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Fake Band - TV Tropes
When the production team making a show can't afford a real band to act as a collective Celebrity Star or Special Guest, they just build one out of whatever actors Central Casting has handy, and pretend that they are the hot new thing in the world of the program. "Evidence" of their talent is either non-existent, or provided by anonymous studio musicians to whose performance the actors lipsync. (Rarely does the Fake Band actually have real musicians in it, save for the truly postmodern moments when a real band is masquerading as a Fake Band — which has been known to happen.)
In a few examples, the Fake Band actually releases real music, usually as a shameless media tie-in. For a really shameless tie-in, or if a developer wants to throw in a Shout-Out, get the music into Guitar Hero or Rock Band.
Fake Band music is either a soulless imitation of the latest trends, or (more frequently) mindless bubblegum pop. Sometimes it tries to be both. Even if the fake band has some actual talent, expect Suspiciously Apropos Music.
The Rocklopedia Fakebandica has a truly exhaustive listing of fake bands from television and movies.
Compare Band Toon, where an animated series is based around a band that may or may not exist in real life.
Not to be confused with an Anonymous Band.
When the fake band is made of the main character and their pals, it's a Five-Man Band Concert.
Examples
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Fake bands that produced real music
- The ultimate Fake Bands actually were the MacGuffins around which entire series were built: The Partridge Family (who save for two of them note Shirley Jones, who was in Oklahoma!, and singer David Cassidy otherwise weren't musicians) and The Monkees (some of whom were, but weren't allowed to use their skills on the show during the first season).
- The Monkees are perhaps the Most Triumphant Subversion: the cast members of the show eventually took over the production of the group's music completely, effectively becoming a "real band".
- The short-lived series The Heights was centered around a band of the same name, formed for the show. The theme song from the show, "How Do You Talk to an Angel", made it to #1 in the United States. One week after the song fell from #1, the show was canceled.
- Literary twist: The comic strip Bloom County had several of its main characters as members of the group Billy and the Boingers (originally named Deathtöngue). The book "Billy and the Boingers Bootleg" actually included a floppy vinyl "45" containing two songs, "U Stink But I ♥ U"note the Heart Symbol pronounced as "love" and "I'm A Boinger", supposedly recorded by the band. (They were actually recorded by bands who were fans of the strip.)
- Confession Executive Committee introduces LIP×LIP, a popular teen idol duo who have also been turned into Virtual Celebrities, into their continuity. They have made multiple songs for various projects and even pushed out music out of universe.
- The fake band/fake musician is a pretty standard character in Professional Wrestling, with The Honky Tonk Man, "Double J" Jeff Jarrett, the West Texas Rednecks, and 3 Count all laying claim to the title. Most of them will produce real music, either in a live performance on the wrestling federation's television program, or a "music video" aired on the show (if we're lucky, the song will be lip-synced, and sung by somebody who actually knows what they're doing rather than the wrestler himself).
- The Double J example is actually a triple subversion, as they ran a story admitting that Jarrett wasn't singing his tune... then claimed another wrestler (now known as B.G. James, at the time, playing Jarrett's roadie) actually sang it... which he had in real life, and not badly either!
- However, actual bands formed by wrestlers, namely Chris Jericho's metal band Fozzy, rarely appear on wrestling television shows so people don't think that these bands are fake.
- The creators of Homestar Runner have created at least two heavy-metal Fake Bands as a Running Gag for their website — hair-metal parody Limozeen and death-metal parody Taranchula. Both "bands" contributed songs to the website's soundtrack album, Strong Bad Sings and Other Type Hits, and both bands' names were coined by Strong Bad, following the band naming philosophy of taking a cool-sounding word and misspelling it.
- Limozeen performed a real live show in Atlanta, Georgia, and both Strong Bad and Limozeen's music have been featured in the Guitar Hero series ("Trogdor" in II and "Because, It's Midnite" in Rocks the 80s).
- Strong Sad's favorite band is the lo-fi alt-rock pastiche sloshy (spelled with the lowercase 's'), who have a hit song called "We Don't Even Really Care About You". They covered one of Limozeen's songs while Limozeen covered theirs.
- Peacey P appears to make a career largely out of appearing as guest rapper in other peoples' music; even appearing as a guest in one of his own albums! He even manages to accidentally record a rap song with Coach Z.
- Another frequently featured "guest artist" (usually collaborating with Peacey P) is R&B singer Tenerence Love.
- Here's one to wrap your head around. The garage band parody Brainkrieg (of the spinoff series Teen Girl Squad, which is a comic drawn and voiced by Strong Bad in-universe) originated as a one-off joke in the Strong Bad E-mails (much like TGS; actually, pretty much like every spin-off on the site; Sbemails themselves can arguably be called a spin-off feature from the main cartoons), which was a comment on words starting with "D-E" that do not belong in death metal (cut to the Battle of the Crappy High School bands, a reference to a previous TGS episode, where Brainkrieg shouts words like "Dentist!" and "Deli-style!" along with their future catchphrase "Jugga-jigga-wugga"). Flash forward a bit, and Brainkrieg is featured in two TGS-style "music videos", both holiday-related ("If I Don't Get Videogames (For Decemberween)" and "Decomposing Pumpkins"), with actual musical backing as opposed to a few shouted lines.
- So, to recap: a fake band which is a spinoff from a comic that is a spinoff of a (somewhat) spinoff fan mail series, originating as an off-hand reference in the fan mail series to an episode of the comic spinoff, which is now doing holiday-themed spinoff music videos.
- The characters of the cartoon themselves have formed their own bands: Marzipan, The Cheat, and Strong Mad perform in a folk-rock trio known as "Cool Tapes"; Coach Z and Bubs apparently jam together as the Two-O Duo on occasion; and in the Strong Bad Email "senior prom", the Poopsmith and the rest of the King of Town's servants performed at the "Entrapment All Up On The Moon" Dance as "All The King's Men". In Baddest of the Bands, Pom Pom and Homestar form Pomstar, while Strong Bad, the King of Town, and Homsar start DOI.
