Sugar Ray
Sugar Ray can be booked through this site. Sugar Ray entertainment booking site. Sugar Ray
is available for public concerts and events. Sugar Ray can be booked for
private events and Sugar Ray can be booked for corporate events and
meetings through this Sugar Ray booking page.
Unlike most middle agents that would mark
up the performance or appearance fee for Sugar Ray, we act as YOUR agent in
securing Sugar Ray at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
Sugar Ray and work directly with Sugar Ray or the responsible agent for
Sugar Ray to secure the talent for your event. We become YOUR agent,
representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
the acquisition of Sugar Ray for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
Sugar Ray Biography
Belying their origins as a raucous funk metal band, Sugar Ray
turned out several of the most breezily infectious summer singles of
the late '90s, hitting on an appealing combination of sunny pop,
lightly funky hip-hop grooves, and reggae lilt. Pegged as likely
one-hit wonders after their 1997 breakthrough smash Fly, Sugar Ray
managed to maintain their career momentum far longer than many
observers expected, helped in no small part by the teen-mag pinup looks
of lead singer Mark McGrath. Of course, it also helped that the band
was able to duplicate the carefree vibe and effortless catchiness of
Fly on its subsequent singles. Not everything Sugar Ray recorded bore
the sonic stamp of Fly, but that was certainly the sound that made
them radio staples.
Sugar Ray were formed in Orange County, the heavily suburban area south
of Los Angeles, in 1992. Guitarist Rodney Sheppard, bassist Murphy
Karges, and drummer Stan Frazier had been playing parties together in a
hard rock/heavy metal cover band, Shrinky Dinx, since the late '80s.
Karges served as the touring bassist of L.A. punk veterans the Weirdos
in 1990, although a story that Sheppard had once been a cast member on
Land of the Lost was patently false. Friend Mark McGrath became the
lead singer of Shrinky Dinx after jumping up on-stage to perform one
night, and they soon began collaborating on original material. The band
played around the L.A./San Diego area, building up a following, and got
one of its friends to finance a music video for one of its original
tunes; it wound up getting them a deal with Atlantic in 1994, albeit
owing more to their look and potential. The threat of legal action by
Milton Bradley, which owned the rights to the original Shrinky Dinks
toy, forced the band to change its name to Sugar Ray (after boxer Sugar
Ray Leonard). Around the same time, they began augmenting their live
shows with the turntables of Craig Bullock, aka DJ Homicide, who later
became an official member of the group.
Sugar Ray released their debut album, Lemonade and Brownies, in the
spring of 1995. Dominated by aggressive funk metal, with touches of
punk and alternative rock, the record's typically roaring guitars and
smart-ass humor seemed to position the band as a potential keg-party
favorite. Commercially, however, the album stiffed. Atlantic decided to
try again, based on the enthusiasm Sugar Ray generated on their lengthy
supporting tour, and sent them into the studio with producer David
Kahne (who, among many other credits, had recently masterminded
Sublime's commercial breakthrough). The result, Floored, became
double-platinum hit thanks to Fly, a laid-back groove tailor-made for
summertime. With help from reggae toaster Super Cat, Fly set new
airplay records at modern-rock radio, and reigned as perhaps the most
ubiquitous hit of the summer. The song didn't sound much like anything
else in Sugar Ray's repertoire, seeming to come out of nowhere, and
when Floored failed to produce a significant follow-up hit, many
assumed that Fly was a fluke the band would never be able to repeat.
Again with Kahne in the producer's chair, Sugar Ray delivered their
third album at the beginning of 1999. The title, 14:59, was a wry
reference to Andy Warhol's 15 minutes of fame dictum, but as it
turned out, the group's time wasn't up by a long shot. 14:59 wound up
outselling its predecessor, eventually going triple platinum. The first
single, the Fly -like Every Morning, shot to number three on the pop
charts and became the group's second number one at modern-rock radio.
Their follow-up singles were successful this time around as well, as
the hits Someday and Falls Apart consolidated the group's growing
reputation for summery, radio-friendly alternative pop; plus, the album
boasted a guest appearance from hip-hop legend KRS-One. The band played
Woodstock '99 that summer, and also made a guest appearance on
Run-D.M.C.'s Crown Royal album. In the spring of 2000, McGrath made his
acting debut portraying a doctor on an episode of the acclaimed drama
ER. Sugar Ray returned in the summer of 2001 with their self-titled
fourth album, which entered the charts at number six and gave the band
its first-ever Top Ten album; meanwhile, the first single, When It's
Over, was another substantial hit in the familiar Sugar Ray mold. But
in spite of reviews claiming that the band sounded more like a band
than ever before, Sugar Ray's sales were ultimately disappointing;
perhaps hurt by the relatively lackluster performance of follow-up
singles Answer the Phone and Ours, the record failed to go platinum
within a year's time. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Written by Steve Huey