They were founded in 1975 by guitarist Randy Rhoads (later associated with Ozzy Osbourne) with the original lineup of Kevin DuBrow (whose Steve Marriott influenced vocals powered most of their hits) alongside Kelly Garni (bass) and Drew Forsyth (drums). They initially released albums in 1977 and 1978, featuring heavy covers of British invasion era acts The Small Faces and Dave Clark Five, and their work was picked up for release in Japan only.
After Rhoads left, with him replaced by guitarist Carlos Cavazo, Quiet Riot had still had failed to break out of the Los Angeles metal scene with a record contract (unlike their hit British Invasion covering contemporaries Van Halen). Quiet Riot eventually scored a deal with Columbia Records, and their second stateside single was "Cum on Feel the Noize", a remake of the U.K. hit tune by Slade in 1973. Quiet Riot's version opened up a new world for the group. Their song became the first heavy metal single to make the 'Top 5' on Billboard Magazine's 'Hot 100' singles chart, spending two weeks at the #5 slot.
The band was reportedly reluctant to record the song, as none of them were Slade fans, and recorded it in one take, trying to play their worst. The success of the single helped carry parent album 'Metal Health' to the top of Billboard Music Charts pop album charts, making it the first heavy metal album to ever reach the #1 slot. Fortunately, lightening also struck twice as their song "Metal Health (Bang Your Head)" (also known as "Bang Your Head (Metal Health)" or "Metal Health") also received significant airplay, peaking at the #31 slot on the 'Hot 100'.
A #1 album and a top 5 single was unheard of for a heavy metal band in 1983. The 'Metal Health' album also displaced Michael Jackson's 'Thriller'' on the charts, shocking critics, and it paved the way for a new, stronger commercial viability for the whole genre. Still, the band members were arguably unprepared for the spotlight put on them, with acrimony between them and the record company people to come.
The group's follow-up, 'Condition Critical' was a relative disappointment critically and commercially, selling only 3 million units. This release included another Slade cover ("Mama Weer All Crazee Now", which was a UK chart topper for Slade) and numerous musical and lyrical nods to the aforementioned act; whether this was a decision made with the band's support or forced upon them by their producer is still subject to debate, as evidenced in their VH1 'Behind The Music' documentary. As well, frontman DuBrow's combative behavior both in public and in private burned numerous bridges between the band and other musicians as well as the press. The other band members felt that DuBrow had turned what would had been middling or mixed critical reviews into scorn as well as ruined chances at future musical collaborations.
Various factors led to bassist Rudy Sarzo quitting the group in 1985 and joining up with Ozzy Osbourne. The bass slot in Quiet Riot was filled by Chuck Wright. Next, the band released 'QRIII' in 1986, which became another commercial failure and left the group frustrated in terms of where to go. Fed up with DuBrow's antics, the rest of Quiet Riot fired him from his own band and replaced him with former Rough Cutt vocalist Paul Shortino. Wright was also fired and was replaced by Sean McNabb.
The revamped band released 'Quiet Riot' in 1988, which also failed to gain much traction. This 1988 album technically has the same name as their original first album with Randy Rhoads. The band fell apart after a tour that ended in Hawaii in 1989 and DuBrow fought to keep control of the name; Quiet Riot appeared to be in shambles.
By 1991, tempers had cooled enough for the former bandmates to communicate. DuBrow and Cavazo formed Heat, but they eventually switched to Quiet Riot again and released 'Terrified' (1993) with Banali and Kenny Hillery (bass). That same year, DuBrow released a work titled 'The Randy Rhoads Years', featuring tracks from Quiet Riot's Columbia albums and some previously unreleased material (many of which included newly recorded vocals). Hillary left Quiet Riot in 1995, and he committed suicide on June 5, 1996.
Wright rejoined Quiet Riot to play bass. The band released Down to the Bone that same year. The following year (1996), the band released a 'Greatest Hits' album, which included nothing from the original two Rhoads albums and nothing from the two 90s albums but did have a few tracks from the 1988 Shortino album. After that, Rudy Sarzo joined up again in 1997, and the band began touring.
The tour was not successful, and the band was arrested several times; one angry fan sued DuBrow for injuries sustained during a show. The group still managed to release 'Alive and Well' in 1999, which featured new songs and several rerecorded hits. They followed this up with 'Guilty Pleasures' in 2001. Although their days of commercial success had come and gone, those albums received some mixed to positive critical reviews.
Quiet Riot officially broke up in February 2003, and Sarzo joined Dio in the following year. However, they reunited in 2005, with the line-up being made up of DuBrow, Banali, Wright, and guitarist Alex Grossi. The band joined the 'Rock Never Stops Tour' in 2005 alongside Cinderella, Ratt, and Firehouse.