- A three band show: Jem with Jem And The Holograms (80's pop), The Misfits (80's new wave) and 'The Stingers'' (80's hard metal.) Three songs play in each episode and while some of them are set to scenes, others are set to music videos. Examples of the latter for each band are "Love Is Doing It to Me", "Universal Appeal", and "Mind Games". Almost all songs also have appeared on cassette and some songs have an extended version to boot. These cassettes were sold with the dolls and other merchandise.
- California Dreams features a Fake Band of the same name that also doubled as your standard teen comedy clique.
- Dethklok, the protagonists' death-metal band on Metalocalypse. Notable because not only did they produce real music, but The Dethalbum is the best-selling death metal album of all time, and that record was beaten by Dethalbum II.
- Amazingly obscure despite its pedigree is The Rutles — a Beatles parody group which has released several albums and CDs since the late 1970s. Featuring Neil Innes of The Bonzo Dog Band and Eric Idle of Monty Python, the Rutles first achieved prominence in All You Need Is Cash, a 1978 NBC mockumentary which was also the only known collaboration between the Pythons and the original Not Ready For Prime Time Players from Saturday Night Live. In 2002, a followup was made, called The Rutles 2: Can't Buy Me Lunch; both films can frequently be seen on VH-1.
- Scare Tactics (DC Comics): Scare Tactics is a band consisting of a vampire, a werewolf, and two mutants. The lyrics for three songs appear in the series and one of them, "Inhumanifesto", was actually produced to be distributed on a promotional cassette before the idea was canned. The song has since made it to the internet.
- This Is Spın̈al Tap is a mockumentary about the eponymous fictional band. Many viewers at the time of its release didn't realize that the whole thing is fake and thought that Spinal Tap is a real band. The film features several original songs, and the performers have subsequently gone on tour as Spinal Tap with more original music.
- A Mighty Wind features a whole slew of fictional folk bands and features a number of folk songs. One of the bands, the Folksmen, consists of the reunited performers of Spinal Tap. The Folksmen had previously appeared as Spinal Tap's opening act during their Break Like The Wind tour in the early 1990s. At least one audience booed them off the stage, apparently not recognizing the performers.
- The titular band from the cartoon Josie and the Pussycats. Note that Josie was not originally conceived as a Fake Band character — Josie was just an Everygirl high school student in the same vein (and universe) as Archie and Jughead, but her comic title, She's Josie, was clumsily retooled as a comic about a wildly popular pop band in order to boost sales enough to justify a TV series (while providing for shameless media tie-ins).
- The original Josie and the Pussycats Fake Band was a genuine fake band — i.e. a band that existed outside the show's universe, for whom they hired three real female musicians to provide the singing voices of the cartoon characters, appear in album art and actually cut an album. They probably would've gone on to tour in-character as "Josie" and her friends had the album actually made any money. Interestingly, there are countless disparities between the band as it actually appears in the show and the band we hear in the musical numbers. Josie, for instance, is presented as the band's lead singer, but most of the lead vocals on the songs actually come from Patrice Holloway, who played Valerie Brown. Moreover, the formula used for the band's songs was a heavily studio-produced R&B sound, while Josie's band in the comic is a three-piece band with two guitars and a drummer. Almost always, fans of the show were treated to scenes of Josie's band rehearsing at home, playing in concerts or giving impromptu live performances with mysterious orchestral string sections or flutes or synthesizers coming out of nowhere.
- The Josie and the Pussycats movie was better about this, at least in the sense that the kind of pop-punk music that the new Pussycats play is something that you can more realistically imagine three teenage girls coming up with in their garage.
- And speaking of Archie and the Riverdale gang, they also formed a fictional band, the Archies. (Which, while generally less famous than Josie and the Pussycats in their shared milieu, released many real-world records, including the #1 hit "Sugar, Sugar".)
- Brazilian heavy metal band Massacration is composed by the Five-Man Band that forms the comedy group Hermes & Renato. The band appeared as a skit back in their own eponymous MTV program, in 2002. They are a downright stereotype of every heavy metal cliché in the book, from being dressed in denim and leather (they adopted a more Hair Metal look later on) to singing in Engrish to being devil worshipers (one of their videos even has the devil chasing them around... only to ask for their autographs), but the joke made so much of a success among viewers, they have two albums out, which are pretty good, as long as you don't take it all too seriously. Oh, and they also helped make heavy metal more popular among Brazilian teens, along with Guitar Hero. To understand what their backstory is about, check the article on Wikipedia. Think Dethklok, mix it with Spinal Tap, add some black humor-laden slapstick and a blatantly overblown backstory and the end result is Massacration.
- Their second album, Good Blood Headbanguers (intentional misspelling) was produced by none other than Roy Z. How's that for status in the metal community?
- The short-lived cartoon Generation O! had as its short-lived, somewhat creepy and frightening premise that an eight-year-old girl known to the media as "Molly-O" is the world's most popular rock star. The titular band was portrayed by the real-life band Letters to Cleo, whose lead vocalist, Kay Hanley, apparently really can sound eight years old if she tries.
- The title song from That Thing You Do! became a chart-topping one-hit wonder, which utterly disrupts the lives of the formerly completely obscure band of protagonists (named, appropriately, the Wonders, originally the "Oneders"). The song, composed by Fountains of Wayne bassist Adam Schlesinger, actually did become fairly popular on Top 40 radio following the movie's release.
- Similarly, washed-up rock star Charlie Pace from Lost has a character background as the former bassist and songwriter for one-hit wonder alt rock band DriveSHAFT, who produced the song "You All Everybody", a song deliberately designed by the producers to be as lightweight, vapid and meaningless as possible. (The song's incomprehensible lyrics are taken from a rant many years ago on the Phil Donahue show.) The actual song we hear on the show was recorded by LA singer/songwriter Jude; the producers have joked that they hoped for it to become a hit on iTunes, which it has yet to do (though it did show up in a cameo on J.J. Abrams' other show, Alias).
- Beck/Mongolian Chop Squad, from the series of the same name. They're a hit in the USA.
