This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2019) |
Demolition 23. | |
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Origin | New York City, U.S. / Finland |
Genres | Glam punk |
Years active | 1993–1994 |
Labels | Music for Nations, Renegade Nation |
Members | Michael Monroe Sami Yaffa Jay Hening (deceased) Jimmy Clark Nasty Suicide |
Demolition 23 (stylized Demolition 23.) was a rock band formed in 1993 in New York by former Hanoi Rocks frontman Michael Monroe and former Hanoi Rocks bassist Sami Yaffa following the ending of Monroe's Jerusalem Slim project with Steve Stevens and Sami Yaffa.[1]
Initially, Demolition 23. was a cover band, playing live shows in New York, with Monroe, Yaffa and guitarist Jay Hening who were joined by the accomplished session drummer Jimmy Clark. Their shows were notable for guest appearances by music industry friends such as Ian Hunter, Joey Ramone, Sebastian Bach, and Kory Clarke.[1]
Demolition 23.'s eponymous first album, Demolition 23., was recorded at Power Station Studios in New York City and produced and largely penned by Little Steven.[1] Monroe's former Hanoi Rocks bandmate Sami Yaffa played bass guitar on the album. The music was a return to Monroe and Yaffa's punk roots with tracks such as "Same Shit Different Day", "Hammersmith Palais" and covers of songs by Johnny Thunders, UK Subs and The Dead Boys. The album was dedicated to the memory of Stiv Bators and released on the Music for Nations label in 1994.[1]
In March 1995, Nasty Suicide announced his departure from the band much to the surprise of Michael Monroe who then decided to end the band.
On October 14, 2022, the album was reissued on Bandcamp with three bonus tracks: demos of "Hammersmith Palais", "Dysfunctional", and "The Scum Lives On".