Cheetah Chrome
Cheetah Chrome (born Eugene Richard O'Connor; February 18, 1955) is an American rock musician best known as the lead guitarist and a founding member of the proto-punk band Rocket from the Tombs and the punk rock band the Dead Boys.[1][2] Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Chrome rose to prominence in the mid-1970s amid the burgeoning punk scene, co-founding Rocket from the Tombs in 1974 alongside vocalist Stiv Bators and others, a group whose raw energy and unreleased material profoundly influenced subsequent punk acts despite disbanding without a full album.[1] In 1976, remnants of the band relocated to New York City and reformed as the Dead Boys, signing with Sire Records and releasing their debut album Young, Loud and Snotty in 1977, followed by We Have Come for Your Children in 1978, establishing them as key figures in the CBGB-era punk explosion.[3][1] Beyond these foundational bands, Chrome has maintained an active career, including collaborations such as playing on Ronnie Spector's 1980 debut solo album Siren and touring with Nico that same year, as well as releasing a single "Still Wanna Die/Take Me Home" on ORK Records.[1] He reformed Rocket from the Tombs in 2003, leading to releases like Rocket Redux (2004) and Barfly (2011), and formed projects including Cheetah Chrome and the Casualties, Shotgun Rationale with the Replacements' Bob Stinson, and the Batusis with New York Dolls' Sylvain Sylvain.[1][2] In 2010, he published his autobiography Cheetah Chrome: A Dead Boy's Tale from the Front Lines of Punk Rock through Voyageur Press, chronicling his experiences in the genre's formative years.[1] Chrome also made a cameo in the 2013 film CBGB, where his Dead Boys role was portrayed by actor Rupert Grint, and issued his first solo EP Solo in 2013 via Plowboy Records.[2] Chrome continues to lead reformed versions of Rocket from the Tombs and the Dead Boys, with the latter releasing archival material in 2024 and planning a new album for 2025.[4]Early life
Upbringing in Cleveland
Cheetah Chrome, born Eugene Richard O'Connor on February 18, 1955, in Cleveland, Ohio, grew up in a modest, single-parent household amid the city's industrial landscape.[1] His father was absent throughout his childhood, an alcoholic and drug user whom O'Connor never met or even saw a photograph of, leaving his mother to raise him alone with limited details about the man.[5] This lack of a father figure contributed to an early sense of independence, as O'Connor taught himself survival skills on the streets of a rough neighborhood, fostering a rebellious streak and a "gang mentality" against the world.[5][6] Cleveland in the 1950s and 1960s was a quintessential Rust Belt hub, dominated by steel mills and rubber factories that blanketed the skyline in orangey-blue hues and filled the air with sulfurous odors, emblematic of its working-class grit.[7] The city's economic backbone, built on heavy industry, faced early signs of decline, punctuated by environmental disasters like the recurring fires on the polluted Cuyahoga River, which locals noted with resigned familiarity rather than alarm.[7] This industrial environment, coupled with a cultural vacuum and isolation from broader artistic scenes, created a breeding ground for raw, confrontational expressions that would later influence O'Connor's path, though his initial musical sparks emerged amid these formative surroundings.[7]Initial musical influences
Cheetah Chrome, born Gene O'Connor, developed his initial interest in music during his childhood in Cleveland, where the gritty urban environment provided a raw backdrop for his emerging artistic passions. At age nine, he watched The Beatles perform on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, an event that profoundly impacted him and prompted him to immediately request a guitar from his mother. This exposure to the British Invasion marked the beginning of his musical journey, instilling a desire to emulate the energy and innovation of early rock acts.[8] O'Connor acquired his first instrument—a inexpensive plastic guitar equipped with gut strings—approximately three months later, thanks to his mother's support. Entirely self-taught, he learned basic chords by ear while tuning into local radio stations such as WIXY in Cleveland and CKLW in Detroit, which broadcast a mix of rock and emerging sounds. His early influences encompassed 1960s rock staples like The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, and Tamla Motown artists, shaping his foundational understanding of rhythm, melody, and performance. As his tastes evolved in his teenage years, he gravitated toward more abrasive 1960s garage rock and proto-punk acts, including The Stooges, MC5, and the New York Dolls, whose raw aggression and defiance resonated with his developing style. A pivotal moment came when his mother mistakenly gifted him The Stooges' debut album for his birthday, which he credited with "permanently twisting" his musical preferences toward high-energy, confrontational rock.[8][6] By the mid-1970s, as O'Connor immersed himself in Cleveland's underground music scene—frequenting local clubs and jamming with like-minded enthusiasts—he adopted the stage name Cheetah Chrome to reflect his swift, aggressive guitar approach, drawing from a high school nickname earned during a brief stint on the track team. This moniker encapsulated his fast-paced playing and bold persona, distinguishing him amid the city's burgeoning punk undercurrents before he entered professional bands.[8][9]Musical career