- The comedy-improv show Whose Line Is It Anyway? had a regular sketch Greatest Hits where a "theme album" CD is being hawked: Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie would give Wayne Brady (who was sometimes accompanied by the 4th chair guest comedian) a made-up song title and a (real) band/singer, and Wayne would have to improvise a song in that person's style. One time, Colin also made up the musician: a Scottish blues singer named "Wet Biscuit" McGlee, who is so old and grizzled you can't actually understand anything he says. Wayne came through, and the character still gets mentioned in joking "histories" on the Internet.
- Gravitation featured the rising success of fake J-pop group Bad Luck, suspiciously acronymized to BL. Naturally, once it got adapted from manga to anime, they needed to produce real music.
- Grand Theft Auto:
- The earlier games' radio stations predominantly featured fictional bands on their playlists. Grand Theft Auto III was the last main series installment, and the spinoff Liberty City Stories the last game in the series overall, to have original songs recorded for the soundtrack in large numbers, with the pop-rock/adult contemporary station Head Radio and the Top 40 pop station Lips 106 comprised entirely of such in both games.
- Grand Theft Auto: Vice City was the first game to predominantly use licensed tracks, in this case a collection of '80s pop and rock hits. It does, however, introduce Love Fist, an '80s Hair Metal band who perform songs like "Dangerous Bastard" and "Fist Fury" on the in-game station V-Rock and wind up being carted through various missions by the player. What we see of them is a parody of the Sex, Drugs, and Rock & Roll lifestyle: lyrics filled with innuendos, androgynous fashion sense, large amounts of drugs and groupies, their own custom limousine, hiring an outlaw biker gang (and Tommy Vercetti) to provide security, the works. Later games reveal that they went on a downward spiral in The '90s, mirroring the trajectory of many real-life hair metal bands during that time.
- Later installments in the franchise have featured actual musicians as fake ones, such as rapper Ice-T playing Madd Dogg in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.
- "Fresh-Step" was a parody Boy Band which appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman and TRL in 1999.
- Phantasm, an indie band that produced Suspiciously Apropos Music in Chaos;Head, had three singles and an album released. Voice actress Yui Sakakibara was already a visual novel and anime singer, so producing the music for Phantasm wasn't a large stretch.
- And they recently released their fourth single, titled as Unmei no Farfalla, this time was the single with the ending theme of the game Steins;Gate from nitro+, the same company that developed the game Chaos;Head.
- From The Colbert Report: Stephen and the Colberts with their 80s-styled hit "Charlene", which is about Colbert stalking a love interest with that name, and found its way onto the Rock Band platform.
- Of course, it's actually rather good. Gotta love that solo.
- Not quite the same, but certainly similar: The movie Swing Girls centres on the formation of such a band, but they're a big-band (and thus they perform covers of 20th-century standards). Also notable because, for the sake of realism, the director cast girls who didn't have any musical experience (they trained while making the film) and portrayed them actually playing their instruments.
- All About Lily Chou-Chou follows fans of fake popstar Lily Chou-Chou.
- Kira☆Kira is all about a band formed by the main characters. Various songs are played during the story, and the developer sells actual d2b (the name of the band) CDs containing the music played by the band in the game. As the game is about a band, there are also plenty of other bands in the game, of which two (Star Generation and Happy Cycle Mania) also have songs that are actually played in the game.
- The animated version of The Band With Rocks In produced some pretty decent rock'n'roll pastiches, which appeared in full on the soundtrack album.
- The titular band of Detroit Metal City is the most popular heavy metal band in Japan and one of the most popular musical acts, beating out rival bands Kintama Girls and Tetra-pot Melon Tea, and rapper MC Kiva. For The Movie, all four released singles (DMC's two singles also featured the light-hearted J-Pop songs by lead singer's alterego Soichi Negishi) and DMC released a full-length 10-track album.
- Left 4 Dead 2 brings us the Midnight Riders, whose cancelled concert is used by the survivors to alert the rescue helicopter in the second campaign. Two of their songs, One Bad Man and Midnight Ride are played during the finale (with lyrics- apparently, the Riders were planning to mime) and come up at random on the jukeboxes in other campaigns. A third song, All I Want For Christmas Is To Kick Your Ass was also published on YouTube, and The Passing DLC added Save Me Some Sugar (This Won't Take Long) to their repertoire. Check out their website!
- "One Bad Man" and "Midnight Ride" are also available as Rock Band DLC.
- MS Paint Adventures has introduced one of these, Midnight Crew, with an entire album of dark jazz music. The creator has suggested that there will be other fake bands in the future.
- The Nickelodeon show Big Time Rush is essentially this.
- Although, the band has been defictionalized - to an extent - a la Hannah Montana, releasing two albums that aren't necessarily soundtracks, which feature writing from the band members and don't have some of the songs the band releases in the show, making separate music videos for songs which have different, completely filmed music videos in the show and going on tours with very little in reference to the show itself.
- Trip Cyclone from the PC game Shivers 2: Harvest of Souls. Full song versions of the snippets used in the game are found as tracks on the second disc of the game.
- Be*Tween, from the Avalon: Web of Magic series, was a fake band whose songs were later performed by Debra Davis and released on the website.
- The manga series Idol no Akahon is about a (fictional) Idol Singer group called Triple Booking, and the OP song from Seitokai Yakuindomo (by the same author) is credited to Triple Booking.
- After-School Tea Time and Death Devil from K-On! can qualify. The voice actresses sing the lyrics for basically every vocalized song in the series, but the music is done by others. Albums of the openings, endings, and a number of the insert songs have topped Japanese sales charts at least once.
- Questionable Content has Deathmøle, the male lead's band, with him as guitarist. They have released several albums of actual music, composed and played entirely by author Jeph Jacques.
- The Subdigitals of Code Lyoko (known as the "Subsonics" in Season 2, but renamed as there was already a real band with that name) not only have a pretty heavy presence in the series proper, but an actual album released in English and French. It's above-average French pop, though it is worth note that the English release is not so much a "translation" as a complete rewrite with varying levels of success. The song "S'envoler/Break Away" is adapted from the show's ending theme, and it and "Planet Net" are featured in the episode "Music to Soothe the Savage Beast."
- The Ohio Express were more of a record company's marketing identity than a real band, and consisted of whatever musicians were available at the time. Joe Walsh is suspected to have been a member of an early version, and the final version eventually became the "classic" lineup of 10cc.
