Patrick Keeler

PATRICK KEELER
 
 
Patrick Keeler  is an American rock music drummer from Cincinnati, who best known for playing in The Greenhornes and The Raconteurs.  He plays with both traditional and matched grips.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

While he was still in high school in OhioBrian Olive was the guitarist in a band called Us and Them that released a four-track tape.  The garage rock band called the Greenhornes that included some members of Us and Them was formed in Cincinnati, Ohio by Craig Fox (guitar and vocals), Jack Lawrence (bass guitar), Patrick Keeler (drums), Brian Olive (guitar), and Jared McKinney (keyboards).  The group relocated to Detroit and released two albums in their original incarnation, Gun for You (1999) and The Greenhornes (2001).  Brian Olive left the band to join Soledad Brothers before the second album was released, and Jared McKinney also departed the following year; Olive was replaced by guitarist and vocalist Eric Stein.  This line-up of the Greenhornes released an album called Dual Mono in 2002.  Eric Stein left in 2002 to join the Griefs, leaving the three core members – Craig FoxJack Lawrence, and Patrick Keeler  – by 2003

 

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Jack White of the White Stripes organized a band called the Do-Whaters that included the rhythm section from the GreenhornesJack Lawrence and Patrick Keeler, plus Dave Feeny, another Detroit musician and producer.  They became the backing band for Loretta Lynn on her universally acclaimed 2004 comeback album, Van Lear Rose, which was masterminded and produced by Jack White

 

Jack White’s next musical project, the Raconteurs grew out of the Do-Whaters that had backed Loretta Lynn on Van Lear Rose; the band was organized in 2005 by Jack White, Jack Lawrence and Patrick Keeler of the Greenhornes, and Brendan Benson (vocals, guitars, keyboards).  Since a Queensland band was already using that name, they are called the Saboteurs in Australia.  The Raconteurs was a high-profile band from the beginning, since Jack White was so well known. 

 

(February 2015)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021