Soon afterwards, Chuck Wright and Alex Grossi had left the band and former L.A. Guns/Brides of Destruction guitarist Tracii Guns had joined, only to leave two weeks later under musical differences. Other recent members of Quiet Riot have included guitarists Billy Morris and Neil Citron, and bassists Tony Franklin, Sean McNabb and Wayne Carver. In an interview with rock & roll comic C.C. Banana in August 2006, Frankie Banali attempted to clarify the matter of Quiet Riot's recent rapid-fire membership rotation, indicating that both Alex and Chuck were both back in the band again.
Quiet Riot's latest album with a line-up somewhat akin to their glory days was released on October 3, 2006, entitled 'Rehab. The band on the album consisted of DuBrow, Banali, Franklin, & Neil Citron. Former Deep Purple bassist and singer Glenn Hughes also made a guest vocal appearance on the album.
On July 13, 2007, Quiet Riot performed at glam metal festival "Rocklahoma." Then on September 19 they gave a free show to service members on Keesler AFB in Biloxi. DuBrow (vocals), Banali(drums), Wright(Bass), & Alex Grossi(guitarist), was the then line-up.
Kevin DuBrow died November 25, 2007, at his home in Las Vegas. He was 52 years old. The cause of death was an accidental overdose of cocaine, and that tragedy appeared to be the end of the group once and for all.
Despite his previous insistence that Quiet Riot could never return as a live performing entity, in September 2010, Frankie Banali announced a new version of Quiet Riot: himself on drums, Chuck Wright on bass, Alex Grossi on guitar and newcomer Mark Huff on vocals. The band sought the blessings of the DuBrow family, recorded new versions of classic hits with Huff singing, and resumed touring. The group has experienced somewhat of a 'broken base' as many fans are unwilling to accept a version of the band sans DuBrow.
The group's latest work is '10', which came out on June 27, 2014 through RSM Records. That incarnation of Quite Riot Made its live debut on December 31, 2013 at Twin Arrows Navajo Casino Resort in Flagstaff, Arizona. Jizzy Pearl of Love/Hate and L.A. Guns among other groups is the current vocalist.
Vocalist Jizzy Pearl departed the band at the end of 2016 to concentrate on his solo career, and was replaced by former Adler's Appetite and Icon vocalist Seann Nicols, formerly known as Sheldon Tarsha. On February 13, 2017, the band announced that they would release a new album Road Rage on April 21. However, in March, it was announced that Nicols had left the band and that James Durbin was the new singer. The band subsequently announced that Road Rage would be delayed until summer 2017 so that all of Nicols' vocals could be replaced by Durbin's with new lyrics and melodies. It was then announced that the new version of the album would be released on August 4 by Frontiers Music Srl.
Banali was forced to sit out several Quiet Riot shows throughout 2019 as he was receiving treatment for stage-IV pancreatic cancer, though he did not reveal his diagnosis until October of that year. He was replaced by either former Type O Negative drummer Johnny Kelly or former W.A.S.P. drummer Mike Dupke depending on each drummer's availability. In September 2019, Durbin quit the band to "follow his own path" according to Banali, and Pearl was rehired as the lead vocalist. Two months later, Quiet Riot's fourteenth studio album, and second and last to feature Durbin, Hollywood Cowboys, was released.
On August 20, 2020, Banali died from pancreatic cancer, which he had been diagnosed with sixteen months earlier, leaving him as the second member of the Metal Health-era lineup to die, following DuBrow in 2007. On September 9, 2020, Quiet Riot announced on their Facebook page that would continue on without Banali, who had wished that they keep the music and legacy of the band alive. He was replaced by Johnny Kelly, who had filled in for Banali on the band's 2019 and 2020 tours. The band embarked on their first tour since Banali's passing in the summer of 2021, and announced, in May of that year, that they were going to release new music in 2022. On August 2, 2021, Quiet Riot announced that former bassist Rudy Sarzo would rejoin the band in early 2022, once again replacing Chuck Wright. However, Sarzo played his first show with the band in nearly two decades at The Groove Music Hall in Woodford, Virginia on November 6, 2021. In December 2021, Sarzo confirmed that new music from Quiet Riot will be released to coincide with their upcoming 2022 tour: "We have a couple of surprises coming up that are already recorded. So they're just waiting to be released. We're gonna release 'em in conjunction when we start touring in February [of 2022]." That same month, he revealed that plans were being made to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Metal Health in 2023.