- The Cheetah Girls were originally a book series, but it did have the same models on every book cover. In 2003 the series was made into a movie, which released original songs by The Cheetah Girls. Ultimately the band was defictionalized with Adrienne Bailon, Kiely Williams, and Sabrina Bryan from the movie. This crosses over with "Real bands masquerading as fake bands", since Kiely Williams and Adrienne Bailon were both from the real band 3LW.
- Infant Sorrow, the band fronted by Aldous Snow in Forgetting Sarah Marshall and its sort-of spinoff Get Him to the Greek: The Sarah Marshall soundtrack included two of their songs, while in lieu of a traditional various artists soundtrack, Greek had a tie-in album consisting almost entirely of Infant Sorrow songs, including songs that weren't in the movie. The remaining tracks are also fake musicians - two songs are by Jacki Q, Aldous' pop-singer ex, and a bonus track from the deluxe edition is by Chocolate Daddy, apparently an in-universe One-Hit Wonder note the name is briefly mentioned in dialog as an example of an artist on Aldous' label who flopped - later there's a callback where an eponymous song is briefly heard as source music. Russell Brand does in fact sing all of the Infant Sorrow songs, although the music was performed and (mostly) written by others: A majority of the songwriting on the Get Him To The Greek soundtrack was done by Jason Segel and guitarist/session musician Lyle Workman, with contributions from some well-known rock musicians like Carl Barât and Jarvis Cocker.
- Eddie and the Cruisers included the ubiquitous radio hit "On The Dark Side," which was in actuality performed by John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band.
- Green Leaves, a Japanese Boy Band famous for the internet sensation and runaway sleeper hit Yatta! written by Hideki Fujisawa, was featured on the Japanese sketch comedy show Silly Go Lucky (the band members were actually some of the show's cast members). The song was intended to be a joke, so the producers were astonished that it topped the Japanese charts and went triple-platinum shortly after it was released as a single.
- Crisis Of Conformity were an Affectionate Parody of 80's Hardcore Punk that appeared in a single Saturday Night Live skit, where they were played by Fred Armisen, Dave Grohl, and Ashton Kutcher. Not too long after that, the indie label Drag City quietly released "Fist Fight", a seven inch single supposedly by the band, but actually written and performed entirely by Armisen himself. Both Dave Grohl and Fred Armisen have been in real hardcore bands - the collage on the cover of the single includes a picture of a young Fred Armisen singing for his old band, as well as one of a young Dave Grohl in a crowd shot (presumably in the audience for a different hardcore band's show). To top it off, their record was produced by Brendan Canty of Fugazi.
- PJ and Duncan spun off from children's soap Byker Grove, whose characters PJ and Duncan formed a band. They released three albums of light hip-hop under that name, and another more soulful (and less successful) one as Ant and Dec, the actors' real names. They did their own singing but didn't write the songs.
- Yes-Man's Munchausen by Proxy, who had four of their songs on the official soundtrack, all of which were cowritten and sung by Zooey Deschanel. Taken a little bit further in the packaging - the other nine songs on the official soundtrack album are by Eels, so the liner notes have an essay about Munchausen by Proxy penned by Eels' Mark Oliver Everett and an essay about Eels supposedly written by Zooey's character Allison Monier.
- In 1959, MAD released a 45 containing two songs ostensibly performed by its mascot, Alfred E. Neuman, "and his Furshlugginer Five". The A-side was a novelty song called "What, Me Worry?" featuring an uncredited man singing in the role of Alfred, and the B-side was an instrumental piece called "Potrzebie".
- SCTV had Yosh and Stan Schmenge (John Candy and Eugene Levy) and their polka band, "The Happy Wanderers". They performed their song "The Cabbage Rolls and Coffee Polka" live on Late Night with David Letterman, and even had a "mocumentary" TV movie about their "career", called The Last Polka. Candy and Levy could really play their instruments (clarinet and accordion, respectively).
- After his stint on Saturday Night Live, Mike Myers formed a faux 60's band called Ming Tea, adopting the pseudonym "Austin Powers", with Susanna Hoffs of The Bangles (as Jillian Shagwell) on lead guitar. Their characters in the lark band spawned the idea for the Austin Powers film series, and the band performs in all three films. They produced two songs, "BBC" and "Daddy Wasn't There".
- Otis Day and the Knights toured as a real band after appearing in Animal House.
- Dr Teeth and the Electric Mayhem from The Muppet Show. One great What Could Have Been was to use animatronics and the real band My Morning Jacket to create an Electric Mayhem live tour.
- Music blog Wondering Sound published The Best Albums That Never Existed, an article covering ten supposed cult classic albums by ten different fake bands in different genres of pop or rock, complete with artwork, track-listings, and one sample song for each album: In reality, the music, art, and text were all provided by Jed Smith.
- A few songs by Walter's favourite 70s band Violet Sedan Chair show up in Fringe and eventually an album titled Seven Suns was released to promote the show.
- The Honey Girls, characters from a line of stuffed dolls sold by the Build-a-Bear company, are Funny Animals who sing teen pop music.
- The titular band in the Big Finish Doctor Who audio story 1963: Fanfare for the Common Men, who in an alternate timeline took the Beatles' place in history, can be heard performing a few of their hits in the story. It's actually pretty good Beatley psychadelic pop sung by the actual actors. (Who include Mitch Benn as the John-expy.)
- Naturally, as it's about musicians, Show by Rock!! has several of these; there are thirteen entirely fake bands, making up half the total bands in the franchisenote Plasmagica, ShinganCrimsonz, Trichronika, Tsurezurenaru Ayatsuri Mugenan, Criticrista, Budvirginlogic, Arcareafact, Shizuku Secret Mind, Uwasanopetals, Dolly Dolci, Baiganba V, Studdo Ban Gyasshu, and Ninjinriot, all of whom have their own tie-in music. Some of the bands' earlier music was sung by professional singers, but most of them have since been recast as voice actors, many of whom are also trained singers.
