Jack Russell's Great White are priming fans for the Jan. 27 arrival of their debut album, He Saw It Comin', with the release of a video for "Sign of the Times."
Great White's most recent reunion ended with original singer Jack Russell out of the lineup and fighting for the right to use the band's name -- a fight that's now ended in what looks like a rock 'n' roll draw.
Jack Russell of Great White wanted to mark the 10th anniversary of the tragic fire at a Rhode Island night club that was caused by his band's pyrotechnics and killed 100 people by giving a concert for the memorial fund. The charity said no thanks.
Great White's ever-shifting lineup is too complicated for all but the most ardent fans of the band -- which now includes two separate touring incarnations and the ever-present threat of a lawsuit. But no matter who's in the group, one thing remains the same: The shadow cast by the fire that claimed the lives of 100 people at a Great White show on Feb. 20, 2003.
Next February will make 10 years since a fire at a Great White show at the Station Nightclub in Rhode Island claimed 100 lives. Co-founder and guitarist Mark Kendall says his relationship with the victims families is what's helped him through the tragedy.