Early years and rise to fame (1982–1985) W.A.S.P. began following the demise of Circus Circus, a Los Angeles-based band featuring
Blackie Lawless and Randy Piper. The original lineup of W.A.S.P. was formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1982 by Lawless, Piper,
Rik Fox, and
Tony Richards. The band became notorious for its raunchy and, at times, shocking live shows. Lawless was known to tie semi-naked models to a torture rack, and to also hurl raw meat into the audience. The band's debut single, entitled "
Animal (F**k Like a Beast)", and its cover were equally controversial.
Iron Maiden,
Dokken,
Helix,
Armored Saint, and a then-relatively unknown
Metallica. and, along with a then-unknown
Anthrax, they supported
Black Sabbath on their
Seventh Star tour. After
The Last Command tour, Piper departed the band.
Mainstream success (1986–1989) With the lineup changes made, they recorded their third album, titled
Inside the Electric Circus. and a headlining North American tour with
Slayer,
Raven and
Saxon.
Inside the Electric Circus received a mixed reaction from the music press: it was considered a big hit with W.A.S.P. fans, while critics, on the other hand, dismissed it as "7th-grader rock". Songs like "Shoot From The Hip" and the minor hit single "95-N.A.S.T.Y." helped the band live up to the reputation of one of the possible meanings of their band name, "We Are Sexual Perverts". However, Blackie Lawless himself, known to be a harsh critic of his own work, cited in the album's re-release liner notes that
Inside the Electric Circus was "[a] tired record by a tired band." Ultimately it was an unfavorable critical review of the single "95-N.A.S.T.Y." that convinced Lawless to take some time off and reconsider the band's creative direction. In 1987, W.A.S.P. had their song "Scream Until You Like It" included on the soundtrack of the movie
Ghoulies 2. The same year, a few dates during the
Inside the Electric Circus tour were recorded and on November 27, 1987, the
Long Beach Arena concert was released as the
Live... in the Raw album. but did not play any shows due to Holmes' illness. and was replaced by Kelly Martella for their
Donington appearance and a
Top of the Pops performance of "Scream Until You Like It" on the
BBC. Martella went on to join the band Silent Rage in 1988. Soderling later surfaced under the name "Tripp Holland" in the band Engines of Aggression with former
Tomorrow's Child members
Rik Schaffer and Craig Dollinger, and is currently making music for TV shows as staff writer with Supersonic Noise. W.A.S.P.'s fourth studio album,
The Headless Children, was released in April 1989, and was their first album without any overtly sexually explicit songs. on the
Billboard 200 before falling off the charts in 13 weeks. However, it was W.A.S.P.'s most critically acclaimed work up to that point and, according to a recent Lawless interview, it is now the highest-selling W.A.S.P. album to date. The drumming duties for the album were handled by former
Quiet Riot drummer
Frankie Banali.
Post-Chris Holmes period (1989–1995) performing with W.A.S.P. in Norway Chris Holmes left the band in August 1989, stating that he wanted to "have fun, you know." Lawless responded with a caustic remark about the fact that "some guys want to stay at home and wear aprons," hinting at the nature of Holmes' relationship with his new wife
Lita Ford. The band effectively disbanded a few months later, with Blackie Lawless embarking on a short lived solo career. Blackie commenced work on his solo project, but under pressure from both promoters and fans, he released it as a W.A.S.P. album. Ironically, many critics feel that the resulting concept album,
The Crimson Idol, has been the best W.A.S.P. output so far. The follow-up to
The Crimson Idol was
Still Not Black Enough (1995), a collection of dark, introspective tunes that extended the
Crimson Idol mythology.
Dying for the World and the Neon God albums (2002–2005) Dying for the World, released in 2002, was written and recorded in less than a year which is very fast by Lawless' perfectionist standards. Its liner notes feature one of Lawless' strongest statements about political correctness, inspired by the
9/11 terrorist attacks. In April 2004, W.A.S.P. released the first part of
The Neon God, subtitled
The Rise, a conceptual album about an abused and orphaned boy who finds that he has the ability to read and manipulate people. The second part,
The Demise, was released in September 2004. In 2005, W.A.S.P. headlined American Metal Blast. A video shoot for the track "Never Say Die" was planned with Ward Boult, a
fetish photographer, directing. To this day, there has been no news as to whether the shoot resulted in anything concrete. It would have been the first W.A.S.P. promo video in ten years, the last being 1995's "Black Forever".
