Collection: Jet Black Joe

Appearing in 1992, Jet Black Joe enjoyed a popularity as rapid as this first episode was brief and its songs short: 4 years, as many albums and an average of 3 minutes per track.

After, it seems, some excesses of all kinds and disputes with their record company (routine, in short), three of his musicians then left to create Ensími , an excellent group of the same punk rock register, while the guitarist and the singer reformed Jet Black Joe in 2001. They released two albums and disappeared again before reappearing in 2012 for a concert which visibly left its mark by its... mediocrity. I wasn't there but it's Grapevine magazine that says so.

From this bumpy journey, there remain a few albums, the first two of which, the eponymous Jet Black Joe in 1992 and You Ain't Here in 1993, deliver effective dry titles, somewhere in the Ramones , Sex Pistols or Clash family (without the quality of the lyrics, however) with a few forays into the more languid style of the Red Hot Chili Peppers.