Jessica's Crime is a sporadically active American independent rock band. Founding member and lead vocalist Aaron Bishop has cited the band's "day-jobs in professional academia" as the primary reason for their occasional, long periods of apparent quiescence.[1] The band formed originally in 1989 as Mistress Christia, morphing into the SpeedKings by the early 1990s, before establishing themselves as Jessica's Crime in 1995, following a number of changes in personnel.[2] Originally from Dallas, Texas, the band moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1999. As of the release of their 2006 record Gone to Texas, Jessica's Crime comprises two members: founder J. Aaron Bishop (guitars, vocals, bass, programming, etc.) and Michael P (guitars, vocals, bass, banjo, programming). Their musical style contains elements of punk rock, post-punk industrial music, dance, and older country music, à la Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell. According to their website, they had not performed live since late 1999, though in the spring of 2010 they began to play the occasional show in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area.
In addition to their original material, Jessica's Crime have long been known for their sometimes bizarre choices of cover songs, the arrangements and performances of which often stray far afield from the source material. Notable examples include The Jolly Rogers ode to Blackbeard the pirate, 'The Devil's Son', as well as the Bo Diddley standard, 'Who Do You Love', both from their 1998 LP, Psychosemantic; their second record, 2001's 'Scarecrow + Hizbollah' yielded a techno-metal take on 'Gimme Gimme Gimme (A Man After Midnight)' by Swedish pop icons ABBA, in addition to a surprisingly emotional rendition of Gary Numan's paean to robot-love, 'Are Friends Electric?'; their most recent offering, 2006's epic Gone to Texas included a bar-room singalong of traditional folk ballad, 'The House of the Rising Sun'. They have recently announced that their next project will be an album of cover songs titled PROJECT : GHOLA.[10] While that has yet to materialize, a live album recorded during their 2010 Texas performances has been released, titled ERSATZ.[11]
^Legends Magazine, no. 88 (July, 1999), also available online: [2][usurped]; ibid., no. 108 (March, 2001), also available online: [3][usurped]; see also A Brief History Lesson, an official biography of the early years by Joshua Roberson, now available from the band's official website: "A Brief History of Jessica's Crime". Archived from the original on 2007-10-08. Retrieved 2007-06-04.