Real meaning behind Bowling for Soup band name fans ‘never knew’ | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV
Iconic pop punk band Bowling for Soup are preparing to headline their biggest gig ever at Wembley this weekend (December 13), and Express.co.uk sat down with frontman Jaret Reddick ahead of the big day. Famed for hits like 1985, Girl All the Bad Guys Want and High School Never Ends, the band have been around since 1994, though theyâve experienced a shifting line-up since then.
With Jaret as the only remaining founder â though he credits drummer Gary Wiseman as an âOGâ member â the band got their start in Wichita Falls, Texas. But theyâve since recorded a series of live albums in the UK; where, Jaret says, the music fans are the âbest in the worldâ.
Though Iâve been a fan for decades, the origin of the bandâs name has always been somewhat of a mystery. Thankfully Jaret was happy to clear it up â explaining that for the longest time, theyâd meant to rename the band to something less silly.
Jaret told Express.co.uk: âSo Lance, our original drummer, didnât cuss. But we listened to a lot of stand-up comedy back in the day, and Steve Martin had a bit where heâs working on a [fictional] TV show, itâs called Bowling for Sh**.
âSo when we were playing our last show in our band before Bowling for Soup, Lance got on the mic and said, âHey, come see our new band in a couple of months! Itâs called Bowling for Soup.â Because he wouldnât say sh**! It just became this hilarious little funny thing.â
Jaret said: âIt was always our intention to change it, but everything happened really fast for Bowling for Soup. We played our first show [a month on], and had an album out in three months. We were touring within six months of starting that band. So we just never got a chance to change it.â
As for what the name actually means? Jaret previously told VICE: âIt did become very apparent that we are bowling to obtain soup because it is our job. And so soup being representative of food, money, those things.
âBut if soup were ever in need, we would definitely be there for it.â
I also asked Jaret whether he gets bored of performing the hits â something that bands like Radiohead, Led Zeppelin and Beastie Boys have confessed to over the years. But for the BFS frontman, the hits are where itâs at.
He said: âIn fact, those are my favourite ones to perform. Girl All the Bad Guys want is my favourite song to perform â thereâs something about when I start that riff, and the audience gets it within the first three or four notes, and just that reactionâŠ
âThereâs a lot of bands out there that donât like their hits, and I think a lot of those bands are those that had one standalone song that became a hit for them, but it doesnât sound like the rest of their catalogue. Maybe itâs a cover song, whatever.
âBut Iâve just never been one of those guys that doesnât like the hits. You want to play songs that people want to dance and sing to.
âYou can see the audience realise what song it is, and they start to look at one another, and theyâre looking at you and theyâre getting excited â and the smile is bigger than it has been all night long. When you start singing that first verse, you just want to see every mouth in there moving – itâs just a magical feeling.â
Bowling for Soup are performing at Wembley this weekend, and for a band thatâs been performing in Britain for 25 years, Jaret didnât shy away from the âclichĂ©â of the fans being his favourite part.
He said: âI think the UK music fans are the best music fans in the world. I do mean it, because itâs such a part of your culture. You guys plan the whole year to take the family to festivals, and that is the coolest thing.
âMusic is such a big part of your lives and families and culture. Thatâs my favourite thing â just the love of music. And obviously the love for Bowling for Soup doesnât hurt!â
Next year, Bowling for Soup are heading on tour with folk punk band Frank Turner and the Sleeping Souls. Tickets are on sale now for the Bowl My Bones tour.