Rocket From the Tombs
Rocket From the Tombs was formed in mid-1974 in Cleveland, Ohio, as a proto-punk band known for its raw, experimental sound. Cheetah Chrome joined as guitarist in late 1974, bringing a high-energy style influenced by his prior collaborations with band member Peter Laughner.[10] His arrival solidified the classic lineup, which included vocalist David Thomas, bassist Craig Bell, and drummer Johnny Madansky.[11] Chrome made significant contributions to the band's repertoire, co-writing and shaping songs such as "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" and "Sonic Reducer," which captured the group's aggressive, confrontational ethos.[10] During their brief original run from late 1974 to mid-1975, the band delivered about 15 chaotic live performances that defined the nascent punk aesthetic, including a notorious July 1975 show at the Piccadilly Club where Chrome fell onstage during "Sonic Reducer" but continued playing without missing a note amid fights and onstage antics.[12] These intense, self-destructive gigs, often featuring Thomas rolling on the floor and Chrome in a dog collar, helped ignite the Cleveland punk scene by blending influences from the Velvet Underground with visceral aggression.[11] The band disbanded in late summer 1975 after a disastrous farewell show at the Viking Saloon, with several members and songs later forming the basis of the Dead Boys.[12] The band reformed in June 2003 with Chrome, Thomas, and Bell joined by guitarist Richard Lloyd and drummer Steve Mehlman, leading to the release of Rocket Redux, a studio recording of original material produced by Lloyd.[13] This incarnation toured actively through 2006, reviving the proto-punk energy for audiences and performing classics alongside new interpretations.[10] Chrome remained a core member until his sudden departure in December 2011, immediately after the final date of a week-long tour, marking the end of his involvement with the group.[13]Dead Boys
The Dead Boys formed in 1976 in Cleveland, Ohio, following the dissolution of the proto-punk band Rocket From the Tombs, from which core members including guitarist Cheetah Chrome, vocalist Stiv Bators, drummer Johnny Blitz, bassist Jeff Magnum, and rhythm guitarist Jimmy Zero emerged.[14] Drawing briefly from the Rocket From the Tombs songbook, the group relocated to New York City that year, immersing themselves in the burgeoning punk scene at venues like CBGB, where their chaotic, high-energy performances quickly gained notoriety.[14] Shortly after arriving, they signed with Sire Records, a label pivotal in promoting early punk acts, which provided the platform for their rapid rise.[14] Cheetah Chrome's jagged, feedback-laden guitar style became a defining element of the Dead Boys' sound, blending raw aggression with proto-punk ferocity during their commercial peak in the late 1970s.[14] Their debut album, Young, Loud and Snotty, released in 1977, captured this intensity with tracks like the anthemic "Sonic Reducer," a Chrome co-write that showcased his slashing riffs and the band's snarling defiance, and became a punk staple.[14] The record, produced by Genya Ravan, peaked at No. 189 on the Billboard 200 and established the Dead Boys as key players in the New York punk explosion, though commercial success was limited by their unpolished edge.[14][15] The band's second album, We Have Come for Your Children, arrived in 1978, delving deeper into Chrome's contributions with more experimental edges, including the driving "I Won't Look Back," which highlighted his rhythmic precision and sonic bite amid the group's escalating chaos.[14] Despite critical praise for its evolution from the debut's rawness, the album underperformed commercially, reaching only No. 176 on the charts, as Sire pushed for a more radio-friendly polish that clashed with the band's ethos.[14] Chrome's guitar work, often described as a bridge between garage rock savagery and punk's urgency, anchored these recordings, influencing subsequent acts with its unyielding attack.[14] Internal tensions, exacerbated by creative differences, substance issues, and frustrations over label expectations, led to the band's breakup in 1979 after a final tour marred by onstage antics and lineup strains.