Guitarist Gary Herrewig, vocalist Billy Paliselli, guitarist Gary Cox, bassist Robb Michael Inglis, and drummer Steve Brigida all played with the intertwined garage bands Badge and Homestead before they formed Brat in Fairfax, Virginia in 1973. They released an independent 45 called "Not Quite Right" in 1974. Inglis left not long afterward, replaced by Steve Cooper. The band switched their name to Artful Dodger and signed with Aerosmith's managers Leber-Krebs, who helped get them signed with Columbia Records. Jack Douglas, who previously helmed albums for Aerosmith, produced the 1975 debut Artful Dodger.
Despite being laden with radio- and arena-ready rockers, Artful Dodger didn't go anywhere commercially. For their second album, Honor Among Thieves, the group worked with Douglas and co-producer Eddie Leonetti. Arriving in 1976, Honor Among Thieves was supported by an opening tour for Kiss, but the record stalled commercially. Babes on Broadway, produced by Leonetti, arrived in 1977 to less attention, as rock was undergoing a generational shift.
Artful Dodger lost their deal with Columbia after Babes on Broadway and Cox left the group. The group hired Peter Bonta as a replacement and delivered Rave On to the Arista subsidiary Ariola in 1980. Rave On was another commercial disappointment and the band began to splinter, with Paliselli leaving after its release; the group called it a day in 1982. Most of the group busied themselves with music in the ensuing years -- notably, Bonta went on to play with Mary Chapin Carpenter -- but the group reunited for a pair of 1991 reunion shows in Cleveland, Ohio; this was the original lineup plus Bonta. They'd continue to play the occasional live performance in Cleveland during the 2000s, during which time American Beat reissued Honor Among Thieves. Cox died in 2012 and the group finally got its due in 2017, when Real Gone Music released the double-disc retrospective The Complete Columbia Recordings. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi