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CKY
CKY in 2017. Left to right: Jess Margera, Chad Ginsburg, and Matt Deis
CKY in 2017. Left to right: Jess Margera, Chad Ginsburg, and Matt Deis
Background information
Also known as
  • Camp Kill Yourself
  • Camp
OriginWest Chester, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Genres
DiscographyCKY discography
Years active1998 (1998)–present
Labels
Spinoffs
Spinoff ofForeign Objects
MembersJess Margera
Chad I Ginsburg
Ronnie Elvis James
Past membersDeron Miller
Matt Deis
Matt "Matty J" Janaitis
Daniel Davies
Chris Weyh

CKY (abbreviation of Camp Kill Yourself)[5] is an American rock band from West Chester, Pennsylvania formed in 1998 by vocalist and guitarist Deron Miller, guitarist Chad I Ginsburg and drummer Jess Margera. In 2011, Miller left the band which has since continued with Margera and Ginsburg, along with touring bassist Ronnie Elvis James who began performing with the band in 2023. Since Miller's departure in 2011, Ginsburg has taken over as frontman. Miller has since reformed pre-CKY group Foreign Objects (which originally included Margera) and founded 96 Bitter Beings, his own continuance of the material he previously played with CKY.

CKY initially found mainstream recognition through its contributions to the CKY video series and Jackass TV series, both of which featured Margera's brother Bam. After the release of their debut album Volume 1 in 1999, CKY signed with Island/Def Jam and issued Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild in 2002, which gave the band its first experience of US chart success. In 2005 the album An Answer Can Be Found followed, after which the group signed with Roadrunner Records and released Carver City in 2009. Miller left the band in 2011, after which Ginsburg, Margera and bassist Matt Deis released The Phoenix on Entertainment One Music in 2017.

CKY has been categorized in various genres, including alternative rock/metal, post-grunge, stoner rock and hard rock. The band's songwriting in the past was typically led by Miller, with production, engineering and mixing handled by Ginsburg.

History

1998–2001: Formation and early releases

Deron Miller and Jess Margera originally met at high school in 1992 and later formed the band Foreign Objects together, releasing The Undiscovered Numbers & Colors in 1995.[4] Within a year, the pair had moved onto playing in a band named Oil, which featured live bassist Andy Smith and later Ryan Bruni,[6] releasing the EPs Lifelines and Oil in 1996 and 1997, respectively.[4] The trio met Chad I Ginsburg, who was then working as an audio engineer,[7] during recording sessions for their planned debut full-length album, and later enlisted him to finalize the first lineup of Camp Kill Yourself, a name which Miller conceived as "a perfect title for a horror movie".[4] The first name Miller proposed for the band was I Dismember Mama, after the 1972 horror film of the same name.[8] Ginsburg had previously performed in the band Rudy & Blitz, which had signed with Columbia Records sub-label Ruffhouse in 1995 and recorded an album, though it was not released.[7]

CKY gained exposure by contributing music to videos produced by Bam Margera, brother of drummer Jess.

The band recorded its debut album between November 1997 and February 1998 at The Ground Hog Studio in Holland, Pennsylvania.[9] Speaking about the recording process to Guitar.com, Miller explained that the whole album took around two years to finish, mainly due to financial challenges, and that the writing process totalled up to four years.[10] Many of the sessions were funded by the frontman's father.[8] The music's first exposure came in one of Bam Margera's early stunt videos, Jump Off a Building, which featured the track "Genesis 12a"; Margera would later enlist the band to provide music for his later videos, including the first CKY video in 1999.[4] CKY's debut albums, Volume 1 and Volume 2, were released in February 1999, made up mostly of the tracks featured in Bam's videos.[4]

In promotion of Volume 1, CKY joined the 1999 Warped Tour, although after taking part in a protest started by fans regarding vending prices they were removed from the tour.[4] Later in the year, the band signed a record deal with Volcom Entertainment, who reissued Volume 1 twice in early 2000 – firstly under the title CKY, crediting the group as Camp,[11] and secondly under the title Camp, crediting the group as CKY.[12] In February, the group fired Bruni as they were "disappointed by his abilities and performance" on the Warped Tour,[6] and he was replaced by Vernon Zaborowski in July, after Ginsburg briefly filled in on bass.[13] The band returned to the Warped Tour in 2000,[4] and the limited edition EP Disengage the Simulator was released later in the year.[14] CKY's music began appearing on Jackass in October 2000, which is said to have generated "a flood of new fans".[6]