[14] Chrome, whose blistering solos and stage presence had been central to their live notoriety, pursued other projects while the group's dissolution marked the end of their initial era.[14] The Dead Boys reunited sporadically in subsequent decades, with Cheetah Chrome as a consistent driving force. In 1987, the original lineup briefly reconvened for a short tour, capturing their enduring punk spirit in live sets that included rare recordings like the 12-inch single "Ignorance in Action." Further reunions followed in 2004 and 2005, featuring Chrome and Blitz alongside new members, though these were limited to select performances without Bators, who had died in 1990.[16] A more substantial revival occurred in 2017 for the 40th anniversary of Young, Loud and Snotty, with Chrome and Blitz leading a new lineup on tour and releasing Still Snotty: Young, Loud and Snotty at 40, a re-recorded version of the debut that reaffirmed Chrome's razor-sharp guitar as vital to the band's legacy.[17] The project, issued on Chrome's Plowboy Records, emphasized their foundational influence on punk.[16] In 2024, Cleopatra Records released the archival live album Live in San Francisco, documenting a 1977 performance that highlights the Dead Boys' explosive energy, with Chrome's feral guitar leads propelling classics like "Sonic Reducer" and covers such as Iggy Pop's "Search and Destroy."[18] This ongoing activity underscores the band's lasting vitality, centered on Chrome's commitment to preserving their proto-punk roots.[18]Solo work and collaborations
Following the breakup of the Dead Boys in 1979, Cheetah Chrome pursued independent recordings, beginning with his debut solo single "Still Wanna Die / Take Me Home," released on ORK Records. Produced by Herb Abramson, the co-founder of Atlantic Records, the single captured Chrome's raw punk energy with themes of despair and longing, recorded in a sparse, garage-punk style that echoed his Dead Boys roots.[19][20] In the 1990s, after relocating to Nashville, Tennessee, Chrome released the live album Alive in Detroit (DUI), recorded at Lili's Bar in Hamtramck, Michigan, on May 15, 1999, and issued in 2000 by D.U.I. Records. The album documented a high-energy performance with Chrome backed by a local lineup, featuring covers and originals that highlighted his enduring punk ferocity amid a rowdy crowd atmosphere.[21] Chrome's collaborations during this period extended his influence across the punk and underground scenes. In 1980, he contributed guitar to Ronnie Spector's debut solo album Siren, produced by Genya Ravan, adding punk edge to tracks like "Here Today Gone Tomorrow." That same year, he joined Nico for live performances, including shows at Squat Theatre in New York City, where he provided guitar for her Velvet Underground-era material like "All Tomorrow's Parties," contributing to her late-career tours marked by atmospheric intensity. He also toured with GG Allin in 1988, playing guitar on a chaotic U.S. run that amplified Allin's notorious extremism, and performed with the Stilettos in New York clubs like Max's Kansas City shortly after the Dead Boys' dissolution. These efforts overlapped briefly with Dead Boys reunion attempts in the late 1980s, allowing Chrome to balance side projects with band obligations. Additionally, he formed Cheetah Chrome and the Casualties in the late 1970s, a short-lived outfit that gigged in New York and released material blending punk aggression with rockabilly edges. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Chrome played in the short-lived Shotgun Rationale alongside Bob Stinson of The Replacements and Sonny Vincent of Testors, delivering raw punk sets. Into the 2010s, Chrome contributed to the Batusis EP, self-titled and released in 2010 on Smog Veil Records, where he handled guitar duties alongside Sylvain Sylvain of the New York Dolls, delivering a four-track burst of glam-punk revivalism produced with high-octane riffs and dual vocals. The following year, sessions from his involvement with Rocket From the Tombs yielded the full-length album Barfly, issued in 2011 by Fire Records, featuring Chrome on guitar and piano across tracks that revisited the band's proto-punk origins with experimental flair under David Thomas's production.[22][23] In 2013, Chrome released his first solo EP, Solo, on Plowboy Records, featuring tracks from a 1996 session produced by Genya Ravan, including "Sharky" and "East Side Story."[2]Recent projects and reunions