- MTV cooked up a parody Boy Band, 2gether, around which they created a movie and short-lived TV series. The demonstrated Five-Man Band archetypes from the Boy Band page were explicitly referenced in the descriptions of each band member (and played to the hilt. In band of mostly twentysomethings, "The Cute One" was a young teenager and "The Older Brother" was a husky, balding man in his mid 30s played by the younger brother of Chris Farley), and their songs were intentionally silly and vapid as possible. Still, the group had both their albums chart in the Billboard Top 200 (reaching #35 and #15 respectively), had a top 100 single ("The Hardest Part of Breaking Up (is Getting Back Your Stuff)") and they even toured and opened for Britney Spears entirely in-character. Their album included a track from their "rival" band Whoa, "Rub One Out," and MTV produced a full video for it.
- The Terminator has Tahnee Cain and The Tryanglz, a fictional New Wave Music group fronted by actress Tane Cain (nee McClure). In addition to the three songs in the film, the faux-band recorded several more demos for a planned album, which unfortunately never saw release.
- 1970s TV drama Rock Follies revolved around a group called Little Ladies, and two soundtrack albums were hits in the UK (the second also yielded a top ten single "O.K.?") though they spoiled it a little by failing to credit Little Ladies, instead just listing actors Charlotte Cornwell, Julie Covington and Rula Lenska (and for the second album, Sue Jones-Davies).
- Sam B. from Dead Island may be a fake rapper (Josef "J7" Lord providing his rapping voice), but that didn't stop him from doing a collab with Chamillionaire.
- Subverted in Cities: Skylines: most bands played on the in-game radio are fake, with the exception of at least two of the artists featured in the "Concerts" DLC: NESTOR (who are an actual Swedish rock group) and MOTi. Jury is out when it comes to Lily LaRoux, who apparently showed up at the game's promotional event in person, but whose musical achievements cannot be traced elsewhere.
- Johnny Crawfish, a fictional singer in The Noddy Shop, actually got his own music video made for an investor in the series.
- An entire album showcasing a fictional live concert held in Paducah, Kentucky for Boyz In The Sink from VeggieTales was released in 2006.
- A key component in the Love Live! franchise is that the fictional idol groups in the shows often hold real concerts and release many albums featuring songs sung by the groups.
- A LOT of characters on NoPixel record their own songs. Many of these songs are available In-Universe on a service called Pixify, which can be accessed in real life.
- Outto-Tune Tyrone is a pop star and gangbanger in-universe. Several of his songs are available on Spotify in real life.
- In the summer of 1981, Disneyland's Tomorrowland stage premiered the sci-fi rock band Halyx, a themed group originating from Disneyland Records who were said to be from outer space. Band members included human vocalist Lora Mumford, guitarist Bruce Gowdy and drummer Brian Lucas, along with a tall Wookiee-esque bassist his performer called a "Baharnoth", a robot keyboardist who rode across the stage in a custom cart, and an amphibian percussionist/acrobat. Bruce wrote whatever songs the band played which weren't covers of existing material. While popular with Disneyland patrons, the actual management felt the rock theming was at-odds with the family friendly nature of the park, and a planned album release with Warner Music Group fell through, making that one summer the entirety of Halyx's professional existence, ending on September 11. Defunctland produced an extensive documentary of the band here.
- In 2021, well after Parks and Recreation concluded, character Andy Dwyer's band Mouse Rat released The Awesome Album, featuring originals as heard in the show as well as some Cover Versions) note (One episode had a subplot where Mouse Rat were booked as entertainment for a party at the Pawnee Senior Center, so instead of their own rock songs, they were heard performing pop standards like "The Way You Look Tonight". The album also features other fictional musicians from the show - Duke Silver, the smooth jazz alter-ego of Ron Swanson, is credited with saxophone on two of the Mouse Rat songs, and the last two tracks are credited to the band Land Ho! and their vocalist Scott Tanner (actually Wilco and their vocalist Jeff Tweedy respectively)
- Studio 666 has Dream Widow, a heavy metal band who met a grisly fate while recording in the same mansion studio that the Foo Fighters are now recording in. A self-titled Dream Widow album was released a few months after the movie was - with all songs for the most part written, played, and produced by Dave Grohl.
- Turning Red has 4*Town, a Boy Band voiced by actual singers including Jordan Fisher and Finneas O'Connell the latter of which, along with his sister, Billie Eilish, wrote three songs for the film.
- Aggretsuko, the full series, featured OTMGirls, a struggling idol group briefly catapulted into stardom when Retsuko gets recruited. Sanrio produced a full, if brief, album for them.
Recurring fake bands in other series
Real bands masquerading as fake bands
- "The Weird Sisters" in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire included Jarvis Cocker and Steve Mackey of Pulp, Phil Selway and Jonny Greenwood of Radiohead, Steve Claydon of Add N to (X), and electronica artist Jason Buckle, who has worked with Jarvis Cocker in their side-project Relaxed Muscle.
- In Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, a number of musicians and bands provided original songs for the film to be presented as played by the fake bands that were adapted from the original graphic novels. For the protagonist's garage rock band, Sex Bob-Omb, Beck (Musician) himself provided a number of songs in his old school lo-fi style (and also did two songs under his own name for the soundtrack). For the band The Clash at Demonhead, Emily Haines and her band Metric provided a very indie synth-pop style (and this one comes with story, as Emily herself was the original model and inspiration for Envy, their lead singer. Meanwhile, Broken Social Scene gives a very (unusual for their style) raw garage-like performance to depict Crash and The Boys.
- From Who's the Boss?, the doo-wop group "Tony and the Dreamtones" is played by actual doo-wop group "The Mighty Echoes" (plus, of course, Tony Danza). (They did have Ray Charles As Himself in another ep, however, even replacing the usual "Brand New Life" endcredit instrumental with a song Charles and the other cast members performed.)
- The J-Rock band "Hummingbird" appeared as Macross 7's band "Fire Bomber," whose music and adventures (including live performances aboard Transforming Mecha controlled by guitars) were at the center of the series. The band released a number of real albums as "Fire Bomber", including an entire fake tribute album to another fictional singer in the Macross Myth Arc. There have been 13 "Fire Bomber" albums so far, many of which have songs that never were in the anime.
