The Regulars (Marquette) In 1984, the Porters moved to
Marquette, Michigan, the largest city in the
Upper Peninsula of Michigan (UP). Though still small by population standards, Marquette offered more culture and options for a young musician, and Jeremy soon met John Burke, a drummer who shared Porter's love for The Who. The two 16-year-olds formed The Regulars with bassist Fritz Vankosky and singer Tim Demarte in early 1985. Burke immediately exposed Porter to the world of punk rock and the bands of the genre from California, Minnesota, New York and England, which Porter embraced as a more achievable music plateau than the metal bands he loved presented, and an opportunity to bond with his new friends. The Regulars played mostly punk and 1960s garage covers by bands like
Ramones,
Dead Kennedys,
The Replacements,
The Monkees and
The Who, but by 1987 the members were each writing songs and the band would occasionally play their originals. The Regulars stayed together until Burke and Vankosky moved downstate to go to college in the fall of 1987, but got together in Marquette for reunion shows in 2003, 2005, 2007, and 2012. Burke would go on to form WIG and record 2 records for
Island/PolyGram Records. Vankosky went into music production and engineering and would join the
Psychopathic Records team and work with
Insane Clown Posse and
Twiztid. Considered one of the earliest punk bands in the UP, the band's influence can still be felt today in the Marquette music scene.
Chutes and Ladders and SlugBug (Detroit) In September 1988, Jeremy Porter moved to
Ypsilanti, Michigan, where he attended
Eastern Michigan University. After two years of failing to find like-minded musicians, Porter met Brian Wimpy, Brad Hales, Dan Cervantes and William Brennan who took him in as the fifth member of their new band Chutes and Ladders. The band played regionally for two years, including a trip to Philadelphia, where they opened up for the well known bands
Tar and The Unsane, but only after (as a favor to the promoter) they agreed to tell people they were Cum Dumpster, the Detroit band originally booked for the show, who had cancelled with little notice. Porter and Brennan were the chief songwriters with Hales and Cervantes contributing occasionally. On August 12, 1991, Chutes & Ladders played with a young punk band from California called
Green Day at a house party in
Grosse Ile, MI, just a couple years before their breakout album Dookie!. In 1992, Jeremy Porter and Chutes and Ladders drummer Brian Wimpy formed SlugBug with Randy Barrett III and Chris Hartmann. SlugBug would become a nationally established
pop punk band, releasing two EPs, two 7-inch singles and a posthumous anthology for Chicago record label Red Eye Growler Records. The band toured the Midwest and East Coast extensively before breaking up in 2000 amidst tensions between members and their desires to play in other projects. SlugBug was nominated for Album of the Year at the
Detroit Music Awards in 1992 for their debut EP
Strong Enough for a Man...But Made for a Woman.
Clashback Porter and Hartmann formed Clashback in 2000. Described as "A celebration of the music of
The Clash" rather than a tribute band, because the members did not try to look, act, or sound like The Clash, but rather, a Midwest bar band playing all Clash songs. Clashback played regularly for four years and continues to perform occasionally today. Clashback was never intended to be more than a side project for Porter, but it was his primary focus and outlet between the breakup of SlugBug and the formation of The OffRamps.
The OffRamps In 2002, Jeremy Porter recruited bassist Jason Bowes (Culture Bandits, Head Injury, The Hoolapoppers) and drummer Mike Popovich (The Holy Cows, 3-Speed) and formed The OffRamps, a power pop band. The OffRamps recorded two albums for
Ann Arbor, Michigan's Deluxe Records,
Hate It When You’re Right (2006) and
Split The Difference (2008) before breaking up in December 2008 after member's commitments to other projects made working together difficult. In their eight years, The OffRamps played extensively across Michigan and Ohio. Popovich would move on to join
Bloodshot recording artist
Whitey Morgan and the 78s and later Ann Arbor-based Blue Snaggletooth, and Bowes would remain on bass for Porter's next two bands: Fidrych, and The Tucos.
Solo Acoustic Party of One (2010) As The OffRamps were breaking up, Jeremy Porter started playing solo-acoustic shows, pulling material from the catalogs of his previous bands and working on the material that would become
Party Of One, Party of One was a Regulars reunion of sorts, co-produced and mixed by Fritz Vankosky, with his bass playing on some tracks. John Burke played drums on several tracks and Tim Demarte co-produced a session with Marquette-based vocalist Jenna Gueke for the track "Last Time I Saw You Happy". Also appearing on the record were Randy Barrett III, original SlubBug guitarist, who co-wrote the song "Out Inside" and contributed backing vocals, Ken Haas from
Reverend Guitars, and Be Hussey (
Morsel) who played bass and engineered Burke's drum sessions at Comp'ny Recording Studio in Los Angeles, California. For the first time since SlugBug, Jeremy toured extensively in support of the record, hitting several major markets in the United States including New York City, Nashville Chicago St. Louis, Minneapolis, and for the first time, Canada, playing shows in Toronto, Montreal, and Wakefield, Quebec. For the next decade or so Jeremy played the occasional solo set but focused mostly on his work with The Tucos. In 2018 he contributed a cover of
Steve Earle's "Christmas in Washington" to the annual Bermuda Snohawk Christmas compilation CD.