In 2017, Cheetah Chrome reformed the Dead Boys for a 40th anniversary tour celebrating their debut album Young, Loud and Snotty, with vocalist Jake Hout joining the lineup.[24] The band released Still Snotty: Young, Loud and Snotty at 40, a re-recording of the original album produced at Creative Workshop in Nashville, on September 8, 2017, via Cleopatra Records.[25] This project revitalized the band's live presence, earning praise for recapturing their raw punk energy during performances at events like SXSW.[26] On November 15, 2024, Cleopatra Records issued Live in San Francisco, the first official release of a 1977 concert recording featuring the classic lineup with Stiv Bators on vocals.[18] The album captures the band's chaotic stage presence during their early West Coast tours, including tracks like "Sonic Reducer" and a cover of Iggy Pop's "Search and Destroy."[27] In late 2024, Chrome announced a new Dead Boys album slated for 2025 release via Cleopatra Records, featuring himself on guitar and vocals alongside Blondie drummer Clem Burke and Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock.[28] The project incorporates AI technology to subtly enhance vocals with elements derived from late frontman Stiv Bators' style, described by Chrome as an "artful dusting" rather than a full recreation, sparking debate over authenticity in punk music.[29] This announcement prompted Hout's departure in November 2024, as he publicly accused the label of using a "fakeass robot AI" version of Bators' voice, leading to his exit from the band.[30] In January 2025, the Dead Boys introduced Mark Thorn, formerly of UK punk band Neon Animal, as their new lead singer, a choice recommended to Chrome by The Damned's Rat Scabies.[31] Thorn debuted with the band on a September 2025 Christmas single, signaling a fresh era.[32] Cleopatra Records has two Dead Boys albums planned for 2025, including the all-star collaboration and Night of the Living Dead Dolls, a punk-infused project tied to the horror franchise.[33] The band also scheduled a spring 2025 tour to support these releases, with Burke and Matlock confirmed for select dates, aiming to bring the updated lineup to stages worldwide.[34]Other activities
Autobiography
In September 2010, Cheetah Chrome published his memoir Cheetah Chrome: A Dead Boy's Tale from the Front Lines of Punk Rock through Voyageur Press, offering a firsthand account of his experiences in the punk rock world.[35][36] The book delves into key themes, including insider perspectives on the formation and dissolution of Rocket From the Tombs in Cleveland, the chaotic rise of the Dead Boys in the mid-1970s New York punk scene, and Chrome's personal excesses amid the era's hedonism.[35] It features candid excerpts detailing drug overdoses—Chrome was pronounced dead three times—band rivalries such as fistfights with Iggy Pop, and interactions with figures like Johnny Thunders, the Ramones, and Nico at CBGB.[35][37] Reception for the memoir has been positive, praised as a raw, no-holds-barred oral history that captures the unfiltered essence of punk's formative years, providing a more intimate contrast to broader oral histories of the genre.[35][38] Critics and readers have highlighted its entertaining and cautionary narrative, emphasizing Chrome's role in documenting the highs and lows of punk rock's front lines.[38][37]Record label and production work
In 2012, Cheetah Chrome joined Plowboy Records as creative director and A&R director shortly after the label's founding by Eddy Arnold's grandson, R. Shannon Pollard, with a focus on preserving legacy artists while supporting alternative and roots-oriented acts.[39][40] Under his guidance, the label released works by punk and garage-influenced artists, including the raw garage-punk duo The Ghost Wolves' album Man, Woman, Beast in 2014 and the Blackfoot Gypsies' high-energy rock 'n' roll record Handle It in 2015, blending Chrome's punk roots with broader indie sounds.[41][42] Chrome's production involvement extended to select projects on the label, where he served as A&R director and producer, overseeing releases such as his own 2013 solo EP Solo, a collection of gritty, no-frills tracks drawn from earlier sessions.[43] He also contributed to archival efforts, curating and producing reissues like Drivin' N Cryin''s Archives Vol. 1 '88-'90, which unearthed unreleased material from the band's early career to highlight their evolution in Southern rock.[44] Building on the punk documentation in his 2010 autobiography Cheetah Chrome: A Dead Boy's Tale, Chrome expanded his industry commentary through blog posts on cheetahchrome.net starting in the mid-2010s.[45] In pieces like his August 2025 article "How Digital Platforms Are Transforming Music Industry Operations," he analyzed the shift toward streaming and AI in production, emphasizing how these tools democratize access but challenge traditional revenue models for independent labels.[46]Personal life
Addiction struggles and recovery
