.[2]

Discography

  • The Meteor Is a Decoy (Demo, 2002)
  • People Coming Back In Time for Me (Self-Released, 2002)
  • Mister Records Comp 2003 (Mister Records, 2003)
  • Ho Ag Equals Go At (Mister Records, 2003)
  • Mister Records Comp 3.0 (Mister Records, 2005)
  • Ho-Ag/Laughing Light Split 7" (Mister Records, 2005)
  • Pray for the Worms (Hive 35, 2005)
  • The Word from Pluto (Hello Sir Records, 2006)
  • Elektra/Elektro EP (Hive 35, 2007)
  • Doctor Cowboy (Hello Sir Records, 2008)
  • World-Destroying Zig-Zags (Hive 35, 2013)
  • No More Masterpieces (Hive 35, 2013)

Reception

Their album The Word from Pluto received positive to mixed reviews.[3][4]

References

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