10-552: [REDACTED] Look up batfish or batfishes in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Batfish may refer to: Fish [ edit ] California batfish or bat ray ( Myliobatis californicus ), an eagle ray from the East Pacific Red lipped batfish or the galapagos batfish Ogcocephalidae , a family of anglerfish found in oceans worldwide Platax ,
20-657: A UK rock group who later shortened their name to Batfish USS Batfish , two submarines of the US Navy Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Batfish . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Batfish&oldid=1213929721 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Fish common name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
30-501: A more Stooges -influenced garage rock sound, and debut album The Gods Hate Kansas prompted comparisons to the likes of The Cramps and The Gun Club . By that point, the band had added bassist Bob "Diablo" Priestley and guitarists Johnny Burman and Murray Fenton. In 1986, Zero Rek (Martin Herbert) replaced Fenton on guitar. The Batfish Boys' second album, Head , also appeared that year, laced with psychedelic blues overtones. With
40-551: A spadefish genus from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and sometimes kept in aquariums Freshwater batfish ( Myxocyprinus asiaticus ), better known as the Chinese high fin banded shark, a catostomid sometimes kept in aquariums and aquaculture Members of the genus Halieutaea Other uses [ edit ] The Batfish Boys , a UK rock group who later shortened their name to Batfish USS Batfish , two submarines of
50-437: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages batfish [REDACTED] Look up batfish or batfishes in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Batfish may refer to: Fish [ edit ] California batfish or bat ray ( Myliobatis californicus ), an eagle ray from the East Pacific Red lipped batfish or
60-758: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages The Batfish Boys The Batfish Boys (later simply called Batfish ) were an English rock band from York and Leeds , England , active between 1984 and 1990. They released three albums. The band was formed by former March Violets vocalist Simon Detroit (b. Simon Denbigh) and ex- Skeletal Family drummer Martin "Bomber" Pink, initially assisted on their first single, 1985's "Swamp Liquor" (their first release on their own Batfish Incorporated label) by Denbigh's ex-bandmates in March Violets, bassist Loz Elliott and guitarist Tom Ashton. Their goth tendencies evolved into
70-492: The US Navy Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Batfish . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Batfish&oldid=1213929721 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Fish common name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
80-480: The band's sound getting progressively heavier, they were signed by Motörhead 's label, GWR , in 1987, and shortened their name to Batfish. The first release on GWR was 1988's "Purple Dust" single, a mash-up cover of "Purple Haze" and Queen 's "Another One Bites the Dust". The third Batfish Boys album, Batfish Brew , was released in 1989, but the band split shortly afterwards. Denbigh, who later issued an album under
90-449: The galapagos batfish Ogcocephalidae , a family of anglerfish found in oceans worldwide Platax , a spadefish genus from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and sometimes kept in aquariums Freshwater batfish ( Myxocyprinus asiaticus ), better known as the Chinese high fin banded shark, a catostomid sometimes kept in aquariums and aquaculture Members of the genus Halieutaea Other uses [ edit ] The Batfish Boys ,
100-450: The name D-Rok, and reformed the March Violets in 2007, was declared Cult Hero No. 36 by Classic Rock Magazine in 2010. The Batfish Boys' early music was classified as gothic rock , post-punk and swamp rock , as well as grebo , before they changed their style to a hard rock , psychedelic blues and arena metal sound. The band, however, resisted classifying themselves as "goth" or "grebo". Chart placings shown are from
#477522