2001–2004: Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild and chart success

In May 2001, CKY ended their partnership with Volcom and signed with The Island Def Jam Music Group.[6] After more remastered reissues of Volume 1, the band recorded its second studio album Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild between November 2001 and January 2002,[6] and released it in September 2002.[4] The album gave the band its first experience of chart success, when it reached number 99 on the US Billboard 200.[15] The single "Flesh into Gear" also charted, reaching number 39 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart.[16]

The group began touring the United States in promotion of the album, but in November was invited by Guns N' Roses frontman Axl Rose to perform in Vancouver as the opening warm-up act for the Chinese Democracy Tour, just three days before it was due to begin.[17][18] Speaking about the news, Margera revealed that CKY had to cancel two of their own shows in California in order to travel to the Guns N' Roses concert, but admitted that he was "psyched because that's probably the biggest tour of [the] year".[17][18] However, due to a delayed flight blamed on "mechanical troubles", Rose failed to arrive to Vancouver in time and the show had to be cancelled, inciting riots started by audience members.[19][20] It was later announced that CKY would return to perform on the remainder of the United States leg of the tour, which was scheduled to run until January 2003.[21] It was ultimately cancelled almost a month early.[22]

CKY toured throughout the rest of 2003 on the Out on the Noose Again Tour, which was delayed when Ginsburg broke his tailbone after falling down a flight of stairs.[6][23] The band secured a high-profile support slot for Metallica in May 2003,[24] after frontman James Hetfield personally approached Miller with the opportunity.[6] The band's first video album, Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild: The Video Album, was released in November 2003,[25] featuring music videos for all ten tracks from the 2002 album as well as "96 Quite Bitter Beings" and "Disengage the Simulator", behind-the-scenes features, and a three-hour documentary titled "CKY: Chopped & Sliced".[26][27] Two-track EP Hellview was also released in 2003.[6]

2004–2006: An Answer Can Be Found and Matt Deis

Matt Deis joined CKY as the band's first full-time bassist in July 2005, performing with the band until May 2010.

On April 7, 2004, the band returned to the studio to begin recording the follow-up to Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild.[28] Band members periodically offered updates on the album, with Miller labelling it a "masterpiece" and "the best rock record of 2005",[29][30] and Ginsburg calling it "an instant classic".[31] Zaborowski was fired from the band in June 2004, with Ginsburg once again filling in on bass for a number of live shows.[6] "Familiar Realm" was released as the lead single from the new album in May 2005, reaching number 32 on the Mainstream Rock chart.[16] An Answer Can Be Found followed in June, reaching number 35 on the Billboard 200.[15] According to Nielsen SoundScan, the album sold 27,786 copies in the United States in its first week of release.[32]

It was announced in July 2005 that former All That Remains bassist Matt Deis had replaced Zaborowski, performing his first show with the band on July 18 at the Whisky a Go Go in West Hollywood, California.[33] The new lineup set out on tour to promote An Answer Can Be Found, joining the Rock Adio Tour arranged by skateboarding company Adio Footwear with Fireball Ministry and The Knives, which ran between August and September.[34] Later tour dates included a headline performance at Skate Fest in Worcester, Massachusetts,[35] a UK stint with Clutch between September and October,[36] and a North American tour with Avenged Sevenfold in early 2006.[37]

The band ended its partnership with Island in April 2006.[38] Speaking at the time, Miller explained that the band had been asking to leave the label since 2003, claiming it "had no idea how to market a band that doesn't write songs about breaking up with their girlfriends".[38]

2006–2010: Roadrunner, Carver City and touring

In December 2006, it was announced that CKY had signed a global recording contract with Roadrunner Records, a label which both Miller and Margera praised.[39][40] Recording for the band's fourth studio album began at Ginsburg's Studio CIG Pennsylvania in January 2007.[41][42] In March it was reported that the band had almost finished recording the album, with the song titles "Hellions on Parade" and "The Boardwalk Body" being confirmed.[43] Speaking about the production process, Margera commented that the band was approaching it differently than it did for An Answer Can Be Found, which he described as "a total guitar record".[43] The band released another update in August, naming a number of new tracks and claiming that the album would be "easily out" by March or April 2008.[44]

