Fat Mike
Fat Mike | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Michael John Burkett |
Also known as | Cokie the Clown |
Born | [1] Newton, Massachusetts, U.S. | January 16, 1967
Origin | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Genres | |
Instruments |
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Years active | 1983–present |
Member of |
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Formerly of | |
Website | fatmikedude |
Michael John Burkett (born January 16, 1967),[2] known professionally as Fat Mike, is an American musician and producer. He was the bassist and lead vocalist for the punk rock band NOFX and the cofounder and bassist of the punk rock supergroup cover band Me First and the Gimme Gimmes. Burkett started out with his first band False Alarm in 1982. Throughout the NOFX's existence, he and rhythm guitarist Eric Melvin were the only band members who stayed since the beginning.
Early life and influences
[edit]Fat Mike attended college at San Francisco State University and graduated in 1990 with a bachelor's degree in Social Science and a minor in Human Sexuality.[3] According to the book NOFX The Hepatitis Bathtub and Other Stories, Burkett received the moniker "Fat Mike" from "one of the guys from [the band] Subculture".[4] He is a Jewish atheist.[5][6]
He credits Joe Escalante of the Vandals for introducing him to punk rock when he was 13 at a summer camp.[7]
Musical career
[edit]While attending Beverly Hills High School, Burkett began his musical career with the band False Alarm. After the band split up in 1983, he met Eric Melvin and Erik Sandin and formed the original line-up of NOFX. He has also appeared as a guest-vocalist on a number of other bands' tracks including "Peter Brady" on Screeching Weasel's 1993 album, Anthem for a New Tomorrow. Other appearances include "Beware" by Randy, "Mr. Coffee" and "Lazy" by Lagwagon. Burkett can also be heard heckling and requesting "Free Bird" at the end of the Lunachicks song, "Missed It," off their 1996 album, Pretty Ugly, which he also produced. He also appears as a guest vocalist on the Dropkick Murphys single "Going Out In Style". Burkett is the owner and founder of Fat Wreck Chords.
Burkett recorded the Cokie the Clown EP with NOFX, playing Cokie on both the cover of the EP and the music video for the title-track, "Cokie the Clown". In the video, Burkett dresses as Cokie and puts white powder into his squirting flower, which in the song he describes as "my own special blend of X, coke, and K". Cokie then walks around Chicago squirting powder in pedestrians' faces, as chronicled in the song itself. The video was shot during the punk music festival Riot Fest.
Fat Mike has made several appearances as Cokie the Clown, but one of his most memorable was at Emo's, a popular nightclub in Austin on March 20, 2010, at the South by Southwest festival.[8] He recounted several graphic and disturbing stories about his life, and played several songs both previously released and unreleased. He also tricked several members of the audience into drinking tequila, before showing them a video of himself filling a partially full bottle of tequila to the top with urine to shocked reactions. The stunt was later revealed as a joke on NOFX's website, which showed Fat Mike switching out the urine bottle for an untainted one before making audience members drink it. Burkett has since been banned from Emo's.[9] However, in NOFX's autobiography Burkett claims that the urine was indeed served to the audience.
In 2015 Burkett premiered a musical titled Home Street Home which he co-wrote with Soma Snakeoil and Jeff Marx.[10]
In 2019, Fat Mike released a solo album, in the character of Cokie the Clown, titled You're Welcome. The album features Fat Mike as Cokie as well as Dizzy Reed (Guns N' Roses) and Travis Barker (blink 182).[11]
Codefendants
[edit]Codefendants | |
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Genres | |
Years active | 2021–present[12] |
Members |
In 2021, Burkett formed his newest project Codefendants, alongside fellow punk rock musicians Ceschi and Sam King of Get Dead. The group seeks to break genre barriers and produces a mix of hip hop music, new wave, and punk rock.[13]
Activism
[edit]Punkvoter.com
[edit]Fat Mike founded the website Punkvoter.com in 2004 in an effort to mobilize the punk community to vote George W. Bush out of office in that year's presidential election. He had never been very active in politics before then, admitting that he never even voted until 2000.[14] However, he was driven into political activism because of Bush, whom he viewed as "the most ridiculous president in the history of presidents."[15] Punkvoter.com targeted 18-to-25-year-old punk fans and other disenfranchised young people and encouraged them to vote Bush out of office. At its peak, the site was getting 15 million hits a day and ultimately raised over $1 million.
