How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
Moderator: Metal Sludge
-
- Playing Decent Clubs in a Bus
- Posts: 1365
- Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2023 5:15 am
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
Tommy was the only one I remember the girls liked. He wasn't the front man. They tried to be more of a 70s throwback with some of their later material and that doesn't always work in the mainstream. Still, they had a decent hardcore following in Norcal. Even in the grunge/alternative era they were at Gold level.
-
- Playing First Stage at SludgeFest
- Posts: 27785
- Joined: Tue Aug 31, 2004 9:49 am
- Location: Candyassland
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
Teenage girls and myself rejected them
They sounded horrible and looked worse
Heavy Metal fans thought they were a joke band and Vain audience laughed at them
Tesla should have had Vain sales and Vain should have outsold Tesla
But i ended up with Vain life so I win
Pretty funny drive to Ventura fair and pass the cowsh*t then see Tesla steps away
Band was so embarrassing I would never own Tesla car
They sounded horrible and looked worse
Heavy Metal fans thought they were a joke band and Vain audience laughed at them
Tesla should have had Vain sales and Vain should have outsold Tesla
But i ended up with Vain life so I win
Pretty funny drive to Ventura fair and pass the cowsh*t then see Tesla steps away
Band was so embarrassing I would never own Tesla car
Jani Lane and Bret Michaels should form a band called "Nelson II"
-
- Headlining Clubs
- Posts: 2032
- Joined: Fri Apr 16, 2010 7:54 am
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
Very true. The HUGE Crue could only go gold & Tesla pulled it off with way less hype.Bono Nettencourt wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2024 8:04 am Yeah they were able to sneak a gold record in in 94 when most of their contemporaries were either DOA or on life support.
- StateOfShock
- MSX Tour Support Act
- Posts: 4693
- Joined: Wed Aug 30, 2006 11:27 am
- Location: Orange County, CA
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
They are definitely one of the best from the decade.
In a time where bands looked over the top, they came across as bland. In that decade, that type of thing mattered.
In a time where bands looked over the top, they came across as bland. In that decade, that type of thing mattered.

Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
What did Tesla and WASP have in common? Nothing as far as style of music is concerned. However, they were both stuck in between genres.
Tesla wasn't glam and they weren't thrash. They were somewhere in between.
Not from LA but Sacramento.
They seemed to have some roots influences that the other bands at the time didn't.
They were hard rock but had a tinge of Americana in there too. If they were to open for someone like Tom Petty or John Mellencamp, they wouldn't have been completely out of place. They could also open for Poison too.
WASP? Tour with Armored Saint, Metallica or Iron Maiden? No problem. Again, could open for a glam or thrash band, they could find a way to fit in as long as the headliner was heavy in some way.
It's an asset that a band like Tesla could tour and open for pretty much any rock band out there or headline theatres or casinos. I saw them a couple years ago open for Styx and Joan Jett. But it can also prevent them from hitting big. I feel like a solid career spanning decades making enough to earn a solid consistent living can be better than a one shot deal earning a lot and never getting back again (see Quiet Riot etc.)
Tesla wasn't glam and they weren't thrash. They were somewhere in between.
Not from LA but Sacramento.
They seemed to have some roots influences that the other bands at the time didn't.
They were hard rock but had a tinge of Americana in there too. If they were to open for someone like Tom Petty or John Mellencamp, they wouldn't have been completely out of place. They could also open for Poison too.
WASP? Tour with Armored Saint, Metallica or Iron Maiden? No problem. Again, could open for a glam or thrash band, they could find a way to fit in as long as the headliner was heavy in some way.
It's an asset that a band like Tesla could tour and open for pretty much any rock band out there or headline theatres or casinos. I saw them a couple years ago open for Styx and Joan Jett. But it can also prevent them from hitting big. I feel like a solid career spanning decades making enough to earn a solid consistent living can be better than a one shot deal earning a lot and never getting back again (see Quiet Riot etc.)
- Bono Nettencourt
- Headlining a Theater Tour
- Posts: 6150
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2022 12:32 pm
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
TREVERLAST wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2024 2:25 pmVery true. The HUGE Crue could only go gold & Tesla pulled it off with way less hype.Bono Nettencourt wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2024 8:04 am Yeah they were able to sneak a gold record in in 94 when most of their contemporaries were either DOA or on life support.