However, in October 2007 it was reported that there were internal tensions within the band. MTV reported that "there's trouble in the world of CKY", explaining that an altercation had broken out between Miller and Ginsburg following an incident after a gig in St. Louis, Missouri.[45] Each of the two had different recollections of the situations – Ginsburg proposed that Miller had "quit CKY to pursue his own band", and that he and Margera would continue CKY without him; Miller retorted by claiming that he had, according to MTV, "overheard several of his bandmates talking smack about him in St. Louis", after which he took a brief break from the group in the hope that he would receive an apology from his bandmates.[45] After around a year with no updates, it was reported in October 2008 that the band was almost finished with the upcoming album.[46] Recording was completed by November.[41]

Chad Ginsburg (left) and former frontman Deron Miller during a tour in support of Carver City in 2009

Carver City was officially announced in January.[47] Miller described the album as "the most collaborative and focused CKY effort to date", while Ginsburg applauded it as "more inventive and more layered than our past releases ... the most inspired album we have ever made".[47] "Hellions on Parade" was released as the first single from the album in April,[48] followed by "A#1 Roller Rager" on May 4.[49] Carver City was released later in the month, charting at number 46 on the Billboard 200 and selling 11,000 copies in the US in its first week.[15][50]

CKY began touring in promotion of Carver City in June 2009, performing dates in North America with support acts ASG and Graveyard until August, when the run ended with a "hometown show" in Philadelphia.[51] Later in the year the band visited several countries in Europe,[52] and in January 2010 played in Japan for the first time.[53] Later tour dates in 2010 included performances at Sonisphere Festival in the UK on August 1, which Miller described as "he biggest highlight of CKY's summer touring schedule by far",[54] and shows in Australia and New Zealand.[55][56]

2010–2014: B-Sides & Rarities and Miller's departure

In May 2010, it was announced on CKY's official website that Deis "could no longer commit" to the band.[57] He was later replaced by Matt "Matty J" Janaitis.[58] In September the band released the single "Afterworld", which was the first song by the band to feature vocals by Ginsburg.[59] The song was written for the third Jackass film, Jackass 3D, and was included in its closing credits upon release in October.[60] It was later revealed that the song would also be featured on an upcoming compilation album titled B-Sides & Rarities, which featured a number of previously unreleased and out-of-print tracks and was released in March 2011.[61] In promotion of the album, CKY completed a US tour in March.[62] B-Sides & Rarities was later released on vinyl featuring a number of additional tracks in September 2011.[63]

The future of the band was once again cast into doubt in July 2011, when members disagreed about its future.[64] In a video titled "CKY – What Next?", Miller noted that he and Margera had the idea for each of the band's members to record individual albums and then release them as an overall "CKY" package, which Janaitis also supported.[65] However, Ginsburg was opposed to the plan, claiming that he would prefer to record a follow-up to Carver City.[65] Miller presented an alternate version of events in an interview in October 2015, claiming that it was Ginsburg's idea initially to produce albums in other bands (Miller in World Under Blood, Ginsburg in Rudy & Blitz and Margera in The Company Band), before a disagreement between the guitarist and his former bandmates left him without a side project.[66] The rift escalated in the days and weeks following the release of the video, as Miller claimed on his Facebook page that Ginsburg had left the band, before himself announcing that he too would be "throwing the towel in" after completing the group's upcoming shows.[67] Margera cited Miller's alcohol abuse as one of the causes of the tensions.[67] The band performed a show dubbed "Christmas with CKY" on December 18 in Reading, Pennsylvania, which Ginsburg labelled on Twitter as the last CKY show.[68]

Following Deron Miller's departure, CKY performed a number of shows with Daniel Davies as frontman.