Rock Against Bush
[edit]As with Punkvoter.com, Mike organized the Rock Against Bush campaign to mobilize punk fans and musicians against President George W. Bush. Fat Mike's band NOFX, along with many other well-known punk artists including Alkaline Trio, Green Day, and Jello Biafra, embarked on a tour of American college campuses in the months leading up to the 2004 presidential election. Mike hoped to go beyond just protest and actually educate kids about why they should vote against Bush. At the shows, he would hand out free DVDs of Uncovered: The Whole Truth About The Iraq War, a documentary that questions the Bush administration's motives in the Middle East.[16] To coincide with the tour, Mike released two Rock Against Bush compilation albums on Fat Wreck Chords featuring new music from some of the bands on the label. The albums sold over 650,000 copies and proceeds helped fund the tour, as well as going toward magazine ads and billboards in swing states.
Personal life
[edit]Burkett lives in Las Vegas, Nevada.
He and his wife Erin divorced in 2010 after 18 years of marriage. They have a daughter named Darla.[17] In October 2009, Mike appeared in the documentary The Other F Word, an analysis of punk rock fatherhood.
Fat Mike formerly owned a gastropub-style restaurant in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City called Thistle Hill Tavern.[18] He has been into BDSM for years: he has had a dungeon in his house.[19] Fat Mike has numerous tattoos, including one on his left arm that features a golfing dominatrix and her bound caddy.[20] When discussing the NOFX song "Fuck Euphemism", for which he wrote the lyrics, he discussed how he describes himself as queer: "I live a BDSM lifestyle and I'm a crossdresser, so it did bother me when people were calling me a cis male. I like the whole thing of defining yourself using your own terms, because I'm a punk rocker first, and then a submissive crossdressing male. The transgender community and the gay community are taking a stance on how we want to be known, and I'm going to be known as a certain way."[21]
Fat Mike announced his engagement to adult film actress Soma Snakeoil on January 28, 2014.[22] Mike and Soma separated August 2017.[citation needed]
He has been vocal about assisting with his terminally ill mother's death, describing the episode in a song called "La Pieta" which is featured in NOFX's audiobook version of The Hepatitis Bathtub and Other Stories.
In 2014, Burkett started Fatale, a brand of panties marketed towards men.[23]
Assault incident
[edit]On November 5, 2014, at a NOFX show in Sydney, Australia, Fat Mike had complained about a neck injury and had asked the audience not to throw objects at him and grab him while on stage as it caused him pain. While playing the song "Linoleum", a fan climbed onstage and put his arm around Mike's neck, to which Mike responded by elbowing him to the ground and then kicking him in the face. The fan suffered some bruising on his face but had no major injuries.[24]
Later, Fat Mike and the fan both apologized via Twitter. A video was released of Mike giving the fan a beer and custom T-shirt and letting him kick him with a fluffy slipper as an apology. This incident happened three years after Fat Mike kicked Screeching Weasel off his Fat Wreck Chords record label because of an assault incident involving Ben Weasel at SXSW in Austin, Texas. Fat Mike said of the Screeching Weasel incident, "I think it's horrible because he punched someone who's smaller and weaker than him."[25]
Discography
[edit]- As Cokie the Clown
- You're Welcome (2019)
- With Codefendants
- This Is Crime Wave (2023)
References
[edit]- ^ Lymangrover, Jason. Biography. Allmusic
- ^ Oseary, Guy (September 27, 2016). Jews Who Rock. St. Martin's Publishing. ISBN 9781250138699.
