A collective stretching from the early days of the hip-hop label Sugar Hill into the industrial music of the 1990s,
Tackhead produced at least half-a-dozen albums under a variety of nominal heads --
Keith LeBlanc,
Gary Clail, and finally
Tackhead. The group came together in the early '80s as the Sugar Hill house band, with guitarist
Skip McDonald, bassist
Doug Wimbish, and drummer
Keith LeBlanc. (The trio had performed on the three best early hip-hop tunes,
the Sugarhill Gang's "The Rapper" and
Grandmaster Flash's tracks "The Message" and "White Lines.") When
McDonald,
Wimbish, and
LeBlanc met British dub producer
Adrian Sherwood (of
the On-U Sound System), they moved to England and in 1986 recorded
Major Malfunction, a street-wise funk-rock LP with doses of
Sherwood's studio trickery informing the whole. Since
LeBlanc had a bit of name recognition due to his 1983 dance hit "No Sell Out," the album was released under his name. Another Brit, vocalist
Gary Clail, had joined the
Tackhead conglomeration by that time, and it was his name -- or rather
Gary Clail's Tackhead Sound System -- that graced the cover of the 1987 album Tackhead Tape Time, on Nettwerk Records. After another collective recording on
Keith LeBlanc's 1989 album
Stranger than Fiction, the
Tackhead team finally coalesced as a stable group on
Friendly as a Hand Grenade. The album, also released in 1989, was the first recorded as
Tackhead, and the addition of a standard vocalist (
Bernard Fowler) made the group that much more stable, in image if not in sound.
Strange Things followed in 1990, with contributions from
Melle Mel and
Mick Jagger. The album appeared to be a conscious attempt at mainstream rock success (not unlike that of
Living Colour), and failed miserably. Though they released no more new
Tackhead material,
LeBlanc,
Wimbish and
McDonald continued to play for
On-U Sound System projects, such as
Gary Clail's 1991 album
The Emotional Hooligan.
–
John Bush, Rovi