Wild Beasts used to have a much more intense name: Fauve, which is French for “wild beast”, based on the early twentieth-century modern art movement Fauvism, led by French artist Henri Matisse. Fauvism excelled at painterly qualities and strong color instead of the representational or realist values retained by Impressionism.
While Wild Beasts can’t exactly portray themselves as painters with their rock music, they still built a solid art-rock following. And though the band has been disbanded since 2018, there’s always a chance another acclaimed album will make it through. Several of the members have gone on to create solo projects.
Rush
With the sad passing of Neil Peart, eyes have been back on Rush. The Holy Trinity started out back in 1965 with original drummer John Rutsey and guitarist Alex Lifeson. They added one bassist, then traded him in for an upgrade with Geddy Lee, and christened themselves...The Projection. Not bad, but it wasn't Rush.
While working together to build their music, this famous group met with John Rutsey's brother, Bill, joined them for a brainstorming session to come up with a better name. It was Bill who suggested the name Rush. Rush it was, and music fans have been thanking the man for more than fifty years.
The Killers
This group from Las Vegas loved them some New Order. When it came to coming up with a name for their own group, they went to their inspirations to come up with something flashy.
The New Order video for their 2001 single “Crystal” featured a fake band called “The Killers,” and so Brandon Flowers, Dave Keuning, Mark Stoermer, and Ronnie Vannucci Jr. grabbed the name as their own. It's evocative and has a good punch, which is what you want to get people from reading the name to listening to the music. And it certainly worked – The Killers are considered one of the biggest rock bands of the twenty-first century.
Spock's Beard
While bands like Rush, Genesis, and Pink Floyd got the prog-rock train started, it faltered big time in the eighties and was dead by the nineties. Enter Spock's Beard, fronted by Neal Morse, and the scene was suddenly revitalized big time.
The band's name comes from a famous "Star Trek" original series episode with an alternate dimension, showing us alternate versions of the characters viewers loved. The most famous way to show the difference, on one famous occasion, was that the alternate Spock had a small, neat goatee. The band loved the name, and it's still going today. The name also inspired a Bubbatunes song: “Spock With A Beard.”
Chubby Checker
As rock and roll got its start in the fifties, the start of people taking wild band names also began. Fats Domino led the way for star and dance machine Ernest Evans. Evans was already called “Chubby” as a nickname by his friends. Then, the rocker put a twist on Fats Domino by picking his own parlor game to tack on to the end of his moniker.
Chubby Checker was born, and because of him we have famous songs like “The Twist,” which was named the biggest chart hit of all time by Billboard in 2008, “Pony Time,” and even the limbo. He's done so much for us.