The huge crue also made a HUGE mistake, but your point is made. I don't remember that Tesla album at all, but somebody bought it.
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
Lobo wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2024 2:56 pm What did Tesla and WASP have in common? Nothing as far as style of music is concerned. However, they were both stuck in between genres.
Tesla wasn't glam and they weren't thrash. They were somewhere in between.
Not from LA but Sacramento.
They seemed to have some roots influences that the other bands at the time didn't.
They were hard rock but had a tinge of Americana in there too. If they were to open for someone like Tom Petty or John Mellencamp, they wouldn't have been completely out of place. They could also open for Poison too.
This is a good take. Tesla might have benefitted of getting labeled as a rock band instead of metal / hardrock. But in honesty that label probably was the most accurate.
Also the band name Tesla probably didn't do them much favours.
I ´ve grown to appreciate them more and more with time.
- Love_Industry
- Signed to a Major Label Multi-Album Deal
- Posts: 18647
- Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 1:49 pm
- Location: Zasransk, Belarus
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
I can see them fitting in with the likes of Springsteen, Adams and Mellencamp in the 80s, more so than Mötley, Guns or Bon Jovi. But didn't Kalodner or someone tell Bon Jovi to go for the hard rock audience as they spent more on music and were more loyal? The same would have applied to Tesla.
Look at Adams's sales. Into the Fire barely made it to one million in between 3 5x platinum sellers Reckless, WutN and SFSG. Then 18 Till I Die was 1 mil again, his last certified album.
Tesla was only 2x platinum with Controversy and had 3 other albums going 1x platinum so they retained half their audience going gold with Bust a Nut and were still able to go platinum with a compilation in 2018.
Chip Z'Hoy wrote: ↑
LI is a gentleman and scholar but that “Parasite” take is wild!
LI is a gentleman and scholar but that “Parasite” take is wild!
-
- MSX Tour Support Act
- Posts: 4766
- Joined: Wed Mar 01, 2017 10:39 am
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
like Kix, the singer wasn’t my fave.
Too skinny & dorky acting.
Also I remember reading an interview with the bass player and he talked about being a fat kid and how he was a strict dieter.
Wasn’t exactly rock n roll cool
Their biggest selling point was Frank.
He had a column in the guitar mags and his intro to ‘love song’ is up there with the intro to ‘nothing else matters’ for amateur noodlers
Too skinny & dorky acting.
Also I remember reading an interview with the bass player and he talked about being a fat kid and how he was a strict dieter.
Wasn’t exactly rock n roll cool
Their biggest selling point was Frank.
He had a column in the guitar mags and his intro to ‘love song’ is up there with the intro to ‘nothing else matters’ for amateur noodlers
- Bono Nettencourt
- Headlining a Theater Tour
- Posts: 6150
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2022 12:32 pm
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
That didn't work out so well...DangerZone wrote: ↑Sat Dec 28, 2024 10:09 am like Kix, the singer wasn’t my fave.
Too skinny & dorky acting.
Also I remember reading an interview with the bass player and he talked about being a fat kid and how he was a strict dieter.
Wasn’t exactly rock n roll cool
-
- Showcasing for A&R Reps
- Posts: 614
- Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2023 5:39 am
- Location: Buckeye Nation
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
Still can't believe that proto-Wolfie got to bang Sandi Saraya on the reg.Bono Nettencourt wrote: ↑Sat Dec 28, 2024 10:52 amThat didn't work out so well...DangerZone wrote: ↑Sat Dec 28, 2024 10:09 am like Kix, the singer wasn’t my fave.
Too skinny & dorky acting.
Also I remember reading an interview with the bass player and he talked about being a fat kid and how he was a strict dieter.
Wasn’t exactly rock n roll cool
![]()
"Copying off of one person is called plagiarism.
Copying off of ten people is called research."
Copying off of ten people is called research."
- kytepunches
- Doing Package Tours in Theaters
- Posts: 5238
- Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 10:49 am
- Location: America’s snowy Hat
Re: How was Tesla not wiping the floor with everyone else in the 80s???
I liked the first album a lot when it came out and the follow up was pretty decent. But from what i recall , i think i saw them on every fucking tour that came through town for a two year period. Nobody i knew was too happy to have Tesla or White Lion rammed down your throat for every tour. . And they were a pretty dull band to see live.