The LeRoi Brothers' story begins with Steve Doerr, Don Leady, Mike Buck, bassist Alex Napier, and vocalist Lou Ann Barton, who played clubs under the alternating monikers the Headhunters and Lou Ann the Fliptops. When Elektra Records started courting Barton, Doerr, Leady, and Buck began operating as the LeRoi Brothers, their frenzied and infectious live shows quickly began amassing supporters. They released an EP, Moon Twist, through Amazing Records in 1981, followed two years later by the full-length Check This Action for Jungle Records. The latter effort, which featured Fabulous Thunderbirds bassist Keith Ferguson, became an underground hit, earning acclaim for its nervy energy and raw power and eliciting praise from contemporaries like Rank and File, the Blasters, and X. The band added Steve's brother Joe Doerr and bassist Jack Newhouse to the roster and inked a deal with Columbia, which put out a pair of EPs, 1984's Forget About the Danger and 1985's The LeRoi Brothers. Despite their best efforts, the band was unable to parlay their regional success into the mainstream, resulting in the departure of co-founder Don Leady, who went on to form the swamp rock power trio the Tailgators.
Replacing Leady was no easy task, but the band found a kindred spirit in D.C.-area six-stringer Evan Johns (the H-Bombs), whose spitfire guitar playing, howling vocals, and mischievous on-stage antics fit right in with the group's dynamic live shows. The LeRoi Brothers continued to release new material as the decades progressed -- Open All Night (1986), Viva LeRoi (1989), Rhythm Booze (1990), and Kings of the Catnap (2000) saw them settle into a reliable rockabilly/country/R&B groove -- but the stage was their true home, and their performances remained both wild and impeccable. In 2014, the band was inducted into the Austin Music Hall of Fame, and in 2019 Jungle reissued a definitive version of Check This Action, which included the group's 1981 EP Moon Twist. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi