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Ko Melina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ko Melina
OriginDetroit, Michigan
GenresGarage punk
Occupation(s)singer, DJ
Instrument(s)vocals, bass, baritone guitar
Labelsvarious

Ko Melina, also known as Ko Shih and Ko Melina-Zydeco, is a musician and radio DJ from Detroit, Michigan.

Biography

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A bartender at the Garden Bowl, a rock n' roll hotspot in Detroit, Melina befriended scene fixtures like Jack White and Steve Shaw from the Detroit Cobras. Shaw asked her to play bass for his new band the Breakdowns. With only childhood piano lessons under her belt, Melina taught herself bass. After hearing her cover Mary Wells's "Bye Bye Baby" with the Breakdowns, Long Gone John of the record label Sympathy for the Record Industry asked her to contribute to his Sympathetic Sounds of Detroit compilation and so Ko & The Knockouts were formed with Steve Nawara and Jeff Klein.[1] Eddie Baranek from the Sights later replaced Klein, and the band released a self-titled album on Sympathy for the Record Industry and toured Europe and the United States.[2]

Ko later joined The Dirtbombs, replacing Tom Potter as "fuzz" bass player, though she later switched to a baritone guitar.[3] Steven Van Zandt asked her to be a DJ for his Underground Garage show on SIRIUS Satellite Radio after he heard the Ko & The Knockouts album[4]

Ko was featured alongside fellow Dirtbomb Zach Weedon in the documentary on Detroit called 'Detroit Lives' by Palladium Boots for their website. In the documentary, Melina and Weedon accompany host Johnny Knoxville on a tour of the abandoned Eastown Theatre, and offer other interview segments about Detroit.

References

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  1. ^ True, Everett (2004). "The White Stripes and The Sounds of Mutant Blues". Omnibus Press. ISBN 9780711998360. Retrieved January 18, 2011.
  2. ^ Handyside, Chris (March 13, 2002). "Ko Ko Puffs". Metro Times. Retrieved January 16, 2011. These are all appropriate experiences for someone who, at one point a couple years ago, was a sort of den mother for Detroit's downtown rock 'n' roll scene, presiding over the fun from her post behind the Garden Bowl bar.
  3. ^ "Q & A: Dirtbombs Bassist Ko Melina". Indy.com. March 13, 2002. Retrieved January 16, 2011.
  4. ^ Tupica, Rich (October 19, 2006). "Turn It Down: KO and The Knockout Interview". City Pages. Retrieved January 16, 2011. The Little Steven thing is kind of crazy for me. He'd somehow heard my record and really liked it a lot and ended up coming to a couple of our shows in New York City, so I'd talked to him here and there. When he started putting together his channel for Sirius, he called me and asked if I wanted to be a DJ.
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