The B-52s (styled as The
B-52's prior to 2008) are an American new wave band which was formed in Athens, Georgia, in 1976. The original line-up consisted
of Fred Schneider (vocals,
percussion), Kate Pierson (vocals,
keyboards), Cindy Wilson (vocals,
percussion), Ricky Wilson (guitar),
and Keith Strickland (drums,
guitar, keyboards). Ricky Wilson died from AIDS-related
illness in 1985, and Strickland switched from drums to lead guitar.
The band also added touring members for albums and live performances. The group
evoked a "thrift shop aesthetic", in the words of Bernard Gendron, by drawing from 1950s and 1960s pop
sources, trash culture, and rock
and roll. Schneider, Pierson, and Wilson sometimes use call-and-response-style
vocals (Schneider's often humorous sprechgesang contrasting with the melodic harmonies of
Pierson and Wilson), and their guitar- and keyboard-driven instrumentation
composes their trademark sound which was also set apart from their
contemporaries by the unusual guitar tunings used by Ricky Wilson on their earlier albums. The band has had many
hits, including "Rock Lobster", "Planet Claire", "Private Idaho", "Whammy Kiss", "Party Out of Bounds",
"Wig", "Love Shack" and "Roam".