During the late 1970s, as the Dead Boys toured extensively to promote their albums, Cheetah Chrome began experimenting with heroin, drawn into the substance amid the band's chaotic lifestyle and the widespread availability of the drug in New York's punk scene.[5] Heroin use escalated during this period, with Chrome describing how boredom and the band's declining momentum in 1978–1979 led him to intravenous consumption for the first time, marking the onset of a severe addiction.[37] This addiction played a significant role in the Dead Boys' breakup in 1979, as Chrome's struggles with substance abuse contributed to internal conflicts, poor performance reliability, and the eventual termination of their contract with Sire Records following a troubled tour.[47] The ensuing years saw Chrome endure nearly two decades of heavy drug dependency, resulting in a prolonged hiatus from music where he battled profound personal and health deterioration, often living what he later termed a "living death" marked by overdoses and isolation.[48] His addiction led to lost career opportunities, with sporadic attempts at reunions in the 1980s undermined by ongoing substance issues that exacerbated physical tolls like malnutrition and repeated health crises.[38] Chrome achieved a key recovery milestone in 1996, when he quit hard drugs after recognizing the destructive cycle, though he experienced occasional slips before fully committing to sobriety; he later ceased alcohol use in 2007.[49] This path to clean living profoundly impacted his health, allowing him to regain stability and avoid the fatal outcomes that claimed many contemporaries. Sobriety facilitated his return to performing and creative work, including founding Plowboy Records in 2012 and releasing solo material, where his clear-headed approach influenced more reflective and sustainable projects in later years.[49]Life in Nashville
In the 1990s, Cheetah Chrome relocated from New York to Nashville, Tennessee, seeking a quieter existence following his recovery from addiction. This move marked a significant shift from the high-energy chaos of his punk rock days in Cleveland and Manhattan, allowing him to establish a stable home base in Music City. By the early 2000s, he had settled into family life, becoming a devoted husband and father.[50] Chrome, born Eugene Richard O'Connor on February 18, 1955, turned 70 in 2025 and continues to reside in the Nashville area with his family, including his son Rogan, now in his early twenties. His daily routine contrasts sharply with the raw intensity of his youth in the Dead Boys, emphasizing domestic stability and occasional reflections on his past through interviews rather than the spotlight. In a 2014 profile, he described embracing this subdued phase, noting the appeal of Nashville's supportive community for raising a family away from urban punk scenes.[1][51][52] Today, Chrome's pursuits remain low-key, centered on personal well-being and selective engagement with music history, underscoring a life of reflection over reinvention. He has spoken fondly of Nashville's role in providing a grounding environment, where he balances fatherhood with sporadic creative outlets, far removed from the adrenaline-fueled performances of his heyday.[49]Legacy and influence
Impact on punk rock
Cheetah Chrome's contributions to punk rock began in the mid-1970s with his role as guitarist in Rocket From the Tombs, a Cleveland-based proto-punk band whose raw, aggressive sound laid foundational elements for the genre. His incendiary guitar work, characterized by staccato riffs and driving double-stops inspired by Chuck Berry and Keith Richards, helped define punk's visceral energy, blending influences from the Stooges and MC5 into chaotic performances that prioritized ferocity over polish. Songs like "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" and "Sonic Reducer," co-written by Chrome, exemplified this approach, influencing the development of punk's hard-edged aesthetic through their nihilistic lyrics and unrefined execution.[53][54][8][12][55] Chrome played a pivotal role in bridging the Cleveland and New York punk scenes by relocating with fellow Rocket From the Tombs members to form the Dead Boys in 1976, becoming a mainstay at CBGB and infusing the New York scene with Midwestern aggression. The Dead Boys served as a vehicle for this cross-pollination, channeling proto-punk's intensity into the urban grit of Manhattan's underground, where their performances amplified punk's rebellious ethos. This migration helped synchronize regional punk movements, contributing to the genre's explosive growth on both coasts.[50][12] The legacy of Chrome's raw energy is most evident in "Sonic Reducer," a blazing proto-punk anthem that transitioned from Rocket From the Tombs to the Dead Boys' 1977 debut Young, Loud and Snotty, where it became a cornerstone of American punk with its melodic yet ferocious structure. Widely regarded as a definitive punk track, it showcased Chrome's taut, machine-gun-like riffs and has endured as a symbol of the genre's unbridled spirit, covered by acts like Pearl Jam and sampled in hip-hop to underscore punk's broader cultural reach.