- Particularly mind-blowing example: In Blues Brothers 2000, the Blues Brothers Band enters the "Battle of the Bands", and has to go head to head with 'The Louisiana Gator Boys'... which is basically a collection of all the most legendary blues musicians alive at the time of filming, including B.B. King, Eric Clapton, Bo Diddley, Isaac Hayes and Dr. John...
- The Blues Brothers themselves began as a comedy sketch on Saturday Night Live, when Dan Aykroyd wanted to do something with Blues music on the show, and became a smash hit and released several real albums.
- In the climax of the 1986 film Crossroads (1986), the protagonist (Ralph Macchio) enters a guitar duel to save his soul. He faces off against the Devil's guitarist, Jack Butler, played by legendary guitar wizard Steve Vai (Vai played both parts of the duel; Macchio's parts in the rest of the film were played by legendary slide guitarist Ry Cooder).
- In an episode of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya, Haruhi and Yuki stand in for members of a fake band called ENOZ — a Sdrawkcab Name Shout-Out to a real-life band named ZONE. Meanwhile Haruhi's voice actress is a real singer, who released her songs from this episode as singles.
- Many Japanese seiyuu double as singers, singing theme songs for the characters they portray.
- Two different J-Pop artists were pressed into service as the fake bands from Nana — and a different pair of artists portrayed those bands in The Movie. All four wound up releasing Top 10 singles.
- The Mighty Boosh has featured the members of electro-punk group Robots In Disguise on several occasions, once in a band called Kraftwerk Orange, along with Vince and "Johnny Two Hats."
- The Horrors also appear in the third series as the Black Tubes.
- Fountains of Wayne has basically made a career out of standing in as a Fake Band, and Kay Hanley has made a career out of standing in as a Fake Vocalist. They performed together to provide the music for Josie and the Pussycats. Fountains of Wayne also wrote and performed the titular Fake Song of That Thing You Do!, and Hanley provided the singing voice of Molly O from the cartoon Generation O! (her band was portrayed by Hanley's band at the time, Letters to Cleo). Fountains of Wayne appeared as animated versions of themselves in the cartoon Hey Joel, regularly contributing Suspiciously Apropos Music to the show.
- The lead vocals of "That Thing You Do" — and all the other singing by Johnathon Schaech's character — were performed by Adam Schlesinger's friend Mike Viola of The Candy Butchers.
- The Soggy Bottom Boys from O Brother, Where Art Thou? is a mishmash of either bluegrass musicians or musicians who could copy the style well, including Ralph Stanley, John Hartford, Alison Krauss, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, and Dan Tyminski. The exception is Tim Blake Nelson, the actor for Delmar O'Donnell, who sang his own lines for "In the Jailhouse Now," in case you couldn't tell.
- In the 2007 film St Trinians, real-life band Girls Aloud perform the closing song, credited as the school band.
- Four Star Mary stood in for Oz's fictional band, Dingoes Ate My Baby, on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
- The Glenn Miller Band's two appearances on film were as Phil Corey's Orchestra in Sun Valley Serenade and Gene Morrison's Orchestra in Orchestra Wives.
- The Residents had The Big Bubble, a band of Zinkenites whose "album" was the conclusion of The Mole Trilogy.
- There's an episode of Home Movies in which a pair of camp counsellors named Mike and Miguel write a bunch of songs. The songs are played, and the characters voiced, by Johns Flansburgh and Linnell of They Might Be Giants.
- Speaking of They Might Be Giants, during one of their tours, they had a very strange opening band, Sapphire Bullets, who played cover versions of the songs from the Flood album, in their entirety, in order. Made even more strange by the fact that Sapphire Bullets really WAS They Might Be Giants, disguised as a fake band, playing cover versions of their own songs.
- TMBG also released a series of mp3s collectively known as "Battle Of The Bands", where they did songs portraying various fake bands, such as metal band Demchuk, Boy Band Too + 3, and Shirley Temple-esque child star Little Lisa Whitman note with guest vocalist Robin "Goldie" Goldwasser, an adult woman portraying a much younger fake singer.
- The members of The Traveling Wilburys have some impressive alter egos (Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Tom Petty, Roy Orbison, and Jeff Lynne). But according to the liner notes, they're all the children of Charles Truscott Wilbury Sr by different mothers: Lucky (Dylan), Otis (Lynne), Charlie T. Jr (Petty), Lefty (Orbison) and Nelson (Harrison)).
- The Jonas Brothers on Jonas.
- Radio host Pat Maine in the game Alan Wake can't quite put his finger on why Poets of the Fall remind him so much of Bright Falls' local rock legends, Heavy Mithril band Old Gods of Asgard.
- An early Happy Days episode concerned the rock band Johnny Fish and the Fins (Richie knew the keyboard player back in grade school), played by 50s Tribute Band Flash Cadillac and the Continental Kids (now just known as Flash Cadillac).
- The plot of Interstella 5555 revolves around the Crescendolls, a fake band who supposedly recorded Daft Punk's "One More Time." The band is fake on more than one level, because they don't exist in real life and they aren't really who they appear to be in the film either.
- Devo supply the music for Cube Squared, a fictional Swedish band from the film Tapeheads: While they aren't played by Devo themselves, the actors mime a Swedish-language version of "Baby Doll". Similarly, "Mr. MX-7", supposedly performed by a metal band called Blender Children in film, is actually by the Goth Rock supergroup The Lords of the New Church with Stiv Bators as lead singer, Pop Star Composers Fishbone have a cameo as a country band called Ranchbone, and real life soul-singers Sam Moore (of Sam And Dave) and Junior Walker portray fictional soul duo The Swanky Modes. Full songs by The Swanky Modes, Cube Squared, and Ranchbone were on the soundtrack.
- Banjo & Sullivan from The Devil's Rejects are kind of an unusual example: None of their music actually appeared in the movie (although the characters had a backstory of being touring country musicians), but a supposed Greatest Hits Album was released as a tie-in to the movie - the music was provided by Alternative Country singer-songwriter Jesse Dayton and Adam Banjo's actor Lew Temple.
- K-Pop group, The Wonder Girls. For their 'English Debut' they released a film on Teen Nick, called 'The Wonder Girls'. they also had a cameo in 'The Last Godfather'.