CKY returned in February 2012 with Year Long Disaster vocalist and guitarist Daniel Davies in place of founding frontman Miller, performing at the Australian festival Soundwave.[69] In an interview at the festival with The Pit FM, the band claimed that they intended to record new CKY material with Davies later that year.[69] After a year without CKY news, in March 2013 Margera posted on the "Ask CKY" section of the band's website to assure fans that the status of the group was still unclear, although he also noted that "5 or 6 awesome songs" had been written with Ginsburg and Janaitis which may be released as CKY.[70] In October, Miller made a statement that he had changed his mind about relinquishing the band's moniker, and noted that he would be recording a new CKY album for a 2014 release whether he could reconcile with the other band members or not.[71]

2014–2021: Frontman changes and The Phoenix

In January 2014, Miller and Ginsburg shared a number of new photos of them together with guitars, indicating a potential reunion for the band.[72][73] Miller expanded on the news on his Facebook page, revealing that he had reached out to "almost all former members" of the band but was unsure as to who would return, and that he and Ginsburg were working on at least eight songs together.[74] Another update was issued in March, with Miller revealing that he and Ginsburg had "collaborated on a very mellow, melancholy song idea" recently, and that he wanted the new CKY album to serve as the soundtrack to a planned documentary about the band.[75] Miller confirmed on February 12, 2015, that the reconciliation hadn't worked out, claiming that working with Ginsburg was "so irritating and so stressful [he] had no choice but to cut the chord".[76] That same day, it was announced that CKY would be performing at Canadian festival Amnesia Rockfest in June.[76] Miller claimed that he knew nothing about the show and Ginsburg asserted that his focus was on his upcoming solo album, although it was confirmed by Bam Margera that Jess would be involved in the show.[76] The band played the festival with Davies returning as frontman.[77][78] However, Miller also used the CKY moniker (as "CKY + Foreign Objects") for a number of shows booked in 2015 with guitarist Kenneth Hunter, bassist Shaun Luera and drummer Tim Luera.[8][79] In an interview with The Sinner's Ball radio show in August 2015, Miller described his former bandmates as "pathetic sons of bitches" and condemned Davies' performances in the band as "embarrassing".[79] In a later interview in October, Miller claimed that he would be re-recording and re-releasing An Answer Can Be Found, as well as a new album, under the name MechaCKY (later renamed 96 Bitter Beings).[66]

In May 2016, it was confirmed that Ginsburg, Margera and Deis would be continuing as a three-piece CKY (with the guitarist also singing), performing at the Random Hero Festival (in honour of deceased CKY Crew member Ryan Dunn) in Cleveland, Ohio, in June and recording a new album in July at Rancho De La Luna in Joshua Tree, California.[80] The following February, the band announced its first tour as a three-piece, with 12 shows in the UK (their first in the country since 2011) scheduled for May 2017.[81] Due to "popular demand", a second date at London's Camden Underworld was later added to the end of the tour,[82] while several other shows were upgraded to larger venues.[83] The group also performed at all dates on the 2017 Warped Tour, which ran between June 16 and August 6, 2017, and included 41 shows in the United States and Canada.[84] In March 2017, CKY signed a worldwide deal with Entertainment One Music,[85] and released their fifth studio album, The Phoenix, that June.[86] Throughout October and November 2017, CKY toured the United States as the opening act for HIM on HIM's farewell tour.[87]

On November 22, 2018, the band released an EP titled Too Precious to Kill.[88] A vinyl-only release, it features three new songs and a GG Allin cover, "Bite It You Scum". The EP was released to streaming services the following year.

On June 3, 2019, the band announced that Deis had left the band. In a statement by Deis, the bassist explained that "I'm stepping aside to focus on myself and my family so that CKY can continue their dominant return with nothing holding it back."[89] Former A Life Once Lost bassist Chris Weyh performed with the band for the Vans Warped Tour 25th anniversary show. Ginsburg and Margera performed as a duo using backing tracks for a subsequent European tour.[90] CKY released "Fuck.Shit.Help. & Yeah" featuring late Turbonegro frontman Hank von Hell, alongside Anders Odden from Cadaver, on November 26, 2021.[91]

2022–present: New Reason to Dream

Ginsburg indicated in August 2022 that work on a new CKY album had begun.[92] The band also announced that they would be performing at the Blue Ridge Rock Festival on September 7, 2023.[93] In May 2024, the band is set to complete its first US tour in over five years, the New Reason to Dream Tour, to mark its 25th anniversary.[94] On April 30, 2024, Ginsburg confirmed the upcoming album title as New Reason to Dream. He also said that the album is in the mixing process, and will be released independently.[95]

In November 2024, CKY was removed from a tour of the UK and Ireland in support of Alien Ant Farm, after frontman Dryden Mitchell accused Ginsburg of punching him in the face in the last of a string of incidents also involving members of the road crew and other bands.[96]

Musical style

Founding frontman Deron Miller wrote the majority of the band's lyrics and music during his tenure.