- ^ "Golden Gate [X]press : SF State alumnus still rockin' after 25 years". Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved December 10, 2012.
- ^ Alulis, Jeff (2016). NOFX The Hepatitis Bathtub and Other Stories. Da Capo PRESS. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-306-82477-7.
- ^ "'Punk Jews,' Why we made it?". Algemeiner.com.
- ^ "Humanist Anthems for Your iPod Playlist". American Humanist Association. Archived from the original on August 19, 2012. Retrieved December 10, 2012.
- ^ Boulware, Jack. (2009). Gimme Something Better The Profound, Progressive, and Occasionally Pointless History of Bay Area Punk from Dead Kennedys to Green Day. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-101-14500-5. OCLC 1156119549.
- ^ "Fat Wreck Chords 2010 SXSW Showcase at Emo's". It All Happened – A Living History of Live Music.
- ^ "Banned in Austin: NOFX's Fat Mike Shocks SXSW". TheInertia.com. September 13, 2010. Retrieved July 4, 2011.
- ^ "NOFX's Fat Mike Preps Punk Musical". Rolling Stone. December 3, 2014.
- ^ "Cokie the Clown – You're Welcome (Album Review)". Wall of Sound. April 19, 2019.
- ^ "Sam King and Cheschi Ramos – Codefendants 'We're Living a Dream'". May 7, 2023.
- ^ "Codefendants". Fat Wreck Chords. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
- ^ Garofoli, Joe (May 27, 2007). "Beyond PunkVoter: "Fat" Mike Burkett built a legitimate interest in politics among apolitical punk listeners, but who'll carry that torch in 2008?". San Francisco Chronicle, May 27, 2007.
- ^ Selm, Nick. "Fat Mike, unfiltered". NUVO, September 12, 2012.
- ^ Cave, Damien. "Punks Mosh for Votes". Rolling Stone, May 13, 2004.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Spontan intervju med NOFX". YouTube. July 9, 2010. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2011.
- ^ "Fat Mike's Not-So-Punk Restaurant Thistle Hill, Now Open in Park Slope!". VillageVoice.com. May 10, 2010.
- ^ "NOFX'S Fat Mike lives a deep S&M lifestyle". Noisey. August 1, 2012.
- ^ How To Explain Awkward Tattoos, From A Guy With A Golfing Dominatrix On His Shoulder Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Fatherly. June 30, 3015
- ^ "NOFX Wields Wordplay to Tackle Identity Questions on 'F–k Euphemism'". Rolling Stone. February 2, 2021. Retrieved March 5, 2021.
- ^ "This is Fat Mike from NOFX. I got tricked into doing this..." Interviewly. January 28, 2014. Archived from the original on April 3, 2015. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
- ^ "About". Fatale Design. Retrieved March 18, 2019.
- ^ Anthony, David (November 7, 2014). "NOFX's Fat Mike assaults fan on stage, apologizes on Twitter". The A.V. Club. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
- ^ Hartmann, Graham (November 10, 2014). "NOFX Fan That Got Kicked in the Face by Fat Mike Gets a Beer, Custom Shirt and Revenge!". Loudwire. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
External links
[edit]- 1967 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American guitarists
- American anti–Iraq War activists
- American atheists
- American male guitarists
- American male singers
- American punk rock singers
- American punk rock bass guitarists
- American rock bass guitarists
- American male bass guitarists
- Beverly Hills High School alumni
- American critics of religions
- Fat Wreck Chords
- Jewish American atheists
- Jewish American musicians
- Jewish singers
- Jews in punk rock
- Me First and the Gimme Gimmes members
- Guitarists from Los Angeles
- Guitarists from San Francisco
- NOFX members
- People from Newton, Massachusetts
- American queer men
- Queer musicians
- San Francisco State University alumni
- Singers from Los Angeles
- Jewish punk rock musicians