Artist's albums
The Radiators
2001 · album
Cockles and Mussels: Very Best Of
1996 · compilation
The Last Watusi
1996 · album
New Dark Ages
1995 · album
Bucket of Fish
1994 · album
Total Evaporation
1991 · album
Zig-Zaggin' Through Ghostland
1989 · album
Law Of The Fish
1987 · album
Heat Generation
1981 · album
The Best of the Radiators: Songs from the Ancient Furnace
1981 · compilation
Work Done on Premises
1980 · album
Ghostown
1979 · album
Ghostown (40th Anniversary Reissue)
1979 · album
Kung Pow!! (Live at Tipitina's - 05/01/97)
2023 · album
Welcome to the Monkey House
2018 · album
I Am Sure (1984 Rare Italo Disco)
2013 · single
The Lost Southlake Sessions
2009 · album
Wild & Free
2008 · album
Dreaming Out Loud
2006 · album
Alive Alive O!
2005 · album
Similar artists
Assembly of Dust
Artist
Bonerama
Artist
Leftover Salmon
Artist
The Big Wu
Artist
moe.
Artist
Donna The Buffalo
Artist
Trey Anastasio
Artist
Anders Osborne
Artist
Tea Leaf Green
Artist
Galactic
Artist
Keller & The Keels
Artist
Widespread Panic
Artist
Keller Williams
Artist
Bob Weir
Artist
North Mississippi Allstars
Artist
Strangefolk
Artist
Ekoostik Hookah
Artist
The String Cheese Incident
Artist
Biography
The Radiators got started on January 28, 1978, during a rehearsal in the garage of one of the bandmembers; by the late '80s, they had become one of New Orleans' most popular rock & roll bands, serving up a smorgasbord of musical styles that included blues, R&B, funk, and rootsy rock & roll. Founding members keyboardist/vocalist Ed Volker and guitarist/vocalist Camile Baudoin began playing together in the 1960s. Drummer Frank Bua began working with the two in 1970, and guitarist Dave Malone and bassist Reggie Scanlan played with other New Orleans bands until they formed as the Rhapsodizers in the mid-'70s. They changed their name to the Radiators in 1978 and released their debut, Work Done on Premises, two years later on their own Croaker Records. Heat Generation followed in 1982, and the band began to develop a loyal following in the Crescent City by the time percussionist Glenn Sears joined in early '80s, making them a sextet. The Radiators developed a reputation for intense, lengthy marathon-like live shows that would last three hours or more, akin to what the Allman Brothers and Little Feat were doing; their shows became highlights of the annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, and word of their reputation spread. In 1987, the Radiators signed to Epic Records and released Law of the Fish, followed two years later with Zig-Zaggin' Through Ghostland. After the release of Total Evaporation in 1991, the band issued Snafu 10-31-'91, 1995's New Dark Ages, and 1996's Party On. The group continued being active into the new millennium, releasing the self-titled The Radiators in 2001 and Dreaming Out Loud in 2006. ~ Richard Skelly, Rovi