Artist's albums
The Verve Pipe
1999 · album
Villains
1996 · album
Pop Smear
1993 · album
I've Suffered A Head Injury
1992 · album
Threads
2021 · album
Forever Reaching
2021 · single
No One’s Gonna Break This Heart (Again)
2021 · single
Parachute
2017 · album
Villains - Live & Acoustic
2017 · album
Overboard
2014 · album
Crash Landing
2014 · single
Are We There Yet?
2013 · album
A Family Album
2009 · album
Platinum & Gold Collection
2004 · compilation
Underneath
2001 · album
Similar artists
Soul Asylum
Artist
The Wallflowers
Artist
Counting Crows
Artist
Semisonic
Artist
Sponge
Artist
The Goo Goo Dolls
Artist
Seven Mary Three
Artist
Nine Days
Artist
Collective Soul
Artist
Eve 6
Artist
Toad The Wet Sprocket
Artist
Better Than Ezra
Artist
Blessid Union Of Souls
Artist
Dishwalla
Artist
Vertical Horizon
Artist
Gin Blossoms
Artist
Stroke 9
Artist
Tonic
Artist
Fastball
Artist
Sister Hazel
Artist
Biography
Primarily known for their post-grunge blockbuster hit "The Freshmen," the Verve Pipe formed in 1992 in Lansing, Michigan, where frontman Brian Vander Ark pieced his group together from the ashes of two local bands. He and his brother, bassist Brad Vander Ark, had previously played in Johnny with an Eye, while drummer Donny Brown and guitarist Brian Stout were veterans of Water 4 the Pool. Both bands had been local favorites throughout Michigan, which helped the newly formed Verve Pipe become a local hit on college campuses across the state. They released their first independent album, I've Suffered a Head Injury, in the fall of 1992. Stout was dropped from the lineup in 1993 and was replaced by A.J. Dunning. The same year, the band released a second independent album, Pop Smear. Through constant touring, they developed a strong reputation and rabid following in their home state, packing large venues with converted fans and eventually selling a combined total of more than 40,000 copies of their first two albums. In 1995, the Verve Pipe signed to RCA Records and began recording their major-label debut, Villains, which appeared the following year. The album spent 15 weeks in Billboard's Heatseekers chart, and its lead single, "Photograph," enjoyed respectable airplay on alternative radio and MTV. Keyboardist Doug Corella was added as a full-time member the same year. After spending 12 months touring and promoting Villains, including an opening spot for Kiss on the European leg of their much-hyped reunion tour, the Verve Pipe finally began to make some serious headway in early 1997, when a re-recorded version of "The Freshmen" -- originally found on the group's debut, I've Suffered a Head Injury -- was released as a single. By that spring, "The Freshmen" had become a number one modern rock hit and a Top Ten pop smash, sending the album into the Top 40 and earning a gold certification. Villains eventually went platinum, and "The Freshmen" became the band's signature song. The Verve Pipe released a self-titled sophomore album in mid-1999, but its grungy songs sounded sorely out of place in a market now saturated by nu-metal groups like Limp Bizkit, and the record failed to produce any hit singles. The band returned in 2001 with Underneath, a considerably stronger album with production by Adam Schlesinger. It, too, failed to spawn any hits as big as "The Freshmen," and the group took an eight-year break from the recording studio while Brian Vander Ark turned his attention to a solo career. Reconvening in 2009, the Verve Pipe issued a collection of family-friendly songs -- the aptly titled A Family Album -- and toured in support of its release. Four years later, the Verve Pipe released their second children's album, Are We There Yet? The band returned to adult-oriented rock music in 2014 with Overboard. In the years that followed, they toured regularly, building up to the 20th anniversary of 1996's Villains which they celebrated by acoustically playing the album in its entirety at Ann Arbor's The Ark. This performance was released as a live album in 2017, accompanied by Parachute, another collection of original material. ~ Chris Woodstra & Andrew Leahey, Rovi