- In Scrubs, Ted's band "The Worthless Peons" is the actual a cappella band The Blanks, who have released a CD with several catchy tunes.
- Inverted in Pink Floyd's live performances of The Wall, where the opening song was performed by a "surrogate band" disguised as the members of Pink Floyd (who, at that point in the story, are Adam Westing as a Fake Band backing up a solo artist called Pink Floyd).
- The film Taking Five features The Click Five as fictional Boy Band 5 Leo Rise. One of the bonus features on the DVD is a full-length, in-character video for "Kidnap My Heart". While The Click Five play their own instruments, 5 Leo Rise were depicted as only contributing the vocals to their songs... Though near the end of the movie, they do pick up rock instruments and play a power pop style version of "Kidnap My Heart", and it's hinted that it could be a new direction for the (fake) band.
- The film Velvet Goldmine, which centres around transparent No Celebrities Were Harmed versions of David Bowie and Iggy Pop, featured two fictional backing bands on its soundtrack album. The Venus In Furs was made up of British musicians, including members of Radiohead, Suede, and Roxy Music, and solo artist David Gray. Wylde Ratttz was made up of American musicians, including members of The Stooges, Minutemen, Sonic Youth, and Mudhoney. Wylde Ratttz had somewhat of a life beyond the movie, recording a self-titled album that stayed on the shelf of album languishment until the musicians were able to secure a self-release in 2020, along with various digital singles released that same year.
- Interesting case in the movie Singles. Real-life bands Alice in Chains and Soundgarden play themselves, but three members of Pearl Jam play Matt Dillon's backing band members of the fictitious Citizen Dick, although for some reason they use their real names. A full version of Citizen Dick's "Touch Me I'm Dick" note a cover / parody of Mudhoney's "Touch Me I'm Sick" performed by the same members of Pearl Jam and Matt Dillon was released as a 7" single in 2015 for Record Store Day, and would also appear on a deluxe edition of the soundtrack album.
- The half of the bands in Show by Rock!! that aren't entirely made upnote Dropout Sensei (based on Asstellus), Gaugastrikes (KFK), Shinimonogurui (Marie Ueda), Demons Venom (Silhouette from the Skylit), Labomunch (clammbon), Rapezziauto (yksb ft. MiLO & 31style), Chammy Chaplets (kiki*), 04Tobizbits (04 Limited Sazabys), Tekebakitsusou (Usotsuki), Shirorakurosuka? (A Crow Is White), Fukashi Gimmick (Band Gokko), and Spectrenotes (BIGMAMA) are this type of fake band, with characters based on the band's actual members. The bands' actual music is used as in-game songs, and though most of the characters are left unvoiced, the real-life band members' counterparts provide voices for the ones that have voiced cards.
- The B-side of Fleetwood Mac's 1969 single "Man of the World" was "Somebody's Gonna Get Their Head Kicked In Tonite" by Earl Vince & The Valiants, a Genre Throwback rock'n'roll number that got very excited about the prospect of a forthcoming riot. Of course it was really just Fleetwood Mac themselves having an Out-of-Genre Experience.
- The Electrocutes, a fictional rock band from Drive Me Crazy, were portrayed by real group The Donnas. This was something of a Development Gag for the real band, who did play some shows under that name before settling on The Donnas.
- Truck Stop from Half-Cocked, portrayed by real band Rodan. Interestingly the premise of the film revolves around Truck Stop having a Fake–Real Turn - they're a group of teens with no musical experience who impetuously stole a rock band's van full of instruments and equipment and found themselves posing as a rock band to support themselves while running from the law, but they gradually get better at their instruments and closer to being an actual band as the film goes on.
- The Wonderfour, the Finnish act in Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga were played by the (English) group Anteros.
- The songs that play on the radio in Cyberpunk 2077 were recorded by real artists under in-world pseudonyms. Refused stand in for Samurai, the iconic rock band led by the Deuteragonist Johnny Silverhand, with Dennis Lyxzen providing the singing voice of Johnny, full-borg singer Lizzy Wizzy is played by Grimes and the singing voices of the fictional trio Us Cracks are provided by Namakopuri.
- The Beatles produced what is arguably their most famous album masquerading as the fictional Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The album itself is implied to be a recorded live performance of the band.
- OutKast: Two different fake bands for the price of one on their Distinct Double Album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, which can also be viewed as two solo albums for each of the duo's members. Side A features Speakerboxxx, characterized as a more traditional hardcore hip-hop crew, and plays to the strengths of Big Boi. Side B features The Love Below, characterized as an experimental R&B group, and showcases the versatility of André 3000.
- The Leningrad Cowboys are an interesting case. They were created out of the Finnish Punk Rock band Sleepy Sleepers as a fake band for the movie Leningrad Cowboys Go America, even performing one of the Sleepy Sleepers' own compositions, "Sauna", in the movie. Afterwards, however, they stayed the Leningrad Cowboys, thereby making the band very real and more popular than ever before.
- Fraktus who allegedly invented Techno as early as 1980 are not so much a real band disguising as a fake one, but rather a comedy group disguising as a band. They're one of several projects by Studio Braun, and their instrumental backings mostly came from Carsten "Erobique" Meyer.
- Paul and Storm recorded a few songs as barbershop quartet the Barrytones despite only being two people.
- Black Roses has the title Heavy Metal band, whose music is provided by actual metal band King Kobra. Four Black Roses songs appear on the soundtrack album - interestingly, so does a previously released King Kobra song.
Real Life
- Steve of The Sneeze has created a fake band, the Tree Brains, named after the fungus that annually grows on a tree in his yard (and that is, as it turns out, delicious). You can be a part of it! (You don't have to do anything).
- Progressive rock band Dream Theater used to occasionally switch instruments with each other during live shows and perform a cover version of Deep Purple's "Perfect Strangers" (except in one case where they did "Suicide Solution" by Ozzy Osbourne instead) under the pseudonym "Nightmare Cinema". They stopped after Derek Sherinian left the band. The only member who didn't switch was James La Brie (or "Abdul Matahari"), who remained on vocals.
