Dow Jones and the Industrials

Summary

Dow Jones and the Industrials were a new wave band from West Lafayette, Indiana, from 1979 until 1981. During this time, they released a split LP with the Gizmos, entitled "Hoosier Hysteria", and a self-titled 7-inch EP, both released in the year 1980 alone.[1] A track of theirs, "Ladies With Appliances", was also featured on the "Red Snerts" compilation.

Dow Jones and the Industrials
OriginWest Lafayette, Indiana
GenresNew wave, post-punk
Years active1979-1981
LabelsFamily Vineyard, Gulcher Records, Hardly Music
Past membersBrad Garton
Chris Clark
Greg Horn
Tim North
Jenny Sweeny

Originally, the band consisted of Greg Horn on guitar and vocals, Chris Clark on bass and vocals, Tim North on drums, and Brad Garton (known by his nickname as "Mr. Science") on keyboards. The use of the keyboard, and the band's flirtation with electronic sounds, meant that Dow Jones and the Industrials hinted towards the post-punk sound of bands that would follow them.

In 1981, the band's track "Ladies With Appliances" was featured on the Red Snerts compilation released by Gulcher Records. By this time, Chris Clark had left, to be replaced by Jenny Sweeny on bass. Brad Garton had also left the group. He appeared as "Mr. Science" on the compilation, contributing a track entitled "Mr. Science".

After the demise of Dow Jones and the Industrials, Greg Horn went on to form the synth-pop band Tone Set with Galen Herod. During the years 1983 to 1990, he also released two solo cassettes, both in a similar stylistic vein as that of Tone Set. He has also released material under the name Pointless, produced music for Japanese TV commercials, and for Nickelodeon's "Eureeka's Castle".

In 2016, Family Vineyard issued the discography compilation album Can't Stand the Midwest, which collects the entirety of their Hoosier Hysteria and Dow Jones and the Industrials records, as well as previously unreleased demo and live material.[2]

Discography edit

  • Hoosier Hysteria split LP with the Gizmos (1980, Gulcher Records)
  • Dow Jones and the Industrials 7-inch (1980, Hardly Music Records)
  • Can't Stand the Midwest compilation album (September 2016, Family Vineyard)[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Robertson (2016-09-16), Jack. "Dow Jones and the Industrials Were Only Around For Two Years But What An Explosive Ride It Was". noisey.vice.com. Vice. Retrieved 2017-05-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ n/a (2016-08-06). "Dow Jones and the Industrials – Can't Stand The Midwest 1979-1981". ravensingstheblues.com. Raven Sings The Blues. Retrieved 2017-05-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Can't Stand The Midwest: 1979-1981 Anthology, by Dow Jones and the Industrials". Dowjonesandtheindustrials.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 22 September 2020.

External links edit

  • Tone Set Article about Dow Jones and the Industrials, Tone Set and Greg Horn's solo projects
  • Remembering Dow Jones and the Industrials Article about Dow Jones and the Industrials history.