Dominator and Babylon (2006–2014) , Norway, in 2006 Early 2006 saw the seemingly stable lineup fall apart. Longtime session and tour drummer
Stet Howland left first (on amicable terms), promising more specific information about the reasons for the split to be posted on his website. Larry Howe of
Vicious Rumors was considered as a replacement. In May, the departure of guitarist
Darrell Roberts, who went on to join the band
Five Finger Death Punch, was announced and new guitar player Mark Zavon was brought in several days before the first tour date. The same press release confirmed
Mike Dupke, and not Howe, would be the new drummer. Furthermore, two days later, Zavon was out of the picture as well, seeing
Doug Blair step in on guitar. A new album,
Dominator, was planned for release in October 2006, according to a statement made by Blackie Lawless at a tour stop in
Kavarna. He then went on to play a new song from the album, entitled
Mercy. A few weeks later, the release of the album was postponed until April 2007, with the band recording two news songs and dropping two cover songs, to be used instead as bonus tracks. In October 2007, W.A.S.P. embarked on
The Crimson Idol Tour, to celebrate that album's 15th anniversary. It was the first time that the album, often regarded to be among the band's finest work, was performed in full from start to finish. The tour kicked off in Greece, in
Thessaloniki at the Principal Club Theater on October 26, 2007. The release of the
Dominator album was finalized for April 16 in the UK, April 20 in Scandinavia with the rest of mainland Europe following on April 27. The release dates for South America and Russia followed in early May.
Dominator reached No. 72 on the charts in Germany. W.A.S.P. canceled their North American tour due to their record label's loss of a distributor. They were going to finish up their shows in Europe and then reschedule their shows in the United States. They were unable to finish the shows in Europe because of a "family illness that needed immediate attention" which forced the band to return to Los Angeles right away. They were originally going to perform at
Rocklahoma. As the tour was canceled, W.A.S.P. was not able to perform at Rocklahoma and was replaced by
Queensrÿche. W.A.S.P. announced a European tour which included dates in Scotland, England and other places throughout Europe in late October 2007. W.A.S.P. released their fourteenth studio album, entitled
Babylon in late 2009, via Demolition Records. Shortly after the release of
Babylon, Blackie Lawless declared that he was never going to play the song "Animal (Fuck Like A Beast)" live again, due to his religious beliefs. These beliefs are what have allegedly been behind Blackie Lawless' self-censorship of his own lyrics during the "Babylon World Tour", most notably during the performance of "Chainsaw Charlie (Murders in the New Morgue)". On The Beast of Babylon Tour, Blackie canceled two shows within a week of each other. The first cancellation came about at the Gramercy Theater in New York City after the band discovered that the venue had been selling
V.I.P. meet and greet tickets for twice the amount of the general admission price. The band made a statement claiming, "We have never charged a fan for an autograph and will never charge any fans for an autograph." The second cancellation occurred when the Crocodile Rock venue in Allentown, Pennsylvania wanted 50% of all of the band's profit, according to Lawless. On September 21, 2012, the band celebrated the 30th anniversary of their first ever live show by kicking off a world tour at The Forum in London. The set for the tour was split into three sections: songs from the first four albums, a cut-down rendition of the Crimson Idol performance and a final segment for newer material.
Golgotha, 25th anniversary of The Crimson Idol and next album (2015–present) W.A.S.P.'s fifteenth studio album,
Golgotha, was released on October 2, 2015. The album took four years to materialize. W.A.S.P. toured in 2017 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the release of
The Crimson Idol. To coincide with this anniversary, the band released
Reidolized (The Soundtrack to the Crimson Idol) on February 2, 2018, which came with the original
The Crimson Idol movie on DVD and Blu-ray, and includes six tracks that were originally intended to be part of the original version of the album. In December 2017, it was reported that W.A.S.P. had been working on new material for the follow-up to
Golgotha. Former W.A.S.P. drummer
Frankie Banali died of pancreatic cancer on August 20, 2020, making him the second deceased member of
The Crimson Idol-era lineup, following
Bob Kulick who had died three months earlier. The band embarked on their first North American tour in over a decade from October to December 2022, with support from
Armored Saint, and on selected dates,
Michael Schenker. While on their North American tour, Lawless stated that he and the band use backing tracks in their live performances during a Q&A session. Additional tours, including in Europe and North America, were rescheduled to spring 2023 and again to 2024, due to the pandemic situation in Europe as well as Lawless' "extensive back injuries". W.A.S.P. returned to touring during the summer and fall of 2025 by embarking on the "Album ONE Alive" tour in Europe, where they performed their
self-titled debut album in its entirety, and will also embark on the "1984 to Headless" tour in North America (which will see the band performing "hits" from their first four studio albums) in September and October 2026. ==Band name meaning==