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Heroes
of the modern garage revival, the Wombats were born
sometime in the late 70s, somewhere in the leafy lanes
of Maple Heights, Ohio. Teenage guitar strangler John
Zinrich, a.k.a. Johnny Fettish (so called because he
had a thing for biting women's knees under tables, hence
"John Knee Fetish"), had previously lived out the punk
ideal by dropping out of high school at age 15 to join
Public Enemy, noted in Cle 3.0 for doing "the fastest
version ever attempted of 'I Wanna Be Your Dog'." Striving
for a poppier sound, Fettish and his suburban neighbor
Vic Halm penned a series of power-punk pop gems and
entered the first national "Battle of the Garages" competition
run by Bomp/Voxx honcho Greg Shaw. The 'Bats contributed
a track, "The Reason Why" to the first "Battle" compilation
and played on the national "Battle" tour in 1981. Positive
public reaction won them a recording contract, and between
1981 and 1984 the 'Bats released two singles and an
album, "Zontar Must Die!" on Bomp/Voxx. They also played
various notable East Coast and local venues, including
the first WRUW Studio Arama show and the opening night
of the Lakefront (which displayed "Wombats" on its curb
sign for several years as a result). Their energetic
live show was notable for speedy fuzzy guitars pumped
through Marshall stacks, unintelligible vocals, and
the sight of 5'4" Fettish leaping two feet in the air,
against a backdrop of six-foot-tall John Lennon-lookalike
Halm and equally towering bassist Tim Ratley. In 1984
the Wombats played a show with the seminal Columbus
band Great Plains, who brought them to the attention
of Gerard Cosloy at Homestead Records. The Wombats subsequently
recorded one EP for Homestead, "Mudpuddles", which came
out in 1985. Unfortunately, the band had a falling out
with Cosloy over their inability to tour, since drummer
Tommy Edwards was busy studying to be a refrigerator
repairman. As a result, promotion for "Mudpuddles" was
almost nil and the 'Bats found themselves once again
without a label. In 1986, Fettish and Halm wrote and
recorded some excellent demos for a third album which
they hoped to place on a major label, but due to lack
of interest this project never saw the light of day.
Since then, the 'Bats have played sporadically around
Cleveland with various lineups. (C.L.Blue)
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