Stay With Me Tonight
Quiet Riot Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
On a hot summer night
Clothes are drippin' wet, babe
You feel so nice
Teach me, teach me darling
Teach me something new
Oh oh I wanna make love to you
My hand in your glove
Little little girl
I need your woman's touch
My hot desire
Is runnin' away with me
Come on baby
Set it free
Stay with me tonight
Stay forever
Stay with me tonight
You'll discover
That this feeling's right
Like no other
Stay with me tonight
All my life
I dreamed of this
My satin sheets
And your satin dress
My hot desire
Is runnin' away with me
Come on baby
Set me free
Stay with me tonight
Stay forever
Stay with me tonight
You'll discover
That this feeling's right
Like no other
Stay with me tonight
Oh oh oh
Oh
Stay with me tonight
Stay forever
Stay with me tonight
You'll discover
That this feeling's right
Like no other
Stay with me tonight
Stay
Stay with me
Stay with me
Baby
G-g-g-g-get get
Closer closer closer
Closer to you
(Stay with me tonight)
Stay with me tonight
Oh oh oh
You don't need to hurry baby
On my satin sheets
Take off your satin dress
Too much to handle
The lyrics of "Stay With Me Tonight" by Quiet Riot depict a hot summer night where the singer desires to make love to his partner. He describes her as feeling nice and asks her to teach him something new. The song talks about how the two of them will fit together like hand in glove and the singer needs the woman's touch. He expresses his desire to be set free and continues to ask her to stay with him tonight forever. Throughout the song, he expresses his hot desire, however, he wants acknowledgement that this feeling is right and like no other.
The lyrics depict a night of complete passion and desire. He wants to know how to please his partner in a way that is new to him so they can further connect. The song expresses a want for acknowledgement from the partner that this desire is right and unique. The song's chorus is an invitation to stay together and recognize the intense feeling between them.
Line by Line Meaning
Holdin' me close
The singer is being embraced by his lover, close enough to feel each other's breaths.
On a hot summer night
This is happening in the midst of summer heat, adding to their intense desire.
Clothes are drippin' wet, babe
Their passion has caused them to sweat and their clothes are clinging to their bodies.
You feel so nice
The singer is admiring the physical sensation of being with his lover; their connection feels just right.
Teach me, teach me darling
He wants to learn and be guided by his lover, seeking new experiences and pleasures.
Teach me something new
He wants to expand his sexual knowledge and try something different with his lover.
Oh oh I wanna make love to you
He is expressing his strong desire and longing to be intimate with his lover.
We'll fit together
They are a perfect fit both physically and emotionally, complementing each other well.
My hand in your glove
He is symbolizing their connection, as if their hands are fitting snuggly like a hand in a glove.
Little little girl
He is referring to his lover with a pet name, signifying their closeness.
I need your woman's touch
He is acknowledging and appreciating the unique touch and energy that his female partner brings to their intimacy.
My hot desire
He is confessing his intense passion and lust for his lover.
Is runnin' away with me
He is being consumed by his desire, feeling out of control and overwhelmed by his feelings for his lover.
Come on baby
He is urging his lover to join him and surrender to their shared desire and passion.
Set it free
He wants to free themselves from any inhibitions or doubts, and just let themselves go and completely give in to their lust and love.
Stay with me tonight
He is pleading with his lover to stay with him for the night, not just for sex but because of the connection they share.
Stay forever
He is hoping that this night together will be the start of a lasting relationship, filled with love and passion.
You'll discover
He is promising his lover that if she stays with him, she'll experience something special and unique.
That this feeling's right
He is reassuring his lover that the connection they have is real and genuine, and that being together is meant to be.
Like no other
He is conveying that the love and passion they share is unlike anything else; it's special and one-of-a-kind.
All my life
He's been waiting for something like this, and he's finally found it with his current lover.
I dreamed of this
He's emphasizing how much he's been longing for love and intimacy with someone who he truly connects with.
My satin sheets
The singer is revealing that he has set the mood for their encounter by preparing satin sheets, adding an element of luxury to their intimacy.
And your satin dress
He's admiring his lover's beauty, from the way she looks in her satin dress to how it feels against her skin.
Too much to handle
He's expressing how overwhelming and intense their mutual desire and passion has become.
Stay
He wants his lover to stay with him, not just for the night, but for good.
Stay with me
He's asking his lover to remain by his side through thick and thin, joy and sorrow.
Baby
He's conveying his tender feelings and attachment to his lover.
G-g-g-g-get get
He's stuttering with excitement and anticipation, overcome by his intense desire.
Closer closer closer
He's urging his lover to move closer to him, emphasizing their physical and emotional closeness.
(Stay with me tonight)
The refrain is repeated, emphasizing the singer's plea for his lover to stay with him, and that this moment is meaningful and worth cherishing.
You don't need to hurry baby
He's telling his lover to take her time and not rush anything, as their connection is special and built to last.
Take off your satin dress
He's urging his lover to become more comfortable and free, and to shed her external layers so that they can become more intimate.
Contributed by Charlie G. Suggest a correction in the comments below.