[54][17][55] Through reunions and archival efforts, Chrome has actively promoted punk's foundational ethos, notably by spearheading the Dead Boys' 2017 40th-anniversary project Still Snotty: Young, Loud and Snotty at 40, a re-recording that recaptured the 1970s sound with enhanced clarity while preserving its chaotic essence. His autobiography, Cheetah Chrome: A Dead Boy’s Tale From the Front Lines of Punk Rock (2010), further documents the era's unfiltered vitality, ensuring the raw innovation of early punk remains accessible to new generations. These initiatives underscore Chrome's commitment to maintaining punk's anti-establishment core amid its evolution.[8][17][50]Awards and recognition
Cheetah Chrome has received notable media recognition for his foundational role in punk rock, particularly through appearances in documentaries that highlight the genre's early pioneers. He was interviewed in the 2007 film King of Punk, which explores the history of UK punk and features contributions from Chrome alongside members of bands like The Exploited and The Vibrators.[56] Additionally, Chrome appears in the 2025 documentary I Was a Teenage Sex Pistol, discussing the transatlantic punk scene and his interactions with the Sex Pistols.[57] In the 2010s, Chrome garnered significant acclaim from the release of his autobiography, Cheetah Chrome: A Dead Boy's Tale from the Front Lines of Punk Rock, published in September 2010, which received warm public reception and praise for shedding light on the Dead Boys' underrecognized contributions to punk.[58] The book was lauded in reviews for its honest portrayal of the era's excesses and innovations, helping to elevate Chrome's profile among punk historians and fans.[59] Further recognition came in 2017 with the Dead Boys' 40th anniversary reunion tour, featuring Chrome and drummer Johnny Blitz, which was celebrated in music press for revitalizing the band's legacy and drawing enthusiastic crowds across North America and Europe.[60] Outlets described the performances as a triumphant return, emphasizing Chrome's enduring guitar prowess and the tour's role in honoring punk's raw energy.[61] By 2024–2025, Chrome's relevance was underscored by widespread media coverage of a controversy surrounding the Dead Boys' planned new album with Cleopatra Records, where departing vocalist Jake Hout accused the label of intending to use AI to recreate the voice of late frontman Stiv Bators, prompting Chrome to publicly refute the claims as misinformation.[29] The dispute, reported in major outlets, highlighted Chrome's ongoing influence in punk discussions on ethics and innovation, with Chrome defending the project as a genuine continuation of the band's spirit.[28] Despite no formal inductions into halls of fame such as the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, these events affirm Chrome's status as a punk icon through sustained critical and public attention.[62]Discography
With Rocket From the Tombs
Cheetah Chrome, as a founding guitarist of Rocket From the Tombs, contributed to the band's posthumous archival releases from its original 1974–1975 period, as well as studio recordings and singles from the group's reformation starting in 2003.Archival Releases from 1974–1975 Era
The band's only official output from its initial incarnation consists of compiled live and rehearsal recordings, as no studio album was produced at the time.- The Day the Earth Met the Rocket from the Tombs (2002): A double album featuring live performances and rehearsals recorded in Cleveland between February and July 1975, including tracks like "30 Seconds Over Tokyo," "Sonic Reducer," and "Final Solution." Released by Smog Veil Records, it captures the original lineup including Chrome on guitar.[63]
Reformation Releases (2003 Onward)
Following the 2003 reunion of core members including Chrome, David Thomas, and Craig Bell (with Richard Lloyd on second guitar), the band produced new studio material reinterpreting its early songs alongside original compositions.- Rocket Redux (2004): The first studio album from the reformed lineup, consisting of re-recorded versions of 1970s originals such as "Ain't It Fun" and "What Love Is Like." Released by Smog Veil Records and Morphius Records.[64][65]
- I Sell Soul / Romeo & Juliet (2010): A double A-side 7-inch single featuring new tracks "I Sell Soul" (written by Chrome and Thomas) and a cover of The Reflections' "Romeo & Juliet." Released by Smog Veil Records.[66]
- Barfly (2011): A studio album of eleven new songs recorded in Cleveland, including "No Evil" and "Bartleby the Scribbler," produced by David Thomas. Released by Fire Records, it draws on the band's proto-punk roots while incorporating post-reformation lineup dynamics.[67][23]