Music

A number of music critics have stated that it as difficult to categorize CKY into a specific musical genre. The band is categorized by AllMusic as post-grunge, hard rock, and stoner rock.[4] Due to the band's association with professional skateboarding (owed mainly to its link with Bam Margera), its music has been dubbed as skate punk,[97] but it is suggested by AllMusic's Greg Prato that this label was extinguished upon the release of Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild, which features a "heavy alt-metal sound".[4] The group's sound has been described as stoner metal by Rolling Stone's Jenny Eliscu.[98] Writers at both Blabbermouth.net and the Ultimate Guitar Archive have described CKY as "genre-defying",[40][99] while PopMatters reviewer Nikki Tranter described the sound on Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild as "impossible to label".[100]

Lyrics

CKY's lyrics cover a wide variety of themes. On Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild, it is proposed by Tranter that a number of tracks are written about "the decaying state of humanity" and "the need for some kind of freedom", with the writer describing the lyrics as "relentlessly dark, yet beautifully written, observant and real".[100] On An Answer Can Be Found, there are multiple songs said to be renouncing the idea of suicide.[98] The band has also written songs as part of ongoing storylines on a number of occasions – "96 Quite Bitter Beings", "Escape from Hellview" and "Hellions on Parade" (as well as an early demo called "Thanks for the Ride")[101] make up a series of songs about a fictional town called Hellview, the residents of which "doesn't take kindly to outsiders", and the songs on Carver City tell a story of a town named after a fisherman, who killed his crew and later returns to "curse the city".[102]

Controversy

The fanbase of CKY is affectionately dubbed the CKY Alliance, and has been identified as particularly passionate about the band.[98] Miller has proposed that the Alliance is "almost more important than the band", praising them as instrumental in the band's success.[101] Following the release of Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild, members of the Alliance "bombarded" Rolling Stone magazine with "pissed-off e-mails" after it awarded the album two out of five stars in a negative review.[98] After they followed this with another poor review of An Answer Can Be Found, Miller responded to writer Jenny Eliscu, mocking her as "an aging, ugly skank" and mocking Rolling Stone themselves as "predictable, tiresome and unprofessional" to have even employed her.[103] The band's fans followed by waging a "harassment campaign" against her, which included phoning and emailing her with death threats.[104]

Critical reception

Albums by CKY have received acclaim from music critics.[citation needed] Common points of commendation include the band's mix of various musical styles,[105] the guitar performances of Miller and Ginsburg,[106] the group's high production values,[100] and the experimental nature of many songs.[107] Other commentators, however, have identified and criticized a reliance on similar styles for multiple songs – An Answer Can Be Found, for example, was criticized by a number of sources a lack of progression and invention.[108][109][110] A similar sentiment was echoed in relation to Carver City by Blabbermouth.net writer Keith Bergman.[111][relevant?]

Members

Current members

  • Jess Margera – drums, percussion (1998–present); backing vocals (2015–present)
  • Chad I Ginsburg – lead guitar, keyboards (1998–present), lead vocals, rhythm guitar (2015–present), bass (1998–2005, in-studio only), backing vocals (1998–2015)
  • Ronnie Elvis James – bass, backing vocals (2023–present)

Former members

  • Deron Miller – lead vocals, rhythm guitar, keyboards (1998–2011), bass (1998–2005, in-studio only)
  • Matt Deis – bass, backing vocals, keyboards (2005–2010, 2015–2019)
  • Matt "Matty J" Janaitis – keyboards (2009–2010; touring); bass (2010–2012); backing vocals (2009–2012)

Former touring musicians

  • Ryan Bruni – bass, backing vocals (1998–2000)
  • Vernon Zaborowski – bass, backing vocals (2000–2004)
  • Rob "Murry" Valeno – keyboards, backing vocals (2010–2011)
  • Daniel Davies – lead vocals, rhythm guitar (2012, 2015)
  • Matt "Uncle Matt/Shitbird" Cole – keyboards, backing vocals (2017)
  • Chris Weyh – bass, backing vocals (2019–2023)