- Meet The Dalton Brothers, a short-lived country band from Galveston, Texas. They've only performed three shows, and they've never released an album. Oh, and they're also U2 performing under another name.
- Real-life musician Doctor Steel has a "mechanical (robot) band" - which never seems to work, so he uses real musicians on those rare times he does live performances.
- Milli Vanilli, a five-member group whose music was all credited to two guys with no vocal talent. They later tried to reform their image, but nobody cared at that point.
- Threatin is a one-man "band" that gained infamy for playing to empty venues during its ill-fated European tour. Despite releasing real music, Jered "Threatin" Eames note The lead singer, guitarist, bassist, and drummer of his band bought Facebook followers and YouTube views and comments to artificially grow his social presence. He tricked venues in the UK, France, Germany, and Italy into giving him appearances, and lied about ticket sales to the venues and his touring artists to keep the show on the road. A Concerned Citizen shares his thoughts on the matter.
- Occasionally during the 70s and 80s, when Blue Öyster Cult wanted to avoid notice so they could play smaller venues like clubs, they would book gigs under the name Soft White Underbelly.
- Weezer used to occasionally bill themselves as Goat Punishment for similar reasons - the gimmick was eventually retired because it became too much of an open secret. The first couple of Goat Punishment shows were cover sets (of Nirvana and Oasis) done on a lark, and later Goat Punishment shows were for the sake of warming up for a tour or bigger show, or to test out new songs. Official Goat Punishment shirts that portray alter-egos of the band members existed, and for a while they started going so far as having a light-up "GP" in place of their signature light-up "W" prop on stage for these shows.
- The J. Geils Band, who started out as a bar band, also had the reputation of playing bars and other small venues under various assumed names after they made it big, though this may just be fanon.
- An interesting variant came with late-1980s country band Billy Hill, composed of songwriters Bob DiPiero and John Scott Sherrill, former Detroit Wheels member Dennis Robbins, former Steve Earle bassist Reno Kling, and session drummer Martin Parker. They created a character named Billy Hill who was said to be the "lead singer", although that post actually went to both Sherrill and Robbins.
- Members of GWAR would open their own shows as "X-Cops." Eventually, some fans got a group together and with the band's permission performed under the name.
- Interestingly, GWAR themselves were originally a "fake band" portrayed by a real one - As a joke, Dave Brockie's Hardcore Punk band Death Piggy once opened up for themselves as a metal band in viking costumes, which eventually evolved into the concept for GWAR.
- The video for the New Order song "Crystal" features a fake band named "The Killers". The Killers took their name from the band.
- R.E.M. and its members used to do this fairly frequently during the '80s, playing either by themselves or with other musicians under such esoteric names as "Hornets Attack Victor Mature", "It Crawled from the South", "Adolph and the Casuals feat. Raoul", and — most famously — "Bingo Hand Job".
- Psychic TV released three albums, Jack The Tab, Tekno Acid Beat, and Ultrahouse The L.A. Connection, which were packaged as compilations performed by various artists: Thus songs were credited to aliases like DJ Doktor Megatrip and Wolves Of The Sun. However, Tekno Acid Beat also featured one song credited to Psychic TV themselves, while Ultrahouse featured one song by an actual performer, Glen Meadmore.
- In the late 90's, Alternative Rock fans went to a club to hear a band called Manwich. However, most of the audience was well aware that it was actually Better Than Ezra previewing new songs from their (then) upcoming album How Does Your Garden Grow?
- The Replacements occasionally played as "Jefferson's Cock" in dresses. Paul Westerberg can be heard saying the name during the outro of the song "Androgynous".
- Steel Panther are an odd variant of the trope. The band is a real band but they pose as a band from the heydey of Eighties Hair Metal who never became famous until "recently".
- "Guardians Inferno", the third end credits song of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, is credited to "The Sneepers feat. David Hasselhoff". There is, of course, no such band; in the song's music video, it's the main cast of the movie and director James Gunn having loads of fun in full Disco regalia.
- Prince Rama's Top 10 Hits of The End Of The World is a Concept Album presenting the band's idea of what popular music might be like during the apocalypse. As part of the concept, each of the ten songs are credited as "channeling" fake performers like The Metaphysixxx and Tauhaus; The liner notes feature photos of the members of Prince Rama dressing up like these fictional groups, and a press release announcing the album included biographies of all of the fake bands.
- The Turtles Present the Battle of the Bands has The Turtles masquerading as ten different bands, each playing a different style of music.
- Madness' Cover Album The Dangermen Sessions, Volume One casts them as a recently re-formed Cuban reggae group, The Dangermen.
- Starting in 2015, Country Music singer Dierks Bentley has done covers of 1990s country songs with his road band, who don stereotypical early-'90s clothing and call themselves "Hot Country Knights". Each member of the band has their own character and backstory, and they recorded a full album in 2020.
- OOIOO started out as a fake band for a photo shoot, then had a Fake–Real Turn. When Yoshimi P-We from Boredoms was asked to do a photo-shoot for the Japanese magazine Switch, she wanted a few of her friends to be a part of it, so it was decided the magazine would present them as a fictitious band called OOIOO. They then decided to make the group a reality, producing a full album and touring with Sonic Youth a year later.
- Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars. The Spiders From Mars actually was the name of David Bowie's backing band, but the album features a fictionalized version of them.
- The Yellow River Boys are a Toilet Humor-themed country rock band whose lineup features Tim Heidecker and Gregg Turkington - part of the joke is that official sources, such as the liner notes to the album Urinal St. Station, portray them as being an actual band from the 1970s who mainly performed in underground fetish clubs.
- In the mid-'80s, Namco developed "Robot Band PicPac", a group of animatronic robots who played music; they were akin to The Rock-afire Explosion, merely being programmed to mime along to LaserDisc players, rather than actually being able to play music. Unlike other animatronic bands, however, Namco marketed the group as if it were an actual band, licensing them out to perform at various venues in Japan. They had about 30 minutes of recorded material (composed by Namco's Norio Nakagata and written by noted City Pop performers EPO and Taeko Ohnuki), but the majority of it was never released to the public. PicPac, along with two of their songs, appear in Namco Museum Vol. 4 for the PlayStation.
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