1987 EP (2019) In 2019 Jeremy released the
1987 EP on GTG Records – 4 new acoustic-based songs recorded in his basement and mixed by Tucos bandmate Gabriel Doman. He did a few shows supporting the release in 2019 (including headlining a small festival on a goat farm. In 2021, as the music business slowly emerged from the Covid 19 pandemic, Jeremy played a private party in Ypsilanti, MI with
Ben Nichols of
Lucero and Shane Sweeney of
Two Cow Garage and some solo-acoustic dates in the Midwest before teaming with Lansing's The Wild Honey Collective for a tour out to the east coast and back. Porter opened the shows and took a support role on
lap steel guitar, mandolin, and guitar with The Wild Honey Collective. Jeremy would play lap-steel on The Wild Honey Collectives second album
Volume 2 on the
Buck Owens' track "There Goes My Love," a staple of the live set on that tour.
Dynamite Alley (2024–2025) In September, 2024, Jeremy released
Dynamite Alley (GTG Records), his first full-length solo album since
Party of One in 2010. The album featured contributions from GTG Records Labelmates The Wild Honey Collective,
Drive-By Truckers’ keyboardist
Jay Gonzales, The Regulars bassist Fritz Van Kosky, and several other collaborators. The release show was held at Ziggy’s in Ypsilanti, Michigan, featuring the debut of The Jeremy Porter Band, with Van Kosky on bass and
Dynamite Alley drummer David Below, as well as special guests Jake O’Riley on upright bass and Noreen Porter on castanets. Jeremy played over 80 shows supporting Dynamite Alley, his busiest campaign to date, hitting most of the US and 3 Canadian Provinces. The tour took Jeremy to several new markets including Seattle, Washington, where he was joined on stage by Joe Reineke from
Alien Crime Syndicate and The Meices.. In July, 2025 Jeremy Played BüddiesFEST in Tillsonburg, Ontario where, in addition to his own set, he joined ex-
Hüsker Dü bassist
Greg Norton and
Jon Snodgrass for a set of Hüsker Dü songs. He also joined Ex-
Doughboys Brock Pytel’s Vancouver-based band The SLIP~ons on stage, singing backups on their song “Greystone” about the legendary `80s Detroit punk club. Jeremy was joined by current The Wild Honey Collective/ex-
Cheap Girls guitarist Adam Aymour on pedal steel a short, regional BüddiesFest warm-up run with ex-
ALL singer
Chad Price Peace Coalition. In November, 2025, Jeremy teamed up again with The Wild Honey Collective for a run down to Florida and back, called the “Together + Separate Southeast USA Tour Fall 2025.” On December 1, 2024, Jeremy released “
Colorado Christmas,” a cover of a
Nitty Ditty Dirt Band song, as a holiday single on GTG Records. The song was recorded during the
Dynamite Alley sessions and the sound and artwork was inline with that project.
Fidrych Shortly after The Offramps disbanded, Jeremy teamed up with OffRamps bassist Jason Bowes and Porchsleeper members front-man Brian Raleigh and drummer Steve Bekkala and formed Fidrych, In 2010. Fidrych played just three shows, each in the Detroit area, and Porter focused on his solo-acoustic work in an effort to stay busy and active. Though the band never officially broke up and remain friends, they have not played since, and Raleigh and Bekkala have enjoyed a Porchsleeper reunion that started in 2014.
Jeremy Porter and The Tucos In December 2010, frustrated with the lack of activity with Fidrych and bored with the lack of camaraderie and volume that comes with playing and touring solo-acoustic, with OffRamps/Fidrych bassist Jason Bowes and drummer Gabriel Doman, who had once tried out on Guitar for Clashback several years earlier. Jeremy Porter & The Tucos became very active very quickly and were soon opening for national acts around Detroit and doing short runs of shows around the Midwest. In 2013 they released
Partner in Crime and in 2015 they released
Above The Sweet Tea Line (with new bassist Patrick O’Harris), both on Detroit's New Fortune Records. The band has toured more extensively than any of Porter's past projects, hitting the Midwest. East Coast, Southeast, Southwest and Deep South as well as Canada multiple times, and was nominated for a
Detroit Music Award for "Outstanding Punk/Indie/Alternative Artist/Group" in 2016, Porter's first nomination since SlugBug in 1992. In 2017, Jeremy Porter and The Tucos played over 40 shows across the US and Canada, including an October run that took them through the Dustbowl and back to Texas for the first time since 2014. They opened shows in Detroit for
Ha Ha Tonka (band) and
Beach Slang and released their third album, and first for the Lansing-based GTG Records, "Don't Worry, It's Not Contagious." 2018 saw The Tucos play their first ever shows overseas with a nine-show tour of the UK in October. They also released their fifth 7" single "At Least She's Still in Love With You". The band's 4th album
Candy Coated Cannonball was released in January, 2021, but they were unable to tour because of the Coronavirus. The Tucos opened for
Soul Asylum in September, one of the band's long-time influences, and played a few regional shows before bassist Bob Moulton left the band. They released a new holiday Song in late 2021 with new bassist Jake Riley and played more shows in 2022 than they had to-date, including opening slots for
Cracker and
The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band. In 2024 the band played out very little while they focused on the recording of their forthcoming fifth album and Jeremy released and toured behind his solo album
Dynamite Alley.
Timeline == Media placement ==