Timeline

Discography

References

  1. ^ Sources referring to CKY as alternative metal:
    • Prato, Greg. "CKY: Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
    • Jackson, Nate (March 25, 2010). "CKY". OC Weekly. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
    • DiVita, Joe (May 1, 2017). "CKY Share Album Details + Song Feat. Mastodon's Brent Hinds". Loudwire. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  2. ^ Sources referring to CKY as stoner rock/metal:
  3. ^ Sources referring to CKY as alternative rock:
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Prato, Greg. "CKY Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved June 17, 2015.
  5. ^
    • Prindle, Mark (March 18, 2003). "Interview with Jess Margera of CKY". rebelnoise.com. Rebel Noise. Retrieved June 14, 2024. Our first record label, Volcom - they had a problem with it. They thought they'd get sued by angry parents, you know. So we kinda just shortened it to CKY. Actually, they were calling us Camp for a while.
    • Hodgson, Alisdair (April 20, 2022). "10 Rock Bands Who Were Forced To Change Their Album Covers". What Culture. Retrieved June 14, 2024.
    • "96 Bitter Beings - Return to Hellview". nuclearblast.com. June 14, 2024. Retrieved June 14, 2024. Miller co-founded Foreign Objects and later Camp Kill Yourself (a name born of his love of VHS slasher classics) in West Chester, Pennsylvania, in the '90s.
    • "HARDCORE CKY AT WEBSTER". courant.com. Hartford Courant. March 6, 2003. Retrieved June 14, 2003. By 1996, singer and guitarist Deron Miller had come up with a new name — Camp Kill Yourself, CKY for short, which he thought sounded like a good title for a horror movie.
    • "About CKY". www.mm-group.org. M&M Group Entertainment. Retrieved June 14, 2024. Sitting around a pizza place in West Chester, Deron came up with Camp Kill Yourself as the new band name, the new direction, the new movement.
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  9. ^ Volume 1 (Media notes). Camp Kill Yourself. Distant Recordings/Teil Martin International. 1999.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
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  25. ^ "Infiltrate Destroy Rebuild: The Video Album - CKY". AllMusic. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
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  27. ^ Kremkau, Bryan (May 19, 2005). "CKY Returns with New Album "An Answer can be Found"". ReadJunk.com. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  28. ^ "Chad I Ginsburg". d'Addario. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  29. ^ "CKY's Deron Miller Offers Updates On Death Tribute Album, Foreign Objects Side Project". Blabbermouth.net. October 17, 2004. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  30. ^ "CKY Frontman: We Have Made 'The Best Rock Record Of 2005'". Blabbermouth.net. May 4, 2005. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  31. ^ Harris, Chris (May 9, 2005). "CKY Need A Bass Player; What They Don't Need Is An Ego Boost". MTV. Archived from the original on April 15, 2015. Retrieved August 12, 2005.
  32. ^ "Soundscan Report: CKY, Megadeth, Devildriver, Darkest Hour, Throwdown". Blabbermouth.net. July 4, 2005. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  33. ^ "CKY: Former All That Remains Bassist Joins The Fold". Blabbermouth.net. July 19, 2005. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  34. ^ Montgomery, James (June 27, 2005). "CKY Line Up Fall Tour, Won't Have To Pack Any Shoes". MTV. Archived from the original on April 17, 2015. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  35. ^ "CKY, Fireball Ministry, The Knives: Tour Dates Announced". Blabbermouth.net. June 24, 2005. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  36. ^ "Clutch To Support CKY On U.K. Tour". Blabbermouth.net. September 2, 2005. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  37. ^ "Avenged Sevenfold, CKY To Team Up For U.S. Tour". Blabbermouth.net. December 21, 2005. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  38. ^ a b "CKY Part Ways With Island Records". Blabbermouth.net. April 15, 2006. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
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  40. ^ a b "CKY Signs With Roadrunner Records". Blabbermouth.net. December 7, 2006. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  41. ^ a b Carver City (Media notes). CKY. Roadrunner Records. 2009.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  42. ^ "CKY begins work on next album". Punknews.org. February 10, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  43. ^ a b Harris, Chris (March 8, 2007). "CKY Almost Done With LP But Not Ready To Discuss Dead Body Yet..." MTV. Archived from the original on August 9, 2015. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
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