Great White
Great White is an American rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1977. The band peaked with several albums during the mid-to-late 1980s, including the platinum-selling records Once Bitten (1987) and ...Twice Shy (1989), and those albums' singles "Rock Me" and "Once Bitten, Twice Shy" received considerable airplay through radio and MTV. They charted two Top 40 hit singles on the Billboard Hot 100, with "Once Bitten, Twice Shy" and "The Angel Song." They continued to release new material into the 1990s. The band is named after both the shark with the same name, and Mark Kendall’s former stage nickname.
Great White | |
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Great White at Moondance Jam 2008 | |
Background information | |
Origin | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
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Members | Mark Kendall Audie Desbrow Michael Lardie Scott Snyder Brett Carlisle |
Past members | Terry Ilous Tony Montana Ty Longley Jack Russell Lorne Black Mitch Malloy Gary Holland Andrew Freeman |
Website | officialgreatwhite |
Great White disbanded in 2001; over the next few years, the band performed as Jack Russell's Great White, which also made headlines when, in 2003, their show pyrotechnics set a Rhode Island nightclub on fire, leading to the deaths of 100 people, including band member Ty Longley. By 2006, Jack Russell's Great White had reverted to its original name Great White. After more than three decades as their singer, Russell left the band in 2011, again using the moniker Jack Russell's Great White. Great White has since continued on without Russell, who was first replaced by XYZ vocalist Terry Ilous, who stayed in the band until 2018 when Mitch Malloy replaced him. Malloy left in 2022 and was replaced by Andrew Freeman, later followed by Brett Carlisle the same year.
As of August 2008, Great White estimated they had sold around eight million records worldwide.